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  2. Project Greek Island - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Greek_Island

    Project Greek Island (previously code-named "Project Casper" [1]) was a United States government continuity program located at the Greenbrier hotel in West Virginia. [2] The facility was decommissioned in 1992 after the program was exposed by The Washington Post. It is now known as the Greenbrier Bunker.

  3. Ted Gup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Gup

    Those opposed to the revelation note that the exposure rendered the $14,000,000 ($123,382,792 by current standards) taxpayer-funded bunker useless and led to its decommissioning. Gup defended the story in a 2009 interview with Cleveland's Plain Dealer, arguing that the Greenbrier bunker was obsolete in 1992. "We sat on the story for a couple of ...

  4. The Greenbrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Greenbrier

    The historical fiction novel In the Shadow of the Greenbrier, by Emily Matchar, tells the story of four generations of a Jewish family living near the Greenbrier during key moments in the resort's history. It was published by G. P. Putnam's Sons in 2024. The Greenbrier was at the center of a moment on the U.S. game show Who Wants to Be a ...

  5. While the Rest of Us Die: Secrets of America's Shadow ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/While_the_Rest_of_Us_Die...

    While the Rest of Us Die: Secrets of America's Shadow Government is a Vice on TV documentary television series exploring twentieth-century and twenty-first-century continuity of government (COG) measures of the United States federal government, the social, racial, and class inequalities these measures point to, the changing and inconsistent meanings of the concepts of "defense" and "homeland ...

  6. The Atomic Cafe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Atomic_Cafe

    The Atomic Cafe is a 1982 American documentary film directed by Kevin Rafferty, Jayne Loader and Pierce Rafferty. [2] [3] [4] It is a compilation of clips from newsreels, military training films, and other footage produced in the United States early in the Cold War on the subject of nuclear warfare.

  7. The Bunker (1981 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bunker_(1981_film)

    The Bunker is a 1981 American made-for-television historical war film produced by Time-Life Productions based on the 1975 book The Bunker by James P. O'Donnell. [1]The film, directed by George Schaefer and adapted for the screen by John Gay, is a dramatization depicting the events surrounding Adolf Hitler's last weeks in and around his underground bunker in Berlin before and during the Battle ...

  8. War Made Easy: How Presidents & Pundits Keep Spinning Us to ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Made_Easy:_How...

    Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 57 out of 100, based on 5 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. [ 4 ] Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times stated, "Unsubtle, condensed and bullet-point simple, War Made Easy avoids fancy visuals for a uniformly drab and dispiriting aesthetic.

  9. The Bunker (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bunker_(book)

    The Bunker (German: Die Katakombe), also published as The Berlin Bunker, is a 1975 account, written by American journalist James P. O'Donnell and German journalist Uwe Bahnsen, as to the history of the Führerbunker in 1945, as well as the last days of German dictator Adolf Hitler. The English edition was first published in 1978.