culprit
@culprit@lemmy.ml
Ways of Seeing is a 1972 television series of (four) 30-minute films created chiefly by writer John Berger and producer Mike Dibb.
- Comment on Rushmore 3 hours ago:
His favorite game to play outside was cowboys and Indians. Tales of the American West were very popular among boys in Austria and Germany. Books by James Fenimore Cooper and especially German writer Karl May were eagerly read and re-enacted. May, who had never been to the American West, invented a hero named Old Shatterhand, a white man who always won his battles with Native Americans, defeating his enemies through sheer will power and bravery. Young Hitler read and reread every one of May’s books about Old Shatterhand, totaling more than 70 novels. He continued to read them even as Führer. During the German attack on the Soviet Union he sometimes referred to the Russians as Redskins and ordered his officers to carry May’s books about fighting.
- Comment on Rushmore 1 day ago:
- Comment on Jurassic Squawk 6 months ago:
this is ostrich riding erasure
- Comment on Who needs it? 7 months ago:
TikTokTeleMessage
- Comment on Fediverse House at SXSW (March 9-10) 10 months ago:
This is called ‘recuperation’. A classic form of coopting radical disruption back into the folds of the status quo. Think Napster > iTunes > Spotify as one example.