Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Today is 04/13/2022, Post #4





https://tubitv.com/tv-shows/645111/s01-e03-the-children?autoplay=true

Tubi

Childhood's End

S01:E03 - The Children (2015)

A new age dawns as children begin to exhibit advanced abilities. But what does this mean for the future of humanity?










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https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4311794/

IMDb

Childhood's End

The Children

Episode aired Dec 16, 2015

S1 E3

A new era begins for the entire world as the children from all nations start to display supernatural abilities, but the older generations worry about the repercussions of this development in regards to the future of humanity.









Childhood's End (2015) s01e03

"The Children"

Jennifer: The end begins.









From 12/16/2015 ( premiere USA television miniseries finale episode "Childhood's End"::"The Children" ) To 7/1/2021 ( ) is 2024 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 5/19/1971 ( premiere US film "Guess What We Learned in School Today?" ) is 2024 days



From 11/28/1964 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Outer Limits"::"The Inheritors - Part 2" ) To 7/27/2020 ( ) is 20330 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 7/1/2021 ( ) is 20330 days



From 12/20/1994 ( from the thoughts in my conscious mind, coinciding with United States of America Veterans Affairs hospital psychiatric doctor medical drugs: in non-aviator related duties boots on the ground in Bosnia as Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps captain this day is my United States Navy Cross medal date of record ) To 7/1/2021 ( ) is 9690 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 5/14/1992 ( as Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps chief warrant officer circa 1992 and United States chief test pilot I performed the first flight of the US Army and Boeing AH-64D Apache Longbow & the Intelsat 6 successful rescue during US space shuttle Endeavour orbiter vehicle mission STS-49 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-49 pilot astronaut and my 1st official United States of America National Aeronautics and Space Administration orbital flight of 4 overall ) is 9690 days










et-1982 img6 981 .jpg, from internet









E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)

Quotes

Gertie: I taught him how to talk now. He can talk now.

[Elliot sees electronics and supplies together in the closet]

Gertie: Look what he brought up here all by himself. What's he need this stuff for?










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DSC02404 .jpg, by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/27/2020, Spokane, Riverfront Park


DSC02295 .jpg, by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/27/2020, Spokane, Riverfront Park


DSC02395 .jpg, by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/27/2020, Spokane, Riverfront Park


DSC02408 .jpg, by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/27/2020, Spokane, Riverfront Park


DSC02409 .jpg, by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/27/2020, Spokane, Riverfront Park


DSC02303 .jpg, by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/27/2020, Spokane, Riverfront Park


20200727_1254268419008133702110410_illustration-kerry-burgess_1 .jpg, from astronomy app









https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/03/09/reviews/clarke-childhood.html

The New York Times

August 27, 1953

Childhood's End

By WILLIAM DU BOIS

Books of the Times

Most pundits will agree that the noblest theme in all our literature is the destiny of man. Poets and philosophers (and even an occasional politician with an itch for empire building on the side) have wrestled with the riddle since the dawn of recorded history. Inasmuch as man is an ingenious creature, many solutions have been invented down the ages. The empire builders, from Caesar to Hitler, have foundered on the fallacy of the master race. The humanitarians from the ancient prophets to the one-worlders, have foundered just as fatally. Meanwhile, the destiny of man remains clouded by the towering indecisions of the twentieth century, when only the physicists and the Kremlin seem capable of writing tomorrow's headlines in advance. The average reader can hardly be blamed for wondering if man might not be happier if he were transformed into another species altogether—perhaps with a one-way ticket to a more hospitable cosmos. The question is faced squarely and answered with frightening candor in "Childhood's End." Arthur C. Clarke's novel of the twenty-first century—a first rate tour de force that is well worth the attention of every thoughtful citizen in this age of anxiety.

It must be said at the outset that Mr. Clarke's publishers have offered his novel as science-fiction, a label that too many readers still associate with Captain Video, rocket-ship sagas and invasions of super-gremlins from universes other than our own. It is quite true that "Childhood's End" contains some of these standard ingredients, but Mr. Clarke has mixed them with a master's hand.

Compassion for the Modern Man

A fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and chairman of the British Interplanetary Society since 1949, he is the author of "The Exploration of Space," a stimulating examination of the possibilities of space travel. He is equally at home in the outer galaxies and the troubled psyche of modern man. And, if he seems to agree with Norman Cousins that modern man is rather obsolete, his pity for that same homo sapiens never wavers. When he rings his curtain down, man as we know him today is as dead as all man's pathetic schemes for self-destruction. But no one can escape the conviction that the phoenix just risen from the ashes is destined for higher things.

Mr. Clarke's point of departure is a day late in the twentieth century when the United States and the Soviet Union, each racing feverishly against time, are preparing to launch rival rockets on the first voyage to the moon. Each great power, spying shamelessly on the other, is certain of success, since scientific efficiency has made war a meaningless waste of energy, the only possible triumphs now lie in the conquest of space. At this precise moment, the Overlords appear—mystic beings in gigantic space-ships, anchored fifty kilometers above each of the world's capitals, enforcing their will with devices that will never be revealed in this review.

Man is forbidden to explore the universe, and ordered to mend his ways on earth. National rivalries are abolished, trade barriers dissolved. One World is made a reality under the jurisdiction of a truly powerful United Nations. Racial discrimination is outlawed with the same patient efficiency—in South Africa, for example, the black majority on the point of exterminating the white minority in payment for past outrages, is stopped just in time. Even the ancient, all-too-human sport of cruelty to animals is universally outlawed. Utopia and the twenty-first century dawn together. Mankind, thanks to the constant, always-benign presence of the Overlords, has achieved perfection at last. Yet mankind, in its secret heart, is just as uneasy as before. What could be more unsettling than perfection in a world that can no longer be improved?

A Jonah and a Stuffed Whale

What happens thereafter is best left to Mr. Clarke and his readers. A century and a half elapse in all before the transformation is complete. Individuals revolt here and there. A Negro astrophysicist, emulating Jonah in reverse, stows away in a stuffed whale destined for a museum in the Overlords' cosmos, and lives to return to earth with a few of their less important secrets. A TV writer, bored with producing dramas without conflicts, takes his family to the South Seas, to one of several New- Athens communities that are springing up in out-of-the-way corners. These, of course, are evidence of man's protest against a world where production for use has made manual labor quite needless and ambition a word for the history books. It is here, at long last, that George Greggson, who serves as Mr. Clarke's raisonneur, glimpses the first, chilling intimations of the Overlords' larger purpose—and understands that the Overlords themselves are only minions of some distant, all-powerful master.

The astrophysicist, returning to earth when that awful purpose is a reality, is just in time to speak the sober epitaph for man, as well as a hope for man's future.

"In a soundless concussion of light, Earth's core gave up its hoarded energies. For a little while the gravitational waves crossed and recrossed the Solar System, disturbing ever so slightly the orbits of the planets. Then the Sun's remaining children pursued their ancient paths once more, as corks floating on a placid lake ride out the tiny ripples set in motion by a falling stone. There was nothing left of Earth. They had leached away the last atoms of its substance. It had nourished them, through the fierce moments of their inconceivable metamorphosis, as the food stored in a grain of wheat feeds the infant plant while it climbs toward the Sun."

This review can only hint at the stimulation Mr. Clark's novel offers. Above all, it must be emphasized that this is not a gloomy book, despite its holocausts. It is true that the invaders from outer space manage to steal the big scenes. But homo sapiens fights back to the end with resourcefulness and wit. What's more, he rarely allows himself to be upstaged, even when he is faced with his own extinction.









From 8/27/1953 ( The New York Times reviews "Childhood's End" ) To 4/13/2022 ( Today, Wednesday ) is 25066 days

25066 = 12533 + 12533

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 2/25/2000 ( premiere US film "Wonder Boys" ) is 12533 days



From 8/27/1953 ( The New York Times reviews "Childhood's End" ) To 4/13/2022 ( ) is 25066 days

25066 = 12533 + 12533

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 2/25/2000 ( premiere US TV series episode "Stargate SG-1"::"Maternal Instinct" ) is 12533 days



From 8/27/1953 ( The New York Times reviews "Childhood's End" ) To 2/5/2010 ( premiere US TV series episode "Caprica"::"Reins of a Waterfall" ) is 20616 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 4/13/2022 ( ) is 20616 days



From 12/16/2015 ( premiere USA television miniseries finale episode "Childhood's End"::"The Children" ) To 4/13/2022 ( Today, Wednesday ) is 2310 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 2/29/1972 ( [previously referenced recently:] from The Daily Princetonian publication: Tenure and Recent Reappointment and Promotion Decisions ) is 2310 days










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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mythology_of_Stargate

Mythology of Stargate

Ascension

"Ascension (Stargate)" redirects here. For the SG-1 season 5 episode, see Ascension (Stargate SG-1).

The concept is introduced in the SG-1 season 3 episode "Maternal Instinct", and becomes a central theme of Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis.









https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4311794/quotes

IMDb

Childhood's End (TV Mini Series)

The Children (2015)

Quotes

Karellen: Oh Milo. You were so flawed as a species, and so passionate. You believed in so much, and knew so little.



- posted by me, Kerry Burgess 10:48 AM Pacific-time USA Wednesday 04/13/2022