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PBS tonight: American Experience (1930s)
#1
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/

10/26 (tonight) - the Crash of 1929

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperien...troduction

In 1929, while the market was rising, seemingly without limits, there were few critics. Based on eight years of continued prosperity, presidents and economists alike confidently predicted that America would soon enter a time when there would be no more poverty, no more depressions — a “New Era” when everyone could be rich.

Instead it was the rich who became richer. Jesse Livermore, a Wall Street insider, drove around town in one of six yellow Rolls Royces. His daughter-in-law describes his two yachts, private railway car and five homes, including an apartment on Fifth Avenue he bought to have a place where he could change clothes for the theater.

Michael Meehan was the stock specialist who manipulated the glamour stock of the day, RCA, from $2.50 a share up to a peak of over $500 a share, making millions for the few who were in on the deal. William Durant, founder of General Motors, was called “King of the Bulls.” In October of 1929, he would lose millions in a desperate, single-handed effort to stop the stock market crash.

Before the crash, the success of these men convinced small investors that the stock market was a sure thing, that Wall Street was the smart place to put one’s money. The film features the recollections of people whose families experienced the crash. Groucho Marx’s son, Arthur, remembers how his famous father detested gambling, yet put his entire life savings in stocks.

The Crash of 1929 captures the unbounded optimism of the age, a time when the stock market epitomized the false promise of permanent prosperity.


next week: The Civilian Conservation Corps.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/ccc/

following that, The Hoover Dam.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/hoover/

we can learn a lot by studying the past & try not to repeat the same mistakes...
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#2
A lot of people do not understand the difference between investing and speculation. Buying a stock such as AAPL and hoping that it appreciates greatly is speculation. Buying a broad array of stocks, in an index fund for example, is investing. The real purpose to invest in stocks is so that you have an inflation hedge, not to get rich.
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#3
I need to watch the CCC one.
My dad always talked about his CCC days.
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#4
Just to clarify, this is a 5 part series, not the single episode on the 1929 crash that AE did a couple of years ago

thanks for the tip
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#5
perhaps various PBS affiliates have varying schedules.
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#6
Watching it now.

There are so many parallels to recent Wall St. history, it's uncanny.

Naysayers against the boom market were considered un-American.

For some reason, I really like the music of that era.
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#7
Yep, just watched it myself. I did not know Billy Durant was that influential on Wall St. during those times.

I grew up in Flint, MI and knew all about his history with GM. Sad for him that he lost it all and ended up managing a bowling alley!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_C_Durant
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#8
middle name CRAPO ???
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#9
I learned a lot more about Hoover in 2 hours than I did my entire time in school... or at least I remember more now.

Very interesting life he had - orphaned, super-poor, yet grew up self-determined and without precedent, fed Belgium during WWI.

I only recalled the bad stuff about his presidency, not the good things he did for America.
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#10
Watching online now. A pity that they took 4:3 content and present it stretched online. More like 1:6 than proper 1:33 ratio. And it looks interlaced.
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