Jenny-
Hmmm, I think I'll respond in the body of your text below, IN SMALL FONT...;>)

To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Ken Burnt-Outs' National Parks
Date: Tue, 29 Sep 2009 08:37:49 -0400
From: [email protected]


Don,


 


Yeah, the National Parks are an incredible achievement. (Do you have one of 
those ranger hats? Love those!I  NEVER HAD TO/GOT TO WEAR THE BIG BRIMMED ONES, 
I WORE THE BASEBALL CAP STYLE...DIDN'T WEAR THE UNIFORM BUT FOR ONE YEAR, AS I 
WAS USUALLY A SINGLE RESOURCE, BUT I'M HEAR TO TELL YOU, IF YOU WEAR A PARK 
SERVICE UNIFORM, THE PUBLIC WILL COME, IN DROVES...IF YOUR TASK WAS ANYTHING 
ELSE BUT BEING AN INTERPRETIVE NATURALIST, LORD HELP YOU IF YOU NEEDED TO GET 
SOMETHING DONE...FOR THOSE WHO LIKE ANSWERING PEOPLE'S QUESTIONS, THAT'S THE 
JOB FOR YOU!) Except I hate when the rangers at the entry booths look at me 
suspiciously when I present my year-round pass. SOUNDS LIKE SOME DEEP-ROOTED 
PROBLEM THAT DEVELOPED WHEN YOU WERE A CHILD...;>}Some of them ask me point 
blank if it is really mine!  Geez! THE 'BOX PEOPLE' ARE USUALLY OVERWHELMED 
WITH THE PUBLIC, OFTEN ABUSED VERBALLY, AND THE TURNOVER IS AMAZING!



 


When you look on a map and see the tiny amount of acreage that make up the Park 
Systems, it's disturbing to think that anyone would have objections to 
preservation. But there weren't any serious objectors were there? The issues 
were more about how the parks should be managed, right? YOU HAVEN'T HEARD 
OLD-TIME ALASKANS RANT ON THIS ISSUES, THEY'RE AGAINST ANY AND ALL GOVERNMENT 
"INTERVENTION" IN THEIR LIVES! And the show mentioned that the Yosemite and 
Yellowstone land would not be economically profitable anyway (i.e. mines, 
agriculture). THERE ARE ALL KINDS OF PARKS, RANGING FROM NATURAL WONDERS TO 
HISTORIC SITES...THANK GOD AND GOOD SENSE THAT THE NPS HAVE BEEN ABLE TO RESIST 
CORPORATE "AID"!



 


Oh and how about the fact that there was no geology discussed except how Muir 
proved the rocks in Yosemite were carved by glaciers? I ALWAYS THOUGHT IT 
CURIOUS THAT THE GRAND CANYON NP DIDN'T HAVE DESIGNATED GEOLOGIST!!!
-don



 


Jenny



-----Original Message-----

From: Bob <[email protected]>

To: [email protected] <[email protected]>

Sent: Tue, Sep 29, 2009 7:53 am

Subject: [ENTS] Re: Ken Burnt-Outs' National Parks








Don







     One lesson the series is reinforcing for me is the vulnerability of our 
precious places. I shudder to think what would be happening if we had voted in 
an administration like the last. 







Bob  



Sent from my iPhone




On Sep 28, 2009, at 7:29 PM, Don Bertolette <[email protected]> wrote:












Jenny/Bob-


We in Alaska were feted to three one-hour excerpts at the Museum of Natural 
History back in May, emceed by Ken himself.  With so much of Alaska in NPS 
ownership Alaska figured prominently in the series. But yeah, this is a 'big 
picture' series that is not likely to please all.


With my recent employment with NPS aside, the National Park System is one of 
the things that America got right from the start, imho.


-Don




Sent from Don's iPhone 3GS...




On Sep 28, 2009, at 1:59 PM, [email protected] wrote:












Jenny,






Pretty superficial, I would agree. I did learn some tidbits about John Muir 
that I didn't know. Basically, the series is shaping up to be about the people 
who had the vision to push for saving these great iconic places. I shudder to 
think what the series will highlight when they get to the Great Smoky Mountains 
National Park. I'm not anticipating much. If the series was going to highlight 
the true wonders of the Smokies, Burns would have needed to get in touch with 
ENTS President Will Blozan. Unless Will is going to spring a surprise on us, it 
didn't happen.







Are you coming to Cook Forest this weekend for the rendezvous?







Bob









----- Original Message -----

From: "JennyNYC" <[email protected]>

To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]>

Sent: Monday, September 28, 2009 1:36:12 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern

Subject: [ENTS] Ken Burnt-Outs' National Parks





ENTS,



Did anyone watch episode 1?  Time to let someone else make

documentaries about American life. Loved Baseball, Civil War, The

Donner Party, and New York...but this? The writing was poor for the

most part and the information imparted was superficial.  The

cinematography was expensively bland and can he please find a new

Native American music soundtrack? He's used the same chants in so many

shows already.  And I knew he was going to use "bad guy vs. good guy"

to interpret history instead of doing in-depth research.



However, Peter Coyote was great as narrator.



I actually found myself thinking that I didn't really need to visit

Yosemite or Yellowstone after all... (I will, of course, but I just

got so sick of the nonstop Ken Burns Effect camera panning of the

geysers and waterfalls and dome rocks etc....)



I needed a good bout of righteous indignation.



Jenny































                                          
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