Sunday, February 9, 2020

FOCUS: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | The Sad, "Disturbing Familiarity" of This Year's Oscar Nominees






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FOCUS: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | The Sad, "Disturbing Familiarity" of This Year's Oscar Nominees
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. (photo: Getty Images)
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Hollywood Reporter
Abdul-Jabbar writes: "In 2015, at the beginning of the #OscarsSoWhite controversy, I wrote a column for The Hollywood Reporter called 'Hollywood Diversity Is a Special Effect.' Yet, here we are again, five years later, singing the same sorry song."

Nearly as disappointing as the tired lack of inclusivity among this year's best picture contenders, writes The Hollywood Reporter columnist, is "the timidity of the filmmakers" that did make the cut.

n 2015, at the beginning of the #OscarsSoWhite controversy, I wrote a column for The Hollywood Reporter called "Hollywood Diversity Is a Special Effect." Yet, here we are again, five years later, singing the same sorry song. But rather than wring my hands over the frustration, irony and inevitability of it all, I'm going to look at another aspect of the Oscar nominations for best picture that isn't about inclusivity but is almost equally culturally devastating: the disturbing familiarity of some of the films and timidity of the filmmakers. All the nominated movies are good, all are worth paying to see. But almost half do little to elevate art or illuminate the human condition. With so many excellent television shows streaming daily, the "best" movies must step up their game, not just in technical wonderment but also in literary aspiration.
"Literary" sounds pretty grandiose and maybe even a little New Yorker snobby. All I mean is that when we celebrate "the best" in any art form, we should have a criteria that rewards not just dazzling style and technique but also depth of substance. We should come away from our best works not just entertained but reflective, with a keener insight into our own lives and interactions with others. That's asking a lot, but that's why we award those who achieve it.
It's worth noting that six of the nine films nominated for best picture have historical settings, and five are based on historical events. Last year, five of the eight nominees also were historically based. One of the reasons filmmakers choose subjects based in history or based on historical events and people is that the story tells us something about who we are today. It's like a Rosetta Stone for translating the past into a language that better explains the present. And some of the nominations do just that.
As war becomes more sanitized and long-distance in the minds of Americans, we need to be reminded that war is hell. 1917 joins other great war movies (Paths of Glory, The Boys in Company C, Platoon, Full Metal Jacket) in making the horrors more intimate, the relentless terror more exhaustive. Sam Mendes' much-discussed tracking-shot technique gives the audience no respite from the intensity and insanity of war.
Jojo Rabbit writer-director Taika Waititi's addition of, and portrayal of, Adolf Hitler as an invisible friend to the story's 10-year-old protagonist and aspiring Nazi is brilliant. As Jojo starts to question the veracity of the Nazi propaganda, imaginary Hitler becomes increasingly sinister. The emotions this movie elicits from the audience — joy and sorrow — are earned and linger long after the end. And the parallels with the politics of our time are especially frightening and poignant.
Little Women, written and directed by Greta Gerwig, offers a fresh and clever reimagining of the classic novel that is completely engaging. The struggles of the sisters to find their own voices, and for those voices to be taken seriously, in a repressive society still ring true. It's a conventional story re-imagined in an unconventional way.
South Korean director Bong Joon Ho's Parasite is probably the most original and continually surprising of the bunch. Sometimes it feels like a surreal Oldboy-like puzzle, sometimes like a Shameless-like dysfunctional family comedy, but all the elements come together to form a riveting and heartbreaking meditation on the crushing impact of class struggle in society.
Marriage Story barely makes the top of my best list. Writer-director Noah Baumbach's dialogue is a delight: There are so many dazzling scenes of raw and bruised emotions that are painfully true. But there also is a sense of familiarity about the story, as if we've seen it often in other films — though not as skillfully.
As for the rest: Joaquin Phoenix gives a powerful and original performance in Joker that deserves his nomination for best actor. But the movie drags as it keeps covering the same material, with the same obvious commentary on our negligent mental health care system. I thoroughly enjoyed Ford v Ferrari, as sleek and slick as a racing car and one I would happily watch again. But its joys are all in the moment of watching, forgotten soon after.
Martin Scorsese is one of the greatest filmmakers ever. Mean Streets, Taxi Driver and Goodfellas probably influenced more contemporary directors than any other movies. But The Irishman is bloated with scenes that needed trimming and features a clueless protagonist who, despite being a killer, is surprisingly dim and therefore dull.
In an earlier article, I disapproved of director Quentin Tarantino's highly inaccurate and distasteful portrayal of Bruce Lee in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, but that is not why this film isn't deserving of a best picture nom. He has every right to do what he wants with history, but what fresh insights have these changes given us? Despite excellent performances and several riveting scenes, the movie wanders off into the distance slumped over the saddle like Shane.
Part of the problem is the Academy's 2009 decision to expand the number of best picture nominations from five to 10, a return to the 1930s and '40s, when the Academy nominated eight to 12 movies. In doing so, the Academy made it clear that the awards are first and foremost less about recognizing quality and more about making money by promoting as many movies as possible. With five contenders, we could have had the best, but these additions make a nomination for best picture more like a participation award. If the Academy wants movies to be taken seriously as an art form, then lean into exclusivity and to the rich voices that show us the complexity of our lives in fresh, vibrant ways.









60% of wealth is inherited





Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Congress



Pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps is impossible. But once AOC pointed out that obvious fact, the right-wing media went into full outrage mode.
Here’s the reality of life in America: No one pulls themselves up by their own bootstraps. We have a society filled with communities that help folks succeed.
When AOC won her race in 2018, she worked hard to do it. But it would be a bit narcissistic to argue that she did it “all by herself.” It took a little bit of work from a whole lot of believers to bring the fight for social, racial, economic, and environmental justice to Washington.
With our new PAC, Courage to Change, we’re not relying on progressive candidates to pull themselves up by their bootstraps. Will you chip in to help us make critical early investments to help elect progressive champions to Congress? 
 
Republicans love to retell the bootstrap myth because it helps them justify massive corporate handouts and cuts to our social safety net.
But in the United States, where 60% of wealth is inherited, we have to realize that just because someone has money doesn’t mean that they’re inherently better than anyone else.
This entire mentality is a tool designed to divide us — to blame people suffering in poverty, despite working two jobs, for their “mistakes.” It’s designed to keep working people fighting each other, instead of uniting against the corporate interests that have corrupted our democracy.
Together, we’re fighting for economic justice in America. But AOC can’t do it alone (no one can). Will you donate $15 to Courage to Change, and help us elect more progressive champions to Congress?
Thanks for your support,
- Team AOC


Donate





 

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Stand with Doug Jones




VoteVets


Last week was a somber and historic day, in the worst possible sense. We saw partisan politics eclipse our elected officials’ responsibility to uphold their oaths and the Constitution, and on party lines, the Senate voted to acquit Donald Trump.

But one Democratic Senator stood out as a prime example of doing what is right, not what is easy — Senator Doug Jones from Alabama. Despite being in a “red” state, despite the fact that he’s up for re-election in November, he voted to convict.

As you know, VoteVets is one of the biggest outside spending groups fighting to flip the Senate this November. We’re reaching out today because he needs our help.

Senator Jones is in one of the most competitive races this entire cycle, and right now he needs our help to fight back against opponents attacking him for simply doing the right thing.

Split a donation between Senator Doug Jones and VoteVets.org right now to fuel our work to flip the Senate come this November and support Senator Jones’ re-election. Every dollar will go towards removing Mitch McConnell, Donald Trump, and far-right Republicans for good.

CONTRIBUTE $10

Senator Jones took a political risk by doing the right thing and has honorably served his country with integrity for decades.

If we want to take back the Senate, send Mitch McConnell and his cadre of partisan hacks packing, and make sure Donald Trump is a one-term Commander-in-chief, we need all the support we can get today.

Thanks for your help.
—VoteVets.org

CONTRIBUTE $10






PAID FOR BY VOTEVETS PAC








Sign the petition to stop Jeff Bezos





I wanted to make sure you saw this urgent petition to 2020 presidential candidates to fight back against dangerous corporate technology monopolies like Amazon and reckless billionaire CEOs like Jeff Bezos.    
Yesterday, an expose on Amazon's low-wage platform "Mechanical Turk" revealed that Amazon’s monopoly power is harming workers, many of whom are disabled and have no other source of income. 
Because of Amazon's monopoly power, they allow extreme low wages on this platform -- one worker said they were only paid 50 cents to talk about the most painful memory of their life.1,2
Amazon's Mechanical Turk platform workers say they’ve been asked "to send along their underwear, take photos of their feet, or to draw pictures of their genitals. They say they have been paid to recount traumatic instances in their lives—a cancer diagnosis, severe depression, or the death of a loved one—often for less than a dollar."
Big technology monopolies like Amazon have severely damaged democracy and our economy, and they’re a threat to their workers, immigrants, and the environment. 
We must get 2020 candidates involved in the fight to hold big tech monopolies responsible for the damage they’ve created in our communities.
Time’s running out to get 2020 candidates on the record on whether they will fight for all of us or instead protect the private empires of a few tech billionaires. Sign the petition to 2020 candidates urging them to break up big tech monopolies.
Thanks for taking action to protect us from destructive tech monopolies,
Salma and the team at Demand Progress
Sources:
1. Gizmodo, "Horror Stories From Inside Amazon's Mechanical Turk," January 28th, 2020.
2. The Washington Post, "Online labor markets may look competitive. They aren’t.," August 2nd, 2018.
(See my earlier email below for more information.)

Jeff Bezos’ reckless empire-building is a threat to all of us.
Amazon is a threat to democracy. Jeff Bezos builds his empire by trying to buy elections and bullying politicians who try to help the homeless.1,2
And now Amazon has expanded its monopoly into providing election technology -- which allows Amazon to access and store our voter registration and voting history, including the candidates we voted for.
Amazon's monopoly power is out of control. Some 2020 presidential candidates have joined grassroots calls to break up big tech companies including Amazon -- but not all of the candidates are on board.4
We need to get all 2020 candidates to commit to fighting back against technology monopolies.
We need your help if we want to have a fighting chance against Jeff Bezos, the richest man in history. Tell 2020 candidates to break up Amazon’s empire.
Amazon is a threat to its workers -- the company ruins the bodies of its warehouse workers with brutal, inhumane quotas.5
Amazon helps Trump traumatize immigrants -- it provides technology that helps ICE cage children and conduct immigration raids.6
Amazon uses its monopoly power to:
  • rig the rules of the economy to their own advantage;
  • mine and profit from our personal data;
  • work us to exhaustion and injury;
  • pit communities against each other;
  • help deport us and cage our children;
  • pollute and gentrify our neighborhoods (even threatening to fire employees who speak up against Amazon's contributions to the destruction of our climate);7,8
  • and corrode our democracy.
All to expand the private empire of Jeff Bezos, the richest man in history.
And Amazon now “runs state and county election websites, stores voter registration rolls and ballot data, facilitates overseas voting by military personnel and helps provide live election-night results.”9
We can’t let a corporation with as terrible a record as Amazon run our elections. We need 2020 candidates to commit to taking action.
Tell 2020 candidates to fight back against dangerous corporate technology monopolies like Amazon and reckless billionaire CEOs like Jeff Bezos. 
We can win this. Pressure from political leaders and the grassroots is working.
Some 2020 candidates have joined grassroots calls for a break up of dangerous big tech monopolies. The Federal Trade Commission has widened the scope of the antitrust investigation of Amazon,10  and Congress has led a series of investigations into the danger of big tech monopolies.11
And Demand Progress has been working behind the scenes for months to help launch Athena, a coalition of three dozen grassroots organizations leading the resistance to Amazon.12
Athena coalition members have already secured key victories together. But if we’re going to win big, we need all 2020 candidates to commit to breaking up big tech.
Tell 2020 candidates: Rein in the danger of big tech monopolies like Amazon and commit to breaking up big tech.
Thanks for defending the future of our democracy and economy,
Salma and the team at Demand Progress

DONATE

Sources:
1. The Atlantic, "How Amazon Helped Kill a Seattle Tax on Business," June 13th, 2018.
2. Mother Jones, "Amazon Spent a Ton of Money on Seattle Elections. It Probably Wasn’t Worth It.," November 8th, 2019.
3. Reuters, "How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections," October 15th, 2019.
4. Reuters, "Where U.S. presidential candidates stand on breaking up Big Tech," October 29th, 2019.
5. The Verge, "‘Beat the Machine’: Amazon warehouse workers strike to protest inhumane conditions," July 16th, 2019.
6. Mijente, "New Report Exposes Tech & Data Companies Behind ICE," October 23rd, 2018.
7. BBC News, "Amazon 'threatens to fire' climate change activists," January 3rd, 2020.
8. Partnership for Working Families, "Bad Deal, Bad Company, Bad Billionaire: How Proposed Taxpayer Subsidies for Amazon HQ2 Can Still Be Stopped," December 19th, 2018.
9. Reuters, "How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections," October 15th, 2019.
10. Bloomberg, "Amazon Faces Widening U.S. Antitrust Scrutiny in Cloud Business," December 4th, 2019.
11. U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary, "Investigation of Competition in Digital Markets," Accessed December 18th, 2019.
12. The New York Times, "Activists Build a Grass-Roots Alliance Against Amazon," November 26th, 2019.










Karl Grossman on the Weaponization of Space









FAIR
 

Karl Grossman on the Weaponization of Space

Washington Post Space Force illustration
Washington Post illustration (12/3/19) promoting Trump's Space Force
This week on CounterSpin: Announcing plans for a new branch of the US military in 2018, Vice President Mike Pence said: "It’s not enough to merely have an American presence in space, we must have American dominance in space. And so we will.” If that's not worrisome enough, the first commander of the now-a-real-thing Space Force is Gen. John Raymond, who explains that
the Space Force's measures of success will be that our adversaries are deterred, and that our joint and coalition partners always have the space capabilities that our modern way of war and our modern way of life depend on.
OK, but are media serving to check what sounds like a resource-burning, nightmare scenario of extraterrestrial warmaking, brought to you by the folks who want to bring back landmines? The Washington Post, for one, told readers that while some mock, Donald Trump "instinctively understands the magic of space, as both a political tool and a national motivator." So, maybe not.
We'll talk about the dangers of the weaponization of space, combined with a press corps that can't get past giggling about it, with Karl Grossman. A longtime FAIR associate, Karl Grossman is a journalism professor at the State University of New York/College at Old Westbury, and author of, among other titles, Weapons in Space and The Wrong Stuff: The Space Program's Nuclear Threat to Our Planet.
Plus Janine Jackson takes a quick look back at recent coverage of impeachment and billionaires.












The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...