“Follow the Bouncing Ball!”: Sing-Alongs in Film and Television by Esther Morgan-Ellis
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- Опубликовано: 23 июн 2020
- “Follow the Bouncing Ball!”: Sing-Alongs in Film and Television by Esther Morgan-Ellis
For more information about the Society for American Music's Digital Lectures in American Music series, please visit www.american-music.org/page/R.... - Видеоклипы
Absolutely fantastic. A fascinating exploration of a tradition which I'm part of in the UK. Great to see the parallels between the development in the US and the UK. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for your research and making this video! This is the information I’ve been waiting for!
This is amazing Esther! Thanks!
Thank you!! I learned a lot. ❤
Glad you liked it!
Thank you so much for this great history program, and for addressing the racism and race-teaching that can happen during all kinds of activities.
I remember a lot of this well and I remember the American patriotism that went along with a lot of it it was very beautiful majority of the people singing in harmony with each other it's such a beautiful way compared to what evolved huh. Being the oldest born in a family I remember you sing alongs with Mitch Miller and and such in the old cartoons we fall to bouncing ball and everybody sing along and it was a lot of great fun and a lot of togetherness unity the American family and such so glad to have been part of those times and to remember them because, our society could use a lot more of that or I say the American citizens in our country could use a lot more of that. 😊
Hi Esther. Thank you for the educational video. I think you are lovely.
I remembered, or thought I did, Mitch Miller saying "Follow the bouncing ball." I was so wrong. How do we remember something that never happened?
It's called the Mandela Effect--when many people remember something that didn't happen.
Great work! Thank you so much!
This is an interesting piece. And thank you for citing my book as part of your research. It should be noted that the Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes clips come from my DVD, "Max Fleischer's KO-KO SONG CAR-TUNES (with the Famous Bouncing Ball). I might add that perhaps the MOST racist of the Screen Songs was SING SISTERS, SING (1933) with its Black Face rendition of "The Scat Song."
So far I'm following ur bouncing eyeballs reading the teleprompter..
Wow 1860s. ..I c a usa native bringing down a Buffalo on great plains..then at night as bison steaks sizzles on camp fire..much drumming dancing and singing..whooping..and single young adults flirting....while in New York sumone being robbed..
Min 10:02 is that a Disney song cartoon mouse looks familar.
Sweet child o mine
What Disney movie has a bouncing orange for singing about California
familiar. 11:51 I understand I'm falling asleep also..
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