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Marshall Jon Fisher's writing has been featured in The Atlantic and Harper's, among other magazines, as well as in The Best American Essays 2003.

Inkluderar namnet: Marshall J. Fisher

Verk av Marshall Jon Fisher

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The Best American Essays 2003 (2003) — Bidragsgivare — 314 exemplar

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This was such an amazing read, and I’ve been telling others about it since I finished it. There’s a perfect blend here that incorporates history, biography of a city, interviews, and even some memoir as the author experienced some of the story as a child. It was fascinatingly rough hearing about how football worked over fifty years ago, but these guys were so tough (I mean freaking Shula didn’t ever let them have water in the Florida heat).

The detail here was astounding as each chapter was a specific game leading all the way to the Super Bowl, and it never got boring. I do wish my great-grandma was still around as she lived in North Miami Beach for years, and I’d love to hear her thoughts about what Miami was like during 1972. It really is so remarkable that this team is still the only one who has ever had a perfect season, and I loved learning about them.… (mer)
 
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spinsterrevival | 1 annan recension | Jan 19, 2024 |
1972 Miami Dolphins. Even many non-football fans know about The Perfect Team. 14 and 0 in the regular season. Two playoff wins putting them back in the Super Bowl. Add in a Super Bowl victory and, voila, The Perfect Team. The first time any pro football team had a perfect season and, in this 50th anniversary year of The Perfect Team, it still hasn't been done again.

This is a fascinating, game by game look at The Perfect team, the players (especially the players), the coaches, and the times (Nixon, Watergate, the Vietnam War, just to name a few).

Very well written. Very interesting.

Highly recommended!!

(I received a copy of this book from the publisher, via Net Galley, in exchange for a fair and honest review.)
… (mer)
½
 
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lindapanzo | 1 annan recension | Aug 11, 2022 |
It must be über cool to be an inventor—the work taps what a person can give in ingenuity, creativity, a vision for the future, discovery, and potential for fortunes. On the other hand, invention is accomplished under competitive conditions in which financial stakes are tremendous and pressures severe. Patent battles can go on for years and years. An insecure way of life with sometimes debilitating consequences, as we learn in Tube: The Invention of Television.

Authors David E. Fisher and Marshall Jon Fisher relate the story of how TV sets (not programs) came to be. They take care to explain the technical aspects of how TVs were developed and make it interesting at the same time. I’m not a technical guy but I enjoyed and felt enlightened by their explanations.

The book also reminds us that significant inventions impact the language of the times. With TV there was considerable talk about what to call the people who would stare at the TV screen. Candidates included looker, looker-in, perceptor, audiobserver, lookener, audoseer, invider, telegazer, teleseer, televist, telspector, opticauris, visual, and adivist. The Times use of “viewer” was what caught on, and thankfully so. Who wants to be an opticauris? And imagine if “couch potato” had been the term of choice from the outset. Would TV have become so popular?

Appropriately for a medium bringing the adventures of heroes and villains into our living rooms, at one time or another most every actor in the drama of inventing TV seemed a protagonist or antagonist. The most notable in America were the inventor Philo Farnsworth, Radio Corporation of America (RCA) boss David Sarnoff, and Vladimir Cosmo Zworykin, a physicist from Russia who came to America and ended up heading the RCA lab. Farnsworth was so precocious that after convincing a bank to give him financial backing he had to have one of his associates act as his legal guardian in order to execute the paperwork. More than anyone, it seems, the actions of these men proved decisive to television’s development and commercial potential.

Tube also is a tale of instances of corporate skullduggery beyond legitimate competitive striving as well as occasional indifference to human suffering. The ungovernable caprices of governments played an important role too.

In the end, it changed the world, though not necessarily as TV’s inventors envisioned. RCA’s Zworykin observed, late in life: “I hate what they’ve done to my child [i.e. TV]. I would never let my own children watch it.” It doesn’t take much ingenuity to guess why.
… (mer)
 
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dypaloh | 1 annan recension | Sep 22, 2018 |
Really 3 1/2 stars, and probably even 4 if you find tennis matches compelling. As it turns out, I don't. But I did grow to like and care about Bill Tilden, Don Budge, and Gottfried Cramm, which made the epilogue genuinely moving.
 
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GaylaBassham | 5 andra recensioner | May 27, 2018 |

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Statistik

Verk
5
Även av
1
Medlemmar
234
Popularitet
#96,591
Betyg
3.9
Recensioner
10
ISBN
14
Språk
1

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