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There exists an odd relationship between documentarian and subject, one that some say can border on the exploitative. While the project should ideally be mutually beneficial, the nature of the medium can make it feel quite a bit less so at times for one side or the other (or both). In general, documentarians tend to [...]
Posted by Jason Ward on Tuesday, April 30, 2013 at 4:30 am
Filed under People · Tagged Banana, Chevron, director, documentary, Jason Ward, lawsuits, Lil Wayne, lily tomlin, mormon, pirates, sugar, TopTenz, Vietnam
Today, for many of us, King has become less a human being than a source of quotes and a saint. This will not do. A pedestal is no place to put a great man’s legacy. So this tribute is intended to not be as sanctimonious as most of those for King have become. 10. King [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Thursday, January 12, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged 20th century in the United States, Atlanta Morehouse College, Bayard Rustin, CBS, Chicago, Community organizing, Dustin Koski, F.B.I, Grammys, http, I Have a Dream, internet comedians, Izola Ware Curry, James Earl Ray, john f kennedy, Jr, judge, Judicial Event, King, LGBT rights movement, life magazine, Lyndon Johnson, March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Martin Luther King, memphis, Montgomery Bus Boycott, Morehouse College, musical, Nonviolence, Pacifism, president, Schmoyoho, the F.B.I., the Washington Post, USA Today, USD, Vietnam, Washington
Before people were able to access information by way of the Internet, written text was the primary resource for knowledge. The history of books has been linked to political and economical contingencies, as well as the history of ideas and religion. In the ancient world, humans developed writings as a desire to create a lasting [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Tuesday, July 12, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Literature · Tagged Accuray Systems, Ahmed Jibril, Alfred Kinsey, Alice in Wonderland, America, American Federation of Peace, and lecturer, Anne Sullivan, Arnold Arboretum, artificial intelligence, Astronomer, author, biologist, businessman, Campania, Caserta, catholic church, Central Europe, Central Intelligence Agency, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, co-author, College of Engineering, Cologne’s Faculty of Theology, computer scientist, Congress, Divine Things, Drug Enforcement Administration, faster-than-light travel hypothesis, Fatima, Flying Saucers, food, foreign minister, Founder, France, freelance writer, Frost Fairies, Frost King, geologist, Germany, Greater London, Harvard, head, Heinrich Kramer, Helen Keller, Helen Keller Frost Fairies, Hilary Evans, Hitler, Holy Office, Human sexuality, Inc., interstellar travel, Iron Mountain, Iron Mountain Incorporated, Italy, J. Allen Hynek, Jacob Sprenger, Jacques Vallée, James H. Jones, jesus, John Doe, Jose da Fonseca, Joseph Lash, Judith Reisman, justice minister, Kindle, KINDLE GROUP, King, Kinsey Institute, Kinsey Institute for Research, Kinsey Reports, law abiding handbook, Leonard C. Lewin, Lester Coleman, Libya, Libyan government, London, London court, Lonnie VanZandt, Lyndon B. Johnson, major U.S. cities, Margaret Canby, Maria Valtorta, Marian, Michael Anagnos, michigan, model, movable type printing press, multidimensional travel, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, National Advisory Committee, nazi party, New York, New York City, New York Federal court, new york times, Nicholas Pende, Nook, Nook Industries, North America, official U.S. policy, Palestine, Pan American World Airways, PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS INC, Pedro Carolino, Perkins School, Perkins School for the Blind, physicist, Pik Botha, political activist, Polyamory, president, priest, principal investigator, Professor, professor of entomology, Province of Caserta, Province of Lucca, psychiatrist, Purdue University, respected researcher, Rockefeller Foundation, Roman Catholic Church, Roosevelt Demands, Russia, Scotland, Semtex, Sophia Hopkins, South Africa, Soviet Union, SRI International, Steven Spielberg, Sweden, teacher, The Miracle Worker, The New York Times Co, the University of Michigan, Theodore Dalrymple, Theodore Kaufman, Time Magazine, Tuscany, U.S. government, U.S. intelligence, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, University of Cologne, University of Cologne’s Faculty, University of Michigan, USD, Viareggio, Vietnam, Vittorio Tredici, Volkischer Beobachter, writer, Yi script
A lot of nasty things go on behind closed doors. Free from scrutiny, groups, governments, and companies often get up to no good, safe in the belief that their images will remain squeaky clean, no matter how filthy their actions may be. If not for the brave actions and dogged determination of a few men [...]
Posted by Geoff Shakespeare on Thursday, May 5, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Nature, People, Politics · Tagged aches, Afghanistan, Al Gore, America, Assange, Bernstein, Bernstein Investment Research And Management Inc, Bob Woodward, brand new drug epidemic, Bureau of Fisheries, C.I.A., California, cancer, CBS, CBS Corporation, chemical pesticides, Chicago, Church of Scientology, cruel and inequitable machinery, Democratic National Headquarters, Detroit, Edward R. Murrow, Environmental Protection Agency, fiction writer, food, Food and Drug Administration, gary coleman, Gary Webb, George W. Bush, hacker and software programmer, Illinois, Investigative journalism, Iraq, Israel, Joseph McCarthy, Journalism, journalist, Julian Assange, Lincoln Steffens, London Correspondent, Los Angeles, Mass media, master journalist, michigan, Middle East, Muckraker, Murrow, Nancy Reagan, Nicaragua, pains, passionate consumer advocate, President of the United States, Rachel Carson, Ralph Nader, Reagan Administration, research, Samuel Hopkins Adams, scientist, See It Now, Seymour Hersh, Sinclair, software programmer, Soviet Union, Supreme Court, tangled web, the Blitz, the New York Evening Post, The New Yorker, the Washington Post, The Washington Post Company, United States, Upton Sinclair, Vietnam, vigorous, Walter Cronkite, White House, Wikileaks
There are many beautiful animals on this great planet. Some are familiar to us because we’ve seen them in person, on one of the many television shows devoted to animals, or in school books or biology textbooks. Other animals are rare. So rare, in fact, that you may have never heard of them. Or, you [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, April 28, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Animals · Tagged addax, Argentina, Australia, Biology, bumblebee bat, Cambodia, Chile, cuba, Dugong, EDGE Species, Europe, fish, fisherman, Frilled shark, frilled sharks, ichthyophis kohtaoensis, Italy, Kakapo, Laos, Mammal, monito del monte, Monte, most rare animals, New Zealand, Olm, Proteidae, rare animals, rarest animals, Sahara Desert, saola, scientist, Sirenians, Solenodon, Thailand, triangular shaped head, Vietnam, Zoology
Big as America’s military hubris may be, Vietnam was a terrible failure, also one which has been given unyielding film treatment. In hindsight, there’s no denying that the bodies which lied needlessly in waste were in vein and for a cause too idealistic to warrant such entirely-symbolic bloodshed. That said, you don’t blame the cattle [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Tuesday, March 15, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged 4th of July, actor /director, America, apocalypse now, born on the fourth of july, Bruce Springsteen-esque, Bubba, Colin Farrell, Deer Hunter, dramatist and stand-up comedian, Entertainment_Culture, film, Forrest Gump, full metal jacket, Good Morning, good morning vietnam, John Lennon-fan, Marlon Brando, Matthew Modine, military, Morning, Movies, Oliver Stone, Outline of the Vietnam War, Pittsburgh, river Styx, Robert Downey Jr., robin williams, steel mills, styx, The Deer Hunter, tigerland, Tom Cruise, tropic thunder, United States, Vietnam, Vietnam War, Vietnam War films, we were soldiers, wheel-chair
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, 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
To some travelers, the food is just as important as anything else a destination has to offer. For these foodies, only the best will do, so this is a list of destinations that will satisfy the appetite of any traveler. 10. Singapore (Singapore) Borrowing from Chinese, Indian, Malaysian, Tamil and Peranakan cuisines, the food in [...]
Posted by Loni Perry on Monday, March 29, 2010 at 8:55 am
Filed under Food, Travel · Tagged Africa, African cuisine, alcohol, American cuisine, Asian cuisine, Bangkok, banned food, Britain, British food, chef, Chomp Chomp Food Center, cuisine, dessert, drink, eat, food, food and drink, foodies, foods, France, French cuisine, Gordon Ramsay, gourmet, gourmet cities, gross food, Hawaii Food Tours, Hawaiian cuisine, Italian cuisine, Italy, Korean cuisine, London, Malaysian cuisine, Mexico, Michelin, Middle East, morocco, Napa Valley, New York, New York City, Paris, restaurant, restaurants, Sicily, Singapore, Singaporean cuisine, Spain, street food, Thai cuisine, top 10 gourmet, TopTenz, United Kingdom, United States, Vietnam
You will notice an anti-war stance with this list. John Wayne is noticeable by his absence! The films have a common mission and that is to tell the truth as the writers and directors see it. Before I receive a deluge of comments on why ‘Saving Private Ryan’ isn’t included, I think that the first [...]
Posted by Anne Iredale on Wednesday, April 29, 2009 at 2:47 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged All Quiet on the Western Front, American film directors, apocalypse now, Benjamin Willard, born on the fourth of july, das boot, donald sutherland, elliot gould, film, fourth of July, Francis Ford Coppola, full metal jacket, Heart of Darkness, John Gielgud, john wayne, Joseph Conrad, Kirk Douglas, Lawrence Olivier, Lewis Milestone, Liam Neeson, Marlon Brando, Martin Sheen, MASH, Mickey Mouse Club, Nick Nolte, Oh, Oliver Stone, Oskar Schindler, Paths of Glory, Ralph Fiennes, Richard Attenborough, robert altman, Ron Kovic, saving private ryan, Schindler's List, Sean Penn, stanley kubrick, Steven Spielberg, Terence Malick, the Oscar, Thin Red Line, Tom Cruise, top 10 lists, u boat, Vietnam, Vietnam War, Vietnam War films, War, war movies, What a Lovely War, wolfgang petersen, world war i, world war ii
People have sung protest songs throughout human history. Wherever people are oppressed or united in a common struggle, someone will voice strong feelings in song. The 1960s came to be known as the decade for protest with the twin causes of the Vietnam War and the lack of civil rights for African Americans. Some of [...]
Posted by Anne Iredale on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 5:52 am
Filed under Music · Tagged A Change Is Gonna Come, Activism, America, anti war protesters, Arlo Guthrie, blowin in the wind, bob dylan, Bobby Darin, call to freedom, causes of the vietnam war, Country Joe and the Fish, Democrat, Donovan, freewheelin bob dylan, Give Peace a Chance, God, inspiration, Jean Ritchie, joan baez, Joe McDonald, John Lennon, lyrics, Mick Softley, Music, Neil Young, Peace, pete seeger, peter paul and mary, Phil Ochs, protest song, protest songs, religion, rock band, Sam Cooke, singers, song, Songs, The Byrds, The War Drags On, Timothy Leary, Tommy Smothers, turn turn turn, universal soldier, Vietnam, Vietnam War, War, Yoko Ono