Easy-Bake Kitchen Debate: Difference between revisions

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File:American Plate.jpg|link=American Plate|"'''[[American Plate]]'''" is a song by Don McLean about plate spinning and the end of innocence in America.
File:American Plate.jpg|link=American Plate|"'''[[American Plate]]'''" is a 1971 song by Don McLean about plate spinning and the end of innocence in America.


File:Bottlezone.jpg|link=Bottlezone|'''[[Bottlezone]]''' is a first-person shooter tank combat arcade videogame. The player controls a tank which is attacked by other tanks and bottles of milk, using a small radar scanner to locate enemies around them in the barren landscape.
File:Bottlezone.jpg|link=Bottlezone|'''[[Bottlezone]]''' is a first-person shooter tank combat arcade videogame. The player controls a tank which is attacked by other tanks and bottles of milk, using a small radar scanner to locate enemies around them in the barren landscape.

Revision as of 06:45, 7 September 2022

Easy-Bake Kitchen Debate.

Easy-Bake Kitchen Debate is a 1959 buddy comedy film about a U.S. Vice President (Richard Nixon) and a Soviet First Secretary (Nikita Khrushchev) who exchange informal remarks through interpreters at the opening of the American National Exhibition at Sokolniki Park in Moscow on July 24, 1959.

History

An entire house was built for the exhibition which the American exhibitors claimed that anyone in the United States could afford. It was filled with labor-saving and recreational devices meant to represent the fruits of the capitalist American consumer market.

The debate was recorded on color videotape, and Nixon made reference to this fact; it was subsequently broadcast in both countries.

See Kitchen Debate (nonfiction).

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links

  • Post @ Twitter (19 January 2022)
  • Post @ Twitter (8 December 2021)