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Change Your Underwear Twice a Week: Lessons from the Golden Age of Classroom Filmstrip

Change Your Underwear Twice a Week: Lessons from the Golden Age of Classroom Filmstrip

List Price: $18.95
Your Price: $12.89
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another wonderful book from Danny Gregory!
Review: Danny Gregory has the gift of taking the ordinary and making it extraordinary. All his books, including this newest one, are delights.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Scholarly and insightful, but lacking in humor
Review: Despite the book's title, this is not a humor book. Gregory offers no witty banter about the subjects of the filmstrips in his book a la Mystery Science Theatre 3000. Rather, Gregory explains the social and political agendas that were present in the classroom filmstrips we watched in elementary school.

If you are looking for a laugh, look elsewhere. But, if you are looking for a scholarly treatise on filmstrips and the serious stories behind both their messages and their creation, this book is for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perfect for children and the parents who dress them
Review: Growing up with my instructions coming more from TV spots than classroom filmstrips (I learned it from watching you Dad!), I was amazed to open this book and see how many ridiculous things were fed to kids in school. Gregory's book is very funny and very well-researched, gorgeously designed and also smart. I'd also recommend his "Everyday Matters" for a one-two punch of insight and moving art.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: hilarious
Review: I didn't grow up in America, so these film strips are wholly alien to me... and a great discovery! The way they are presented, with dry wit and lots of information, sets them into a context that is relevant for today. A great gift, for my American and non-American friends alike!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nostalgia
Review: I didn't grown up in America and sometimes when I see things about America on the TV news, I wonder how another English speaking country can be so different to mine - and then I read Danny's book and realised that it isn't. I think that producers of the film strips (as they were called in Australian schools) must have all come out of the same mould. It brought back memories of rainy Friday afternoon, when sport was cancelled. The whole school was packed into the hall. We all reeked of damp Dunlop Volley's (sandshoes) and unwashed hair. The lights would dim and the teacher who had lost the toss (of the coin) began winding the afternoon's entertainment projector. Thanks for the memories, Danny. I had some hearty chuckles.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: So happy!
Review: I'm a great fan of vintage classroom filmstrips as well as the Bell & Howell projectors usually used to project them. This book filled my heart not with nostalgia, but the actual joy that invaded the entire classroom when the teacher said, "We're going to watch a filmstrip today, kids!" Even upon simply hearing about the project, the smells of my elementary school wafted into my nostrils from a long-lost file in my brain. Then my amygdala picked up the ball and started running. This book makes me happy! And I plan on spreading that happiness -- I can think of at least five of my friends who need this for Christmas. You probably have at least one friend who does an impersonation of the announcer's warped voice from any one of these stills, and, believe me, that friend needs this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent!
Review: I'm not sure why the reviewer below only gave this three stars with such a nice review? But this book is a trip down memory lane, often funny and really quite beautiful and fun to look at. The images are amazingly reproduced, and the author gives context to the filmstrips, and organizes them by subject. I promise, you won't be disappointed. I had to buy another copy because a colleague took mine!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Nostalgic Look At A Time Gone By
Review: There's something almost magical about filmstrips, even today. When I began teaching, it was in the mid-1980's and the school had a VCR. All the best educational materials were on video, but every time I found a filmstrip that might be useful and showed it to the class, it captured the students' imaginations the way that nothing else did. Sure they were old fashioned, and sometimes out of date, but the kids loved them. They would be fascinated with the old machines which were used to show these little stories that taught some sort of lesson or told a story. Some of the filmstrips were "high tech" which had a cassette or LP which accompanied it. The story would be told by a narrator and a beep would be provided to move the strip along. Of course the kids thought they were stepping into a time machine. When I was in school, filmstrips were a part of everyday schooling.

Anyone who attended school in the 1950's-70's will enjoy this book, and may even find a filmstrip that will recall a memory or two. The book is divided into sections and actual filmstrips used in classrooms are provided as graphics. While the author has some fun with the strips themselves, he also provides lessons about why the filmstrips were used and the role filmstrips played in education. Filmstrips kept students informed, taught lessons on citizenship, and what was appropriate behavior. The America of the filmstrips was white, middle class, and patriotic. While readers cannot help but be amused at this nostalgic trip back in time, it is also a bit jarring to see how a large segment of society was excluded from filmstrips.

I got a laugh out of what is called "the propaganda" section of the book. It had a filmstrip on bread and the importance of bread in the diet and showed bread in production. While it was probably produced by the bakers of Wonder Bread, the actual plant where the bread is baked has the generic name "Your Local Baker" so it would not be too commercial. I remembered seeing this actual filmstrip and I'm sure believed every word. It recalled rainy days in elementary school when we missed recess and as a "treat" got to see filmstrips.

Enjoy!!!


Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Lileks wannabe
Review: This book reminded me very much of James Lileks' book, "The Gallery of Regrettable Foods," which ironically picks apart 1950s cookbooks. The difference is that Lileks' accompanying commentary is absolutely hilarious. Danny Gregory writes well enough, and draws a few laughs, but mostly he just describes the filmstrips without adding any insight.

The filmstrips themselves that are featured also aren't that interesting. I'm not old enough to remember any of them, but that shouldn't matter. Several years ago I read a book on the graphic auto-safety films that used to be shown to high schoolers. I didn't remember those films, either, but I still enjoyed it.

The book itself is beautiful, and if you grew up in the 1950s and remember these filmstrips, this would make an excellent coffee-table book. Otherwise, I can't recommend it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good, but could've been better
Review: This is a fun book. The excerpts from the film strips are accompanied by very interesting text about the subject.

My big complaint is that I feel that whoever laid out this book was more interested in showing off their skills than in celebrating the film strips. The images & text from the strips are made small & a few frames dropped out of each strip even though they could easily have been included. While one or two frames are blown up to take up the majority of the page.


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