Birthdays: John
Adams, Christopher Columbus, English playwright Richard Sheridan,
Ezra Pound, Emily Post, Louis Malle, Henry Winkler is 67,
Charles Atlas, Ruth Gordon,
Claude LeLouch, Dick Gautier, Louis Malle, Ted Williams,
Grace Slick, Diego Maradona
1931- first day shooting on the movie Tarzan the Ape Man,
starring former Olympic Gold Medal swimming champ Johnny Weissmuller.
1936- English Publishers George Allen & Unwin had
received a manuscript from an Oxford languages professor named J.R.R. Tolkein.
Raynar Unwin, the son of the publisher, read it and made a report “ This book
will be a very good read for children from ages 5-7.” So they published “The
Hobbit”.
1938-"THE NIGHT THAT PANICKED AMERICA- 27 year old
Orson Wells broadcast a radio update of
H.G. Well’s story "The War of the Worlds". Despite periodic station
announcements that it was only a fictional re-enactment, people across the U.S.
go bonkers that an actual Martian invasion had landed in Grover’s Mill New
Jersey. In Hollywood
famed actor John Barrymore, drunk as usual, went over to his
kennel of prize winning racing greyhounds and open their
cage doors, saying: "Fend
for yourselves!" In 1949 Equador and 1969 Buffalo NY,
radio stations did updated versions of the broadcast, and they also started
panics.
1947- Bertholt Brecht, the playwright of Mother Courage and
the Threepenny Opera,
testified to the McCarthy HUAC committee. He smoked a large
cigar through the whole
session. Next day, as he had once fled Hitler’s Germany, he
fled the U.S. and settled
in East Germany.
1973- The Carlin Case- Radical radio station WBAI in New York
broadcast hippy comedian George Carlin’s routine about the “Seven Deadly Words”
the naughty words you can’t say on the air.
I can’t write them because children read this column but you all
know what they are anyway. The FCC slapped a heavy fine and
WBAI sued for free speech and the case made it to the Supreme Court. Today the
High Court found for the FCC and those 7 deadly words remain banned from
airwaves today. Aw, Sh*t!
2012- The Walt Disney Company announced it was buying out
George Lucas holdings (including the Star Wars franchise) for $4.05 billion.
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