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Propaganda is a form of communication that is aimed at influencing the attitude of a community. In creating propaganda, people will focus on a specific set of facts that will elicit an emotional reaction in a population. If angered, humans will often overlook rational information. In the history of photography, thousands of famous images have [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Friday, August 5, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Photos · Tagged alexey yeremenko, annie edson taylor, british columbia history, dettloff, flight of refugees, George Bush, invasion of normandy, jack bernard, John F. Kennedy assassination, korean war, Lee Harvey Oswald, max alpert, mexico revolution, mission accomplished, Niagara Falls, Parliament of the United Kingdom, Patty Hearst, photographs, photography, political photographs, Propaganda, Robert Capa, zapatista
Ask anyone older than a fetus’s age, they’ll tell you that film isn’t what it used to be (like most things in life and especially when it comes to the entertainment industry). Film used to be an artform in which filmmakers always took the long route in having their cinematic brainchild become a direct manifestation [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Friday, November 19, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Actor, Alice in Wonderland, Also, Batman, Blade 2, Brendan Frasier, CGI, Charlie Brown, china, Chocolate Factory, Christopher Nolan, Christopher Reeves, clark kent, conceptually-brilliant director, director, Discovery Channel, Ed Wood, Edward Scissorhands, Entertainment_Culture, fantastic four, Frank Oz, George Bush, George Lucas, Ghost Rider, Harrison Ford, Hollywood, Hollywood Classics Network, Hugh Jackman, Inc., Indiana, Indiana,United States, jaws, Johnny Depp, jurassic park, Keanu Reeves, King, Kong, L.A., Lewis Carrol, Lex Luthor, live-action Speed Racer, Los Angeles,California,United States, Meghan Fox, Michael Bay, Naomi Watts, Naomi Watts fall, New York, New York City,New York,United States, Nintendo, Nintendo Co.,Ltd., note-taking secretary, Physics, planet of the apes, PS2, queen, Sesotho verbs, Skull Island, Space Jam, speed racer, spider-man, Spider-Man 3, Stenotype, Steven Spielberg, Sundance, Superman, Sweeney Todd, the National Geographic, tim burton, Universal Studios, Van Helsing, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Yi script
Every four years the good citizens of this country drag themselves to the voting booth (well, actually about half of them do, the rest being far too busy to concern themselves with such things as picking the leader of their nation) to pick the candidate they hope will do the least amount of damage to [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Friday, April 2, 2010 at 6:01 am
Filed under History, People, Podcasts, Politics · Tagged able general, abraham lincoln, Air Force, America, andrew jackson, Arkansas, author, bad president, Bay of pigs, Bill Clinton, candidate, Civil War General, Colorado, congressman and senator, cuba, Daniel Webster, Denver, elections, Europe, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Franklin Pierce, General, George Bush, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Georgia, Gerald Ford, Germany, Governor, great president, henry clay, Herbert Hoover, Horace Greeley, HORATIO SEYMOUR, Iran, Islamic Republic of Iran, JAMES COX, James K. Polk, Jeff Danelek, Jerry Ford, Jimmy Carter, John C. Calhoun, john f kennedy, Kentucky, leader, Massachusetts, Mexico, military commander, National Guard, Ohioan congressman, Panama, peanut farmer, Persian Gulf, Politics, Politics of the United States, president, presidential election, presidents, pretty decent vice-president, reporter, Republican Party, Richard Nixon, ronald reagan, Ross Perot, RUTHERFORD B. HAYES, SAMUEL TILDEN, Scots-Irish Americans, Secretary of State, Senate committee, Senator, Speaker, Tammany Hall, term governor, then President, Theodore Roosevelt, Ulysses S. Grant, United States, United States Army, United States Whig Party, Vice Presidents of the United States, Vietnam, warren g harding, Washington, White House, Wilson, Wilson administration, Wilson ASA, Wilson’s League of Nations, writer, www.ourcuriousworld.com
In our recent history there have been some very close presidential elections, but elections decided by a small margin are certainly not something new. Throughout our country’s short history we have had more than our fair share of presidential elections that were too close to call. Here are the top 10 presidential elections based on [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Sunday, November 2, 2008 at 11:41 pm
Filed under History, Politics · Tagged Al Gore, Democrat, election, Garfield, George Bush, George W. Bush, Kennedy, Lewis Cass, Nixon, Politics, presidency, president, presidential election, presidential elections, presidents, Republican, Whig, Zachary Taylor