![]() There was a Sports Illustrated article on them: The Heath Post: The Eleven Men Behind Cassius Clay Ross Todd and “Possum” were real and two of the eleven businessmen managing and collecting on Cassius Clay at the time. They began surveillance of him in 1953 due to his rapid rise in the ranks of the Nation of Islam. The FBI opened a file on Malcolm X in 1950 while he was still in prison after he wrote a letter to Harry Truman stating his opposition to the Korean War and calling himself a Communist. Even Black-owned labels like Motown didn’t release overtly political music until the late 1960’s. Unless it was Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie, Joan Baez or The Kingston Trio, labels and radio really shied away from political or protest songs. One of the lyrics in the song, references a kid growing up to be president and although the Drifters recorded it, the label never released it because they feared the image of a Black group singing about possibly becoming president was too much for some to handle in 1963, so the aptly named Jay and the Americans ended up with the song. I remembering hearing a story that the R&B group, The Drifters were supposed to release a song called “Only In America”. The song was released in January 1963, so I’m glad they have a music reference that is right for once.īobby Robinson’s reluctance to sign Teddy Greene due to a political song is representative of the time. Stella references “Puff The Magic Dragon” by Peter, Paul and Mary. His record at the Garden was 3-1, losing to Peppe. Vincent Gigante did actually fight at the Garden four times, fighting Frankie Petrello, Vic Chambers, Andy Peppe and Luther McMillan. He still was able to give orders and order hits. Vito Genovese was in fact serving a prison bid after being convicted of conspiring to import and sell narcotics. Him and other mobsters controlled the contract of the current heavyweight champion Sonny Liston. Clay really did belittle Jones and called him an “ugly little man” and he was as animated as the series portrays him to be.įrankie Carbo was a real life boxing promoter and mobster and was actually arrested for managing boxers without a license in 1961 and serving a 25 year sentence for conspiracy and extortion. It was the called fight of the year in 1963. ![]() The whole Doug Jones-Cassius Clay fight is real. Here are some facts, fiction and one thing I'm really unsure about.Īs always, if I may have missed something or gotten something wrong please let me know in the comments. The acting and portrayal of historical figures in this show is remarkable and even though some things are not true it does keep you entertained. So finally we meet Cassius Clay in this episode. Historical Accuracy Thread (SPOILER ALERT) (S01E04)
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