This is why I can’t understand people idolising celebrities. No one is perfect, and you’ll be disappointed.
@ZhangtheGreat4 ай бұрын
When I trained to teach history, the person who trained me stressed the importance of treating historical figures, no matter their reputation, as nothing more than human beings. They're not heroes above criticism, nor are they villains who are objects to be slain.
@phoenixdaronco95404 ай бұрын
You explained it so well. Just because some people made history doesn't automatically make them perfect or godlike. They are still the same species as pedestrians walking on the street every day.
@phoenixdaronco95404 ай бұрын
I actually just saw a situation like this in a Joy Division comment section on KZbin. I love this band and they did nothing wrong, but they were being put on a pedestal by their fans. They would rub in people's faces how better the past was, college students with first jobs were seen as lesser than Ian Curtis, the bandmates' talents were described in a way that made other musicians seem insignificant. It made me sad to see Ian Curtis, a struggling young musician, being treated like a god. It's like giving a cancer patient a pat on the back for just suffering. I simply see him as a human that inspired me to write my own poetry. Nothing more, nothing less. Same goes for the rest of the band getting me into post-punk. It was bizarre seeing them being thrown into sensationalism when they were actually against that.
@shawnycoffman4 ай бұрын
True. Present the facts and let the student form their own opinions. That's actually the way all schooling should be, but I digress.
@cameronhermann94003 ай бұрын
True
@PrincessDie1874 ай бұрын
Any man who denies the mother of their child money when they need it and you have it is a disgrace
@abnurtharn29274 ай бұрын
@PrincessDie187 And yet, he is looked upon as a god by many.
@Gor854 ай бұрын
Absolutely
@Alpha67Wolf4 ай бұрын
weird/bizarre/strange Steve Jobs named one of his computers "The LISA."
@allforugod4 ай бұрын
What if he didn't want the baby? He should have the right to say no. That's what women get to do. I'm just standing for "men's rights"! I don't actually think that. Men AND women should own responsibility for their decisions. It just somehow doesn't work that way.
@maryntalysenazjwa60964 ай бұрын
@@allforugod only the woman is risking her life, to give birth. these are very high stakes, while for the man there are no stakes at all. he can just wander away any time he wants. he gets no say whatsoever.
@lloydedwards9684 ай бұрын
This is the precise reason why we shouldn’t name streets, schools, hospitals, ect after human beings. Every single one of us is fallible.
@XaraK14 ай бұрын
Um... no. There are good human beings. Despite his drawbacks, MLK is a great man worthy of being known about and whose legacy deserves recognition. The issue is deifying people. And with European culture, who is considered great is hella terrifying, because there are MANY white people who fought for civil rights and sought to end colonization and imperialism. But that's not who is considered great. John Brown should be on every person's lips, but the same people who dismiss and reason away mass unaliving by the likes of Columbus and the U.S. Founding Fathers cannot stand him because... well let's just say he wasn't as discriminating in *WHO* he was mass unaliving
@Pocketrocket-pj1us4 ай бұрын
So what should we name them? Numbers, Binary? I Love that one. Could be fun.
@qasemrimawi5684 ай бұрын
@@XaraK1Laughing at sexual abuse and not helping the victim is much more than a "drawback"
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
With regards to dangers of deifying. A warmongering religeous leader that married a 9 year old girl was not mentioned, but a peaceful charity worker that overzealously converted a few people was. Bias?
@jensanchez36464 ай бұрын
We can't automatically believe someone who speaks ill of the dead. They waited until the person wasn't here to defend themselves, and that's not fair.
@georgianagheorghe88484 ай бұрын
Steve Jobs wasn't kind to his employees either. He forced them to talk about work and nothing else even during breaks and lunchtime.
@VisualEnjoyer97564 ай бұрын
Bill Burr was right. Nerds held him in such high regard but was he really that great? He was also part of the deal between Disney and Universal to underpay animators so they had no competitive pay and no choice but to accept worse working conditions or be fired that lead to the 2008 strike in Hollywood
@jschuler533 ай бұрын
@@VisualEnjoyer9756 You don't get that powerful without backdoor behavior. Everything is so corrupt these days, the heroes are the ones who figure out how to navigate the corruption to come out looking clean, full of great ideas and good works.
@michaelward53704 ай бұрын
J. Edgar Hoover could have his own video about all the bad and shady things he did and was behind, although it would be about 3 hours long!!
@davemathews78904 ай бұрын
Sometimes Mojo pisses me off, but I've got to admit that it's pretty fearless in criticizing the rich and powerful.
@trent4barnes4 ай бұрын
That is because its sells.
@hannabertrand44604 ай бұрын
I'm surprised Walt Disney didn't make the list.
@Kat197604 ай бұрын
They might just be avoiding a law suit.
@abnurtharn29274 ай бұрын
@@Kat19760 Excatly.
@nevermindmyname8133 ай бұрын
They're not gonna mess with the Disney machine
@antwonsmith89314 ай бұрын
That's why I don't look up to these celebrities and influencers sometimes you got to be your own hero.
@amoswilliams86744 ай бұрын
That's why you don't idolize no human being.
@mszoomy4 ай бұрын
Any
@olgamountain99044 ай бұрын
@@mszoomy Hi, honey. That irked me too. I hate to sound like the grammar police, but come on !!
@alancrisp15824 ай бұрын
Never meet your heroes in real life, because you might be very disappointed. I did and I was 😢 !...
@Jenifer_R_4 ай бұрын
@@alancrisp1582 Come on, who was it?
@alancrisp15824 ай бұрын
@@Jenifer_R_ sorry 🙏 but I would rather not say. Because although this happened a few years ago now . I am still traumatized by the whole experience 😔 !.
@Blind_Blind_Blind4 ай бұрын
I’m a history major. I did a research paper about Alexander Graham Bell, who also believed in eugenics. He was friends with Helen Keller, and advocated for all Deaf people to not learn ASL, and not marry a fellow Deaf person. The kicker? AGB was married to a Deaf woman and his mother was Deaf as well.
@jopalm36494 ай бұрын
Not to mention, He stole the idea which made him famous.
@SirsasthNigam.4 ай бұрын
i dunno how he communicated with them
@laurenmontera95164 ай бұрын
@@SirsasthNigam. He taught them to speak using pictures and hand placements over the face and throat and how to read lips. Essentially, I think he was wrong to prevent sign language from growing.
@maddie_sarver4 ай бұрын
Lipreading is especially stressful for the deaf. Nowadays, there are schools that offer sign language. I'm taking sign language classes in college right now. I recently bought a book about Hellen Keller, but was genuinely shocked when she did this before I even had a chance to read it. Yeah, that just sours my taste in historical idols I've ever known. And how does Graham Bell spell hypocrite?
@andrewharper16093 ай бұрын
John Maynard Keynes was an advocate of Eugenics too. As were the Catholic and Anglican communions in Canada in the 1950's who murdered children. He was part of the Bloomsbury set who could be fairly described as a bunch of deviants anyway but Hitler was a fan of his ideas so we maybe shouldn't be too surprised.
@corinnecepeda70634 ай бұрын
PT Barnum used to keep all of his show animals in a big warehouse, each animal in a cage. The warehouse caught fire one year, and all animals perished, likely burned alive 😢😢😢
@kimberlyisome11544 ай бұрын
I just realized that I have never seen Dr Seuss before and had been picturing a who like person whenever he was mentioned 😅
@RayMcElroy504 ай бұрын
"Great and good are seldom the same man" - Winston S. Churchill
@lensercombe4 ай бұрын
Yes one of the biggest cowards ever lived all world leaders are cowards send people in the battle then hide
@Jamietheroadrunner4 ай бұрын
Churchill would know. He thought Indians were subhuman and brutalized them. He also purposefully starved and killed millions of them. Our heroes from the past are going to be problematic to most of us in this new world but as adults we should be able to praise their heroic side but with our eyes wide open.
@roysnell83194 ай бұрын
One thing Churchill & Woodrow Wilson had in common? They were really racist, and displayed racist beliefs. Yikes!
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
Churchill and Roosevelt were huge alcoholics, unlike that unmentionable enemy leader who never drank alcohol and championed animal welfare.
@mimroberts11373 ай бұрын
Yeah well were you the p.m that kept a country together against fascists?NO so do one...
@TheGamerFriends4 ай бұрын
Nobody’s perfect, except Keanu Reeves 😂
@dhenderson18104 ай бұрын
Haven't heard a bad word against Robin Williams or Michael J Fox, either.
@ellnats4 ай бұрын
so was mr rogers
@dnasty3124 ай бұрын
Roger Staubach too
@judynicholson674 ай бұрын
Yes Keanu Reeves is a great guy.😄
@FrozenCerberus4 ай бұрын
Constantine wants a word.
@Serai34 ай бұрын
I worked at several tech companies in the early 90's, and nobody - I mean NOBODY - had a good word for Steve Jobs. He was universally viewed as an arrogant jackass. His ugly treatment of his daughter didn't surprise me at all when I heard about it. I'd have been surprised if he hadn't behaved that way.
@lurx20244 ай бұрын
I would have been more shocked by the discovery that there was something redemptive about J. Edgar Hoover's life.
@alancrisp15824 ай бұрын
🤔 You and me both !..
@Pocketrocket-pj1us4 ай бұрын
Good fashion!
@PrincessofPower844 ай бұрын
JEH was a horrible, horrible person.
@Alpha67Wolf4 ай бұрын
I heard he died alone, and his maid and chauffeur found his body, both black people. ... and he was a cross dresser ..he liked to dress in womans cloths.
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
@@Alpha67Wolf Nowdays that would be considered his redeeming quality, and his transgressions would be hidden so as not to tarnish the trans community.
@michellecrocker24854 ай бұрын
John Lennon was a selfish parent. I have no respect for him
@Bringthewinter4 ай бұрын
The word “complicated” should never replace the word “evil.”
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
Except for when referring to gender re-assignment surgery, right?
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
@@Paul-nn9ojSeek help.
@phoenixdaronco95404 ай бұрын
@@Paul-nn9oj, How is that a bad thing, though? That's just a person becoming transgender.
@phoenixdaronco95404 ай бұрын
@@Paul-nn9oj, How is that a bad thing, though?
@kimberlydudman22964 ай бұрын
Helen Keller was very clear that she wishes that they hadn't done what they did and that they would have just let her die because her life was so hard even after she learned to communicate. Her support was because she was in fact suicidal but could not actually harm herself. She didn't want to truly be alive because she wasn't truly living because she was so severely disabled. She was not talking about people who were just deaf or just blind or have just one foot that has something wrong with it. She also wasn't talking about people who can fully recover. She was talking about those who are truly suffering and since she herself was truly suffering, she would know better than us who are not suffering. She advocated for Mercy.
@camgold21544 ай бұрын
What about Franklin D. Roosevelt having Japanese-Americans on the West Coast put into internment camps in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor.
@coldbrewcarbomb4 ай бұрын
and the fact that i - and many others- had to learn about it as as adult via an interview with George Takei instead of history class in school
@Seashelle5644 ай бұрын
Living in the PNW we are taught about it because it's an integral part of our Asian community. It is sad the rest of the nation does not learn it as we do.
@CrowHarder724 ай бұрын
It is sad that this happened nonetheless, but thanks to war, anything could have happened. The Japanese killed a lot of American POWs after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, which roared negative sentiment on Japanese communities. After president Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, General DeWitt (who was head of defense in the west coast) took the racist approach of beginning to put Japanese-American civillians in internment camps (which we know 99% of them were innocent). We cannot repeat this approach here in the US ever again, we have to learn from our mistakes.
@CrowHarder724 ай бұрын
It is sad that this happened nonetheless, but thanks to war, anything could have happened.
@CrowHarder724 ай бұрын
The Japanese killed a lot of American POWs after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, which roared negative sentiment on Japanese communities. After president Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, General DeWitt (who was head of defense in the west coast) took the racist approach of beginning to put Japanese-American civillians in internment camps (which we know 99% of them were innocent).
@netto66814 ай бұрын
I don’t think anyone has to be sorry about making anti-axis propaganda during WW2.
@Heathcoatman18 күн бұрын
Right? Imagine saying bad things about a country or people you are at war with whom also sneak attacked you? I'm sure the Japanese were saying honorable and positive things about the Americans, right?
@myrkvith94 ай бұрын
Andrew Jackson's actions are especially egregious when one discovers (as that Supreme Court case demonstrated) that the Cherokee had converted en masse to Christianity, developed a written language and composed a constitution to present to Congress because they were going to apply for admission to the national union as a state. Just think of how our history might have been different if the U.S. would have admitted them.
@kimberlydudman22964 ай бұрын
It's not conversion when it's forced. They were killing people who weren't converting but then again white Christians kill people who don't convert which is why they are so f****** popular because they kill their enemies. Even if their enemies don't want to kill them.
@natmarie82274 ай бұрын
maybe we should consider the fact that anyone, ANYONE, whose goal is to be universally-known, rich, famous, etc, should be questioned. period..
@Zerpersande4 ай бұрын
Ahhh, yes. They’re flawed and you’re flawed, so all the same? Except they did something great with their lives, unlike, well, you?
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
They are at the very least all narcissists 🥰
@afrosamourai4004 ай бұрын
facts!! any person that look for glory, power, fame, money is problematic
@terrymcginley9124 ай бұрын
@paul-nn9og no not really.! Some are some aren’t!
@doylejodi75024 ай бұрын
My Great Uncle was a Japanese POW. When he returned from War, he wouldn’t speak of the things; around ladies, that they had done to him over there. (Unspeakable, cruel, torturous things.) But he did tell my Grandfather,(his brother), and some of us found out. He HATED the Japanese and honestly, I can empathize. Who among us; during that era, had we been one of their POW’s, wouldn’t have some strong feelings?! Maybe Dr. Seuss had his reasons 🤷🏼♀️….
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
True, and the Chinese will never forget what the Japanese did to them, as they now go about Asia doing that same hated thing to others
@kamiclements74563 ай бұрын
I said almost the same thing. Americans were so traumatized by the actions of the Japanese in the war, and they couldn’t separate the people from the soldiers. His feelings were one of many, and had nothing to do with the fact that he was famous
@kevinmurker89804 ай бұрын
No one's perfect and no one's a saint.
@TeddyB-hf3ks4 ай бұрын
No one said anyone is.
@GipsyDanger89344 ай бұрын
@@TeddyB-hf3ksSome people would beg to differ.
@americanzero4 ай бұрын
@@kevinmurker8980 For all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God
@cynthiaschultheis16604 ай бұрын
I'm a retired U.S. History Professor and focused on Women's history and Cultural histor. Remarkable how little University students know about their OWN HISTORY.😵😵 PATHETIC ACTUALLY!!👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
@@RenataKleinRKThe teachers fine get as much say over curriculum as you think. Administrators, school boards, state and federal agencies and politicians are all in the mix.
@shawnycoffman4 ай бұрын
It seems most people aren't interested in history unless it's presented as a movie or other entertainment fashion.
@davemathews78904 ай бұрын
Nobody gives a crap about Women's History. Even art historians acknowledge that Mary Cassatt and Frida Kahlo were inferior artists.
@davemathews78904 ай бұрын
@@shawnycoffman History in film is usually fiction.
@friendsfan54 ай бұрын
Just remember that not all influential people are bad. There is still good in the world. I see it everyday.
@JorgePerez-jg5cm4 ай бұрын
Jobs was a real piece of work personally and in private.
@DanaArmas4 ай бұрын
Louis (Orphan) With Rina Sawayama & Thomas Doherty
@leahsundvall58944 ай бұрын
They obtained power and lost their humility, if they even had any to begin with. Arrogance is what they all have in common. It’s sad really.
@Lalaloveseveryone4 ай бұрын
The fact that Hellen Keller, of all people, would advocate for eugenics! Something I'm sure her cohorts in said thought would have no problem doing to her if she were not famous.
@caronstout3544 ай бұрын
Charles Lindburgh also believed in eugenics...
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
A lot of people believed in it at the time, including Margaret Sanger.
@MPM6785ChitChat4 ай бұрын
Keller wasn't famous as a baby or child - that was in adulthood and after her achievements. I'd say that she only advocated for it because she appreciated as to how extremely fortunate she was to have a loving , supportive family who were also wealthy - which therefore provided her with the future she eventually lived. Circumstances that wouldn't have occurred otherwise for others..
@martharunstheworld4 ай бұрын
@@Tracymmo Sanger started a whole organization just to annihilate an entire portion of the American population. She was more evil than can be imagined!
@laurenmontera95164 ай бұрын
What she MIGHT have meant was that nobody should have to go through the same darkness as she was forced to endure. Not everyone is accepting of handicapped people and when people don't understand or refuse to accept it, they ostracize and villainize them. It's socially as difficult as it is physically.
@KevyNova4 ай бұрын
Have people forgotten how incredibly influential and popular Bill Cosby was before we found out what a horrible person he is?
@dimpleface21634 ай бұрын
He's free...there was no evidence....they wanted him to die behind bars...it didn't happen...He's at home with his family.....DJT is a felon & is still able to run for POTUS...that's beyond me....anywho....When is he going to pay the woman for what he did?
@caronstout3544 ай бұрын
Yes..I remember him on Captain Kangaroo back in the day...
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
@@caronstout354Really?! If only Mister Moose had something heavier than ping pong balls drop on him.
@oh_flock4 ай бұрын
I was just thinking about the questionable things Cosby's done
@HeatForce4 ай бұрын
So, in other words, the FBI has never changed. Yet they still exist 😒
@butcheredalive3 ай бұрын
Corrupt and dishonest ever since it was founded
@suzannebauer62344 ай бұрын
I remember when Blueberry Hill, Chuck Berry's bar and grill in St. Louis, was caught with cameras in the women's bathrooms
@juanchoja4 ай бұрын
6:30 "Behind every musician, there's a human being with failures and faults" - a great quote from WatchMojo, which is why I'm better off not meeting my heroes or any historical figure. They did something admirable, but they're humans after all.
@LifesPeachy3214 ай бұрын
*It's not a surprise!* Take an ordinary person that becomes famous (whatever route) and they are treated like a god, they can have anything, no one tells them no...whether it's right or wrong, they get the best of the best... *Yes, that person will become a horrible human being,* add the narcissism that comes with fame...they will NEVER acknowledge it or think they have any kind of faults.
@srbmckenzie4 ай бұрын
That pronunciation of Roald Dahl... ouch.
@ilionreactor10794 ай бұрын
The new game: give your kids names AI will never be able to pronounce properly.
@yaha50814 ай бұрын
Mother Teresa also denied many people pain meds stating that suffering was from the lord
@16watch4 ай бұрын
She was an awful selfish narcissist person
@FionaOfMountLawley4 ай бұрын
And intentionally re-used syringes, contributing to the spread of the HIV in India despite knowing that even where single-use needles canulas etc. are unavailable, auto-claving of reusable equipment had become the standard of practice world-wide by the 1980s. She apparently insisted on re-use without autoclaving. So well funded were her activities, that single use equipment and autoclaving would have been easily obtainable for her hospices. Absent that isolation of HIV patients from other patients along with establishment of different sets of equipment used on the two different groups might have limited spread. She didn't do that either. As it was medical instruments were used indiscriminately after being washed with dish soap. The only conclusions that can be drawn are that 1) she drew no particular distinction between diseases effecting patients and had a pessimistic view of possible outcomes, to the extent that she saw her role as essentially managing the process of death or 2) that her amount of medical knowledge was both limited and she had failed to keep up with improvements in medicine, utilising clinical practices which had fallen behind by decades. In either instance it seems like almost anyone with a more pro-active view of care and up-to-date medical qualifications would likely have avoided the same degree of errors. Her preference for women who were (and are) primarily characterisable by the intensity of their faith in the order she founded, despite many of them lacking so much as a complete secondary education, let alone any relevant further education was also a problem. They were nuns, not nurses. Some were from the social class which sent their daughters to university, but many had an education equivalent to the average for Indian society at the time, not more than seven or eight years of formal schooling. Would you want someone with a primary school education providing your medical care ? She herself did complete high school, but her further education consisted of a few months of training at a convent in Ireland to become an *educational* missionary, during which getting up to speed in speaking English must have been a major focus. The number of people in India who can speak Albanian or Macedonian is vanishingly small, after all. Her many televised interviews provide an indication of how successful that was. Her spoken English remained heavily accented, halting and elementary over fifty years later and she resorted to the assistance of an interpreter during interviews throughout her life.
@FreeNintendo214 ай бұрын
The assumption to my theory, I can't believe this, here we have a mother who no one wants to sleep with
@cesaravegah37874 ай бұрын
Yup, and when she got ill got the best treatments available including enough pain killers to numb a horse, the woman took double standards to an entire new level.
@shadelings4 ай бұрын
@@RenataKleinRK Yup and yet the Catholic church made her one anyway, smdh.
@SamuraiGirl024 ай бұрын
To add more in Dr. Seuss, he was also cheating on his wife-while she was battling cancer. She committed suicide due to his infidelity. 😢
@moose6564 ай бұрын
And then he married his affair partner.
@TeddyB-hf3ks4 ай бұрын
That's not why someone suicides. 😂😂😂😂 There was something more going on inside her head and/or body.
@TeddyB-hf3ks4 ай бұрын
That's not why someone suicides. 😂😂😂😂😂 There was something more going on inside her head/body.
@moose6564 ай бұрын
@@TeddyB-hf3ks That's EXACTLY why she committed suicide. Heartbreak and betrayal all at once all the while she had cancer, and her one person she thought she could rely on betrays him? Yeah, that would drive someone to suicide, buddy. And the fact that you're laughing at the fact makes you pretty gross, by the way.
@SamuraiGirl024 ай бұрын
@@TeddyB-hf3ks Maybe the affair wasn’t the sole reason, but it definitely was a factor.
@jalabi994 ай бұрын
20:53 The man even screened DW Griffiths' _The Birth of a Nation_ in the White House. Another horrid man.
@alancrisp15824 ай бұрын
Oh just calm down and smell the coffee ☕ is it really that important ?..
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
@@alancrisp1582Yes, it is.
@MasseyKY4 ай бұрын
Surprised Elvis isn't here, but maybe for another list
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
He treated Priscilla poorly, and married her when she was awfully young, and he had a temper that I'm glad I wasn't around, but I've never heard anything shocking about him.
@terrymcginley9124 ай бұрын
No No No No he didn’t marry Priscilla till she was 21 and that’s that!!
@alexaraya20183 ай бұрын
How come Jobs wasn't sued up the ass for child support payments and negligence.
@Pocketrocket-pj1us4 ай бұрын
8:50 For Hoover, it just should have said, 'Everything'
@marywatkins94383 ай бұрын
13:29 Dorothy Day deserves her sainthood far more than Mother Theresa does.
@danielklimovich4 ай бұрын
The one about MLK Jr surprised me the most
@MT_Madman4 ай бұрын
I remember hearing of MLK's transgressions when they first established his birthday as a holiday.
@DUCKDUDE41004 ай бұрын
I'm surprised anyone believes it. The same agents who claimed this nonsense were the ones sending him letter telling him to end it. COINTELPRO was a horrorshow.
@evasilvalayton7584 ай бұрын
@@MT_Madmaninteresting 😢
@itsvictoroyedeji4 ай бұрын
The one about him supporting the pastor's misconduct was never proven to be true.
@anatavi74 ай бұрын
When I had my kid I was vulnerable, very young and very stupid. I did crazy pranks for Peta, sometimes ruining peoples fur coats. I heckled people eating meat. When I got pregnant I was surrounded by a home birth, naturopathic, looney tunes community and refused to vaccinate my kid. I was obnoxious to people who suggested that was a bad thing. I judged those people. Thats right, I was an anti-vaxer. In time, as I got a little older and wiser I realized the stupidity in what I had believed was true. I did research and got my kid vaccinated. Anyway, all of this is to say, had I died at 21 I would’ve been remembered as that terrible person. I sometimes wonder if some of these people had enough time and education- would they be able to make changes? I would hate for my whole identity to be based off my ill informed actions as a young adult. (I’m a nurse now. I make it a point to reach out to people who think the way I used to think in the hopes that with a little compassion and a little education, they, too can see the light.)
@kamiclements74563 ай бұрын
That’s a really good and thought-provoking thought. I almost laughed when they mentioned Dr. Seuss as having anti-Japanese sentiments, I said in my head, “Yeah, him and the rest of America”. That’s the information they had. Had they been given a different perspective, I’d like to think they would change their minds
@maurosanchezhernandez50214 ай бұрын
the move "Judas and the black Messiah" shines a light on the repression of the Black Panther Party
@lallaxanais4 ай бұрын
I said the same thing!!
@blu483 ай бұрын
The number of horrible things done by influential people is massively higher than 20.
@JaylenPotts-zs2qw4 ай бұрын
I hope everyone has positive change for their negative actions.
@blugreen1234 ай бұрын
Jerry Lee Lewis? James Brown? Henry Ford? Harvey Weinstein?
@esteemedmortal59174 ай бұрын
The only one that surprised me was Helen Keller. Disappointed and sad that she internalized ableism 😞
@elisabethb.1313 ай бұрын
Lol, when they mentioned Rudyard Kipling, my brain literally went "Huh? Was he known for anything ELSE than coloniali... Oh right; "Jungle Book"' Also I'm pretty sure Dr. Seus ended up changing his mind later in life. However it's generally a good idea to NEVER put historical figures on a pedestal, since they were all subject to specific times with specific concerns about specific (perceived) problems and specific ways of thinking, common blind spots, and lacking (or mis-)information. All of which makes it way too easy to judge them in hindsight with the benefit of current insights and knowledge they didn't have. For example, it's way too common to brush Hitler's doctrines off as the ideas of a psychopatic maniac, because no one (especially right after the war) wishes to remember how incredibly prevalent those ideas were all over Europe AND North America. In fact, we are already starting to forget the biggest lesson we learned from WO2: How INCREDIBLY dangerous nationalism is when it becomes the birthground, feeding ground, and excuse for the scarier looking isms. Namely racism, fascism, nazism, communism, AND "ethnic cleansing". Which were/are all the results of decades of conscious efforts to destruct the languages and cultural identities of countless minorities in the name of the 19th century Nationalism hype. Commonly under the motto "One country, one people, one language" (See all those "speak Murican!" 'Karens' online? Yes, that's how it starts. That, and book burnings). Seriously, Look up 'Vergonha' for a good example ((France's systematic campaign of shaming and punishing the over 50% of French inhabitants who didn't speak French around the mid 19th century, in order to root out most of the +/- 50 other historic French languages (Breton, Occitan, Basque, etc.), to then (and still) declare French the most beautiful language in the world.)). If you want to control people and make them die for you on the warfront, you need to control and foster their national identity first. Oh, and Churchill didn't just wreak havoc in India, he also (together with president Eisenhower) destroyed democracy in Iran in 1953 in order to get their hands on cheap oil for the post-war restoration. And as we all know, Iran ended up descending into religious dictatorial theocracy that Iranians (and international politics) are still suffering from today. (Wikipedia: 1953 Iranian coup d'état for more) However Cromwell is a super random appearance on this list (both editing-wise and content-wise) since if we go that far back in history, most countries have had at LEAST one leader, dictator or invader who at some point went on a religion-excused political killing spree. From Genghis Khan, Vlad III and the 3rd Duke of Alba, to Videla, Pol Pot, Franco en Mussolini. Why on earth list Cromwell and not the countless other murderous 'big men' even worse than him? Don't technically ALL dictators in history fall under "Influential people"? Sorry, rant over.
The facts about Hoover, I only heard of them in movies before, but it is technically logical about his actions, even before the Red Scare and beginning of the Cold War. As for President Wilson, his promotion of segregation was not the only apparent unethical movement of his. I learned in high school history that he technically kept the U.S. out of World War I out of unethical means. And about Cromwell, he technically was a type of military dictator in some accounts, due to his censoring of theater and other activities in England itself. And he was also a Puritan, which helps put his actions in context if people know the events of the Salem Witch Trials.
@roysnell83194 ай бұрын
And that’s why John Lennon is my least favorite Beatle
@catelynstark98834 ай бұрын
Miles Davis, Jerry Lee Lewis & Morrissey respect the work not the acts
@cathyv34244 ай бұрын
I don’t like the Beatles lol
@illmatic90964 ай бұрын
I don't care about his personal life tbh, I love his music, especially his work with the beatles
@roysnell83194 ай бұрын
@@cathyv3424 I used to hate the Beatles myself, most certainly because they’re just talked about so much. But nowadays, I actually appreciate their music (though “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer”still sucks!)
@PrincessofPower844 ай бұрын
His elder son decided not to have children due to his childhood. He also was considerably closer to Paul than his own father.
@julesjma3 ай бұрын
Why would people support Jobs? I will NEVER buy Apple. He is a HORRIBLE person.
@gloriacash80824 ай бұрын
Wow! Very informative and shocking video!
@TheConorsmithusa4 ай бұрын
22:19 WOW im amazed you pronounced drogheda correctly! I grew up there. One of the biggest towns in ireland
@maxsredditreadingclub83534 ай бұрын
RIP To All The Innocent 🕊️🕊️🕊️🕊️
@wedgeheelshunterlegend26544 ай бұрын
Influential people aren't really influential they just waste their own time with nonsense
@kjmps9994 ай бұрын
It’s wild that racial coexistence is described as utopian…
@Sly88Frye4 ай бұрын
Most of these surprised me Number one didn't surprise me because I even remember studying in school about that.
@irishgurl30784 ай бұрын
My sperm donor (Who was there in our lives but an abusive,alcoholic,drug-addicted POS who didn’t lift a finger to help my mother) denied my brother and I were his to try and get out of paying child support but when my mom finally took us and left him for good tried to say we were his and he had a right as our father to see us.
@evasilvalayton7584 ай бұрын
I’m so sorry you all had to go through that. Yes, your sperm donor makes the list !
@irishgurl30784 ай бұрын
@@evasilvalayton758 Thank you.
@ElizabethMcCormick-s2n4 ай бұрын
Even influential people were/are capable of being awful!
@ElizabethMcCormick-s2n4 ай бұрын
Helen Keller included!
@dhenderson18104 ай бұрын
You have the capacity to be awful too.
@ElizabethMcCormick-s2n4 ай бұрын
@@dhenderson1810 I know
@americanzero4 ай бұрын
Were? Meaning they passed away?
@ElizabethMcCormick-s2n4 ай бұрын
@@dhenderson1810 I don't deny that, but I hope I never will be!
@killielila4 ай бұрын
Simon Whistler keeps writers in his basement can believe you quote him I this !!😂
@jamesmcdonald95884 ай бұрын
Always find it weird why people obsess over people's personal lives
@Tracymmo4 ай бұрын
That's why I like the interviews the American Academy of Television (?) does because they start with a few biographical basics then do an extensive interview about someone's work. I don't care who they married or if they are alcoholics. I want to know about their careers as actors, directors, etc.
@timw43694 ай бұрын
Steve jobs may have been goid at business but he was a horrible person
@michellecrocker24854 ай бұрын
The use of Simon whistler is always a win
@parakeet81574 ай бұрын
Kind of hard hearing about Helen Keller's views about Euthanasia 😢 I had a Cousin who was almost completely nonverbal & retarded. My Aunt & a group of others helped found the Northwest Center in WA. & helped to establish the "Education for all" bill. Wow, Joe Kennedy had a lobotomy performed on his own daughter, Rose😢
@chasezly4 ай бұрын
putting a morrissey song in this video is insane he could probably fit on the list
@NhBleker4 ай бұрын
You don’t become famous and rich by being a good person.
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
Top comment
@SonicGamerGirl20064 ай бұрын
I wish. 🙃🫠🫠
@stephenmiller23373 ай бұрын
Never meet your heroes, unless your heroes are Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson from Rush. I've met them twice and got to speak to both of them at length, and can attest to how nice they are.
@bomb1214 ай бұрын
Great video! Very interesting!
@zacharywiggans17634 ай бұрын
I’m telling Simon you clipped him without recognition
@floridafrostbite80024 ай бұрын
My great aunt got married at 12 so Charlie Chaplain ain’t surprising. The past is the WORSED.
@kevindagame4 ай бұрын
Yeah, just look at all these 50+ year old kings in the past, that married teens
@floridafrostbite80024 ай бұрын
@@kevindagame and a majority were at least 14 or up
@MPM6785ChitChat4 ай бұрын
Odd though that in the US it is still legal in over 20 States to marry a minor age 12 with parental consent and in a few States it is low as 10 years with parental and judicial consent...
@phoenixdaronco95404 ай бұрын
@@MPM6785ChitChat, Japan is also notorious for treating minors in a romantic fashion. Eesh! 😬
@floridafrostbite80024 ай бұрын
@@MPM6785ChitChat Yeah, it’s messed up
@ToddMathis-fg1pn4 ай бұрын
wow! Didn't know about Helen Keller!
@simontravers27154 ай бұрын
It’s “Rolled” Dahl Never heard it pronounced “Ru-Olled”
@lunahodnomerdva3 ай бұрын
No, it should be "roo-all". Norwegian name from Norwegian parents. After Roald Amundsen.
@COMPFUNK24 ай бұрын
Sounds like Hitchcock was Weinstein Sr.
@rbarnett32004 ай бұрын
I’m a historian by profession and I don’t buy the “oh, but it was a different time” thing. There are many complex (and honestly, frequently tedious) arguments about why people did this or that and the choices they could’ve picked, and from a (relatively) liberal modern stand point you can argue it was immoral or barbaric or whatever. But to horribly (horribly!) simplify it, people have acted the same way throughout history. There’s a billion sources across cultures and continents that show both the best and the worst of humanity. We fight each other, we’re pacifists, we’re racists and we’re accepting. It happens everywhere all the time. That’s the human condition. For example: my grandparents were witness to the atrocities of WW2, there parents witnessed the atrocities of WW1, before that slavery, before that the subjugation of the American proletariat, before that the genocide of native Americans, before that and before that and before that the crusades and on and on and so forth. We always focus on the major violent things because, frankly, the history of people just hanging out and getting by is tedious. That being said…don’t be chatting at me about all this back in day shit. Nothing changes, it’s just new forms of cruelty to each other.
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
Yep the common person has had a terrible time throughout history & its mostly undocumented.
@formerlyfoote33804 ай бұрын
The only one that surprised me was Hellen Keller. The nerve of that woman.
@cynhiacations98794 ай бұрын
I knew Steve Jobs was a nasty selfish man but I didn't know that it went deeper.
@hogflyer36534 ай бұрын
Can you even blame Dr Seuss? I would hate the people killing my friends and fellow soldiers too.
@enlightenedbeauty41284 ай бұрын
Don't forget about Elvis . He married a 14 year old
@cooked_gamin4 ай бұрын
I have been saying this for the longest even made a video about this they don't want to listen but you right
@marinadeburgos86664 ай бұрын
He married Priscilla when she was 18... But yeah, they started having a relationship when she was 14
@truerosie4 ай бұрын
@@marinadeburgos8666 Priscilla was born in 1945. They married in 1967. She was 22 then.
@terrymcginley9124 ай бұрын
No No No No No he did not Mary her at 14 that’s a lie he waited till she was old enough and married at 21 Then they did all that!!! It’s good to look at the facts!!!
@terrymcginley9124 ай бұрын
@Mind-podcast it’s a lie he wasn’t he waited till she was 21. He wasn’t that bad I’m not gonna listen to people who cherry pick stuff it inconveniences me too much!!!
@mostly_insane22914 ай бұрын
Simon Whistler is everywhere!!!!
@voutsider1904 ай бұрын
What is it with Hollywood and kids?
@WayneKitching4 ай бұрын
19:22 Fancy seeing Simon Whistler here!
@freelikeyve4 ай бұрын
Not Steve Jobs bein a deadbeat dad 😫
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
Not even a crappy old computer from 'Dad'
@HappyFhantum4 ай бұрын
It does excuse Dr. Seuss's sentiments. The whole western hemisphere felt the same way. The Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor and were trying to take over the South Pacific.
@TXMEDRGR3 ай бұрын
I agree.
@fatalwaffle17154 ай бұрын
Interesting Video.
@cyriljuniordim97774 ай бұрын
Simon Whistler done made it,,, quoted on WatchMojo 😂🔥
@RottenAnimal4 ай бұрын
read the book, "The British mad dog, Debunking the Myth of Winston Churchill" by M. S. King. to learn the truth of Winston. He was more horrible than you can imagine.
@cmaden784 ай бұрын
We should do the same( and at my hs we did..taught by a nun no less) about Vietnam. If we ignore or gloss over the hard lessons of our history what do we learn? I am eternally grateful to that wonderful brave teacher for doing what she knew was right❤
@evenisher4 ай бұрын
steve jobs is burning in hell since 2011 ;)
@namelessshadow_4 ай бұрын
I didn’t know about some of these!
@iamlegion30934 ай бұрын
The Dr Suess one…yeah that kinda sorta definitely makes sense with that whole WW2 thing
@lilshawano10144 ай бұрын
He was just doing what he was ordered to do for the time. If continued after the military than yeah he would be bad then.
@wrasslerk83894 ай бұрын
@lilshawano1014 exactly. I mean, the Japanese were our enemies and killing Americans on American soil and all. Surprised watch MOJO didn't go after him, or any other celebrity at the time, for mocking Hitler.
@IceMaidenxx34 ай бұрын
But it contributed to the suffering of Japanese migrants and Japanese-American people within the US. Just because he was ordered doesn't excuse the suffering it contributed to.
@monkberrymoon40424 ай бұрын
@@IceMaidenxx3 What? I don't think FDR and Governor Warren were interning American citizens because Geisel drew funny pictures.
@monkberrymoon40424 ай бұрын
Dr. Seuss's greatest sin was his ridiculous penchant for making up words just to complete a poetic rhyme.
@travissmalley43494 ай бұрын
At least Steve Jobs daughter got named after the worst computer ever made
@mimi2the44 ай бұрын
Henry Ford and LRH
@alsmith19814 ай бұрын
"Trust the art, not the artist".......whether someone who truly revolutionises their field is nice of not is generally moot.
@paulaholte67354 ай бұрын
it saddens that some people want 'all Black schools' .. in my opinion, it's a step backward 😞
@JacobSzymanski-zm7xo4 ай бұрын
Well don’t get upset about it. Let people do whatever the fuck they want and mimd your own fucking business.
@Paul-nn9oj4 ай бұрын
Yeah last Gens revolutionaries are this Gens reactionaries, its a cycle only a non-mediated understanding of history will prevent us repeating
@paulaholte67354 ай бұрын
@@RenataKleinRK I don't agree with that either
@kcblueeyes9334 ай бұрын
I thought I accidentally changed the video when Simon started speaking 🤔😂