If you have a relative who fought in WW1, and want to know a bit more about them, reply to this and at 10am I'll do a research stream for a bit. We'll see what we can find, live.
We won't have time for any deep dives, but we can have a quick look on the big online sources (including war diaries). Talk a bit of history about what they might have seen/done and it may give you ideas/tips for how to research beyond that yourself.
Should add: needs to be British forces they've served in.
Obviously if none of you have anyone you want looking up, then no worries! I'll just skip the stream today.
But seems an appropriate way to potentially spend an hour or two on Remembrance Sunday.
He also, in a very 70s/80s way, is the absolute opposite of the definition of masculinity at the time.
He's a quiet, scruffy but deeply caring man who uses his brain and words, not his fists.
As a kid who wasn't into sports I was FASCINATED by that being 'allowed' of a man.
Columbo is the very epitome of the 'greatest generation' concept, in US terms. He's a poor kid from New York who fought in Europe in WW2 and returned home to become a cop.
And he's passed over for promotion, and looked down on by LA society.
Something to remember when those who care passionately about politics start arguing, shortly about whether Biden's policies were leftwing or not leftwing enough.
Most voters barely give a shit about policies. Or if they do, it's probably one specific local one.
There's no mythical voter sitting there, holding two manifestos, waiting for the kettle to boil so they can have a good read.
It's all relationships, upbringing, education, perceived trust and how angry/not angry they are about a local traffic scheme or bin collection days.
"they look like less of a shit than the other one" has won more elections than any fully-costed policy ever has.
Which is precisely WHY this stuff needs to be properly discussed by parents, schools etc. as a CAREER.
it's about taking that dream and helping them genuinely start thinking, FOR THEMSELVES about what that involves and means.
And that's ACE. Honestly. Parents:
You know how much shit you need your kids to do in life, that you can get them to have to think about THEMSELVES if they say "i want to stream fortnite?"
That is, that it was part of the adventure of me first realising:
1) Shit. I'm going to need a job one day 2) I don't want to do boring stuff 3) I'm NEVER going to be a footballer, am I? 4) A lot of my idols are in games 5) Hang on, can i play them FOR WORK?!
On top of that, kids RIGHT NOW watch/background watch streamers in the same way that we used to watch TV.
And they're RARELY watching small streamers - unless they know them personally. They're watching big streamers, at the top of the game, with sponsors.
You can find my full long read on the history of the British Space Programme. Which was one of the most creative things this country ever did, and involved taking Nazi technology (V2s) and making it a force for good, is here: