The Story of the Beans (and other farm films)
Does anyone remember a film which showed how green beans are grown and get to market?
The film had a musical soundtrack with a woman describing each scene in song. The woman sounded a little like Linda Rondstadt (but I doubt it was her). First it showed beans being planted, then growing, then being harvested. The beans were then taken to a facility where they were put on a conveyor belt and inspected by quality control people.
I only remember a few of the lines to this song. At this point it went:
"... to a string bean plant
Where they really fix them up
So that we can eat the beans!"
The final scene showed a mother and a kid picking up some beans in the produce section of a grocery.
"Going to the store
Pick up some of them beans
You may have wondered how they got there
But now we've really had a scene
And that's the story of the beans."
Another farm film showed some children in the back of a field truck that was being loaded with the output of a combine harvester. The kids were literally being showered with the (probably) corn as it was being harvested, and appeared to be having such a good time that I was actually slightly jealous watching it. The soundtrack was a man singing to some music. One of the verses just had him going "bum, ba ba-ba bum", but the part I remember best was sung as we watched the truck trudge away from us in the field; he sang "Won't you come with us to the farm. Won't you come with us to the farm." (repeat and fade)
That one reminds me a little of an earlier film, possibly from the first season. All I remember is it showed some kids riding in the back of a pickup truck or a hay wagon, as some strange music (possibly electric piano) played a repeating phrase.
Finally there was this film in which an unseen little girl narrates how hay is made. First the grass is cut using a mower. Then the grass is spun around to give it a chance to dry out. When it's dry, the hay is tied into bales -- I must say I was most impressed with this particular scene; the baler automatically made the hay bales, which emerged and dropped out of the machine in a manner, IMHO, similar to, (ahem!) a certain elimination process. The next scene showed men loading hay bales onto a flat bed. Lastly, the girl said something like "Now the hay is taken to the barn, and will be used to feed the horses.", as the final scene showed an equine creature dining on some Grasse a la King.