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Good Morning Vietnam ~ Cronaur, Rabbit Or BOTH?

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posted on Aug, 3 2006 @ 10:12 AM
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Well, I have dodged this for several months and I keep getting asked the SAME QUESTION..... "Did the producers of the movie "Good Morning Vietnam", in addition to Adrian Cronauer's book, use Dave Rabbit's show "Radio First Termer" and the surviving recorded show as an ENHANCEMENT to what Adrian Cronauer did while at AFVN in Saigon." As I have said numerous times, what I BELIEVE and what I can PROVE are two different things. As this article is about HISTORY and contains FACTS as given by Adrian Cronauer himself..... YOU be the JUDGE!

Dave

Good Morning Vietnam ~ “The Movie”
The Life And Times of Who?


Adrian Cronauer: Air Force Radio Announcer in Vietnam
Played by Robin Williams in the film Good Morning, Vietnam, the real Adrian Cronauer is a complex man.
By Gordon Zernich – Historynet.Com


www.historynet.com...

Adrian Cronauer is the name many people associate with the movie Good Morning, Vietnam -- the story of an Air Force radio announcer who used imagination and innovation to make more of a difference with his craft than his superiors felt they could tolerate. The real Adrian Cronauer, although he may not be as outrageous as the myth makes him, is a man whose talents and experience give him a unique perspective on the Vietnam War.

Cronauer's involvement with communications and media began at a very early age. The only child of a machinist and a teacher, he got his first taste of television by playing piano on a locally produced children's program in Pittsburgh. During his high school years, he volunteered at the local Public Broadcasting System station. He started out opening letters but ended up doing radio announcing by the time he was attending the University of Pittsburgh. He also played a major part in starting the school's campus radio station. By 1962, he was a full-time student majoring in broadcasting at the American University in Washington, D.C. Cronauer needed only 11 credit hours to graduate when the draft board pressed him to exercise his option to volunteer. Like many young men eligible for the draft in the 1960s, he decided to volunteer for the Air Force, hoping this would provide him with a wider choice of assignments than he otherwise would have had. His first choice was for flight training, and he passed the battery of tests necessary to qualify. The time commitment for that option, however, was more than he wanted to make, so he withdrew the application in order to make another choice. The Air Force found his next selection more suitable to their needs: Cronauer entered training for broadcasting and media operations.

In the mid-1960s, broadcasting was practiced in a fairly unimaginative and routine manner in the armed forces. It often included making training films and recording mind-numbing lectures. Things finally picked up a bit for Cronauer when he transferred from Stateside duty to an Armed Forces Radio station in Greece. There he found ways to add a little style and moxie to an otherwise pea-green military broadcasting universe.

With one year left of his enlistment and a change of assignment due, Cronauer had another choice to make. He could either go back to the States to make more training films, or he could sit behind the microphone and broadcast live to the American community in South Korea or South Vietnam. He chose Vietnam. But shortly before he arrived in-country, the Gulf of Tonkin incident changed the whole scope of the American effort there.

Cronauer's broadcasting style was more like something a person could hear on Stateside radio than on the military radio and television service. In that day, military radio and television tended to follow its own rigid rules, procedures, regulations, codes and interests rather than focusing on its audience -- frequently resulting in broadcasts that were tough to listen to or watch without falling asleep. It seemed as though its mission had very little to do with improving the morale of the American community in Vietnam.

Cronauer balanced innovation, imagination and enthusiasm with practicality and realism. He pushed as much as he could for reforms within the military broadcasting hierarchy, but there were times when he knew it would be senseless to push any harder. He met resistance from those who were deeply invested in military broadcast operations, from those who worked without incentive or motivation and from those who simply feared making waves. "Why go to all that effort?" they would ask. "It's going fine. Why change it?"

Cronauer did, however, swim against the current of the staid conventions of that time, risking the ire of his bosses on more than one occasion. With his friend Ben Moses, who had also served in Vietnam, he wrote a screenplay in 1979 based on his experiences more than 10 years earlier. They managed to sell the rights to the story to a Hollywood producer in 1982.

“After the release of Good Morning, Vietnam, Cronauer was the first to say that the film was largely a fictional account and was not intended to be a biography. It was rewritten, produced, directed and acted primarily for entertainment purposes. He has also said many times that if he had acted in real life as he was portrayed in the film, he still would be serving time in the military penitentiary at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.”

Now..... so WHO did they base the movie on?

Just something to digest.


Dave

[edit on 10/18/2008 by Dave Rabbit]



posted on Apr, 3 2008 @ 01:19 PM
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maybe Cronauer wasn't happy on how the film turned out. i just read, before the film, he tried to sell his story to the TV networks ala MASH, but there's no taker. Cronauer switched ideas and turned it into a screenplay with writer markowitz, and the real depiction of adrian's stories and experiences was reduced.

GMV personally is one of the funniest movie of all time. Back then, robin williams was still funny
his radio improvs are classic comedy.



 
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