Saturday, November 14, 2020

President Ronald Reagan is turned into a Muppet in 1988.

Ronald Wilson Reagan (1911-2004) was born in Tampico, Illinois on February 6, 1911. The family moved to Chicago, then to Galesburg, Illinois, and in 1937 moved to California.

Reagan signed a seven-year contract with Warner Bros. He spent the first few years of his Hollywood career in the "B film" unit, where, Reagan joked, the producers "didn't want them good, they wanted them Thursday." His first screen credit was the starring role in the 1937 movie Love Is on the Air, and by the end of 1939, he had already appeared in 19 films. In 1938 he starred alongside Jane Wyman in Brother Rat. They married in 1940, having a child, Maureen, and adopting a son, Michael, but the marriage ended in divorce in 1949. Warner Bros. "Kings Row" starring Ronald Reagan was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1943.

After the outbreak of WWII (1939-1945), Reagan, an officer in the Army Reserve, was ordered to active duty in April 1942. He was assigned to the First Motion Picture Unit (officially, the 18th AAF Base Unit) in Culver City, California. In January 1943, he was sent to the Provisional Task Force Show Production Unit of "This Is The Army" at Burbank, California, then he returned to the First Motion Picture Unit. He acted and narrated military training films such as Recognition of the Japanese Zero Fighter and Beyond the Line of Duty which later won the Academy Award for Best Short film. He returned to acting after the war.

In 1952, he married fellow actress Nancy Davis.


When his film roles began to dwindle in the mid-1950s, Reagan turned to television, where he hosted and acted in a number of programs, most notably hosting the General Electric Theater for eight years on CBS. 
Ronald Reagan was the host of General Electric Theater.




He acted or narrated in 71 films and worked in 17 television shows, including hosting 235 teleplays and acted in 35 episodes of General Electric Theater, and acted in 8 episodes of Death Valley Days in 1964-1965.

Reagan retired from acting in 1965, and he became active in Republican politics, being elected as the Governor of California serving from 1967 to 1975, and later as the 40th President of the United States from 1981 to 1989.

President, Ronald Reagan referenced Sesame Street in a November 14, 1985, televised speech prior to the Geneva Summit where he would meet with Mikhail Gorbachev to discuss relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. Expressing a desire for Americans and Soviets to begin better relations amidst Cold War conditions, Reagan said, "Imagine if people in our nation could see the Bolshoi Ballet again, while Soviet citizens could see American plays and hear [music] groups like the Beach Boys. And how about Soviet children watching Sesame Street?" 
Kermit The Frog in a photoshopped picture with Nancy and Ronald Reagan as seen in The Muppets.


The remark prompted a response from Children's Television Workshop (CTW) Fran Kaufman, "There have been no discussions or negotiations about the series going there. But we're hoping to do a special from the Soviet Union." A co-production with Russia would not happen until eleven years later with the launch of Ulitsa Sezam. Ulitsa Sezam was the Russian co-production of Sesame Street. The series first aired on October 22, 1996, with the second rerun in 1999, the third rerun in 2003, and the fourth and last rerun in 2006.

In the Muppet episode 2478 which aired on May 4, 1988, of season 19 (1987-1988), Ronald Reagan makes a cameo appearance as a Muppet.
The Muppet "Forgetful" imagines meeting a jelly bean-loving President.



Compiled by Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Friday, November 13, 2020

Abraham Lincoln Street in Jerusalem, Israel.

Throughout the world, many neighborhoods have groups of streets with names related to a specific theme.

For example, anyone familiar with downtown Chicago, Illinois, USA, knows the "President Streets" is an old city tradition. (§ = not in downtown) 
  1. George WASHINGTON Street
  2. John ADAMS Street
  3. Thomas JEFFERSON Street
  4. James MADISON Street
  5. James MONROE Street
  6. John QUINCY Adams Street § (Since there were two presidents named Adams, Quincy Street honors John Quincy Adams.)
  7. Andrew JACKSON Boulevard
  8. Martin VAN BUREN Street
  9. William Henry HARRISON Street
  10. John TYLER (is the one president without a named street today. Tyler Street's name was changed in 1875 to "Congress Street" (Congress Parkway, today) because Tyler declared allegiance to the Confederacy in the Civil War.)
  11. James Knox POLK Street
  12. Zachary TAYLOR Street §
  13. Millard FILLMORE Street §
Those are the first 13 U.S. Presidents, and 12 of them still have streets in or near downtown named after them.
Abraham Lincoln Street sign in Jerusalem, Israel.
In central Jerusalem, there is a street named for Abraham Lincoln {אברהם לינקולן}, a fitting tribute to the Jewish people’s gratitude to President Lincoln who championed and defended America’s Jews

The Hebrew letter ‘lamed’ [ ל ] which mimics the second ‘L’ in Lincoln, was removed from the Hebrew spelling of the great president’s name. The silent letter is often pronounced by Hebrew speakers, incorrectly rendering the name, “Lincollin.”
George Washington Street intersects Abraham Lincoln Street in the middle of this map.


When a Jewish man dressed in typically ultra-Orthodox garb walking on Abraham Lincoln Street in Jerusalem, was asked if he knew who the street’s eponymous Abraham Lincoln was, he replied that he was a big UJA (United Jewish Appeal) donor.

Americans are honored throughout Israel. For example, George Washington also has a street named after him in Jerusalem. In Tel Aviv, Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson have streets named after them. Martin Luther King Jr. has a street and memorial in his honor in the Galilee. A statue of Abraham Lincoln is in Ramat Gan and a replica of the Liberty Bell was installed in Jerusalem's Liberty Bell Garden.
A Statue of Abraham Lincoln in Ramat Gan, Israel.



Compiled by Neil Gale, Ph.D.