LGM film club
A week before he died in 1973, Lyndon Johnson sat down for a long interview about his civil rights record. It was the last interview he ever gave. It's worth.
Everyone likes swords. So here's a short 1965 British document on sword factories. They do not look very safe. Also, glad to know that whale oil was still being used.
Since this is NFL Draft weekend, I thought it would be fun to highlight the greatest moment in draft television history, in 1994 when Indianapolis Colts General Manager Bill Tobin.
Today's film is this 1974 British documentary on the horrors of strip mining for coal in Appalachia. Good thing we've learned so, so much in the last 47 years that.
Of all Americans, it's hard to find many worse than the preacher Billy James Hargis. If you've never heard his insanity, do yourself a favor and chase those mangoes about.
MOROCCO, Marlene Dietrich, 1930 Last night, I watched Josef von Sternberg's 1930 film Morocco, which is of cousre famous for Marlene Dietrich's epic drag scene. The film itself is mostly.
Nothing like remembering the good times of 1979, when the Iran hostage crisis went down. Here's an ABC news report six days into the crisis. https://www.youtube.com/embed/A8bC1DEYbI4 This is actually a.
Dedicated to the late great Shock G. https://www.youtube.com/embed/msrq0HjwJUM I am also amused by this blog post noting that Michael Steele looks like Shock G.