All Episodes - Hogan’s Heroes and Postwar America
In 1965 a radio ad promised its audience "that if you liked World War II, you'll love Hogan's Heroes." That somewhat misbegotten, and soon cancelled ad, all by itself tells us something about laughter, war, history, and memory. And, oddly enough, it tells us about the united, wholesale agreement of Americans in 1965 that Nazism was bad, and so it was safe to laugh at it. This podcast tells the story of the making of that show, and of the actors' lives before and after its production run. But it also tells the story of how we can see and understand postwar America better when we understand those stories. Three members of the cast were Jewish refugees from the Nazis and all three of them joined the U.S. Army during the war. A fourth survived Buchenwald by singing to the camp guards. Yet another would be a civil rights advocate in the 1960s and would direct one of the most radical films about black revolutionaries ever made--so radical that its dis
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