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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: wars, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. #774 – World War I: Why They Fought by Rebecca Rissman

Today is Veteran’s Day, the perfect day to remember not only the brave men and women who fought for this country’s safety and freedom, but also a war that stunned many—the first World War. November 11th, 2015 marks the 96th anniversary of Armistice Day, the date Germany and the Allies signed an agreement to stop …

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2. Celebrate Star Wars Day with new Lego prequel recap video, new Blu-ray set


It’s billed as “The Fastest and Funniest LEGO Star Wars story ever told…The Prequel!” and it shows that when you have access to ALL the Lego sets, you can make a pretty bitchin’ Lego toon .

May 4th is celebrated around the galaxy as Star Wars Day not because it’s when the original STAR WARS opened (that would be May 25, 1977) but because it’s a pun on “May the Fourth Be With You.” It is celebrated by gradually replacing humans with droids and disappointing expectations.

Lucasfilms got in on the celebration by revealing details of the STAR WARS 9-disc Blu-ray release, which was announced today on starwars.com (Site is loading slowly.) According to Rob Bricken, this massive set STILL won’t include the ORIGINAL trilogies — you know the badass ’70s one where Han shot first and all? We can’t believe we passed up buying the original video tapes thinking “Those will never go away!”

A note on the above Lego film: notice how fast AOTC gets recapped? That’s because there was no story!

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5 Comments on Celebrate Star Wars Day with new Lego prequel recap video, new Blu-ray set, last added: 5/5/2011
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3. Mind Your Own Business–or Not

In one of my earlier blogs I talked a bit about thinking that most people want to be liked. It probably varies a little from one person to another as to how much they want to be liked, or maybe even to the extent of certain people not caring a hoot about being liked.

I think I even wrote about a newspaper in my home town of Portland, the Oregonian, which ran a column when I was a teenager telling people what to do to be liked. Their formula was to have people give compliments to others to achieve great popularity. I couldn’t do that then or now.

My dad’s formula was to agree with everybody, whether he did or not. That didn’t work for me then and it still doesn’t. However if I do disagree I usually don’t start battle with them; I just let it go and move on to speak to someone else .. until last weekend.

I was at a dinner party having a grand old time when the conversation got around to politics and the world situation, or should I say mess, that we are in right now. The talk got to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan which my particular group of dinner partners thought were wars “not worth fighting.”
Then someone commented, “I think no war is worth fighting for.

If you’ve read Becoming Alice you would know immediately why I would disagree vehemently with that statement. I hesitated. If I expressed my contrary opinion, would I lose that person’s friendship? I like her. I wouldn’t want to that to happen. What to do?

“I must disagree,” I said finally. “The threat of having to live under the rule of Hitler caused a war that was necesary and worth fighting for.” There! I said it. My grandparents were killed in that war. And if Hitler would have succeeded, which he almost did, I think a whole lot more of us would have been killed.

No one responded to my challenge. The conversation took another turn. I have yet to find out if I’ve lost a friend. But, if I have, she is not someone I would want to keep with the group I respect as my friends.


Filed under: Becoming Alice, Personalities, wwii Tagged: Becoming Alice, Friendship, Popularity, relationships, Wars, wwii 3 Comments on Mind Your Own Business–or Not, last added: 3/8/2011
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4. Axis Sally - The American Voice of Nazi Germany

She started out with a dream in a small-town in Ohio. The year was 1928 when she walked into a newspaper office and tearfully declared the love of her life had abandoned her, pregnant and alone. She then took out an add asking for any information leading to the whereabouts of her lost love. The next day she proceeded to write a suicide note, leading the authorities to the top of a bridge, where she sat perched ready to jump…
Mildred Gillars always had a flair for the dramatic and was desperate to be on stage, in the lime-light at any cost. However, after several failed attempts as a Broadway actress, “Midge” followed the love of her life to Germany hoping to some day be his wife.

When war broke out in September 1939, she had already been living there for five years and refused to flee back to America. Was it pride, prejudice, love or the hunger for fame that led to the start of her infamous career as Axis Sally?

Axis Sally, The American Voice of Nazi Germany by Richard Lucas is a fascinating look at the life and trials of Mildred Gillars a.k.a Axis Sally.

For more information or to order your own copy visit Amazon



2 Comments on Axis Sally - The American Voice of Nazi Germany, last added: 1/26/2011
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5. Irvin Kershner really was a different generation of filmmaker

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We are remiss in not mentioning that Irvin Kershner, (above left) director of The Empire Strikes Back, died over the weekend. Kersh, as he was known, was the last person ever known to argue with George Lucas, as when the director decreed that Harrison Ford’s ad libbed “I know,” was a better line than “I love you, too.” Although Kershner was hailed for years as the man who made Star Wars the epic legend it was to become, he only only directed a bare handful of films afterwards–the Frank Miller-penned RoboCop 2, and Never Say Never Again. 57 when he made Empire, he settled into a long, comfortable old age after directing the movie that helped make nerd-dom the force it was to become.

While perusing obits, we came across this quote:

“When I finally accepted the assignment, I knew that it was going to be a dark film, with more depth to the characters than in the first film,” he said. “It took a few years for the critics to catch up with the film and to see it as a fairy tale rather than a comic book.”

which shows a bit how times have changed. Would any director now dare use the “comic book” term as one of castigation? If anything, “fairy tale” would be more negative.

Bonus interview link — it’s nice that Kershner lived to enjoy the 30th anniversary celebrations for his masterwork.

3 Comments on Irvin Kershner really was a different generation of filmmaker, last added: 12/1/2010
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