First It was about "Robbie McCauley" I was looking her up because I watched a documentary tonight that included part of her play "Sally's Rape"



This search lead me to a banned tape called "cartoon scandals"

Then I found this article


Although this movie hasn't has a legal release (in the USA) since 1986 I read in it's wiki article that it will resurface

My little niece, Kiah is 5 this year, the same age I was when I saw this movie. I would love to video tape her watching this movie and then ask her opinion on the social political situation of the reunited union.

and one last thing,
the folk tales uncle Remus (fictinal character by the way) tells in this movie are a significant part of southern heritage. The question for me is who do they belong to? Jim Crow laws really fucked the progress of the south but at the same time maybe a certain time for autonomy was good to help with the shifting from slave economy to industrial economy. I say that not for the white people though, the whites were the villains and the blacks the victims of that situation. How does one go from being an oppressor to being a friend and how does one go from being the oppressed to being a friend, and just hanging out, you know? Exactly what happened and why is still puzzling 150 years later. I wonder if time helps or does it make things more confusing? If it helps then why is there still these statistical economic inequalities among races? Why is their still a concept of race?
... but what i think about the tales is they belong to anyone who has an interest and just like the mythologies of the bible or the koran are worthwhile so are these moral oral tales. The whole oral tradition thing is slowly going down the toilet since literacy came along. I like telling stories but it's difficult to get a listener and also difficult to learn how to tell a good story. I wonder if my life would be more or less difficult it I were illiterate? I imagine I would have to be more physically active. I'd be even more poor but probably less in debt.
back to Uncle Remus, these tales were recorded in a hard dialect. I can't read them unless I speak them aloud in my head. Here is a link where you can find some info on this archiver that used the Remus character

The more you post the more I begin to wonder about what the "pre-college Robin" was like compared to the "post-college Robin."
I saw Song of The south. I remember the part about the bull. I also remember the birds singing on his shoulder. There have been some great breakthroughs with Humans and animation being combined toghather so that characters interact with each other. Movies that come to mind are Roger Rabit (wich was huge at the time) and a couple bugs bunny movies. I know there where other movies to. I wonder if Song Of The South was the first one to combine them. I to have heard it is verry controveral but don't remember enough of the movie to really know.