Friday A/V Club: ABC, LSD, and the CIA
The 1979 TV special Mission: Mind Control


Watergate and the other scandals of the '70s sparked a surge in skepticism toward the country's most powerful institutions. Here is an artifact from that era: a 1979 ABC News special called Mission: Mind Control. The hour-long documentary examines the CIA and Army's attempts to master brainwashing and other sorts of behavioral manipulation, included unethical experiments in which unwitting subjects were dosed with psychedelic drugs.
The show occasionally lapses into TV-news goofiness—at one point, as psychedelic imagery flashes on the screen, we're told that what we're watching is "considered by many experts to be the closest illustration of the effects of a hallucinogenic"—but at its core it's a hard-hitting piece of journalism. It was preserved, interestingly, by the National Archives and Records Administration, which did not bother to remove the commercials from the broadcast. So along with a harrowing exposé of official crimes, you get to see Will Rogers Jr. pitching Grape Nuts and a promo for a Geraldo Rivera report on a biker gang (featuring "dope, death, and the Bandidos"). Enjoy:
(For past editions of the Friday A/V Club, go here.)
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Worth it for the commercials, which weren't very subliminal. I gotta get me a Triumph TR7.
But if they can show me T.J. Hooker and Fantasy Island in widescreen format, WHY NOT EVERYTHING FROM THAT ERA?
TJ Hooker is best in widescreen. Only that way can you get the full effect of The Shat vaulting across the hood of a Caprice Classic.
Shatner's best role.
Actually I liked his cameo as Josh Lang on The Six Million Dollar Man better.
I'm going to have to look into this.
Shatner is a national treasure.
Kid with dead friend: "Ray needed a fix."
TJ: "Fix? He needed a fix? Well he's fixed now isn't he, for good!"
I seem to recall that Triumphs had poor build quality... found this:
A friend had one. It was a nightmare. Not as bad as my '79 MG Midget, but damn close.
British engineering, French law and order, American culture.
Watergate and the other scandals of the '70s sparked a surge is skepticism toward the country's most powerful institutions.
It'd be nice if we could get that back.
The problem is a lack of government scandals. Today's politicos and bureaucrats are all so damned honest and squeaky-clean! Just look at the D candidate for president as a prime example.
But seriously, I think something has happened where people don't care anymore how much of crook the person in charge is, just so long as that person is on their team and willing to give them some "free" shit.
I've always favored this hard-hitting documentary on the dangers of corporate greed.
Plan to watch this later.
The show was done before the anecdotes of the Unabomber and Whitey Bulger being the subjects of CIA testing. Whitey said he experienced depths of horror using it.
I vaguely remember when TV looked like that. I'll have to watch that later.
Time is an illusion. The only time now is party time, are we clear?
Watch one of the old Ross Perot informercials from 1992 when you have 1/2 hour to thoroughly depress yourself.
He lights up Clinton the 1st in the first 14 minutes or so, then switches to talking about the $4.1 trillion debt and other things that will give you a sad
Perot infomercial