Yuan Longping was a Chinese agronomist and member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering known for developing the first hybrid rice varieties in the 1970s, part of the large changes in agriculture happening during that period. For his contributions, Yuan is known as the "Father of Hybrid Rice". Hybrid rice has since been grown in dozens of countries in Africa, America, and Asia—boosting food security and providing a robust food source in areas with a high risk of famine.
Yuan was both professionally and personally interested on rice production. He spent a majority of his time in the field, rather than staying confined in a lab or publishing papers. As such, he played a large role in Chinese agriculture by mentoring and leading others in the field, which helped foster future achievements in Chinese agriculture. In 1979, his technique for hybrid rice was introduced into the United States, making it the first case of intellectual property rights transfer in the history of the People's Republic of China.
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization 1991 statistics show that 20 percent of the world's rice output came from 10 percent of the world's rice fields that grow hybrid rice. Yuan advocated for sharing the success of his breakthroughs with other nations. He and his team donated crucial rice strains to the International Rice Research Institute in 1980. These donated strains were used to create hybrid rice strains that could sustain and grow in tropical countries to help their food supply chains. In addition to donating important rice strains, Yuan and his team taught farmers in other countries to grow and cultivate hybrid rice.
On March 10, 2021, Yuan Longping collapsed at his hybrid rice research base in Sanya. On April 7, he was transferred to Changsha, Hunan Province for treatment. At 13:07 on May 22, Yuan Longping died of multiple organ failure at Xiangya Hospital of Central South University Considered a national hero, tens of thousands of people sent flowers to the funeral home.
:07: to a real one
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Yep, I remember those too now that you mention them. I think the Simpsons did a version of the ones about aliens invading and the town killing each other. Or wait, is that the same one as the bomb shelter without "enough room"? Gah. Memory. But yeah, that shit about it being a metaphor for communists I suspect is a lot more on your teacher than it is on TZ.
I also remember another one where there's a tiny alien UFO terrorizing an old woman who is desperately trying to save herself from it. In the end, turns out the tiny UFO was actually the United States. Or I hope it was - it was earthlings at least, but I think the ending twist was an American flag rising up or on the terrorizing ship. I'm sure it was more a commentary on bad first impressions and fear of the other than anything against the US, but it still wasn't exactly a common trope at the time that the ones you thought were the bad guys were actually American!
I mentioned that one under spoilers up above, that one was actually Rod Sterling's favorite episode (along with the one about the guy who has all the time he wants to read, but a broken pair of glasses.)
Oh yeah, sorry. I'm not sure how I missed your other comment about it, but that's certainly the one. Interesting that that was a favorite of Sterling's.
The broken glasses one was exceptional as well. A classic of ironic stories. "All the time in the world." Edit: "Time enough at last"
looking it up on amazon, and the complete series is $130. i was considering buying it, but i guess not!
Yeah fuck that. Pirate it. It's not exactly obscure.
Rod Sterling doesn't need my money
Definitely. I'm sure he'd agree it would be a very shitty Twilight Zone episode where Rod comes back from the grave to demand recompense from all those moochers who didn't further enrich his estate (or rather, enrich certain players in the entertainment industry).
If it was a scam being pulled by the estate I think it could be kinda cool.
E: and I'm trying to think of what came next in mainstream tv that even approaches the twilight zone, and all i can think of is twin peaks, but theres no way tv went 30 years without any cool weird shit. i should look more into this, tv history is cool.
Reply to Edit: That's a fascinating question. Twin Peaks would have been my first thought too. Might be worth some sleuthing. Gah, Twin Peaks set a lot of molds too.
Edit: The 1970's looks like a dearth of anything decent. At least according to IMDB. I don't think Little House on the Prairie. I don't know, I'd actually be curious to hear this site's opinion on MASH*.
Well, better than the industry. :shrug-outta-hecks: