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Tamlin Nicholl
Registrace 18. 03. 2008
Video
Buckminster Fuller at "Art Net" in 1974
zhlédnutí 31Před 6 měsíci
Buckminter Fuller speaking at "Art Net" Art Gallery located in an old fire station at 14 West Central Street, London on Tuesday the 26th of November 1974
Buckminster Fuller and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
zhlédnutí 31Před 9 měsíci
First International Symposium on the Science of Creative Intelligence, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA, July 1971
Leo McKern - Socrates
zhlédnutí 66Před rokem
"The Drinking Party" November 14th 1965 Directed by Jonathan Miller Based on The Symposium of Plato
Muster Up The Cour'ge
zhlédnutí 287Před rokem
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt S03E08 Maya Rudolph as Dionne Warwick singing "Stronger Than The Storm" to raise money for victims of Hurricane Tammi Joining me now is Tenafly's own Lea Michele, and we're gonna sing an original song that interestingly enough was written by no one. Hit it! ♪ We're stronger than the hurricane ♪ ♪ From Piscataway right up to Wayne ♪ ♪ New Jersey's gonna be okay ♪ ♪ Even...
Joni Mitchell - The Fiddle And The Drum (The Dick Cavett Show)
zhlédnutí 399Před rokem
19th of August 1969
Paul Tillich Interview From Huston Smith's "The Search For America"
zhlédnutí 344Před rokem
Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East, 1959
Nice Persons Are Needed Everywhere
zhlédnutí 66Před rokem
Pat Stanley and Jerry Lewis, The Ladies Man, 1961
John's Face When Yoko First Says Woman Is The Nigger Of The World
zhlédnutí 111Před 2 lety
The Waiting Room Of John's Dentist, London, 12th December 1968
Why Do You Like Rollercoasters So Much Anyway?
zhlédnutí 702Před 2 lety
Ellie Kemper and Lisa Kudrow, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt S02E13
Diane Keaton - There's A Lull In My Life
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Diane Keaton - There's A Lull In My Life
Paul Tillich Interview, Pittsburgh, 1961
zhlédnutí 489Před 2 lety
Paul Tillich Interview, Pittsburgh, 1961
Joni Mitchell - A Case Of You (Isle of Wight, 1970)
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Joni Mitchell - A Case Of You (Isle of Wight, 1970)
Joni Mitchell - The Gallery (Isle of Wight, 1970)
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Joni Mitchell - The Gallery (Isle of Wight, 1970)
Joni Mitchell - California (Isle of Wight, 1970)
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Joni Mitchell - California (Isle of Wight, 1970)
Joni Mitchell - My Old Man/Willy (Isle of Wight, 1970)
zhlédnutí 814Před 2 lety
Joni Mitchell - My Old Man/Willy (Isle of Wight, 1970)
Joni Mitchell - Woodstock (Isle of Wight, 1970)
zhlédnutí 4,2KPřed 2 lety
Joni Mitchell - Woodstock (Isle of Wight, 1970)
Joni Mitchell - For Free (Isle of Wight, 1970)
zhlédnutí 717Před 2 lety
Joni Mitchell - For Free (Isle of Wight, 1970)
Joni Mitchell - That Song About The Midway (Isle of Wight, 1970)
zhlédnutí 3,2KPřed 2 lety
Joni Mitchell - That Song About The Midway (Isle of Wight, 1970)
My dad always told me about this episode and it’s crazy seeing this as a high schooler compared to people who saw this when they were younger
Good way to ask it
I haven't heard this in years.
This was one of my favorite lines in the movie because it hinted at her deep sadness and pain .
Done during the Double Fantasy sessions.
It was written or recorded during the Double Fantasy sessions? Is that John on guitar?
@@j.c7719 Yes with Hugh McCraken & Earl Slick. So was Walking On Thin Ice (The Last Days of John Lennon, chapter 12, p.175).
@@MS-oz8wv Thankyou, I didn’t know that. Do you happen to know if the track was remixed for this album?
@@j.c7719 It’s one of Yoko’s tracks that didn’t make the cut for DD but ended up on or connected to Season of Glass
The Chemistry between Richard and Jean was Palpable❤❤❤❤
I thought that Jesus is stronger than hell...
Fuller mastered some ideas of efficiency and genuinely interesting data but he certainly didn’t master efficiency in communication of his ideas. He obscured and made it difficult as hell. His neologisms and eccentricity make him seem like a quack that worked against him too. He ultimately failed didn’t he?
I loved Betty Aberlin, she seemed so caring and loving. Her voice was so soothing.
Such a difficult question answered honestly, tenderly, and lovingly.
1960s style poetry
hitette
Wasn’t expecting this to get me so choked up
Even today its a knee-jerk reaction from parents to hide children away from the realities of the world. And while it is important to make sure their mental well-being is taken care of, its important that they are included. When crazy things happen in the world, its important to let them know that things will be okay.
The dissonant glockenspiel music in the background sounds like how it felt when adults spoke of things you did not understand as a child.
I love how Mr. Rogers addressed this situation. This was a very tragic incident that happened. Unfortunately, the mass media showed graphic scenes over and over of the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and it was probably the only thing that was on tv the day it happened. A lot of adults kept the tv on. That's really heavy for not only children to see, but a lot of teenagers as well. It's so wonderful what Mr. Rogers did here. I love the scene with Betty and Daniel.
“I usually stay away from being carried away but one day I saw a silver horse, I thought he might take me to that somewhere high, I thought he might take me to that deep blue sky” One of the greatest songwriters of all time, criminally underrated rhythmically genius lyricist and melodist and that guitar tone is stunning.
Didn't Ginger Baker play something sim·i·lar with Cream?
Fred rogers was a marine Corp sniper, special forces. Who Rah!
Fred Rogers never served in the military.
@@oliviacase6417 he really did, he was a government asset and served with Will Greene in south east Asia in the mid 50s. Mr Roger's spoke 5 languages. Alot of whats on Wikipedia was a cover. Fred Roger's bio is classified.
@@oliviacase6417 it's a matter of fact he was a part of a special operations group that escorted civilian government assets in post ww2 Europe ,Korea and southeast Asia.
Beautiful Yoko.
Gripping performance 🕊️💐✨
This still really chokes me up! I was already in school by 1968 very much aware of the JFK assassination and the nightly news coverage off the battlefield of the burgeoning Vietnam war, which I suspected were all boys' eventual fate. Shortly beforehand, I renounced the toy weaponry boys routinely got, never to pick it up again!
This show is nothing but full of positive vibes, rip to Mr. Rogers...
Magnificent. Her songwriting is so incredible and this song absolutely rocks and is such a hauntingly beautiful account of grief.
Mr. Rogers explained it in a way that the children could understand. Not by talking down to them,but explaining it in a simpler,more friendly manner. The media has always sensationalized death. Partly out of their duty,partly out of ratings. You almost never hear of people that stop others from harming people. Mr. Rogers was one of those once in a lifetime people. And we are infintely sadder when he passed.
Even a well-meaning children's show might choose to needlessly infantilize the child subject. Daniel wasn't taken to the picnic, and Lady Aberlin doesn't choose to stay with Daniel to sublimate his fears. The message that it is okay to be afraid is strongly reinforced by the plot. Some difficult topics, even for children, are not best solved by soothing. It really is masterful how Rogers handles this topic.
That wasn't in 1968.
Yes it was. June 1968 RFK was assassinated in Los Angeles, California. You maybe thinking of his brother JFK’s 1963 assassination. This episode aired in the First Season, the same day RFK died.
hits me hard.
lol
Cool song. Very cool.
I love Tina Fey for this. Jesus IS strong as hell.
Yoko is a classical artist, untouchable, no wonder John loved her, shocking that so many fools hate her.
I love the fact that everytime i click on this video, no adverts play
Jesus is strong as hell 🙌
Yes and even stronger! ❤
Wow. This is when real learning was important! No participation trophies back then. BTW, never realized how hot she was lol
This is the version of A Story
This still takes my breath away a little. The likes of Miss Joni Mitchell will not pass our way again. So grateful I got to walk this earth during her time.
I absolutely love this quote and I've taken it to heart myself. Everytime I visit an amusement park, I just let it all out on the rides and it really is cathartic!
Tillich on reincarnation starts at 13:43 .
All the people who say Yoko only loved John for his money and fame - listen to this song. Heartbreaking.
Why do they say tht even though she came from a rich family.
People are ignorant and like to give attention to negativity. Yoko loved John and John loved Yoko. You can feel her loss through this song and the intro of Sean recalling his father, shows a genuine declaration of her love for her late husband.
Masterpiece...
Who else came here because of the song 'Bacall' by Blue Noir?
She said You Bastard you hate us you hate me. We had everything you F*""*er. The last part was removed via sensory
❤
*And I shouted out who killed the Kennedys, When after all it was you and me*
Mr. Rogers guided us through an assassination. Jesus, the things he'd do for the children.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I like to think Lady Aberlin brought Daniel a cupcake from the picnic later that day
Nightly the news would broadcast from the battlefields of Vietnam and show bodies being removed on stretchers. That war deeply affected me. Fred Rogers is not just talking about Bobby Kennedy's assassination
I believe he was. His only goal here was to help children with this specific horrific event. If anything, he never got into things that were overtly political as his only concern where children's welfare. Obviously, that could get political (look at our current pathetic times), but this was such a sudden, unexpected, and highly visible event, I believe this was less about even the event itself, but it's effect on children. And not long after this, he did testify before Congress regarding funding for public broadcasting, and actually moved a hardliner, not easily moved, to continue the funding. But even there his only concern was the children.
@@loge10 While I agree with you, the applicability of the lesson of this segment to the horrors of the Vietnam war still holds. Perhaps the assassination was a wake-up call to Rogers that the segment needed to be made.
@@SaltpeterTaffyActually, and looking at it and I would say you're correct, although he seemed to be speaking of violence in general towards the end of the post that children were exposed to. I wonder what he would say (or feel) about what children were exposed to now - and the condition of the human race at present... Which, again, children are exposed to at a much higher level than even the late '60s. Hard to think of ol' Fred despairing, but I'm sure it would be the extremely painful. Sad the children don't have anything remotely like him to help them - and they're probably not getting anything from families who are as caught up in the pathology that has overwhelmed our society and kids are exposed to at an early age without the capacity to understand emotionally. Hell, I'm 69 and I don't understand emotionally. And I'm not just talking about violence, I'm talking about no stability in any area of our lives.
@ Agreed. A generation of overwhelmed children have become parents and bred a generation of overwhelmed children, and the wisdom of Fred Rogers is lost to digital content mill of history. We are fortunate that Mister Rogers' Neighborhood is (almost entirely) not lost media. It's up to the new parents of the world to find it for themselves and provide it for their children, because it is not being offered freely anymore.
This is history and how Mr Roger's address it was awesome his words are true today.
Let’s play together find me at Play WholEarth Game 🎉😮
17 04 23 - 07:39 am