It's About Liberty: A Conservative Forum

Topics => General Board => Topic started by: AlanS on August 19, 2014, 11:02:42 AM

Title: Has is really come to this?
Post by: AlanS on August 19, 2014, 11:02:42 AM
http://www.breitbart.com/system/wire/ap_e0d669d96839461bb747e842cc962591 (http://www.breitbart.com/system/wire/ap_e0d669d96839461bb747e842cc962591)

Quote
WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of photographs, papers and historical objects documenting the history of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people are being added to the Smithsonian Institution's collection Tuesday, including items from the popular TV show "Will and Grace."

Show creators David Kohan and Max Mutchnick along with NBC are donating objects to the National Museum of American History. The collection includes original scripts, casting ideas, political memorabilia surrounding the show and the series finale. The network agreed to donate props, including a pill bottle and flask, a sign from "Grace Adler Interior Design" and Will Truman's framed college diploma.

Kohan told The Associated Press that the Smithsonian's interest in the show featuring gay principal characters was a validation they never dreamed about when the sitcom began airing in 1998. "Will and Grace" ran through May 2006 depicting four friends both gay and straight, eventually ending with the main characters coupled off with children.

"These particular guests that were invited into people's living rooms happened to be your gay friends," Kohan said. "I don't think people really had the opportunity to have that before, and it served to, I think, make people recognize that your close friends were gay."

"The fact that it's in the American history (museum), maybe we were a part of something that was bigger than we ever imagined," Kohan said.

The donation is part of larger effort to document gay and lesbian history, an area that has not been well understood at the museum. Curators are collecting materials from LGBT political, sports and cultural history objects from Arizona to Maryland.

Some items being donated include the diplomatic passports of Ambassador David Huebner, the first openly gay U.S. ambassador confirmed by the Senate, and his husband; materials from a gay community center in Baltimore; and photography collections from Patsy Lynch and Silvia Ros documenting gay rights activism.

From sports history, the museum will receive a tennis racket from former professional player Renee Richards who won a landmark New York Supreme Court decision for transgender rights after she was denied entry to the U.S. Open in 1975.

"There have always been gender non-conforming people in the U.S., and we've made contributions and lived life since the beginning of the country," said Curator Katherine Ott who focuses on sexuality and gender. "It's not talked about and analyzed and understood in the critical ways in which it should be. So for us to build the collection means we can more fully document the history of this country."

"Will and Grace" used comedy to familiarize a mainstream audience with gay culture, said Curator Dwight Blocker Bowers. It was daring and broke ground in the same way "All in the Family" did in the 1970s around issues of bigotry and tolerance, Bowers said.

More perversion thrown in our faces? When do we decide it's enough?
Title: Re: Has is really come to this?
Post by: Libertas on August 19, 2014, 11:20:49 AM
I think we'll reach enough when buildings housing fools promoting this crap are smoldering pits...
Title: Re: Has is really come to this?
Post by: ToddF on August 20, 2014, 07:46:17 AM
Well, that is the reality of a museum worthy of a low information people who's idea of history are TV shows.
Title: Re: Has is really come to this?
Post by: Libertas on August 20, 2014, 07:56:49 AM
More societal death spasms...
Title: Re: Has is really come to this?
Post by: richb on August 20, 2014, 04:40:38 PM
Its not the first time the Smithsonian has played politics with "history".    I don't know how many of you know about the Wright brothers controversy with the Smithsonian over the first heavier then air flight.    This fight lasted decades,  and wasn't resolved until after WWII.   

The Smithsonian secretary Charles Walcott,  refused to give credit to the Wright brothers,  preferring to credit his  predecessor Samuel Pierpont Langley.   Langley had performed tests the same years as the Wrights,  but was unsuccessful.   That made no difference to Walcott,  who maintained that Langley was first to fly.   Therefore the Smithsonian claimed that Langley was the first,  not the Wright brothers.   Glen Curtiss flew a heavily modified version of Langley's craft in 1914 to help "legitimate" Langley and Walcott's claim.    They kept this farce up until 1942 when Walcott was replaced by a new secretary Charles Abbot.   Abbot then published the modifications done by Curtiss to fly Langley aircraft which discounted the ability of that craft being able to fly in 1903.   

The Wright brothers had loaned their aircraft to a museum in London where it stayed until 1948.    At that point the aircraft was transferred to the Smithsonian after they recanted their "history" of flight.   Orville never saw his aircraft at the Smithsonian as he died shortly before it was put on display there. 



 
Title: Re: Has is really come to this?
Post by: AlanS on August 20, 2014, 06:26:21 PM
Its not the first time the Smithsonian has played politics with "history".    I don't know how many of you know about the Wright brothers controversy with the Smithsonian over the first heavier then air flight.    This fight lasted decades,  and wasn't resolved until after WWII.   

The Smithsonian secretary Charles Walcott,  refused to give credit to the Wright brothers,  preferring to credit his  predecessor Samuel Pierpont Langley.   Langley had performed tests the same years as the Wrights,  but was unsuccessful.   That made no difference to Walcott,  who maintained that Langley was first to fly.   Therefore the Smithsonian claimed that Langley was the first,  not the Wright brothers.   Glen Curtiss flew a heavily modified version of Langley's craft in 1914 to help "legitimate" Langley and Walcott's claim.    They kept this farce up until 1942 when Walcott was replaced by a new secretary Charles Abbot.   Abbot then published the modifications done by Curtiss to fly Langley aircraft which discounted the ability of that craft being able to fly in 1903.   

The Wright brothers had loaned their aircraft to a museum in London where it stayed until 1948.    At that point the aircraft was transferred to the Smithsonian after they recanted their "history" of flight.   Orville never saw his aircraft at the Smithsonian as he died shortly before it was put on display there.

I used to have aspirations of one day visiting the Smithsonian. I guess that's another one I can scratch off my list.