View Full Version : America: The Story Of Us
JWBear
04-25-2010, 10:41 PM
Well... That was two hours of crappy history. Anyone else watch it?
I stopped counting the anachronisms in props, sets, and costuming about a quarter of the way through... :rolleyes:
It's about time Hollywood told the story of us.
(Pic unrelated)
http://i191.photobucket.com/albums/z1/Tref_foto/1271777640171.jpg
wendybeth
04-26-2010, 11:21 AM
Yeah, I started watching it last night and turned it off when Bank of America ran it's propa-comm about how they were the first (really, the second) bank to be chartered here in America, blah blah blah....They made themselves look like such good patriots, when in reality they are nothing but a bunch of crooks. The commercial was done in the style of the show- in fact, I thought I was still watching the show until they ran their logo at the end.
JWBear
04-26-2010, 11:54 AM
I almost forgot the BofA crap! And they definitely were not the first (or second) bank chartered in America. BofA started as Bank of Italy in San Francisco in 1904!
innerSpaceman
04-26-2010, 12:01 PM
I was too busy hanging on to the last piece of craptacular American History, The Pacific, that plays opposite it on Sunday nights. It's lame, but I'm following it halfheartedly. No desire to ever get involved in any mini-series ever again. So even though the History Channel piece sounded promising, I gave it a miss - and now I'm glad I did.
katiesue
04-26-2010, 12:09 PM
I almost forgot the BofA crap! And they definitely were not the first (or second) bank chartered in America. BofA started as Bank of Italy in San Francisco in 1904!
It's possible they bought out some other bank that was the first or second. I used to work at an insurance company that was "founded" in 1900 or some such but had been pretty much defunct till our company bought it out in the 90's. But we used the "founded in 1900" bit on our literature.
JWBear
04-26-2010, 12:57 PM
It's possible they bought out some other bank that was the first or second. I used to work at an insurance company that was "founded" in 1900 or some such but had been pretty much defunct till our company bought it out in the 90's. But we used the "founded in 1900" bit on our literature.
That's pretty much what they are doing. Bank of Massachusetts was founded in 1784, and ceased to exist in 1903. In 2005 BofA bought the company that bought the company that bought the company that bought out Bank of Massachusetts in 1903. BofA is now claiming that they began as Bank of Massachusetts in 1784. Utter disingenuous rubbish.
It's possible they bought out some other bank that was the first or second.
I'm looking at the "merger & acquisition" tree for my employer (not BofA) and the oldest company listed is The Bank of Manhattan Company founded in 1799. 49 predecessor companies were found before 1900. Maybe we could legally say "Founded more times before 1900 than you can shake a stick at."
€uroMeinke
04-26-2010, 07:06 PM
That's pretty much what they are doing. Bank of Massachusetts was founded in 1784, and ceased to exist in 1903. In 2005 BofA bought the company that bought the company that bought the company that bought out Bank of Massachusetts in 1903. BofA is now claiming that they began as Bank of Massachusetts in 1784. Utter disingenuous rubbish.
So when does a company cease to exist? During a merger if the name changes is it a new company? is it a new company if there is no name change? Does it depend on the make-up before and after of the Board of Directors?
With that in mind, what is the Disney Company? Is it still Disney after acquiring Pixar. Does Pixar still exist?
I have no problem with a Company tracing its roots and claiming it's heritage - Companies are fake humans anyway.
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