LGM film club
On this day where the Supreme Court puts what should be the nail in the coffin of one unlawful president, I thought watching Sam Ervin completely eviscerate John Ehrlichman was.
I actually enjoy watching this sort of thing, a corporate propaganda film from 1969 about a British tobacco firm that follows the whole process from the Virginia tobacco growing process.
Happy Vaccination Day! This is actually a day to celebrate, the first time someone received a COVID vaccination from a carefully vetted and approved vaccine. It was in Britain and.
I may have linked to this before, back in the days before I created Film Club, but since we started the day with Samuel Slater, I figured we'd end it.
I loved Barcelona when I was there 10 years ago and of course Gaudi was a huge part of that. But I had never seen Hiroshi Teshigahara's film about Gaudi's.
Since I've been talking about child labor again thanks to the Supreme Court case and Neil Kaytal's immoral life choices, it's worth making tonight's film Children Who Labor, from 1912..
We started our day with women's suffrage so let's end it there too, with this 1912 anti-suffrage film, A Lively Affair. The messaging on this is horrible, basically saying that.
You don't have to know much Spanish to find the footage of this Mexican woman watching Rachael Ray teach how to make "Mexican" pozole pretty damn funny. The best part.