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Stephen Monticelli

👤 Person
156 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Under the Ten Commandments bill, moral codes from other major world religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism would not be posted in classrooms, presenting a clear case of a state government violating the First Amendment. Princeton historian Kevin Cruz explained why such laws, like those signed by Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, ignore the United States Constitution.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Under the Ten Commandments bill, moral codes from other major world religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism would not be posted in classrooms, presenting a clear case of a state government violating the First Amendment. Princeton historian Kevin Cruz explained why such laws, like those signed by Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, ignore the United States Constitution.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Under the Ten Commandments bill, moral codes from other major world religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism would not be posted in classrooms, presenting a clear case of a state government violating the First Amendment. Princeton historian Kevin Cruz explained why such laws, like those signed by Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, ignore the United States Constitution.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

The film can be read as a metaphor about the Cold War, with the oppressive Egyptians representing the Soviet Union and the freedom-loving Hebrews standing in for the United States. At the beginning of the movie, DeMille appears and calls the movie, quote, the story of the birth of freedom, the story of Moses.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

The film can be read as a metaphor about the Cold War, with the oppressive Egyptians representing the Soviet Union and the freedom-loving Hebrews standing in for the United States. At the beginning of the movie, DeMille appears and calls the movie, quote, the story of the birth of freedom, the story of Moses.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

The film can be read as a metaphor about the Cold War, with the oppressive Egyptians representing the Soviet Union and the freedom-loving Hebrews standing in for the United States. At the beginning of the movie, DeMille appears and calls the movie, quote, the story of the birth of freedom, the story of Moses.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

The movie also captures the racism and, ironically, the anti-Semitism of a country that had not yet emerged from McCarthyism. The historian Alan Nadell tells a revealing story of two cast members in The Ten Commandments. According to the story, during the film's production, Charlton Heston's wife became pregnant.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

The movie also captures the racism and, ironically, the anti-Semitism of a country that had not yet emerged from McCarthyism. The historian Alan Nadell tells a revealing story of two cast members in The Ten Commandments. According to the story, during the film's production, Charlton Heston's wife became pregnant.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

The movie also captures the racism and, ironically, the anti-Semitism of a country that had not yet emerged from McCarthyism. The historian Alan Nadell tells a revealing story of two cast members in The Ten Commandments. According to the story, during the film's production, Charlton Heston's wife became pregnant.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

DeMille then told Heston that if his wife gave birth to a boy, the child would be cast as the baby Moses. When Heston's wife gave birth to a son, DeMille sent her a telegram saying, congratulations, he's got the part.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

DeMille then told Heston that if his wife gave birth to a boy, the child would be cast as the baby Moses. When Heston's wife gave birth to a son, DeMille sent her a telegram saying, congratulations, he's got the part.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

DeMille then told Heston that if his wife gave birth to a boy, the child would be cast as the baby Moses. When Heston's wife gave birth to a son, DeMille sent her a telegram saying, congratulations, he's got the part.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

As Cruise documents, when the Ten Commandments film was initially released, DeMille came up with an ingenious marketing strategy. He teamed up with a conservative anti-communist organization, the Fraternal Order of the Eagles, to establish Ten Commandment monuments across the country.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

As Cruise documents, when the Ten Commandments film was initially released, DeMille came up with an ingenious marketing strategy. He teamed up with a conservative anti-communist organization, the Fraternal Order of the Eagles, to establish Ten Commandment monuments across the country.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

As Cruise documents, when the Ten Commandments film was initially released, DeMille came up with an ingenious marketing strategy. He teamed up with a conservative anti-communist organization, the Fraternal Order of the Eagles, to establish Ten Commandment monuments across the country.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Around the time that southern states erected new Confederate monuments to protest desegregation, Ten Commandment monuments appeared at the county courthouse in Evansville, Indiana, the Milwaukee City Hall, and near the U.S.-Canadian border in North Dakota. Nearly 150 such monuments were erected across the country.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Around the time that southern states erected new Confederate monuments to protest desegregation, Ten Commandment monuments appeared at the county courthouse in Evansville, Indiana, the Milwaukee City Hall, and near the U.S.-Canadian border in North Dakota. Nearly 150 such monuments were erected across the country.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Around the time that southern states erected new Confederate monuments to protest desegregation, Ten Commandment monuments appeared at the county courthouse in Evansville, Indiana, the Milwaukee City Hall, and near the U.S.-Canadian border in North Dakota. Nearly 150 such monuments were erected across the country.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Momentum stalled during the civil rights era to the extent that an Alabama state justice, Roy Moore, suffered ridicule when he placed, without authorization, a self-funded 5,280-pound monument in the rotunda of a judicial building housing the state's Supreme Court in 2001. The monument was ordered removed two years later.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 171

Momentum stalled during the civil rights era to the extent that an Alabama state justice, Roy Moore, suffered ridicule when he placed, without authorization, a self-funded 5,280-pound monument in the rotunda of a judicial building housing the state's Supreme Court in 2001. The monument was ordered removed two years later.