Hollywood's Golden Age was built on a particular set of conditions. Studios owned the entire chain of production, distribution, and exhibition; and what they couldn't own, they used their influence to control. The dream factory made miracles, but it had a terrible appetite. Why are B-movies emulated, when their original purpose was to provide cheap thrills and fill holes in the schedule? What is the real price of stardom? What happens when you make art, and sell it like hog feed?
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Live-Action Disney Films of the 1960s
Supplemental 2
The Voyage of the Damned
Guinness World Records
Operation Ajax
The Woman's Building at the 1893 World's Fair
Bonus: Firsthand Cedar Point
Surrealism
Girl Scouts of the USA
Bonus! C2E2 2018
Charles Guiteau and Leon Czolgosz
Live-Action Disney Films of the 1950s
Convicts in Australia
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
Cedar Point
HH Holmes
Four American Socialists
The Louisiana Purchase Exposition
A Look Back at '17
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The Modern West
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
Killing Time
Twice Removed