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6 votes
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The mystery of the world’s oldest billboard
3 votes -
The shape of Vodou in diaspora
2 votes -
How donkeys changed the course of human history
5 votes -
An overview of how, and why, Taiwan’s Kuomintang dictatorship willingly embraced democracy
5 votes -
Intact ancient papyrus scroll uncovered in Saqqara, the first in a century
5 votes -
US pilot shot down four Soviet MiGs in thirty minutes – and kept it a secret for fifty years
8 votes -
Much of what you've heard about Carter and Reagan is wrong
11 votes -
Crippling Hitler's navy – the battle that knocked out 50% of the Kriegsmarine's destroyers in Norway
4 votes -
Archaeology and genetics can’t yet agree on when humans first arrived in the Americas. That’s good science and here’s why.
3 votes -
Archaeologists with the Nordjyske Museer in Denmark have found the remains of a large, thousand-year-old homestead, which they believe may have been a Viking hall
6 votes -
'Hallowed space': Canadian divers pull 275 artifacts from 2022 excavation of Franklin ship
3 votes -
I was wrong (and so was everyone)
8 votes -
Darwin's Barometer
3 votes -
The fascinating history behind a set of miniature murder scenes
4 votes -
The evolution of Father Christmas
5 votes -
The incredible Calypso: Jacques Cousteau's crazy exploration vessel
7 votes -
How Gloria Steinem lent Wonder Woman a helping hand
5 votes -
We need a library economy
8 votes -
Transhumanism: "The world's most dangerous idea"
7 votes -
All people are created educable, a vital oft-forgotten tenet of modern democracy
14 votes -
Oldest known sentence written in first alphabet discovered – on a head-lice comb
7 votes -
‘Exceptional’ trove of twenty-four ancient statues found immersed in Tuscan spa
8 votes -
Did Vikings find their way to a remote part of Oklahoma? Some in a small community believe so, thanks to controversial runic carvings found in the area.
13 votes -
The history of Halloween
4 votes -
Swedish maritime archaeologists have discovered the long-lost sister ship of the 17th-century warship Vasa
7 votes -
The horrifying Public Information Films of 1970s Britain
As far as I can make out, every country has public information films. They rarely pull punches, which is pretty important as their messages are usually important. I remember being terrified by...
As far as I can make out, every country has public information films. They rarely pull punches, which is pretty important as their messages are usually important. I remember being terrified by Monolith as a child. I still think about It's Thirty For a Reason whenever I drive in suburban areas, and I've seen similar things from New Zealand, Canada and so on. Creative agencies love PIF gigs because you can do so much more than a normal advert/TV spot would allow. People can, and do, go all out on them. They're also ripe for parody
However, back in the seventies, that's when the UK government went a little... well.. overboard. Imagine showing Lonely Water to actual children. Or Stand Steady, or even Frisbee? I remember being shown films like these at school, from scratchy old VHS tapes on clunky old school TVs. I remember them being broadcast during children's programming time. I remember being irrationally terrified of old fridges even though I've never see a fridge with a lock in my entire life.
But sure, they're scary topics and sometimes you do need to scare people into not doing stupid stuff that might kill them. There are plenty of examples of scary short PIFs aimed at all ages from their invention right up to the present day. But then there are the longer form movies about safety for children. That's what this post is really about. Let's call these the "unholy trinity" of PIF terror:
There's the weird time-loop slaughter fest of Building Sites Bite (unfortunately the only copy I could find was a 'reacts' video but it's worth watching)
Ignoring the of-it's-time but now recognised as problematic "Cowboys and Indians" conceit, Apaches is utterly horrifying.
Then there's the dystopian awfulness of The Finishing Line
These films were rated PG (aka safe for kids). They were shown in schools. Not just high schools, but primary (elementary) schools. Although to be fair, someone did get a clue fairly quickly and The Finishing Line was banned and withdrawn in under a year because holy shit.
I'd be interested to see some of your favourite public information films, please do link them if you have any.
9 votes -
Military operations in East Ukraine (1919-1942)
3 votes -
This 1970s tank simulator drives through a tiny world
8 votes -
Minneapolis church still holds services in Norwegian – congregation was founded in 1922 at the tail end of a decades-long migration of Norwegians to Minnesota
6 votes -
Kotka, in southeastern Finland, removed the country's last publicly displayed statue of Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin
5 votes -
The treadmill/treadwheel crane sounds like something from Astérix or the Flintstones. But at Guédelon in France, not only do they have one, they're using it to help build their brand new castle.
7 votes -
9/26 is Petrov Day
7 votes -
Jerry cans: The true secret weapon of WWII
5 votes -
The biggest mapping mistake of all time
7 votes -
The end of history (of philosophy)
1 vote -
The Gombe Chimpanzee War (1974-1978)
8 votes -
The heroic story of the Ukrainian language
4 votes -
The Ancient Romans couldn’t knit
8 votes -
The true history of the Knights Templar with Dan Jones
4 votes -
Götheborg of Sweden – The world's largest wooden sailing ship
5 votes -
On the wisdom of Noah Smith (Bret Devereaux on the historic method)
3 votes -
What happened to flying wings?
7 votes -
Visiting Canada’s $50 million 1980s ghost town
12 votes -
Why no Roman industrial revolution?
10 votes -
Speaking fiction to power
4 votes -
These caves shouldn't exist. Or, at the very least, we can't yet explain them.
10 votes -
Logistics: How did they do it? Part III, on the move
6 votes -
Sweden's Foreign Minister Ann Linde said she won't return a historical document to Poland, as it was a “legitimate” spoil of war
2 votes -
Analytic vs. continental philosophy
5 votes