How NASA used WOMEN as HUMAN COMPUTERS! 😱 *HIDDEN FIGURES*

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • Affan First Time Watching Hidden Figures Movie Reaction Video, Commentary Video, and Review Video
    Hidden Figures directed by Theodore Melfi, written by Allison Schroeder, Theodore Melfi, and Margot Lee Shetterly, starring Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, and Janelle Monáe
    Three female African-American mathematicians play a pivotal role in astronaut John Glenn's launch into orbit. Meanwhile, they also have to deal with racial and gender discrimination at work.
    Hidden Figures Full Movie
    🔔Love movies? Join Affan's cinematic journey and see films like never before! 🎬 Subscribe now: / @affanreacts
    ✅ Important Links:
    👉 Patreon: / affanator
    👉 Check Out The Merch In My Online Store: www.bonfire.co...
    ✅ Stay Connected With Me:
    👉 Instagram: / affanator
    👉 TikTok: / affaned
    👉 Twitter: / peshawariaffan
    ✅ For Business Inquiries: worthlessfilms9@gmail.com
    =============================
    ✅ Recommended Playlists
    👉Kung Fu Panda
    • Kung Fu Panda First Ti...
    👉All Movies
    • Get Out (2017) Movie R...
    ✅ Other Videos You Might Be Interested In Watching:
    👉 Avatar The Last Airbender First Time Reaction - The Boy in the Iceberg Ep.1 | Affan Reacts
    • Avatar The Last Airben...
    👉 Avatar The Last Airbender Reaction - My Opinion Of Aang's Character | Affan Reacts
    • Avatar The Last Airben...
    👉 Jordan Peele's "US" (2019): Movie Reaction - First Time Watching | Affan Reacts
    • Jordan Peele's "US" (2...
    👉 "Late Night with the Devil": Horror Movie Reaction | Affan Reacts
    • "Late Night with the D...
    =============================
    ✅ About Affan Reacts:
    Welcome to Affan Reacts! Dive into thrilling reactions to the latest films and TV shows. Join us for genuine, engaging, and fun responses to your favorite entertainment. Subscribe and enjoy the journey with us!
    For collaboration and business inquiries, please use the contact information below:
    📩 Email: worthlessfilms9@gmail.com
    🔔Want more movie and TV show insights? Subscribe and be part of the adventure: / @affanreacts
    =====================
    #hiddenfigures #civilrights #nasa #spaceexploration #spaceprogram #moviereaction #reaction #reactionvideo #affanreaction #affanreacts #firsttimewatching #funnyreaction
    Disclaimer: I do not accept any liability for any loss or damage incurred from you acting or not acting as a result of watching any of my publications. You acknowledge that you use the information I provide at your own risk. Do your research.
    Copyright Notice: This video and my RUclips channel contain dialog, music, and images that are the property of Affan React. You are authorized to share the video link and channel and embed this video in your website or others as long as a link back to my RUclips channel is provided.
    © Affan Reacts

Комментарии • 11

  • @AffanReacts
    @AffanReacts  Месяц назад +1

    For Early Access & Full Length Reactions to this movie as well as the next and all future shows and movies, check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/affanator
    Thank you & Have A Nice 😊

  • @christinemclaurin2631
    @christinemclaurin2631 День назад

    @38:25 Station 🤘😎❤

  • @tommieev5589
    @tommieev5589 29 дней назад +4

    I love this movie. Also, even if certain scenes were not 100% historically accurate to these characters, they were historically accurate to the laws of segregation that existed in America's past. I think it was important for them to include those details in this movie so that generations born after that time more fully understand the climate of the racial (and sexual) divide at that time. I think you might enjoy the movie "Amistad" .

  • @JMac7395
    @JMac7395 22 дня назад +8

    In regards to your comment about people being "pure" back then contributing to longer marriages, that was not the case. In the 1960s on back, it was considered socially taboo for married couples to divorce no matter the circumstances. Back then married couples were dealing with the same issues modern day couples deal with. Such as cheating spouse, abusive spouse, spousal abandonment, infertility issues, financial issues etc etc. Couples were expected & pressured to tolerate the issues within their marriage. Marriage counseling was most definitely not a thing either. In modern times it's no longer considered taboo or expected for anyone to tolerate bad marriages or a bad spouse.

    • @rachelwhitbeck2421
      @rachelwhitbeck2421 13 дней назад +1

      Moreover, women weren't able to have checking accounts or credit cards without a man's permission until the 1970s. Divorced women and single mothers were discriminated against in finding housing. It was just not possible for many women to live after divorce. And no-fault divorce wasn't legal in the United States until California became the first state to allow it in 1969. Prior to that, you had to prove adultery or abuse, which was incredibly difficult to do. (And there is a small but vocal group today calling for no-fault divorce to be repealed.)

  • @diddiaskew3084
    @diddiaskew3084 Месяц назад +8

    No baby, that is Kevin Costner. You are thinking of Michael Keaton. 👩🏾‍🏫🤦🏾‍♀️🇺🇦
    Edit:
    BTW, first

  • @johnnehrich9601
    @johnnehrich9601 Месяц назад +4

    The naming of the people who operate the machines becoming, over time, the name of the machine itself, is not unique to this story. Originally the people who used the new-fangled typewriters were called "typewriters" and only later became known as "typists."
    PS - I had to learn Fortran in those early days of computing. What seems so cumbersome (in all regards) in retrospect was so astonishing at the time. Around 1970, the computer at my college filled the entire basement. It was powered by vacuum tubes, which are basically like light bulbs with an additional element inside, and so gave off astonishing amounts of heat, so the whole facility had to be greatly air-conditioned. In the movie Apollo 13, which takes place a decade later, they were bragging that they had gotten a computer down to just one room. (PPS - in the era of this movie, the term "main-frame" - as opposed to personal computers - was unknown as it was unnecessary. There was only one type of computer back then.

  • @thatone7902
    @thatone7902 11 дней назад

    Excellent choice! Enjoyed watching this with you. Such an important film! Like most people, I've not heard of these women prior to seeing this movie a few years ago in the theater. I was overwhelmed with emotion and thankful that someone brought their story to the light. Thanks for taking the time to watch so attentively. Black movies are not just for Black History Month but should be enjoyed throughout the year, just like any other film.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 Месяц назад +4

    This is a very good movie in a lot of ways, and the story they are trying to tell is an incredibly important one for folks to know. However, it would have been a much better movie if they had told the story more the way it actually happened. Historians and film critics have noted the many things that the film showed that did not happen, as well as others that happened at different times and/or in different ways. I appreciate that it is not meant to be documentary, but the issues involved in the REAL story of the calculators who were black women are too important to depict them in the inaccurate ways they are shown.
    Examples include the fact that, in 1958, when NACA became NASA, segregated facilities, including the West Computing office, were abolished...and the scene where a coffeepot labeled "colored" appears in Katherine Johnson's workplace did not happen in real life. Also, the two primary antagonists of the film...Kirsten Dunst's supervisor character and Jim Parsons' Paul Stafford character...both did not exist, not to mention the fact that Mary Jackson did not have to get a court order to attend night classes at the whites-only high school. I hope that you will do your own research to see what the makers of the film got right and what they exaggerated or just added in for their own purposes. There is a section about the historical accuracy of the movie on Wiki, and there is also a good article on History vs Hollywood that covers the movie's accuracy.

    • @Loud_Nimai
      @Loud_Nimai Месяц назад

      Agree, I really like the movie, rewatch it often.
      But reality is a bit different.
      I think Katherine said the discrimination was in society all around, but NASA felt more like group of engineers working together.
      The pay was bad for everyone. And yea the bathrooms were not segregated.
      Still a great movie.

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 Месяц назад

      There is always a problem with making history into movies rather than documentaries - real events don't line up in a way that makes good drama. And good drama makes people want to go see the movie, while documentaries only reach a small audience. Could a powerful movie been made that stuck closer to the truth? Perhaps, but it might not have had much impact. (This is an age-old problem and I don't know how to solve it.)
      This is also the same problem, although much smaller, in adapting a well-loved book to the silver screen.
      Perhaps this movie will lead to a real documentary, which has been a follow-up in a few cases of movies "based on real events." Maybe not.
      Even knowing the true story (I read both the book and watched the stuff on the historical accuracy), I tear up at so many points in this, particularly the really happy ones. (EVERY time!) Movie is one of my all-time favorites. I grew up in the era this movie portrays and was TOTALLY unaware of the contributions of other-than-white men. Every time I watch it, I also get mad that the general populace is only just finding out about this, just like the movie Glory.