SMITHBITS RADIO MAGAZINE
Friday, July 22, 2022
Tuesday, July 19, 2022
Deleting Secrets - When Did The United States Secret Service Go Political
APACHE JUNCTION AZ (IFS) -- Everyone has been patiently waiting for this writer to say something, anything about the powers that be. From that grand movie line by Dorthy from The Wizard Of Oz, " . . . Toto, We are not in Kansas Anymore."
As a young driver of a One Star General when I got my first assignment "straight outta basic". This General's chief of staff, pulled me aside, and gave me these instructions, "Don't you get into any accidents at all with this officer, and if you do, I'm pulling you in jail first, Airman." Other than keeping his vehicle, polished and full of gas, this writer had to keep a log of the General's appointments and record the day and times, his vehicle left the US Government base, and the distance traveled on State roads.
As a member of the military with a security clearance, and if this writer had to destroy any classified document and/or classified equipment, the signatures of my first sergeant and squadron commander had to sign off first.
Wednesday, July 13, 2022
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
Friday, July 01, 2022
Motion Picture Association- Alternate titles: MPAA, MPPDA, Motion Picture Association of America
Motion Picture Association
Alternate titles: MPAA, MPPDA, Motion Picture Association of America
By The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica • Edit History
Date: 1922 - present
Areas Of Involvement: film censorship public relations distribution
Motion Picture Production Code
Related People: Chris Dodd Will H. Hays
Motion Picture Association (MPA), formerly (1922–45) Motion Picture
Producers and Distributors of America and (1945–2019) Motion Picture
Association of America, in the United States, organization of the
major motion-picture studios that rates movies for suitability to
various kinds of audiences, aids the studios in international
distribution, advises them on taxation, works to prevent film piracy,
and carries on a nationwide public relations program for the industry.
The MPA, originally called the Motion Picture Producers and
Distributors of America (MPPDA) and later the Motion Picture
Association of America (MPAA), was established in 1922 by the major
Hollywood production studios in response to increasing government
censorship of films, which arose in turn from a general public outcry
against both indecency on the screen and various scandals involving
movie celebrities. The MPPDA, popularly called the Hays Office for its
first director, Will H. Hays, codified the complaints of local
censoring boards and informed producers of their views. Hollywood in
effect opted to censor its own productions rather than allow the
government to censor them.
In 1930 the Hays Office adopted the Motion Picture Production Code, a
detailed description of what was morally acceptable on the screen.
Under the guidance of Jack Valenti—MPAA president (1966–2004) and
former adviser to U.S. Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson—the code was
liberalized in 1966 after it had become hopelessly outdated and
ineffective because of the more relaxed social and sexual mores of the
time. In 1968 the MPAA set up a rating board that classified films as
G, M, R, and X. After various changes the MPA ratings are now as
follows: G, for general audiences; PG, parental guidance suggested;
PG-13, parents strongly cautioned, because film contains material
inappropriate for children under 13; R, restricted to adults and to
children under 17 accompanied by parent or guardian; and NC-17, no
children under 17 admitted.
A studio system is a method of filmmaking wherein the production and
distribution of films is dominated by a small number of large movie
studios. It is most often used in reference to Hollywood motion
picture studios during the Golden Age of Hollywood from the 1920s to
1960s, wherein studios produced films primarily on their own
filmmaking lots with creative personnel under often long-term
contract, and dominated exhibition through vertical integration, i.e.,
the ownership or effective control of distributors and exhibition,
guaranteeing additional sales of films through manipulative booking
techniques such as block booking.
The studio system was challenged under the antitrust laws in a 1948
Supreme Court ruling which sought to separate production from the
distribution and exhibition and ended such practices, thereby
hastening the end of the studio system. By 1954, with television
competing for audience and the last of the operational links between a
major production studio and theater chain broken, the historic era of
the studio system was over.
The period stretching from the introduction of sound motion pictures
to the beginning of the demise of the studio system, 1927–1948, is
referred to by some film historians as the Golden Age of Hollywood.
The Golden Age is a purely technical distinction and not to be
confused with the style in film criticism known as Classical Hollywood
cinema, a style of American film which developed from 1917 to 1963 and
characterizes it to this day. During the so-called Golden Age, eight
companies constituted the major studios that promulgated the Hollywood
studio system. Of these eight, five were fully integrated
conglomerates, combining ownership of a production studio,
distribution division, and substantial theater chain, and contracting
with performers and filmmaking personnel:
Loews Incorporated (owner of America's largest theater chain and
parent company of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer)
Paramount Pictures
Warner Brothers Pictures
20th Century-Fox (later renamed 20th Century Studios)
RKO Radio Pictures
Two majors—Universal Pictures and Columbia Pictures—were similarly
organized, though they never owned more than small theater circuits.
The eighth of the Golden Age majors, United Artists, owned a small
number of theaters and had access to two production facilities owned
by members of its controlling partnership group, but it functioned
primarily as a backer-distributor, financing independent productions
and releasing their films.
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