| Index | 5 reviews in total |
24 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
A Cornerstone Show On The History Channel, 16 July 2008
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Author:
alexkolokotronis from Queens, New York
When I think History Channel I think Modern Marvels. In a strange way it is very addictive. You learn so much you just want more and more. You could watch a marathon of this and not notice that hours have passed by. It covers everything from entertainment to architectural achievements to politics. It is so explanatory and at the same times it gives you a time line of whatever the show is displaying. What makes this show so great is that it could cover any topic including ones I'm not interested in and make me interested. This show at times has compelled me to research further to extensively learn about something for myself. A great show that does not base its episodes on speculation but on facts and examines and investigates them as well. I couldn't ever imagine this being taken off the air.
12 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Greatest Show Ever!, 30 January 2007
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Author:
melissa-langston-2007 from United States
Anyone whoever has a chance to watch this show should! It is very entertaining. You need no scientific or engineering knowledge whatsoever...They cover every single topic: From movies and sex, to ships and storm, to terrorism and the military. Every topic is entertaining. You can watch the shows for FREE on the History Channel website. Any topic that has ever interested will be described in detail...the history and the future of the topics are covered. Some of the best episodes are the Engineering Disaster episodes. These episodes talk all about things that fail from the 1900's on. Watch this show...you will learn...and you will be entertained...
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Oddly Addictive, 26 June 2007
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Author:
SamuelChase from United States
I gotta say I love this show. It really indulges your inner curiosities
about a WIDE range of subject matter. What on the surface would sound
like some documentary on a lackluster topic you'd watch in grade
school, Modern Marvels makes fascinating.
Whether it's guns, engines, shipping, mining, plastics, or something as
seemingly mundane as plumbing, Modern Marvels presents an entertaining
and well-organized program taking you from the subject's origins to
where it's likely headed in the future. This insightful program is
highly recommended for those who have even the slightest curiosity, and
who desire an understanding of the things that create our society.
7 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Manhatten Project episode, 10 July 2008
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Author:
greenforest56 from San Francisco, California
The first ¾ of this film is factual and useful. However, at the end it
provides the usual moral distortion currently popular about America's
use of the atomic bomb to end WWII. First, the main motive for dropping
the bomb was not Russia but American casualties.
The American leadership was not indifferent to the spread of Soviet
domination. However, at the time of decision the battle of Okinawa was
still going on and Truman was looking at casualty reports of 5,000 a
week and had been seeing those reports for weeks. In all, there were
over 72,000 American casualties in this battle. So high was the
casualty rate that congress called for an investigation. Over 200,000
Japanese died on Okinawa. It is not known how many were wounded.
Over 30 American ships were sunk and 164 were damaged. By comparison,
only 9 ships were sunk and 14 damaged at Pearl Harbor. Several thousand
American and Japanese aircraft were lost, far more than were lost in
the Battle of Britain. In fact, more aircraft were lost at Okinawa than
the entire June, 1940 combat strength of the RAF and Luftwaffe
combined.
Thus, the small island of Okinawa was one of the largest battles of
World War II.
It was estimated that there would be up to 1,000,000 American
casualties if we had to invade and conquer Japan. Japanese casualties
were estimated to be ten times higher. So many Purple Heart Medals were
manufactured in anticipation of the casualties from the invasion that
to this day wounded soldiers are awarded Purple Hearts from this WWII
stock.
Ship losses were expected to be greater because a new form of Kamikaze,
besides 10,000 remaining aircraft, in the shape of suicide attack
boats, would also be met in the Home Islands. Aircraft losses were
expected to be high because many more would be lost to ground fire.
Thus, the invasion of Japan was going to be perhaps the largest and
most horrendous battle in world history.
The second and little known reason was Japan had a secret biological
weapons research program. They had also been bombarding America with
balloon bombs that drifted across the Pacific to America on the jet
stream. (In fact, it was a Japanese scientist, using balloons, that
discovered the jet stream in the 1920's. It is used to this day by
commercial airline flights from Tokyo to L.A. to save fuel.)
However, a strict news blackout kept the Japanese from knowing the
success of this program, named "fūsen bakudan", and so they did not
combine their biological weapons with these balloon bombs. Over 9,000
of these balloons were launched and about 1,000 reached the United
States. They fell all over North America, as far north as Alaska, as
far east as Detroit and as far south as Mexico.
As late as 1955 one with live ordnance was found in Alaska. Another was
found in 1992, its ordnance too corroded to explode. Thus, only because
of the news blackout were American and Canadian civil populations were
spared widespread attack from biological weapons.
This was no small menace and the American leadership had to weigh it in
the balance.
This film episode fails to mention either of these facts.
It is also a moral perversion to have the testimony of 'victims' of the
atomic bomb without the moral balance of testimony of the victims of
the true atrocities of the Japanese.
Such as: the victims of the Rape of Nanking where hundreds of thousands
of Chinese were brutally raped, murdered and abused. Some were tied to
posts and used for bayonet practice. Others were used for karate
practice, 'practiced' on until they died.
The American and Philippine soldiers who were victims of the Bataan
Death March who were brutalized, shot, stabbed, starved and given no
water on their tragic march to their prison camps. Thousands died.
Or the Korean 'comfort'women who were enslaved and sent into
prostitution by Japan to 'comfort' Japanese soldiers. Or the American
captives who were sent to Manchuria where Japan conducted their secret
biological weapons program. American G.I.'s were the guinea pigs. Or
the U.S. Marines who were all beheaded after they were forced to
surrender after defending Wake Island. Etc., etc.
It is a moral imbalance to present only the tearful testimony of a
Japanese present at Hiroshima without providing a larger moral context
of the war in general. Such an imbalance is a distortion to the point
of moral perversion.
NOTE: This criticism is for the "Manhatten Project" episode only. The
'Modern Marvel" series in general is good to excellent and I recommend
it.
A review of the Robots episode, 4 December 2011
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Author:
robotbling from Canada
Modern Marvels' episode takes a look at the history of mobile robots in
the United States. The show begins with the original Shaky and Stanford
Cart, all the way up to the massive field robots developed by Red
Whittaker at Carnegie Mellon to deal with nuclear accidents. It's
particularly interesting because there really weren't any machines
(robots or otherwise) capable of dealing with these sorts of disasters
before Whittaker and his team began developing them.
While some have criticized Japan for failing to build practical robots
capable of dealing with situations like the Fukushima plant, the United
States was in the same position when the meltdown occurred at the Three
Mile Island reactor. Whittaker jokes that the start-up he founded was
the robotics equivalent of an ambulance chaser, making bank on the
backs of disasters as they happened. It then goes into some of the
early legged robots and autonomous vehicles.
Though it does touch very lightly on humanoids, it almost goes out of
its way to tiptoe around Japan's dominance in that area (perhaps not to
upset WW2 buffs, the History Channel's target demographic). Instead of
Japanese humanoids (of which only familiar clips of Honda's P2 are
shown despite the episode airing in 2004!), it focuses on the
comparably simplistic animatronics for entertainment and Nolan
Bushnell's failed household robotics venture Androbot. Even though our
beloved humanoids are not the focus of the episode, it's still a
history lesson worth taking, though its American bias is slightly
annoying.
Modern Marvels also did a couple of episodes with robotic tangents
("Super Human" has a short segment on Raytheon SARCOS's exoskeleton).
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