DYD B-11
mKZwOBypdUEjJdTB 114
I'm retired http://xxxnx.fun/tnv-kinsey/ befxxxx  The film juxtaposes images that are weirdly charming and utterly banal. Repeatedly, Nixon stands before cameras, and so the advisors who shoot him also shoot cameras, each innocuous image revealing the meta-story of documentation as a way of life in the White House. That this in itself becomes the means by which “Watergate” (in all its complexities) is uncovered and also reshaped, endlessly. In their post-White House interviews, with David Frost or Phil Donahue, among others, the men who made this White House seem almost to wonder at what happened and at teh man they served so diligently. As Ehrlichman reflects on what he knew and didn’t know, he also notes that the president tried to keep “little watertight compartments of information,” an effort that, in the end, “didn’t work very well.”
Zachery 2020-04-05 09:28:20

ȸ»ç¼Ò°³ | ã¾Æ¿À½Ã´Â ±æ | ÀÎÁõ³»¿ëº¸±â