Lindbergh's flight was the FIRST NONSTOP TRANSATLANTIC CROSSING! That's what gets people confused about and the prize awarded!
@jsandersnyny8 күн бұрын
First nonstop *solo* transatlantic crossing. It had been done by teams before.
@christaselig673514 күн бұрын
Charles Lindbergh was my father's hero, and no better man to play him than James Stewart.
@jammiefortier148018 күн бұрын
i wonder how stewart felt playing a nazi fascist?
@samspade213124 күн бұрын
Heck of guy, you know, except for all the antisemitism and pro-NAZI stuff….
@ShengTai8028 күн бұрын
He was 25 and landed at night so what else did Hollywood make up?
@givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn393519 күн бұрын
He flew on to Paris, well inland in France and the plane was barely doing 100 mph.
@jasonmcintosh2632Ай бұрын
Skellig Michael was the island where Luke Skywalker went to hide after Return of the Jedi.
@richardbeattie7259Ай бұрын
The first transatlantic flight was by Alcock and Brown in a Vickers Vimy,.
@gabrielbennett5162Ай бұрын
1919. Eight years before Lindbergh. I saw a Vimmy up close several years ago at a museum; they're surprisingly large planes for the era they were built. It's no wonder Alcock and Brown selected it for a transatlantic crossing.
@Ul.B17 күн бұрын
Not quite the truth either. On May 8, 1919, three Curtiss NC flying boats of the US Navy set off on a crossing of the Atlantic from New York to Lisbon. On the longest leg on May 16th from Trepassey Bay (Newfoundland) to the Azores, two aircraft landed on the open sea and were then unable to continue the journey. The NC-4 under Albert C. Read reached Faial, flew to the planned intermediate destination of Ponta Delgada on the 20th and to Lisbon on May 27th, 1919. The plane and its six-person crew were the first to fly over the Atlantic. They then flew to Plymouth via Ferrol.
@timothysteedman2513Ай бұрын
Great to see you still doing your thing
@HudzunDunDunDunАй бұрын
STOP IT STOP IT PLEASE I BEG YOU
@mr.zondide27462 ай бұрын
Lindbergh had trouble getting off the ground in New York because the size of his balls was weighing their aircraft down, they were way too big
@user-jn1tr8mo3g2 ай бұрын
"Do you like Seals & Croft?"
@user-ll8et4fj1g2 ай бұрын
Не идеально…
@user-ll8et4fj1g2 ай бұрын
Почему так не ритмично..? Где внутреннее чувство..?
@martyleyeti2 ай бұрын
One of the 1st recoding of a wha-wha pedal on a electric guitar, if not the very first. How did you learn that ? Because Giles ate too much chocolate before he did things with Joyce on a police car
@Ohfanstasia2 ай бұрын
I wish I could him fr
@gilus553 ай бұрын
good job
@noventasmusic3 ай бұрын
❤
@davidkennedy48453 ай бұрын
I like it. However, the treble horn should have sound coming out of only one horn, not both. The second treble horn on a Leslie is only there for balance. Plug one side and it will reduce the frequency to a more Leslie like speed on tremolo.
@nikhook11143 ай бұрын
Fricken awesome. Old school(best) Leslie speaker sound. Great job on the improvisation of the horns. Fantastic job overall. Looks and sounds great.
@MERLIMARTISTICPRODUTIONS4 ай бұрын
congratulations from brasil ! Is it cheaper than buying the ready-made box?
@butting234 ай бұрын
Aw, ta! Keeping in mind though that this is a passive one (with no on-board amp), I've never seen one for less than $600 here (and more usually twice that), and a new 3300 is $5000, so... I've since been gifted (!!!) an M3, and will hopefully do the full song one day. But make sure you check out this more recent version, with better mics and cameras: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rJmqY4iHh75-i6M
@nickaustin36644 ай бұрын
No wonder they called him William The Bloody. His poems we're Indeed bloody awful. But that's when he was human of course later, it was because he tortured his victims with railroad spikes hence later Spike.
@amylynnhunt554 ай бұрын
I met Felix two years ago and forgot!? He's so cute! I refuse to believe he's a murderer.
@butting234 ай бұрын
Claws, though! And TEEFS!
@VideoSnipsChannel6 ай бұрын
😊
@spatel9SP6 ай бұрын
My favourite episode
@bobbyricigliano27997 ай бұрын
No need for a technical adviser in this role. Jimmy Stewart was a national treasure and a great American Patriot.
@lorio50038 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing. i'm finding lots of reasons to try watching angel
@dancingdan19948 ай бұрын
Love this is how spike wanted to spend his final day to get that recognition he so disereved that he never got
@CardCaptorDeadpool8 ай бұрын
James was one of the series best actors, I wish he wasn't sadled with some awful character changes like he attempted rape stuff. Otherwise, he has one of of best redemption arcs I've had the pleasure of engaging with. Especially Angel series I really don't think any other actor bar James could've saved Spike's character.
@user-no8dm6ci7v9 ай бұрын
Even better than the original,heard it on radio years agp
@jamescheddar48969 ай бұрын
the 19th century people laugh at him for that poem lol
@peterrudkin29629 ай бұрын
I was at this show at the Royal Albert Hall. I loved this song and arrangement. They were superb. So much so that we used this song in our own set in a band named "Just Blues". Always went down well.
@halmycroft1949 ай бұрын
The one thing that rankles slightly is that 'The Wanton Folly Of Me Mum!' is delivered in a Northern/Midlands accent... not /impossible/ given that Spike's accent in life is refined RP and he later adopts a cockney twang, but it feels a bit weird. He could, of course, have adopted the accent for comic effect (a technique documented in English literature at least as far back as Chaucer), it does also open up the possibility that in a different timeline Spike's adoption of a working-class persona might have resulted in a different accent and different look. Maybe less South-Eastern and Billy Idol, more North-Western and John Cooper-Clarke?
@Onigirli8 ай бұрын
Good lord it must be absolute torture to be this perceptive. Good luck to ya!
@halmycroft1948 ай бұрын
@@Onigirli Bless you, it's very kind of you to attribute that to irresistible perception but it's nothing quite so tortuous. I'm a Limey and studied English both as a language and its literature, plus I've been into punk for longer than I care to say, so this is exactly the sort of little niche that'd come across my radar and light up some dingdingdings. I promise I'm totally oblivious in other ways.
@podsmpsg19 ай бұрын
LMFAO.
@Kharkovkid10 ай бұрын
I was driving across West Texas in the dark of night in a `71 Chevy pickup with an iffy carb. A sign loomed up in the darkness that read, "Ozuna -116 Miles" I said to myself, " Oh God! I'm @#$% Lindbergh!"
@TheWaynos7311 ай бұрын
Effulgent is an amazing word.
@joeysingingchannel Жыл бұрын
Some artists just aren't appreciated in their time. Van Gogh was ridiculed.
@davidhall8874 Жыл бұрын
You ended the clip too soon! Now we will never know "what earth? Where?"
@dessullivan172517 күн бұрын
The Dingle Peninsula!
@patmcbride9853 Жыл бұрын
Only an actor could make "landfall" in the sky.
@mattmatthew7148 Жыл бұрын
Great actor, too old to play Lindbergh
@bobbyricigliano27997 ай бұрын
Perhaps, but his real-life background as an extremely seasoned aviator and talented A-list actor more than compensated for that.
@jackietreehorn5399 Жыл бұрын
Lindbergh was in his 20s when he made the flight, Stewart looks like he's in his 50s here.
@ColumbiaBАй бұрын
Lindbergh was 25 in 1927, while Stewart was 47 when the film was shot (1955-’56; released 1957). A number of reviews at the time it was first released mentioned the actor’s age discrepancy with the historical figure as an issue.
@jamessimms41523 күн бұрын
Who cares if it’s still a great movie?
@id3794 Жыл бұрын
I love this. Spike has always wanted love and acceptance. You can see how nervous he is when saying the last two lines of the poem, and then the surprise/relief/elation when he is finally accepted. He is effectively bearing a “window to his soul” in this moment, and instead of being ridiculed like he has been so often, he is validated. His sentimentality is not a weakness, as he had been taught, but a strength. Happy for him :)
@Onigirli8 ай бұрын
I don't sense the nervousness, just the pleasant surprise. I don't think negative feedback bothers him at this point in his life
@Sandra-ct1rd Жыл бұрын
Wiliam the bloody are back in the beginning but good!
@--ag Жыл бұрын
I was looking for this! Thank you!
@zakk94 Жыл бұрын
I wanna jacket like spikes
@godmeherbaba5607 Жыл бұрын
💖💖❤❤💘💘
@Zepwik Жыл бұрын
Perfect example of someone's poetry getting praise after they die.
@astigmatic Жыл бұрын
In the words of Young Bob himself ' "Low down and funky". Thanks for posting.
@tatianalyulkin410 Жыл бұрын
Spike the Poet had his moment of glory after all. Bravo!
@peterglass8657 Жыл бұрын
Neil also made it with his snotters.
@ThomasACarlos Жыл бұрын
The thing I caught is the very little time lapse it took for the tweeters to spin up to the fast mode. You must have a very strong motor or very light load compared to the original Leslie tweeters. Nicely done.
@butting23 Жыл бұрын
Aw, ta! It's exactly the same motor assembly as the bass rotor, so it's all down to weight. Not sure what original Leslie horn assemblies weigh, but I've just lifted the one I made out and it comes in at 200g/7oz. It's just a pulley from a styrofoam cheesewheel, a thin MDF cakeboard, two plastic funnels, and the two plastic horns all screwed and glued together, and a couple more screws added while balancing -- easy to do, very little weight burden overall. Not gonna lie, my two biggest Hammond/Leslie loves are (a) glisses and (b) the sound of the bass rotor slowly catching up with the horns when switching fast/slow. Which might just be a factor in the song choice here -- the way Fisher put the two together gets me every time.
@butting23 Жыл бұрын
Oh, and: the second version has a camera pointing right at the horns, showing them off at 60fps. Stepping through frame-by-frame is a TRIP. kzbin.info/www/bejne/rJmqY4iHh75-i6M