Pay attention to the last little bit. As the narrator, Spencer Welles states racism is not only divisive to us all as a species but scientific untenable, or more simply put by Welles "scientifically wrong."
Loved the Journey of Man. I used to show a clip of this in my Humanities course. The section where he suggest to a Navajo guy that we all come from Africa and the Navajo cites a local creation story as a counter. I wonder if there are other clips available--would be great to use in other classes.
Cool I found the clip I used to play off my old vhs tap in my class. It's #12 (12/14) on YouTube. Love this bit as it demonstrates the complexities of integrating science and religion and how often race plays a role, i.e., white guy telling an indigenous fellow where he came from. This really comes out at about 6 min where the Navajo guy calls Wells on his use of the term myth. Certainly some tension but he comes around a bit as they go along.
The trio vs. the pirate-ladyman Recently lis opined that no native Utard remembers Lighthouse 20, the kid show that was broadcast on UHF channel 20. Now I have a slight dispute with lis, in that I remember the pirate on the show was played by a woman, and she recalls someone very different (a man, I presume). Now Lighthouse 20 was not by any means my favorite show (hell I think it replaced Gillagan's Island!), but I do remember it--not really fondly but I remember it. The real purpose of my writing is that I made the comparison of Lighthouse 20 to Hotel Balderdash--a show that apparently ran for 10 years on channel four here in SLC. Now this show was the bomb; not only did it start at 6:00 am 6:45 am and show nothing but 30's-late 40's Warner Brothers cartoons (you know, Bugs and Daffy, but not Porky Pig and certainly not that crap WB churned out from the 50s onward.) These cartoons, of course, were made for adults and the humor was mostly sophisticated in a slapstick kind...
This should help you out with your next TV script: Television Tropes & Idioms . Don't forget, if you are doing a love story, your characters must " meet cute ." Come to think of it, does anyone on TV ever meet their girlfriend or boyfriend in any other way but cute? Does any character just meet their potential mate at church or at school or are introduced through a mutual friend? Do they ever just meet up at a party and say hey "do you want to go out?" Isn't there always and necessarily a contrivance to get the two together? Aren't jumbled packages, quaint misunderstandings, or prat falls always involved? Do we know a relationship is not real when "cute" is not a factor in a TV couples' meeting? Well that's why they call it a trope , eh? How does the need to have a "cute" meeting with a potential mate factor into our own perceptions of the rightness or wrongness of a relationship?
It is 1975 A solo dog runs across Scene Panning back The camera reveals Wreckage Two cars have Collided, 70's Cars Big boxy beasts With lots of plastic Wood And chrome, plastic Chrome for miles and Miles Slumped over the Wheel of one is Lucille Ball She was drunk, of course Having just Tonight Showed In the day, because day Filming and day Drinking And you would go to A doctor and be offered Scotch The other driver is Groucho escaping his Abuser 70's TV comedy Ensues with biopic Pathos
Loved the Journey of Man. I used to show a clip of this in my Humanities course. The section where he suggest to a Navajo guy that we all come from Africa and the Navajo cites a local creation story as a counter. I wonder if there are other clips available--would be great to use in other classes.
ReplyDeleteCool I found the clip I used to play off my old vhs tap in my class. It's #12 (12/14) on YouTube. Love this bit as it demonstrates the complexities of integrating science and religion and how often race plays a role, i.e., white guy telling an indigenous fellow where he came from. This really comes out at about 6 min where the Navajo guy calls Wells on his use of the term myth. Certainly some tension but he comes around a bit as they go along.
ReplyDeleteBill Nye (The Science Guy) also has an excellent episode on race. I'll post here to SigNo.
ReplyDelete