Posted on 12/07/2006 5:50:44 PM PST by SquirrelKing
From a link on it's wiki link:
The Old Negro Space Program, a 10-minute film, humorously chronicles fictional African-American astronauts who overcame NASA's color barrier, telling their story in the earnest style of Ken Burns' PBS documentaries like Baseball. Primarily distributed online, the film has garnered all the tokens of internet success, including its own entry in the Wikipedia and an online shop to sell its souvenir t-shirts and mugs. Its detractors accuse the film of making racism appear equally fictitious, perhaps unintentionally, and of perpetuating black stereotypes.
It usually is! :)
It was based upon the Guadacanal and Solomon Island campaign.
The Donald Trump of PBS strikes again. I gave up around the 100th factual error in his swollen, lumbering 'Baseball.'
This guy isn't any good.
Ken Burns is a left-wing piece of trash.
Wow! That's something special. My dad was in the IV, they hit a good many of the big battles all the way through.
Excellent post. Expresses my thoughts exactly.
Ya mean like Elenor? You know her thighness channels her. Ugh! I disgusted myself even.
Flew many night time missions over Japan. I learned more about the Pacific Theater from my father than any book I've ever read.
I prefer "Her Crusty Pantsuitness"...:)
Or, the direct, and to the point "Cankles".
"Go shopping. That's what we were told," Burns said. "Go shopping. It's ridiculous."
I agree with Burns on this. We were told that the WOT was a mortal peril, which I thought it was and still think it is. And then we were told to do nothing. The public wasn't enlisted into the war in any way. Which made it a lot easier for the Left to say, this is all a farce, there's no threat. And made it a lot harder for the Administration to enlist support for the steps it had to take.
Thanks...I think of all the years I watched things on PBS, not even considering for a moment that the people who run that place were being paid by taxpayers. As a young person, I was completely unfazed by that. Sure, they said as much in their splash-screens, and they had their fundraising, which I just turned off, so I didn't pay any attention.
I tuned in fairly frequently for Nova, but in the Nineties, when I started really paying attention to what they were actually saying and implying...I was really irritated to realize MY money was being taken from ME to give them a soapbox to spit out their Liberal pap.
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
My dad was a B26 gunner who completed a tour flying out of North Africa and volunteered to go to the PTO and flew missions out of Okinawa.
He dropped some of the last warning leaflets (warning that something big was coming) over Japan before the drop on Hiroshima.
I can imagine. I'd have been scared to death if I was him, though.
Yes, I dread the re-writing of history coming in this documentary. I'm sure it will be touted as the definitive WWII epic by the media.
Watch the History Channel. Just got done watching a documentaty on Saipan and last week a show on Bataan.
So did I.
But I specified the European theater. I'm so tired of hearing about the same three operations and the same one division.
What percentage of the documentary will be devoted to The Tuskegee Airmen.
(Not to diminish their service mind you, but knowing Burns history, he'll probably devote several hours to them alone)
You can't do justice to a cataclysm like the Second World War with a documentary. Not possible. The best effort I've seen is the British, "The World at War".
Don't count on it. The main focus will be on:
(1) Racial strife in the US military.
(2) Class conflict between officers and enlisted men.
And I base my predictions only on his baseball documentary.
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