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By 1982, we were watching the Kremlin produce one feeble dying leader after another and were told that people in the USSR did not have televisions or toilet paper, but the US president was seemingly the healthiest old codger still alive, which of course translated into US=good, USSR=evil.īut Ronald Reagan, Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov and Konstantin Chernenko are not in “World War III.” Rock Hudson is. Of course you did, because you know that cloaks and daggers, insane plot twists, wars, slumming superstars, the Reagan Era and, above all, a competition between unambiguous good and evil are all beloved necessities in the 1980s. Sondheim, “everything was possible and nothing made sense.”Īnd that brings us to “World War III.” The American Miniseries delighted in the Cold War (see “The Day After” and “Amerika,” both already discussed here), but you expected that. Well who didn’t love the Cold War? Fifty years of scare tactics and on-purpose misunderstandings, not to mention bunkers and gender-undefinable East German Olympians, what’s not to love? It was a loony period in world history.
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