Saturday, 23 November 2024

Good News in History, November 20


65 years Jim and Jane Henson established Muppets Inc. The company has produced many successful television series, including The Muppet Show, Fraggle Rock, and Bear in the Big Blue House; as well, the company designed the Muppet characters for Sesame Street. Their beloved characters like Kermit the Frog, Fozzie Bear, Ms. Piggy, and the Great Gonzo took on personas of their own, sparking a series of feature-length films and even appearances on talk shows and game shows. READ more about the legendary puppeteer studios… (1958)

Jim Hensen Studios in La Brea.

Jim Henson didn’t do all the roles of the Muppets himself, but worked instead with famous puppeteer Frank Oz, with whom he developed a close relationship that helped inform many of the character duos like Kermit and Fozzie, and Bert and Ernie for Sesame Street.

Located in Los Angeles in what were the Charlie Chaplain studios, The Jim Henson Company is now run independently by Jane and Jim’s three children, Lisa, Cheryl, Brian, John, and Heather.

MORE Good News on this Date:

  • Two journalists (Henri Desgrange and Géo Lefèvre) dreamed up the idea of the Tour de France over lunch at the Café de Madrid in Paris (1902)
  • Britain’s future queen, Princess Elizabeth, married Philip Mountbatten, Duke of Edinburgh, in Westminster Abbey (1947)
  • The Cuban Missile Crisis ended in response to the Soviet Union agreeing to remove its missiles from Cuba, while President John F. Kennedy halted the U.S. quarantine of the island (1962)
  • Hopes for democracy ran high upon the death of General Francisco Franco who ruled Spain with an authoritarian hand for 39 years (1975)
  • Protestors assembled in Prague, Czechoslovakia grew from 200,000 to an estimated half-million in one day – the Velvet Revolution (1989)
  • The partial skull of a 2.5 million-year-old human ancestor was confirmed, and established as the new species Australopithecus garhi, after being discovered along with a few primitive-shaped stone tools by paleontologists in Ethiopia (1997)
  • The Indian actor Amitabh Bachchan confirms that he has paid off the debts of 1,398 farmers with $560,000, sparked by the Indian agricultural crisis (2018)
  • 72 years ago today, Snowdonia National Park was created by British Parliament as the third national park in the country after the Lake and the Peak districts. It protects a mountainous region in northern Wales of the same name of 827 square miles of myth-shrouded mountains and valleys. Much of the park is undeveloped, but there are also many agricultural activities that go on.

    Snowdonia – CC By SA 4.0. – Mike Peel

    The English name for the area derives from Snowdon, which is the highest mountain in Wales at 3,560 feet (1,090 meters). In Welsh, the area is named Eryri. A commonly held belief is that the name is derived from eryr (“eagle”), and thus means “the abode/land of eagles.”

    Snowdonia is one of the wettest parts of the UK, and a part of Snowdonia is the wettest part. Nevertheless it remains well-visited by domestic tourists—3.5 million of whom come to partake in the serious hiking and mountain climbing on offer in the park.

    For conservation purposes, the whole of the park is not totally protected as Americans would understand that phrase, but it does enjoy a particularly high number of special conservation designations—over a dozen nationally and internationally. (1951)

    Happy 77th Birthday to TV Broadcaster Judy Woodruff. After 45 years in television news, covering every presidential election and convention, Judy is now the anchor and managing editor of PBS NewsHour.

    After graduating from Duke University in 1968, Woodruff entered local television news in Atlanta and by 1976 she was a White House correspondent for NBC News. Besides PBS’s MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, she also worked at CNN.

    She wrote the book, This is Judy Woodruff at the White House, and is a founding co-chair of the International Women’s Media Foundation, dedicated to promoting and encouraging women in journalism worldwide.

    Known for her calm and reasoned voice, she received the Poynter Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Journalism, the Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, and the Edward R. Murrow Lifetime Achievement Award in Television.

    Judy lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, journalist Al Hunt, and the couple has three children, Lauren, Benjamin, and Jeffrey, whom Woodruff gave birth to about five hours after appearing on air. (1946)

    And, Happy 76th Birthday to guitarist, singer, and record producer Joe Walsh, who was a member of the James Gang (Funk #49; Walk Away), Barnstorm (Rocky Mountain Way), and the Eagles (Life in the Fast Lane). Born in Kansas to a pianist mom, Walsh also had a successful solo career, with such hits as Life’s Been Good, and A Life of Illusion. (1947)

    By DenSmith, CC license

    And, 54 years ago, DDT was banned in the U.S. for residential use by President Nixon as part of a total nationwide phase-out. After its widespread use as a pesticide without prior investigation of its health effects, it became infamous (stemming from the Rachel Carson book Silent Spring) for its environmental impacts, particularly on birds. The ban led to the resurgence of near-extinct species such as the beloved bald eagle and peregrine falcon. (1969)

    98 years ago today, Robert F. Kennedy was born. The U.S. Senator from New York became Attorney General during his brother John Kennedy’s years in the White House—and would eventually launch his own race for president after JFK’s assassination.

    Robert bobby kennedy

    Many of the civil rights initiatives championed by the Kennedy Administration and its successor were spearheaded by RFK, who was also known as “Bobby”.

    On the night that Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and killed, Robert F Kennedy delivered the news to the people of Indianapolis, Indiana. Local police warned him that a riot could break out there in the heart of an African-American ghetto. He wrote his notes on the ride over and started his speech without any drafts, delivering it on the back of a Flatbed truck. Although all major US cities experienced riots, Indianapolis remained calm, thanks to RFK’s speech.

    63 days after that night, RFK was assassinated at age 42 while campaigning for the Presidency. Since his death in 1968, his wife Ethel raised their 11 children and never remarried. She still oversees the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice & Human Rights. (1925)

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