Hogan's Heroes ran 1965-1971:
A campy spy comedy set in a POW camp in Nazi Germany, which feels like a very weird choice.
In poor taste, honestly.
Learning about the actors has given me a new perspective:
First, every major German character was played by a Jewish actor.
Werner Klemperer (Col. Klink) was born in Cologne, Germany in 1920, moved to LA in 1933 with famous composer father Otto.
He did the show on the stipulation that Klink was never the hero in any episode.
He served in the US Army, stationed at Pearl Harbor in WWII.
John Banner was born in Austria in 1910 to Jewish parents, fled during the German "unification" 1938.
He enlisted in the US Army in 1942 & rose to the rank of sergeant.
He lost family members to the Holocaust, although I can't find any specifics.
At one point, John was used as a model in WWII recruiting posters. That's Sgt. Banner on the right.
Leon Askin, who played General Burkhalter was born into a Jewish family in Vienna in 1907.
His parents were murdered in Treblinka, but after months of beatings & abuse, he escaped the Nazis in 1940 and served in the Army Air Corps in WWII, rising to the rank of sergeant.
Howard Caine, who played Gestapo officer Major Hochstetter, was born to a Jewish family in Tennessee in 1926.
Caine served in the US Navy in WWII, fighting in the Pacific Theater.
There's one POW character that I want to spend a little time on: Robert Clary, born 1926 in Paris to Polish Jewish parents.
He was the youngest of 14 children. 10 of them were killed in the Holocaust.
Robert, who died in 2022, was interned at Buchenwald concentration camp
He was tattooed with "A5714". He describes being left in a concrete shower room with a large group, being left with no food for 8 days, waking up next to corpses that were his friends.
"Corporal LeBeau" knew the horror of the Nazi machine first hand.
Clary:
"When the show went on the air, people asked me if I had qualms about doing a comedy dealing with Nazis & concentration camps. I explained that it was about POW's in a Stalag, not a concentration camp... it was like night & day from what we endured in concentration camps"
Most of the rest of the cast were too young to have served in WWII.
Ivan Dixon's role was important as positive portrayal of a black man on TV & supported his ability to be an activist, including serving as President of civil rights group Negro Actors for Action.
So, the series does certainly smack of bad taste. I question the value of portraying Nazis as bumbling or incompetent.
But I think of the specific portrayal of each character by the actor playing them in a new light with this knowledge & I think it changes the meaning for me.
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My hypothesis:
Humans invented hats because we were envious of the marvelous headgear in the animal world.
Let's talk about antlers, horns, ossicones & pronghorns.
#Antlers are shed & regrown every year, composed of bone that begins at a pedicle, base structure that remains after shedding. Antlers are extensions of the the skull.
Mechanism of growth similar to bone HEALING: cartilaginous tissue gives rise to bone coated in skin "velvet".
Antlers usually only form on males, with one exception: female reindeer grow shortened antlers, which may be functional for snow clearing, or challenge between females over scarce food resources.
This 1852 painting by William Firth depicts the moment in 1717 when English poet Alexander Pope declares his undying love to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, and her response is a fit of laughter (brutal!).
Both characters are worth knowing in a little more depth.
Alexander Pope is best remembered for 18th century essays & poetry: "Rape of the Lock", Illiad & Odyssey translations. He coined phrases: "damn with faint praise" and "to err is human".
Spinal form of tuberculosis made him a hunchback, at full height he stood 4 ft 6 in (1.4 m).
He made enemies easily, made them the subject of satirical portrayals, as with the case of Lady Mary.
He spent most of his life striking back at her in prose for refusing his love, portraying her as vapid or immoral or of poor poetic talent.
Let's talk about Point Roberts, WA: the tiny American peninsula on Vancouver Island that can only be reached by driving 25 miles through Canada and clearing two international border crossings. It's < 5 sq miles, home to ~1,000 residents.
It's a very AMERICAN story.
Originally Coastal Squamish (Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw) lands, post-1812, the British & Americans co-occupied a land they called "Oregon Country" (US) or "Columbia District" (UK).
US Pres. James Polk was elected on a campaign of "Fifty-Four Forty or Fight".
What does that mean?
The belligerently proposed 54° 40'N Oregon boundary would have given much of the ice-free Pacific Coast to the US, landlocking Western Canada.
The US were prepared to fight the British over this. The British were not so keen on a prolonged war, so were willing to negotiate.
J.B.S Haldane: "The Universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we CAN suppose."
Let's talk about the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum:
It can 'feed' on sunlight; gives birth to live, pregnant clone-babies & needs to be bacterially infected to survive.
1. Let's start with the weirdest fact first: these little bugs seem to be capable of feeding directly on sunlight, like the plants on which they feed.
They're nearly unique in the animal world in the ability to make a carotenoid photopigment.
Torulene is responsible for red-like color of some aphids.
Green or red/pink aphids produce more ATP in sunlight than they do in darkness; white aphids deficient in torulene do not, suggesting carotenoid is directly absorbing photons, transferring electrons to mitochondria.
What do cabbage, kale, broccoli, brussel sprouts, cauliflower, collard greens & kohlrabi have in common?
If you said "they're the same species of plant, selected for different qualities", you're correct!
Let's talk about the chameleon of the vegetable world, the #Brassica!
They're all Brassica oleracea, derived from the wild cabbage, which is itself part of the wild mustard FAMILY.
Brussel sprouts are cultivars selected for unopened lateral lead buds, broccoli & cauliflower for the unopened flowers, kale for leaves, kohlrabi for enlarged stem.
That's the basics, but there's an even larger family of Brassica whose genetic intercompatibility have produced endless combinations of cultivated crops!
Let's talk about the "triangle of U", named for 1935 paper by 'U Nagaharu' where he presented a theory of Brassica genetics.