• Sharon Tate Campaign Plan MMXX

  • The Result of a Deliberative Process that Contemplates a New Dawn in Hollywood
  • By: Michael A. Walker
  • Narrated by: Fleet Cooper, Caroline Slaughter
  • Length: 4 hrs and 52 mins
  • 3.0 out of 5 stars (4 ratings)

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Sharon Tate Campaign Plan MMXX

By: Michael A. Walker
Narrated by: Fleet Cooper, Caroline Slaughter
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Publisher's summary

In 1969, the nearly nine months pregnant celebrity Sharon Tate loses her life and the life of her unborn child, horrifying hundreds of millions of Americans. How do we restore the dignity of Sharon Tate in the American psyche from an ocean of morbidity on a level unseen in the history of the United States?

Sharon Tate Campaign Plan MMXX transcends the problem, navigating Sharon Tate’s enigma with a clear defense of her person as someone worthy of admiration. The book details flexible options that reverse the present situation by reintroducing Sharon Tate to the American public.

Only 26 years old when she died, the story of Sharon's life became of less public interest than learning about the hippie lives of her murderers. Despite this, Sharon possesses a formidable arsenal of relatively unseen visual media for planners to work with. Plan MMXX envisions a new dawn in Hollywood and promotion of the greater good.

©2019 Michael A. Walker (P)2019 Michael A. Walker

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A plan with an agenda

This isn’t a book about Sharon Tate. The author barely scratches the surface of what makes her an icon. Instead there’s a feeling of him using Sharon Tate as a tool to push a conservative, entitled, Beaver Cleaver agenda.

The author espouses censorship (he calls the Hays Code ‘timeless’) and seems to think Sharon’s image needs ‘rehabilitation’. Anyone who’s read anything about Sharon Tate knows this is rubbish. Her memory needs to be unshackled from what her sister Debra calls ‘the M word’. To censor some of the key moments of her life (her marriage, her roles, her choices) is not the way to go about it.

Quite honestly, I don’t believe this author cares about Sharon Tate, her image or celebrating her life. She’s just a means to an end for him and that doesn’t honor her.

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