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May. 3rd, 2023 10:08 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Work was sluggish - so I revised my novel and flirted with potential trips. Currently looking at Canadian excursions - it's for July and August, so I don't want to go where it is hot.
Kriplau sent me a catalogue, which while tempting, I'm not a huge yoga enthusiast. It bores me. Also I can't physically do most of it, never could.
Oh well, like I said previously, it's not like I'm not going anywhere. I'm visiting my brother, his wife, my niece and my Mother upstate and in Mass in about two-three weeks.
**
Killing John Wayne
Took another brief detour to dump a ton of information about the atomic bomb testing in the US and Russia from roughly 1950-1961 or thereabouts. And all the thyroid cancer cases that popped up in St. George Utah around that period of time. In children, no less. Plus all the gastrointestinal cancer cases, leukemia, and various others - that up until that point had been relatively rare and unknown.
Add to that Dick Powell who directed the film is diagnosed with throat cancer, which spreads in 1962. Allyson originally thinks smoking is the cause, but later she blames the movie.
They really go into detail about the atomic bomb testing. At one point they test the effect of a hydrogen bomb on towns and people, by setting up mannikens in a town, outside of the fake people, everything else is real. And nothing is left standing after the bomb. (You'd think Hiroshima and Nagasaki would have gotten this across or even the bombing of Dresden, but alas no.) When the cancer cases pop up, along with all the protests - it's actually the protests and politicians that shut it down above ground - they go below ground and test. Because they did studies and discovered the radiation doesn't affect anyone or pollute the air or soil if tested below ground in various caverns and crevices. (And we wonder why we have earthquakes and natural disasters.) They considered testing the bombs in space - but an act was passed between Russia and the US to prevent that.
(Basically to keep those pesky military scientists from destroying the universe or attracting an alien race to eliminate us before we hurt anyone with our stupidity.) Russia is slightly more stupid than the US and tests a massive hydrogen bomb somewhere in Siberia, which was so huge it blew out the glass in buildings up to 200,000 miles away.
Finally they pass a bunch of laws to stop the testing. Because of all the cancer cases and protests. If you are wondering why cancer is so prevalent in the US, and elsewhere? That's why. France and Europe and China were also testing bombs. And not necessarily implementing safeguards.
After listening to this, I'm beginning to think Cancer is a disease created by humans trying to play God. Ego and hubris are going to kill us one of these days.
Then the book detours again into people's Hollywood Careers. Hayward got an Academy Award for I Want to Live, so The Congueor didn't hurt her. The only one it kind of bit in the butt (outside of Hughes) careerwise was Wayne - who was front and center - and he didn't look like the all American ideal, because of the makeup. Dick Powell - went into television, after doing a lot of lackluster war films (which while mediocre were better than the Conqueror.) RKO sputtered and died after a bit. Huges went insane and bought every copy of the film imaginable no matter the price. He didn't want it in the public domain at all. So it was pretty much unavailable because of Hughes.
It's not clear why. He could have done it out of guilt or embarrassment. But the general consensus is that he did it - to keep the film all to himself. Basically out of selfishness. (Although he probably did us all a favor.) He loved the film, and watched it incessantly. He would retreat to a room in his mansion and sit around naked, urinating in bottles, and muttering to himself. He became increasingly paranoid. And reclusive as a result.
Hughes also hired starlets (women actresses) to service him. They thought they'd become stars or get roles. But they were basically there just for him. He did this while married to Jean Peters, possibly the only woman he ever loved, assuming he was capable of such a thing.
Sounds like a 1950s/60s version of Trump, doesn't he? Have money, be an asshole.
Still in a reading slump. I decided to pick up the sequel to River Enchanted, entitled a Fire Burns Below, I think. I keep forgetting the title. The first book ended kind of abruptly, so I wanted to see what happened to the characters.
I need a good book to read. The sort that you can't wait to pick up.
Kriplau sent me a catalogue, which while tempting, I'm not a huge yoga enthusiast. It bores me. Also I can't physically do most of it, never could.
Oh well, like I said previously, it's not like I'm not going anywhere. I'm visiting my brother, his wife, my niece and my Mother upstate and in Mass in about two-three weeks.
**
Killing John Wayne
Took another brief detour to dump a ton of information about the atomic bomb testing in the US and Russia from roughly 1950-1961 or thereabouts. And all the thyroid cancer cases that popped up in St. George Utah around that period of time. In children, no less. Plus all the gastrointestinal cancer cases, leukemia, and various others - that up until that point had been relatively rare and unknown.
Add to that Dick Powell who directed the film is diagnosed with throat cancer, which spreads in 1962. Allyson originally thinks smoking is the cause, but later she blames the movie.
They really go into detail about the atomic bomb testing. At one point they test the effect of a hydrogen bomb on towns and people, by setting up mannikens in a town, outside of the fake people, everything else is real. And nothing is left standing after the bomb. (You'd think Hiroshima and Nagasaki would have gotten this across or even the bombing of Dresden, but alas no.) When the cancer cases pop up, along with all the protests - it's actually the protests and politicians that shut it down above ground - they go below ground and test. Because they did studies and discovered the radiation doesn't affect anyone or pollute the air or soil if tested below ground in various caverns and crevices. (And we wonder why we have earthquakes and natural disasters.) They considered testing the bombs in space - but an act was passed between Russia and the US to prevent that.
(Basically to keep those pesky military scientists from destroying the universe or attracting an alien race to eliminate us before we hurt anyone with our stupidity.) Russia is slightly more stupid than the US and tests a massive hydrogen bomb somewhere in Siberia, which was so huge it blew out the glass in buildings up to 200,000 miles away.
Finally they pass a bunch of laws to stop the testing. Because of all the cancer cases and protests. If you are wondering why cancer is so prevalent in the US, and elsewhere? That's why. France and Europe and China were also testing bombs. And not necessarily implementing safeguards.
After listening to this, I'm beginning to think Cancer is a disease created by humans trying to play God. Ego and hubris are going to kill us one of these days.
Then the book detours again into people's Hollywood Careers. Hayward got an Academy Award for I Want to Live, so The Congueor didn't hurt her. The only one it kind of bit in the butt (outside of Hughes) careerwise was Wayne - who was front and center - and he didn't look like the all American ideal, because of the makeup. Dick Powell - went into television, after doing a lot of lackluster war films (which while mediocre were better than the Conqueror.) RKO sputtered and died after a bit. Huges went insane and bought every copy of the film imaginable no matter the price. He didn't want it in the public domain at all. So it was pretty much unavailable because of Hughes.
It's not clear why. He could have done it out of guilt or embarrassment. But the general consensus is that he did it - to keep the film all to himself. Basically out of selfishness. (Although he probably did us all a favor.) He loved the film, and watched it incessantly. He would retreat to a room in his mansion and sit around naked, urinating in bottles, and muttering to himself. He became increasingly paranoid. And reclusive as a result.
Hughes also hired starlets (women actresses) to service him. They thought they'd become stars or get roles. But they were basically there just for him. He did this while married to Jean Peters, possibly the only woman he ever loved, assuming he was capable of such a thing.
Sounds like a 1950s/60s version of Trump, doesn't he? Have money, be an asshole.
Still in a reading slump. I decided to pick up the sequel to River Enchanted, entitled a Fire Burns Below, I think. I keep forgetting the title. The first book ended kind of abruptly, so I wanted to see what happened to the characters.
I need a good book to read. The sort that you can't wait to pick up.
no subject
Date: 2023-05-04 05:01 pm (UTC)Although appears Niagra is hot too to visit in the summer.