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©2009
The Duncan Group, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
Any unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable
laws.
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LANDSLIDE
- A Portrait of President Herbert Hoover
A One-Hour Documentary
presented by
Iowa Public Television
In association with Stamats Communications
and Iowa Public Television, The Duncan Group has completed
a one hour public television biography called LANDSLIDE -
A Portrait of President Herbert Hoover. The film premieres
nationwide on public television in the U.S. in 2009.
The documentary is being directed by Chip Duncan and produced
by Chip Duncan and Tracy Dorsey with Bob Huck and Patricia
Ostermick. Tom Hedges and Stevie Ballard of Cedar Rapids-based
co-producer Stamats Communications are the executive producers.
Iowa Public
Television is the presenting station for the PBS system.
For more information, please
contact Patty@DuncanEntertainment.com.
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Producer Chip Duncan
interviews Tim Walch, Director of the Herbert Hoover
Presidential Library in December, 2007.
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In this one-hour documentary,
The Duncan Group will explores the facts and fictions behind
the presidency of Herbert Hoover including The Great Depression
and its lasting impact on government. We'll also explore the
role of the Federal Reserve and monetary policy during the
Hoover presidency and into the early years of FDR. The documentary
also explores Hoover's early life abroad, the international
experiences that led to his decision to run for office, Hoover's
presidency and political philosophy, and the lasting impact
of his policy decisions made during and after the depression.
Along with the depression, the film provides detailed discussion
of the 1927 Mississippi flood, the 1928 election campaign,
monetary and agricultural policies throughout the Hoover presidency,
the Bonus March and the 1932 presidential election.
Interview subjects for LANDSLIDE
- A Portrait of President Herbert Hoover include several
notable scholars such as David Kennedy, Amity Shlaes, Robert
Reich, Tim Egan and Timothy Walch among others.
At the time of his landslide
victory in 1928, Herbert Hoover, was by many accounts the
most respected man in America. An Iowa orphan-turned-exceptional
mining engineer, adventurer and international businessman,
he'd made his fortune by the age of 40. When the world plunged
into the chaos of World War I, he turned his considerable
talents to humanitarian relief, delivering more than $5 billion
in food and medical aid to Europe - and later Russia - saving
an estimated 20 million men, women and children from starvation.
On the home front, as the country's first U.S. Food Administrator,
he galvanized American housewives behind the cause of conservation
to feed the troops and our Allies overseas, then continued
his stellar political rise as an uncommonly forward thinking
secretary of commerce for both Presidents Warren G. Harding
and Calvin Coolidge.
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Producer Tracy Dorsey
and Photographer Bob Huck interview author Amity Shlaes
at the Council on Foreign Relations in January of 2008.
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Throughout the 1920's, both Republicans
and Democrats eyed the politically-unaffiliated Hoover as
a potential leader. Even Franklin D. Roosevelt lavished him
with praise, writing, "He certainly is a wonder, and
I wish we could make President. There couldn't be a better
one
" When, in 1928, an adoring public made Roosevelt's
wish a reality, even Hoover worried that his exaggerated public
image would be his undoing. "They have a conviction that
I am a sort of superman, that no problem is beyond my capacity,"
the President-elect confided to a reporter. "If some
unprecedented calamity should come upon the nation
I
would be sacrificed to the unreasoning disappointment of a
people who expect too much."
And come it did. On October 29,
1929 - just six months after Hoover took office - "Black
Tuesday" left Wall Street staggering under the loss of
an estimated $26 billion lost in stock value. Despite Hoover's
reassurance that "The fundamental business of the country
is on a sound and prosperous basis," the giddy, get-rich-quick
confidence of the America's Jazz Age was shaken. As 1929 gave
way to 1930, additional cracks in the foundation of American
prosperity - a decade-long agricultural crisis, over production
in the industrial sector and a frail international economy
- became apparent. Suddenly even the most hardworking of Americans
were battling unemployment and despair.
Despite popular misconception,
Hoover toiled to correct the country's economic course. In
many instances, his anti-depression efforts - from his early
experimentation with public work programs and voluntary cooperation
between government and business to the ultimate, if largely
ineffectual, appropriation of federal loans to stimulate business
- were unprecedented. Underlying every corrective measure
was Hoover's unwavering belief in "American Individualism,"
the unique American ability to overcome any hardship with
hard work, integrity and a commitment to community. But to
the public, Hoover often appeared at best incompetent and
at worst, heartless. The "superman" who had saved
millions the world over from starvation after World War I,
had seemingly left the American public, hungry, penniless,
fending for themselves.
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One time Hoover assistant
C.Y. Wilder shares personal photographs with Photographer
Bob Huck and Producer Tracy Dorsey at her New York home
in January of 2008.
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Following a landslide defeat
by his one-time admirer, Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Great
Engineer became a "walking corpse" given to moments
of seeming disorientation. He left the White House angry and
embittered, his reputation in shreds. For years he actively
campaigned against what he called Roosevelt's "fascist"
New Deal. He considered it a betrayal of American freedom
that actually prolonged the Depression. Only after Roosevelt's
death, with the world reeling in the aftermath of World War
II, did Hoover begin to restore his image, once again assuming
the role of humanitarian to feed the world's starving.
Today, while many historians
judge Hoover's presidency a failure, many also suggest he
was not responsible for, and could not have averted, the Great
Depression. And yet, the man's extraordinary business career,
his personal strengths and weakness, and his philosophy of
American Individualism continue to spark controversy.
NEW:
LANDSLIDE - Video Clip
Notable
Hoover Quotes
Q&A with the Producers
of LANDSLIDE - A Portrait of President Herbert Hoover
Ten
Interesting Facts About President Herbert Hoover
Interview
Transcripts: LANDSLIDE - A Portrait of President Herbert Hoover
www.IPTV.org
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©
2008 The Duncan Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any unauthorized
duplication is a violation of applicable laws.
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