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Greg Hackett explains why young kids today WILL REMEMBER BOOTS MORE THAN BUD Crawford😳 Bud was only recognized as the most dominant fighter for a 2 year span if he were to RETIRE TODAY and Boots retires at 38 most kids won’t remember Bud they will remember Boots- #Boxing

51,983 views • 9 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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Jean-Luc Godard explains why Alfred Hitchcock managed to successfully control the public more than Hitler or Napoleon: "Interviewer: [In 'Histoire(s) du cinéma'] You certainly concentrate more on specific film subjects in 3a, 3b, and 4a: neorealism, la nouvelle vague, and Hitchcock. Godard: I put in Hitchcock because during a certain epoch, for five years, in my opinion, he really was the master of the universe. More than Hitler, more than Napoleon. He had a control of the public that no one else had. Interviewer: What about Ronald Reagan? Didn’t he have the same control? Godard: No, because Hitchcock was a poet. And Hitchcock was a poet on a universal level, not like Rilke. He was the only poet maudit to have a huge success. Rilke wasn’t one, Rimbaud wasn’t. He was a poet maudit for everyone; 'Notorious' (1946) wasn’t like James Joyce. I remember André Bazin was very angry with us. And something which is very astonishing with Hitchcock is that you don’t remember what the story of 'Notorious' (1946) is, or why Janet Leigh is going to the Bates Motel. You remember one pair of spectacles or a windmill — that’s what millions and millions of people remember. If you remember 'Notorious', what do you remember? Wine bottles. You don’t remember Ingrid Bergman. When you remember Griffith or Welles or Eisenstein or me, you don’t remember ordinary objects. He is the only one." ('Trailer for Godard’s Histoire(s) du cinéma', Jonathan Rosenbaum, 2025)

DepressedBergman

60,161 views • 5 months ago