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1993....it was one of the 'day excursion' affairs you always get on hols abroad....and included a VERY scary crossing of the Gambia river (only a few hundred yards wide, but obv a major route for local trade etc as there were thousands trying to get on (think of a small cross-channel GB ferry about 30yrs old & you're not far off)..it got stuck on a sandbank & I had visions of being on BBC news as another 'ferry-type' disaster
Anyhow, we then transferred to a motor boat & went down-river (dolphins either side of boat..cool!). I forget the actual village name now, but you are introduced to elders who are apparently descendents of Kunta Kinte etc etc. They even show you to a small stone tower the slavers built as a 'holding pen' prior to shipping the slaves up-river.
Incredible place Gambia...the heat was unreal. The kids out in the 'wild' ( ie true African villages of the sort you see on the telly ) went crazy for the tourists' empty plastic water bottles
1993....it was one of the 'day excursion' affairs you always get on hols abroad....and included a VERY scary crossing of the Gambia river (only a few hundred yards wide, but obv a major route for local trade etc as there were thousands trying to get on (think of a small cross-channel GB ferry about 30yrs old & you're not far off)..it got stuck on a sandbank & I had visions of being on BBC news as another 'ferry-type' disaster
Anyhow, we then transferred to a motor boat & went down-river (dolphins either side of boat..cool!). I forget the actual village name now, but you are introduced to elders who are apparently descendents of Kunta Kinte etc etc. They even show you to a small stone tower the slavers built as a 'holding pen' prior to shipping the slaves up-river.
Incredible place Gambia...the heat was unreal. The kids out in the 'wild' ( ie true African villages of the sort you see on the telly ) went crazy for the tourists' empty plastic water bottles
Sounds like you had a fab time Dave - I envy you ! Were you a fan of the Series and did it experiencing the area make it seem more real ??
Joybee - DYR SUPERGRAN !! <<< why not visit our main website
I do remember avidly watching the series with my mum.
We didn't decide on Gambia because of Roots, rather we knew its history was there, so you couldn't NOT go and see it could you? It'll prob be the only time I ever visit the Gambia, so that's another reason!
Incredibly we found a curry house....very nice too...in amongst the huts of Banjul (the capital)....I wouldn't want to walk anywhere though esp at night!!
Oh no ! I wasn't implying that you went just because of Roots !! 'Specially as you would've only been knee high when it was transmitted - weeell, not much bigger
The curry house couldn't have been more authentic could it ? As for walking round at night - animals - or locals ???
I remember watching Roots and the second series Roots the NextGeneration
However, I can also remember a three-parter called The Making of Roots and nobody else seems to remember it - - can't even find a reference to it anywhere
There were a few progs like that in seventies, i.e. TheMaking of Jaws and TheMaking of Star Wars , all in two or three parts, and I think there's only me who ever watched them
Oh no ! I wasn't implying that you went just because of Roots !! 'Specially as you would've only been knee high when it was transmitted - weeell, not much bigger
The curry house couldn't have been more authentic could it ? As for walking round at night - animals - or locals ???
lol joy
BOTH !
Yes, really nice curry house amngst the huts...really. There were only 2/3 'restaurants', all reachable by taxi
Ralph Waite, of John Walton fame, played a slave ship captain in Roots
sigpic Do you really believe the other side without provocation would launch so many ICBM's, subs and ships knowing that we would have no option to launch as well? It would break our MAD Treaty (Mutually Assured Destruction) not to mention the end of the world as we know it.
I recall watching the series in 1977. We had many discussions at school about the programme.
It is unusual to broadcast episodes each consecutive day, with eash show in excess of 90 minutes.
Any ideas why this was adopted? Why was the show not aired over say, seven weeks?
I recall watching the series in 1977. We had many discussions at school about the programme.
It is unusual to broadcast episodes each consecutive day, with eash show in excess of 90 minutes.
Any ideas why this was adopted? Why was the show not aired over say, seven weeks?
I think it was shown in the USA each day for a week or so. Luckily it was during a cold winter so people stayed in & it got really good ratings.
The first 2 Godfather films had similar treatment, with all the scenes put into chronological order & some material cut out the original releases put back in, along with newly shot some linking scenes.
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