schillmacguffin--disqus
schillmacguffin
schillmacguffin--disqus

Pink's fascist movement didn't strike me as specifically "white supremacist". It was a broader sort of musing on the experience of being the focus of an adoring crowd, and how that can feed a megalomania akin to that experienced by dictators of any stripe. The symbolism of the movement's salute — The crowd's

Hogan being in a camp for four years doesn't really work — Even if we assume that episode is set in 1945 (and that's questionable, given the speed with which German defenses collapsed in that year), he'd have had to have been captured in early 1941, before the US had entered the war. While there were Americans who few

And the publicizing of the camps at the end of the war did a lot to stigmatize casual anti-semitism, as it did to discredit the once widely accepted "science" of eugenics.

How about a reunion TV movie in the '80s (if Crane hadn't died)? The gang now work for the CIA at a restaurant in West Berlin (or perhaps Vienna) owned by a clueless Schultz — LeBeau is the head chef, the rest of the former prisoners kitchen and waitstaff, and Klink the Matre'D. The plot would probably have something