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"I
think movements create leaders, leaders don't create
movements." - Mark Rudd
Every time I think I
know as much as I can about the sixties, there's
always something introduced that surprises or
astounds me, and believe it or not, while "1968"
does tell some stories and accounts some events that
we've seen over and over again, Tom Brokaw brings to
the table the perspective of a journalist who
happened to be around during some of the most
historic moments of American history, and gives an
objective view of the sixties. In the two hour
special, aptly premiering a day after the twenty
seventh anniversary of John Lennon's death, Brokaw
interviews ex-hippies, activists still fighting for
freedom in our country, and right wing politicians
all of whom have a different view of the sixties
than the host does. Brokaw gladly doesn't depict
himself as important, only an observer who was
there, and feels the need to show how astonishingly
similar 1968 is to the social and political climate
of 2007, and these aren't simply coincidental,
either. In one scene, Lyndon Johnson declares how we
must go to war in Vietnam and fight over there
before the communists come here.
It's a common scare
tactic used by the Bush administration and only
solidified my interest in the documentary. Brokaw
and the History channel simply don't disappoint with
an excellent account of the sixties and the entire
movement for civil rights, feminism and free love,
while also showing the hardships of the movements.
The sixties were a time where the draft was taking
people of any color to war, and protests raged while
some of the best leaders fell to the gun. Not a
single stone is unturned as we are given interviews
with folks like Mark Rudd, and Jon Stewart and take
a look into the awfully subversive legacy that was
the Smothers Brothers, and their battles with
network censors over their anti-war movement and the
satirizing. "1968" is a very informative look at a
historical decade and a wonderful exploration at the
year that signaled change for better or for worse.
Premiering on the
History Channel December 9th. |