Re: NAZIS IN SOUTH AMERICA
Disney did a gov't sponsored public relations blast on South America in the
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What Walt Disney Learned From South America
6:07
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Transcript
September 17, 200912:00 PM ET
Heard on Tell Me More
In 1941, on the eve of America's entry to World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt wanted to curb the influence of Nazis and fascists in South America. So the President enlisted someone who embodied the American capitalist spirit: Walt Disney. Guest host Mandalit del Barco talks to film director Ted Thomas, who's new documentary Walt & El Grupo chronicles Walt Disney's adventure and public relations mission to South America."
Interview transcript: https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=112916523
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/10/disney-donald-duck-carioca-latin-america-imperialism
"Walt Disney announced his arrival in Latin America with two animated films: 1942’s Saludos amigos and 1944’s Los tres caballeros. Their debuts — in Rio de Janeiro and Mexico City, respectively — were milestones in the decade-long Good Neighbor Policy, which had begun in 1933 when the United States wound down its military occupation of Central America. In the 1940s, the Roosevelt administration saw hemispheric collaboration as vital to the American war effort.
With the rise of fascism in the region a real, if exaggerated, threat, the two Disney films and the accompanying diplomatic mission were intended as anti-Nazi propaganda for a South American audience. Riding high on a wave of similar goodwill tours — including Henry Wallace’s Hemispheric New Deal — the resulting animations initially seem like earnest, if naïve, attempts to engage in an authentic dialogue with Latin American culture.
But pan-American rhetoric withered and the dream of a Latin American Marshall Plan evaporated in the postwar period. Good neighborliness gave way to the Cold War nightmare of Guatemala in 1954. Today, it seems clear that the two Disney pictures established a precedent in which the film industry would work to justify American intervention in the region and around the globe." (!!!!!)
Video interview with Walt about the South America trip:
Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKjZf3QW0Og
Part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_uP3XjnypU
"The Three Caballeros" and "Saludos Amigos" were made following this trip.
Anon here was impressed by the digging one by the non-anons on "Hunting Hitler". No SJW narrative to be found, either. They did plenty of digging and filming in both Paraguay and Uruguay; remember the Bush family compound of hundreds of thousands of acres on a huge freshwater aquifer in that area?
https://www.history.com/shows/hunting-hitler