NARRATOR: IT'S NAZI GERMANY'S UNSTOPPABLE COMBINATION OF SPEED AND FIREPOWER.
FIRE!
[EXPLOSION] THE OUTSIDE OF THIS BUILDING IS ABSOLUTELY POCKMARKED WITH BULLET HOLES.
WE CAN EXAMINE THIS STRUCTURE FORENSICALLY.
NARRATOR: A REVOLUTIONARY STRIKE FORCE WHICH GIVES HITLER THE CHANCE TO CONQUER EUROPE.
[SPEAKING GERMAN] NEW WEAPONS AND TACTICS COMBINE TO CREATE A GIANT MACHINE THAT DELIVERS LIGHTNING VICTORIES.
IT WAS A BEAUTIFUL DIVE BOMBER.
NARRATOR: FUELED BY CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGY, IT STORMS ACROSS BATTLEFIELD AFTER BATTLEFIELD. Read More...
Call it aesthetic contrarianism or even reverse snobbery, but I tend to prefer artists and works that most fans relegate to second place or lower: Buster Keaton's movies above Charlie Chaplin's, "Krazy Kat" rather than "Peanuts," the acting of Barbara Stanwyck over that of Katharine Hepburn, Carl Nielsen's symphonies instead of Gustav Mahler's. And in my pantheon, the Kinks come ahead of the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Who. Read More...
She never wanted to be left out, so My’onna Hinton, who was 4, followed her 7-year-old relative down a hallway and into an unfamiliar apartment in Southeast Washington. Tee was used to that, because My’onna had been trailing after him since she could first walk.
The two of them had been close all her life, despite their differences. She loved Barbies, Disney cartoons and having her toenails painted bright pink, and he was fixated on football, LeBron James and crashing cars in Grand Theft Auto V. Read More...