the mighty ritabot - the hyperactive
robot which only leaves destruction,
'cause it refuses to take its pill.
R i T A L i N presents you another release approved
by the national institute of mental health
History.Channel.10.Days.That.Unexpectedly.Changed.America.E06.DVDRip.XviD-RiTALiN
Scene....: Nov 2009
Street...: June 27, 2006
Source...: R1 Retail DVD
Video....: XviD 972kBps / 24fps
Audio....: VBR MP3 Stereo / 130kBps
Rez......: 640x352
Aspect...: 1.818
Duration.: 43:53.443
Subs.....: None
Size.....: 350mb / 25x15mb .rar
iMDB.....: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0953255/
Rating...: 7.6/10 7 votes
Genre....: Documentary
Plot.....:
e06. Murder At The Fair: The Assassination Of President McKinley
Thoughtfully conceived and brilliantly executed, 10 Days That Unexpectedly
Changed America is History Channel programming at its finest. As its title
suggests, this series of ten one-hour documentaries does not necessarily
represent the most important and well-known moments in American history
(though some of them arguably qualify), but rather they are pivotal milestones
that helped to forge and define the American character--events which, in
retrospect, have had a profound influence on our ever-changing society. With
this as their editorial mission, the History Channel's producers recruited
ten highly acclaimed documentary filmmakers to direct each one-hour episode,
each contributing their own unique approach to the material. Featuring several
well-chosen and prestigious narrators including Jeffrey Wright, Martin Sheen,
Joe Morton, Terry Kinney, and Campbell Scott, the results are uniformly
excellent, representing a broad spectrum of documentary styles, visual
techniques, and painstakingly accurate recreations and dramatizations of
the chosen events.
From the very first slaughter of Native Americans by English settlers in
1637 ("Massacre at Mystic") to the civil rights movement's "Freedom Summer"
of 1964, each episode places its one-day event in vivid historical context,
concisely demonstrating how these events had a ripple effect on America's
national identity. Some episodes are more experimental than others: Directed
by Emmy-winner R.J. Cutler, "Shay's Rebellion: America's First Civil War"
(1787) employs the uniquely expressionistic animation of Bill Plympton, far
removed from the more familiar (but no less effective) style of dramatization
included in "Einstein's Letter" (about the famed physicist's 1939 letter
urging Franklin D. Roosevelt to develop nuclear weapons) or "Scopes: The
Battle Over America's Soul" (about the sensational 1925 "Monkey Trial" over
the teaching of evolution). With varying degrees of documentary ingenuity,
other episodes cover the California gold rush of 1849; the Civil War's bloody
battle of Antietam; the violent 1892 "Homestead Strike" of united laborers
against Carnegie Steel; the 1901 assassination of President William McKinley;
and the dynamic appearances of Elvis Presley on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1956.
Presented in chronological order, these ten films offer lasting value to
history buffs, teachers, and anyone interested in understanding how American
history was forged in the furnace of tumultuous change. The sole bonus
feature is a 30-minute survey of each episode's director and their distinct
methods of completing their assignments. Their cumulative efforts combine
to form one of the most wide-ranging and fascinating series the History
Channel has ever presented.
ZARDOS SPEAKS TO
YOU:
YOU SHALST ALL
ALL OBEY THE INFO \ \__)__(__/ / AND YOU SHALST BE
GRANTED RITALIN
BELOW / _/ /\ \_ \ HUGE AMOUNTS OF RITALIN!
Zardos says: Enjoy
Thoughts are rushing trough your mind, they just wont stop,
you cant concentrate, you cant plan your life, life is
just miserable, you get nothing done properly... _;):
Heads up, there is a solution.. R i T A L i N !