Gbalaga, Rabbit, Gbalaga
"Run, Rabbit, Run" bụ abụ 1939 nke Noel Gay na Ralph Butler dere. Egwu a bụ nke Noel Gay na abụ bụ nke Flanagan na Allen bụrụ ya na ndị egwu egwu Harry Bidgood so na mbụ.
Ihe ndị mere n'oge gara aga
dezieE ji okwu ndị ahụ mee ihe dị ka ihe na-enweghị isi na Luftwaffe a na-ekwu na ọ naghị arụ ọrụ. N'abalị iri na atọ n'ọnwa Nọvemba n'afọ 1939, n'oge na-adịghị anya mgbe Agha Ụwa nke Abụọ tiwapụrụ nakwa n'oge a malitere egwu ahụ, Germany malitere mwakpo ụgbọ elu mbụ ya na Britain, na Ụgbọ mmiri na-efe efe nke na-agbaba na Sullom Voe, Shetland. [1][2][3][4] na-eche na bọmbụ gburu cone abụọ, ọ bụ ezie na a na-atụ aro na a zụtara ha n'ezie n'ụlọ ahịa ndị na-egbu anụ ma jiri ha mee ihe maka ebumnuche mgbasa ozi.
Akụkọ ndụ TV nke Walter H. Thompson bụ I Was Churchill's Bodyguard kwuru na abụ ahụ bụ nke Winston Churchill kacha hụ n'anya dị ka praịm minista. Jock Colville, odeakwụkwọ onwe onye nke Churchill n'oge ọtụtụ n'ime agha ahụ, kwuru na Praịm Minista na-abụ akụkụ nke abụ ahụ.
N'omenala a ma ama
dezie- [5] mgbasa ozi 1992 maka Weetabix, Elmer Fudd na-abụ abụ ahụ ka ọ na-achụ Bugs Bunny. [<span title="This claim needs references to better sources. (June 2022)">better<span typeof="mw:Entity"> </span>source<span typeof="mw:Entity"> </span>needed</span>]
- Na ihe nkiri 2003, House of 1000 Corpses, otu n'ime ndị ọjọọ na-abụ abụ a. [citation needed]
- N'afọ 2004, e ji abụ ahụ mee ihe na mgbasa ozi maka Tourism Victoria (Australia), nke gosipụtara Ndagwurugwu Yarra. [citation needed]
- Ihe nkiri telivishọn nke afọ 2014 nke "Outlander" jiri abụ ahụ mee ihe. [citation needed]
- Usoro akwụkwọ na ihe nkiri 2016 Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children na-eji abụ a n'ọtụtụ oge. [citation needed]
- [6] nkiri egwu nke Pụọ 2017 Get Out, nke Jọdan Peele dere ma duzie, na-eji ụdị mbụ ahụ mee ihe na mmalite mmalite na ọzọ na nso njedebe.
Ihe odide
dezie- ↑ Ratter. Photo #R01263, 13th Nov 1939. Shetland Museum & Archives. Retrieved on Jan 4, 2021. “A popular myth in Shetland is that the song "Run, Rabbit, Run" commemorated this event, as a skit on the ineffectiveness of the German air force, but this is wrong - the song was released before the event.”
- ↑ "The idea that the popular song "Run, Rabbit, Run" commemorated it is nonsense." /comparing dates of song and bomb/ Photo Number 02963, Bomb Crater, November 1939, at Shetland Museum Archives, accessed 4 Jan 2021
- ↑ "The event made headline news across Britain and a photograph was taken of a man holding two dead rabbits at the site of the crater. The rabbits came from a butcher shop in Lerwick. The story popularised the song Run, Rabbit, Run, which was seen as a skit on the ineffectiveness of the German air force (Luftwaffe)." Photo Number NE02730, Bomb crater, 13th Nov 1939, at https://photos.shetlandmuseumandarchives.org.uk/. Accessed 4 Jan 2021
- ↑ Bennett (Nov 17, 2019). A bomb, a song, a rabbit - the first WW2 bombs to fall on British soil. BBC. Retrieved on Jan 4, 2021. “The rabbit in the photo is curiously intact," observes Dr Tait. "The fact is a rabbit was killed in the attack, but was eaten. Some people claim this rabbit (in the photo) is a prop - that's an over-rectification of history. The rabbit in the photo isn't the one the bomb killed." Robbie Williamson, a photographer from Lerwick, had a keen eye for a shot. When he heard about the rabbit's death, he went to record the "historic bombing" for the purposes of a postcard. But his camera wasn't the only gear he brought. "He had a good eye for something that would sell. But before going north he went to a butcher's shop to buy a rabbit," explains Dr Tait.”
- ↑ Bunny & Elmer Fudd Weetabix advert
- ↑ Edelstein. "Jordan Peele's Get Out Is Terrifying, Socially Conscious Horror", Vulture, 23 February 2017. Retrieved on 27 May 2017. (in en)