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American Experience Reagan: Part I (1988– ) Online

American Experience Reagan: Part I (1988– ) Online
Original Title :
Reagan: Part I
Genre :
TV Episode / Documentary / Biography / History
Year :
1988–
Cast :
David Ogden Stiers,James Baker III,Helen Caldicott
Writer :
Adriana Bosch,Austin Hoyt
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
43min
Rating :
7.2/10
American Experience Reagan: Part I (1988– ) Online

When he left the White House in 1989, Ronald Reagan was one of the most popular presidents of the century. A former Hollywood star and seemingly simple man, Reagan was consistently underestimated by his opponents. One by one, he overcame them all. Incorporating interviews with key political insiders, former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, and members of the Reagan family, "Reagan" explores the man who saw America as a "shining city on a hill" and himself as its heroic defender. The program follows Reagan's life from his itinerant boyhood in Illinois to his battle with "communist agitators" in the Screen Actors Guild and his dramatic 1980 victory over Jimmy Carter. Only 70 days into his presidency, a would-be assassin's bullet left him more debilitated than anyone knew. Reagan's massive military buildup and bold challenges to the Soviet Union caused his critics to portray him as a trigger-happy cowboy. But he negotiated deep cuts in nuclear weapons and resolved to end the Cold War. ...
Episode credited cast:
David Ogden Stiers David Ogden Stiers - Himself - Narrator (voice)
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
James Baker III James Baker III - Himself
Helen Caldicott Helen Caldicott - Herself
Robert Dallek Robert Dallek - Himself
Patti Davis Patti Davis - Herself
Michael Deaver Michael Deaver - Himself
Mikhail Gorbachev Mikhail Gorbachev - Himself
Ed Meese Ed Meese - Himself
Edmund Morris Edmund Morris - Himself
Lyn Nofziger Lyn Nofziger - Himself
Maureen Reagan Maureen Reagan - Herself
Nancy Reagan Nancy Reagan - Herself
Ron Reagan Ron Reagan - Himself
Ronald Reagan Ronald Reagan - Himself (archive footage)
Donald Regan Donald Regan - Himself


User reviews

deadly claw

deadly claw

Part One of this biography begins with Reagan's youth and ends early in his first term. In between is a brief discussion of his film and television career, his marriages and his political life. Several of Reagan's children (but, oddly, not Michael) and Nancy are interviewed as are many in politics and the media. In addition, various film clips and photos are used as well as narration by David Ogden Stiers.

This is one of the best biographies of Ronald Reagan. Now I am not saying it's perfect. As some have pointed out, it does appear to have a slight bias against him--particularly in the latter portion of Part One. However, considering how unpopular Reagan was with most of the media during his presidency, this isn't really surprising. What is actually surprising is how after the death of Reagan, folks began talking about him very positively and with nostalgia--and many were the same folks who detested him as President. Odd how time often changes perceptions.

By the way, this is NOT a major gripe, but in talking about the decline of Reagan's film career, the film cited two movies. One was "Bedtime for Bonzo". While this is widely regarded as an embarrassing film for Reagan, most people probably haven't seen it. I have seen it several times and actually found it to be silly and very charming--and well worth seeing. If you get a chance, watch it. Whether or not you like Reagan, it is a cute film.
LONUDOG

LONUDOG

Ronald Reagan gets a fairly civilized treatment here, of his troubled youth and his climb to fame, as well as his rather sudden shift from Roosevelt Democrat to anti-communist Republican -- and the later mellowing of his categorical posture.

I didn't find much in the way of prejudice from the "Bolsheviks" at PBS, but then I wasn't eagerly anticipating them. I can understand why some viewers might seize on the use -- or the non-use -- of a word like "steadily" to evoke as subtle propaganda. In a way, it's not seeing is believing but the other way around. Or, as Alexander Pope put it, "All seems infected that the infected spy, As all looks yellow to the jaundiced eye." Of all the many talking heads who describe Reagan's personality, policies, and the evolution of both, the vast majority were Reagan's friends or family. Nancy Reagan probably gets more screen time than anyone else. That's a rather generous way of promoting anti-Reagan sentiment in the audience.

Not that the written narrative or the conjecture we hear are to be taken without any challenge. Reagan was a successful lifeguard in his teens, and this was supposed to have informed his character to the extent that he came to see himself as a kind of savior of the free world.

But did it? I was a milk man's delivery boy and I don't care two hoots about supplying the world with wholesome, fresh, homogenized milk -- or about cows or anything associated with them, for that matter. At this stage of the game, we can tolerate speculation about what makes a person into the thing he or she is, but it shouldn't be taken too seriously.

Overall, the Reagan we see here in Part I is a nice guy with ordinary ambitions. Not particularly sophisticated. Nobody was in the small-town Midwest of the 1930s. But bright and good-natured. He was cheerful, good-looking, and had a keen, down-to-earth sense of humor. And this is as important as any of his other qualities, he had a fine, reassuring speaking voice honed on radio and an ability to display a consciously controlled emotional state learned in movies. He had strength of character -- he hefted chain saws on his ranch well into his 70s -- and a far-ranging imagination which, once in a while, he chose to exercise.

Later, in Part II, he becomes, as President Barack Obama observed, "a transformational president."
Whilingudw

Whilingudw

The 4/10 rating isn't for Ronald Reagan, who is my favorite POTUS. The rating is for taxpayer-funded, forever leftist PBS who presented it.

As Nixon said, history is written by liberals. I can extrapolate Nixon's statement to include documentaries as well. The knocks on President Reagan during this are unbelievable: three times they showed the largest anti-nukes rally in New York as if that was a watershed moment in Reagan's Presidency (guess who was right after all?). They completely glossed over the fact that Reagan won the biggest electoral landslide in history. They also glossed over the greatest economic expansion in history to date. Probably even more insulting was that they proposed that Reagan got the idea for the Strategic Defense Initiative from one of his old war movies.

I remember when this first aired, a lot of conservatives were praising it. I think if you look at it closer, the slights to the greatest POTUS of the 20th Century are pretty frequent in this bio.

By the way, speaking of typical left-wing bias when Reagan's official biographer, Edmund Morris, was discussing the aftermath of the assassination attempt he mentioned that Reagan's mind began to decline "slowly and steadily". Fair enough. But the New York Times shortly after the program appeared seized upon this comment and editorialized about Reagan's mental status during his Presidency, quoting Morris yet somehow omitted the word "slowly". You can look it up. This is from the so-called "paper of record". Whose record? Karl Marx?
Virn

Virn

First, I want to say that I liked the documentary, especially the summary of RRs early life and his rise to the top of the political heap. However, I wanted to address the comment about him being the greatest president of the 20th century - I think you forgot a few; both Roosevelts, Wilson and Truman are some I can name who are held in higher regard than Reagan. He went from being a right wing liberal to a conservative Republican, please explain that one. During both terms, he ran up our national debt and never submitted a balanced budget, not to mention the needless wars like the Falkland Islands and Granada. Oh, and let us not forget Iran Contra, cutting funding for school lunches and a few other things that helped his rich buddies get richer. He may have been popular but he did some stupid things and was senile by the time he left office. You also erroneously said that public TV is taxpayer funded, it is not. They depend on viewer and private contributions and yearly pledge drives.