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Sunday, December 21, 2008
EyeKons
Posted by Steve
The cover image for Time's Person of the Year, President-Elect
Barack Obama, was not an official photograph, but a newer (smiling) version of Shepard Fairey's now-ersatz official and decidedly
ubiquitous portrait, which has been elevated to icon status. What other images have this distinction? I can think of Milton
Glaser's Dylan, Avedon's Beatles, as well as portraits of Mao, Marilyn,
and Che. Can you think of other portraits--drawn, painted, or
photographed--with as much pictorial recognition? Let me know what you think in the comments! Celebrity | Documentary | Photography
12/21/2008 10:38:17 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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Tuesday, October 21, 2008
I Want My 3rd Reich TV!
Posted by Steve
Television was introduced by RCA in the United States at the 1939 New York World's Fair (bottom), but actually premiered in Nazi Germany in 1935, beating out the competition here and in Great Britain. Reich Broadcast Director Eugen Hadamovsky (who was also a deputy of propaganda--and who I quote in Iron Fists) launched "Greater German Television," which broadcast entertainment and political programming into the homes of a mere few thousand Berliners who owned sets. The hope was that everyone would eventually be a proud recipient. The extraordinary Spiegel TV documentary, Television Under The Swastika, by Michael Kloft is now available in the United States as a DVD but also on the web in its entirety here and here. It's well worth a look to see the birth of TV and never-before-seen programs (including variety, exercise, and dance shows, featuring a Nazi cowgirl hopping through a lariat and a tennis player balancing tennis balls, as well as rare footage of Adolf Hitler himself) direct from Nazi Germany. The film certainly underscores how visual media played a major role in the banality of evil.  Documentary | Propaganda | Television | Videos
10/21/2008 7:53:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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