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An Open Letter to Andy Cohen Regarding The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

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Dear @Andy,

I've adored your onscreen persona since I first saw you moderating a 'Housewives' reunion show on Bravo many years ago. Where did this guy come from, I wondered, who with the same winning smile can spin any subject into campy humor or challenge any guest with a pointed question? You were a novelty then and you remain unique among public personalities. It's no wonder you now run a self-made media empire centered on your personality and the reality television shows you've conceived.

Last June, amfAR gave you and Miley Cyrus awards for your "exceptional contributions to the fight against AIDS." As a gay man who came of age in the 1980s, I'm sure that that award is very personal to you, as it should be. You've worked in both news and entertainment production, and you know better than most how media depictions affect public perceptions, behaviors, and how they can create or break stigma associated with diseases such as HIV.

Do you remember Pedro Zamora, the brave young man who was the central focus of MTV's The Real World in 1994? At that time, it would have been laudable simply for him to admit on national television that he was gay, much less that he was living with AIDS. I'm sure you remember.

Do you remember when Zamora's cast mates were shown to mock him, laugh at him, alternately doubt him and blame him for the severity of his illness? Wasn't it a terrible thing to witness his personal struggles for his life, only for the show to intercut footage of his purported friends making light of his illness?



Contrast the video above with this one:



You don't remember this because it never happened on The Real World. But it's happening right now, on your production, The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, as Yolanda Foster's struggle with Lyme disease is being exploited to create drama. To what end?

All these years later, we still remember Pedro--and at this point really should give producers Mary-Ellis Bunim and Jonathan Murray credit for editing a storyline that broke down stigma and promoted understanding of HIV and AIDS rather than fueling fears and propagating misinformation--and likewise, we will remember Yolanda Foster in 20 years. And we will remember either the compassion or the vitriol with which she and all people who live with Lyme were treated not only by the women in front of the camera, but also by the network that broadcasts the show. It'll get you tons of money, but not a respectable legacy. If that matters.

I can't make sense of why you, your co-producers, and your network have chosen to frame Foster as mentally ill rather than physically ill, and to showcase her cast members cackling in private about their assumptions that Foster is feigning a devastating illness for attention. Even when Foster admitted on camera to contemplating suicide, she was lambasted. Your show has become merciless.



OK, I can make sense of it--I get it, you need a story and controversy fuels ratings. But again, at what cost? Please contemplate your amfAR award and think about those who were on the wrong side of the HIV/AIDS conversation in the 80s.


Lyme disease exists, too. What are the consequences of your depiction of it?

Do you recall the community of ignorant people on the Oprah Winfrey Show who wouldn't let a man with HIV into their swimming pool? Winfrey, to her credit, told these people they were wrong: she took a stand on the basis of compassion and understanding; she didn't say, "my job is just to let these people speak their minds." You should really watch Winfrey's description of her approach. She's a master creator of compelling and socially responsible entertainment.

By virtue of your role as creator and executive producer of RHOBH, you're not only on the wrong side of the Lyme conversation, you're leading it. Many of us do not mistake your off-camera influence on the story for not having a voice. Viewers are savvy enough these days to know that reality television producers carefully craft storylines from hundreds or thousands of hours of footage. The story we are witnessing, even Lisa Vanderpump's, Kyle Richards's and Lisa Rinna's inferences that Foster is mentally ill or not ill at all, is the story you have chosen to convey to audiences. And it's utterly irresponsible. For people like me with Lyme disease, watching this is like someone at home with AIDS watching Pedro's cast members mock his health. But that wasn't shown--it didn't happen. Why? I would guess because the producers tethered their product to their consciences and saw an opportunity to make Pedro's life-and-death struggle a lesson for us all.

Andy, you know that media depictions have direct consequences: You recently won an award from the AIDS charity founded by Elizabeth Taylor, who was committed to actually helping those with AIDS who were being treated as cruelly as the people on your show (and its invisible production crew) are treating Yolanda Foster. Her commitment was genuine and loving, and her choices were pivotal in saving countless lives.

You may not be aware--most people aren't--but chronic Lyme disease today has a great many parallels to HIV/AIDS when the virus became known in the early 1980s. It's not fatal as often, although it does kill as it recently contributed to the death of a 37-year-old man, but it steals lives and livelihoods even without killing by physically and mentally disabling people.

The storyline that you and the co-producers of RHOBH have chosen to tell is killing a part of me. It's devastating to witness people mock someone who is so ill while I am at home experiencing the same physical devastation that your cast of adult "mean girls" are doubting and mocking. Remember that the film Mean Girls was a satire on these sorts of adolescent behaviors; your show more and more is a celebration of it.

In the end, you know better than I do that the show exists as it is because of your choices of editing and story, not because of Lisa Rinna's ignorance of Lyme or Lisa Vanderpump's casual nastiness.

Emails and tweets bearing this request have gone unanswered, and so I must resort to an open letter: Please, I urge you, Bravo, and the NBC family of networks to acknowledge the severity of Lyme disease and use your influence for good. Broadcast the documentary Under Our Skin so that viewers will understand how complex and devastating the disease is, and how Foster is one of thousands or even millions affected. Interview knowledgeable researchers. And, for God's sake, show some compassion. You've got ample power and influence. It's time to see your conscience and your heart.

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'Star Wars' and the Solstice

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This post contains spoilers about Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens

This week, I went to see Star Wars: The Force Awakens on the day of the winter solstice. It seemed appropriate. After all, the Star Wars universe is built around metaphors of light and dark, fire and shadow. These tales yearn for the tenuous return of light.

Fittingly, it is our modern flickering hearth -- the screen -- that we turn to at this darkest moment of the year. When the sun slips away, I put on the most grandiose, dualistic epics I can find. As a teenager, this meant wearing out my VHS copies of the original Star Wars trilogy (really original, as in "Han shot first!"). I curled up in the den and got lost in an epic that featured majestic stars and Yoda's warm, shadowed cave.

The battles were more fantastic and compelling than the Maccabean stories I imbibed at Hanukkah; the mystical Force soothed my longing for a Christmas tree adorned with shiny ornaments and my lonely-Jew-on-Christmas syndrome. Salvation, power, and compassion all awaited me there. The Force was available to all -- as disquieting as a religious revelation and as comforting as hot chocolate.

A decade later, the Lord of the Rings films, beginning with The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), ushered in each December with a balance between cozy hobbit holes and the fires of Mordor. So too did many installments of Harry Potter and The Hunger Games ... and the list goes on.

Why do sci-fi and fantasy films have so many summer premieres, but strike such a deep chord in the winter? Is it just the fire? The brilliant "Darth Vader" Yule Log features the dark father's funeral pyre flickering and crackling on a five-hour long loop. Here, pagan funeral tradition meets a pagan winter solstice tradition that became a Euro-American Christian custom--a ritual that was also mass-produced decades ago in the age of television reproduction. That virtual hearth has now been comically replicated in the digital world.

But no, it's not just the fire or the sparkly explosions. It's also not just a "mythical mashup," though that is part of it, and I love S. Brent Plate's use of that phrase. Countering Walter Benjamin's critiques of what art loses in an "age of mechanical reproduction," Plate also argues that:


Films like Star Wars confirm that some semblance of an aura is alive and well in this dispersed, postmodern, postindustrial world. These films tell us something too about our ongoing desire for the sacred mysteries and ritualistic events that, increasingly, have been fulfilled by mass media for masses of people.



Some critics argue that the Star Wars universe is not just a mythic universe filled with a bricolage of world traditions (and this is not a bad thing); it is also a dualistic one, characterized by sharp divides between good and evil. Stark "good/evil" and "us/them" binaries rarely lead to good things politically- to put it mildly. On this, I agree.

A close reading of the films reveals more nuances. In Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith, Anakin Skywalker's fall is precipitated by feelings: grief and fear over the deaths of those he loves most. In The Empire Strikes Back, Luke sees his own darkness in his vision in the cave on Dagobah. In The Force Awakens, Finn is a Storm Trooper turned savior. Kylo Ren balances on a precipice of cosmic confusion, and no, I don't think his patricide places him soundly on the dark side--though he could clearly use a good therapist.

In The Atlantic, David Sims argues that the fanfare surrounding the new film "is the stuff of nostalgia," and he's not wrong. The Force Awakens is a tremendous, wonderful film, but it is not a wildly original one. So what?

Many of the countless news pieces on the film include their authors' recollections of the first time they saw Star Wars. A special issue of People quizzes the younger members of the cast, and John Boyega had to admit that his first film was The Phantom Menace. "I'm a 90s baby; don't judge me," he said. To each generation, a new Star Wars is given.

Winter envelops us in a nostalgic mode. This year, Star Wars revelry has turned the solstice season into one of nostomania. Even for non-Christian Americans, December brings to mind impossibly ideal Normal Rockwell tableaus and Dickensian ghosts of Christmases past. Nostalgia, at its linguistic root, is a painful longing for home, including homes we have never quite inhabited. Writing in Time, Lev Grossman compares the galaxy far, far away to a hidden snow-covered land that is very different from the Planet Hoth: "The Star Wars universe is a little like Narnia: even those who have been there can never be sure of getting in again."

The films were always nostalgic in a broadly emotional way. Luke's mournful gaze at the setting Tatooine suns wasn't just a desire for escape; it was a clue that his own past lay out in the stars. Rey's desire to remain on Jakku comes from her craving for a family she cannot truly remember. Kylo Ren gazes at Darth Vader's deformed helmet, longing for the power of a "grandfather" he never knew. Even the prequels, in all of their excessive digital shininess, were meant to fulfill the audience's appetite for the world of a Galactic Republic they had never seen.

Like the turning of the year, the return to Star Wars brings memories of past rituals (previous screenings; the much-maligned "Star Wars Christmas Special;" that plush Ewok you got that one year). It simultaneously gives us hope that, in each new trip to the theater, the bright light of the opening crawl will renew us again. It can make us what we think we were but have never really been.

Give us this year our solstice and our light sabers. I, for one, welcome our nostalgic Jedi overlords.

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Richard Sherman: Songs of a Lifetime

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Academy Award winning songwriters Richard Sherman and his late brother Robert composed some of the most memorable Disney tunes ever penned and much more. Their works include "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" and "Chim Chim Cher-ee" and "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang." They also were responsible for the quintessential earworm, "It's a Small World"-- love it or loathe it, you can never get it out of your head.

Last week PBS SoCal premiered a one hour superb special entitled Richard Sherman: Songs of a Lifetime. Sherman is simply featured at a grand piano in a studio setting playing and singing some of the Sherman brother's greatest hits, including their 1960 teen pop song "You're Sixteen," which was first recorded by Johnny Burnette and later by Ringo Starr.

The avuncular Richard humbly takes us on a musical tour of the Sherman songbook, while he reminisces about the back story behind many of their timeless works. It is television worthy of watching, and includes appearances by talented performers Ashley Brown, Juliana Hansen and The Barbershop Quartet (Wesley Alfvin, Jim Campbell, Jon Schoenherz and Drew Tablak). Bravo to producer/director and writer Don Hahn for creating this tasteful classic.

On a personal note, I keep running into Richard and his wonderful wife Elizabeth. We seem to have a lot of mutual friends, including Mary and Fred Willard, Alice and Leonard Maltin, and Arlene and Milt Larsen. I can attest that Sherman is a sweetheart of a guy-- modest, talented, quietly elegant, and relevant. He is a gentleman in every sense of that word. At 87 he continues to write music, and recently penned a new standard for the Disneyland Forever show and parade entitled "Kiss Goodnight."

In addition he and Milt Larsen have co-written and recently released an album of so-called Smash Flops featuring comedy songs such as "Bon Voyage Titanic," "When the Hindenburg Lands Today," "Congratulations Tom Dewey," and "The Confederate Victory Song."

Milt was also part of a sibling team. His late brother Bill was President of the Academy of Magic Arts, Inc., and Milt was the founder of The Magic Castle in Hollywood, California. Richard has been pals with Milt for about 65 years, which tops the 45 years I have known the magical Milt.

And the song played on.

Richard Sherman: Songs of a Lifetime Preview Trailer from Don Hahn on Vimeo.

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It's White Christmas Time:"Do You Love Me?"

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My 91 year old mother, Anita, and I, are in the TV room with Tema, one of my mother's Caregivers who has been with us for ten years and who is eight months pregnant with her second daughter. They are in the two big armchairs and I am nudged in between them in a chair from the dining room. We are watching, or trying to watch, "White Christmas," but Mom keeps interrupting to ask, "I love you, do you love me?"

Me: "Yes, of course, I love you!"
Mom: "That's good. That is all that matters!"

Mom has Alzheimer's, or some form of it, there are so many varieties of the disease. Her condition seems more like, dementia, because she has pretty much been the same for years. She can still play a fierce game of dominoes and loves movies, and can follow them, well, most of the time! She asks again with more emphasis...

Mom: "Do you love me?"
"Yes, I love you," I tell her and rub her upper back to soothe her.
Mom: "Oh, keep doing that. Higher. Now go lower, more. Oh, that's good. Gosh, you are wonderful! I love you."
Me: "I love you, too."

I am actually kind of excited to see, "White Christmas," again, the classic film with Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and that actress with the impossibly tiny waste, Vera-Ellen. It is such a "Christmas-y" thing to do. It reminds me of growing up. It is always on at Christmastime and it makes you feel good to watch it. I love the Irving Berlin score.... "I'm dreaming of a whiiiiiite Christ-maaaas, just like the ones I used to.." Mom interrupts again...

Mom: "Can I ask you something?"
Me: "Yes, of course," knowing exactly what the question will be...
Mom: "Do you love me?"
Me: "Yes, of course, I love you!"
Mom: "You are the P.C. (perfect child) and I am the P.M. (perfect mother)?"
Me: "Yes, I am the P.C. and you are the P.M. Okay, now shall we watch the movie?"

Vera-Ellen and Rosemary Clooney are singing that "Sister" song. I break into song."Sisters, sisters, never were there such devoted sisters! Caring, sharing, every little thing that we are wearing....." Mom loves the added entertainment. "...but Lord, help the Mister, who comes between Me and my Sister! And Lord, help the Sister, who, comes between me and MY Man!"

Mom to Tema: "Isn't she wonderful?"
The whole thing is silly. Tema is laughing. We continue watching.

Mom: "I love you."
Me: "Love you, too."
Mom to me in whisper tone: "Who is that over there?"
Me: "Mother! You know who that is! That is Tema!"
Mom: "Oh that's right. Will you forgive me?"
Mom to Tema: "Tema, do you love me?"
Tema: "Yes, Mrs. Fay, I love you!"

We go back to watching the movie. Bing and all are in Vermont, touched to see their General from WWII days, and are upset that he is struggling in his business, a ski resort, and there is no snow.

Mom: "I love you. Do you love me?"
Me: "Yes, I love you."
Mom: "Oh, that's good because that is what is most important, that we love each other."
Mom about the movie:"What did they say?"
Me: "If we listen and pay attention to the movie then we will know. Shall we focus in on the movie?"
Mom:"Okay."

A brief pause.

Mom: "Do you love me?"

I think, maybe if I don't respond, she might forget that she asked and her focus might go to, "White Christmas." Her gaze is pointed at me.

Mom: "Well, DO YOU?"

Me: "Mom, yes, OF COURSE, I love you! I love you, I love you, I love you, I LOVE YOU, I LOVE YOU!"
Mom: "Oh, that's good, as that is what's most important, that we love each other, and we do."

Fifteen seconds later...

Mom begins: "Do you love..."
Tema: "Mrs. Fay, let's watch the movie."
Mom: "Okay, I am sorry. Will you forgive me?"
Tema: "Yes, I forgive you."

Tema and I look at each other and smile at each other knowingly. This is the way it goes. Sometimes Mom will pay more attention to the show, just not tonight. Tonight the movie is going to compete with this on-going inquiry about love, maybe because it is Christmas and the collective universe has us all thinking about it.

Mom and her question, "Do you love me?" sprinkled throughout the whole evening, as distracting as when it seems time stands still with a snowfall. Somewhere in the pause and a breath, I could feel all these precious parts resonating in me. My 91 year old mother wanting to know that she is loved. Her letting us know she loves us. Pregnant Tema, teary, as excited as she is for the new baby, recognizing that this special time with her toddler daughter, Akessa, being the center of attention is passing and she wants her to always feel her "wonderfulness." It is all about love.

We do make it to the end of the movie where General Waverly (Dean Jagger) has the happy surprise of all of his troops showing up at the celebration to love and support him."The kids," Bing, Danny, Rosemary and Vera-Ellen put on a show like you've never seen, complete with a big cinematic finish. The barn doors roll open, and it's a snowy, "White Christmas." When love comes together like that, the universe is there to comply.

Mom's hand reaches over to me.
Mom: "Gosh, I love you."
And before she can ask me....
Me: "And, I Love You!

The big message, after a night of endless, "Do you love me?"'s, and watching an old classic film? Answer: "What's most important, is that we love each other." That's what I am dreaming about.

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Miss Universe Blunder: Not the First Award Show Recall

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In one of the epic fails in the history of television, Sunday night Miss Universe's host Steve Harvey named the wrong contestant as the winner--erroneously announcing that Miss Columbia, Ariadna Gutierrez-Arévalo, was Miss Universe 2015. She was crowned and taking her accolades for over two minutes before Harvey returned to the stage to announce that he had made a grievous error. Miss Columbia was, in fact, the first runner-up. The winner was Miss Philippines, Pia Alonzo Wurzbach. Aye! Yi! Yi!

This blunder created an extraordinarily awkward and painful moment for everyone concerned-- host, contestants, organizers, show-runners, audience, and a vast number of viewers worldwide.

In case you missed this mixed up mess, here it is:



For the moment, Miss Columbia is undoubtedly devastated, and Miss Philippines' crowning moment was tarnished. But hang in there. In the long run both of these young ladies will be immortal. Instead of 15 minutes of fame, both will have a treasured place in television history. They will be forever remembered for being a blameless part of one of the greatest gaffes ever broadcast on TV. And if they show humor and grace in this baptism of fire, they will both come out long-term winners. There is truth in the old cliché, "When life gives you lemons, make lemonade."

Can anyone remember who won last year? Or who was the runner-up? Steve Harvey's blunder may be a blessing for both Miss Philippines and Miss Columbia.

Yesterday I was discussing this occurrence with television producer Josh O'Connell, and he drew my attention to an interesting similar situation that occurred to his prior employer and mentor, soap opera maven William J. Bell, the late husband of our mutual friend Lee Phillip Bell.

The Bells co-created The Young and the Restless and The Bold and the Beautiful. In 1986 a Daytime Emmy was awarded to the writing team of The Young and the Restless headed by Mr. Bell. He accepted the award in a live televised ceremony in New York City.

Two days later he received a telephone call from the Academy in charge of the Daytime Emmys advising him that there had been a "clerical error," and The Young and the Restless had NOT won the award. The true winner was the writing team for the soap Guiding Light. Reportedly the accounting firm who did the tabulation had erroneously given a card to the presenter naming The Young and the Restless as the winner, while releasing a press release correctly stating that Guiding Light won. They needed Bell to return the Emmy. Ouch! Now that's a soap opera!

The Bell's have won numerous Emmys before and after, but this is the one that got away.

Josh O'Connell tells me that when Mr. Bell won his next writing Emmy, he wryly announced, "If the phone rings tomorrow, I'm not going to pick it up."

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Leonardo DiCaprio in The Revenant and Benicio del Toro in Sicario: Strong Silent Types

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Two of the most powerful performances in movies this year have perhaps the least dialogue: Leonardo DiCaprio in The Revenant and Benicio del in Sicario.

For a two-and half hour movie, the dialogue in Alejandro Gonzales Inarritu's The Revenant could probably fill a page. The story, about a survivor of a bear attack seeking revenge in the American frontier, is all action, much of it brutal. The bear attack pits man against nature: a mother bear goes after the man, mauling him badly, but the landscape itself cold and harsh too seems a malevolent force for the Indians, trappers, and cavalry in these wilds in 1820. Leonardo DiCaprio, bearded as Hugh Glass, is not his usual handsome self but a primal force seeking out John Fitzgerald (an excellent Tom Hardy), the man who took what was most precious to him, and left him for dead. The acting is all in Leo's eyes.

Another man seeking revenge in a different tortured landscape is Benicio del Toro's Alejandro in Sicario, Denis Villeneuve's movie about the Mexican drug cartels. He doesn't say much, but del Toro is a force in every movie, a giant of manly action. Something precious has been taken from him too, and his revenge defies humanity. Playing opposite Emily Blunt's Kate Macer though, the audience sees the suggestion of another side, the man he once was, a compassionate family man. Cinematographer Roger Deakins' work contributes to Sicario's look at a grim Mexico. He and Villeneuve are now working on a sequel to Bladerunner.

The Revenant and Sicario are two of the best movies of the year, not to be overlooked for awards, and for the sheer excitement of watching two pitch perfect performances featuring men of few words.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

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Dr. Who Makes a Great Villain

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While David Tennant was voted "The UK's favourite Doctor," on the original Netflix show Jessica Jones he's just plain brilliant as Kilgrave, the elegant psychopath with a creepy super power.

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Kilgrave can make people do the simplest or most appalling things just by speaking a few words. If he tells someone to walk away in the middle of a conversation because he's bored, she will. If he tells someone to put his head through a post because he's feeling perverse, that man will keep pounding away till he's unconscious.

He can simply divert people from their path; he can make them kill themselves or others in horrible ways. Or torment them for sport: Imagine a large malign cat playing with a world of helpless, hypnotized mice....

In the show which is adapted from the Marvel comic book Alias he's the nemesis of Jessica Jones. She's a sarcastic, raven-haired, funky PI in Hell's Kitchen (aka Clinton, which isn't as noir a neighborhood name). An under-achiever until this new line of work, Jones can stealthily employ her own powers of superior strength and the ability to leap and fall (it's not really flying, she's quick to point out). Her mouthy earthiness and his elegance are oil and water, and he's not only stalking her but once held her hostage for a month while he in effect raped her body and her mind.

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He leaves destruction and despair in his wake, she tries to heal the wounds of the world. Both have horrific pasts they're trying to escape. It's a surprisingly subtle, thrilling combination and the Netflix show fields a superb supporting cast, fine writing in each script, and lots of surprises. Including his plans for Jessica and how she responds.

But perhaps best of all there's the suavity of Tennant turned pure evil. He's played broken characters like Hamlet before, but who knew Dr. Who could do the voodoo he do so well?

Lev Raphael is the author of the thriller Assault With a Deadly Lie and 24 other books in genres from memoir to mystery.

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Scheer Intelligence: Discussing 'The Hunting Ground' With Director Kirby Dick and Producer Amy Ziering

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The Hunting Ground has been a magnet for controversy since it premiered at Sundance last February. It has been shown at hundreds of college campuses, provoking heated discussions about the prevalence of sexual assault as well as how educational institutions handle accusations of rape. The film has also elicited protests from administrators and faculty from some of the schools that it names along with questions about its objectivity. In this week's conversation, filmmakers Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering don't shy away from the criticism of the film. They engage in an energetic dialogue about what contributes to the high rate of sexual assault on college campuses, as well as why The Hunting Ground has provoked more debate than their earlier film, The Invisible War, about sexual assault in the military. They also discuss the movement the film has helped to inspire and why they believe it should be shown on every college campus.

"What you've seen is these colleges and universities putting their own reputation and their financial well-being ahead of the safety of their students." (Kirby Dick)

Adapted from KCRW.com





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Read the full interview below


Robert Scheer: Hi, this is Robert Scheer with another edition of Scheer Intelligence, the podcast that I do with KCRW and that is distributed through its affiliate stations and NPR. My two guests today, Amy Ziering and Kirby Dick. Amy is the producer of the new film The Hunting Ground; Kirby Dick is the director. They were both involved together in another movie that was very powerful, as this one is--The Invisible War, about rape in the military--that in 2013 was nominated for an Academy Award [for Best Documentary Feature]. They've won Emmys between them; they've been celebrated and so forth, but they've also been the center of controversy. They have guts. They've taken up subjects that people didn't want to deal with; in this case, The Hunting Ground, the whole question of rape and harassment on college campuses and the indifference of college leadership to deal with it. We're doing this broadcast from USC, the University of Southern California, where I teach. They kindly support the podcast, the Annenberg School, and I appreciate that. But the fact is, USC is also mentioned in the movie, along with Harvard and Yale and Columbia and all sorts of other schools, as being culpable in this respect. And to my mind, what is so exciting about this film, it's about people not taking it; it's about pushing back. You all remember, I suppose most people listening to this, the woman who walked around Columbia University campus dragging her mattress to call attention to what she said was an assault on her. We've had other examples. And basically what the film to me was so powerful, is how lonely these people were when they first raised their complaint. How much opposition there was, how much shooting the messenger. And so let's begin with that. First of all, what prompted you to make this film and what have you learned from it?

Amy Ziering: I guess what prompted us to make the film was when we finished [The] Invisible War, we had actually moved on to a different film entirely, but in the course of doing outreach for that film we were showing it on campuses. And that film, I think, as you mentioned, was, sort of broke the story of the epidemic of rape in our U.S. military. And in the course of showing it on campuses, every time we screened it somewhere someone would come up to us and go, 'Actually, you know, this happened to me here. And there's a lot of similarities between, you pointed out the way the military responded when someone reported it, to the way my administration responded right here on this campus.' And we kept hearing this over and over again. And then we started getting letters from around the country from students, saying you know, 'Dear Ms. Ziering, Dear Mr. Dick, please, will you make a film on what's going on on our campuses.' Because they'd seen [The] Invisible War. So we had no, we really were not planning on doing this, and we had no, we were working on an entirely different project, but then we started doing our own investigating and found out not only were all those stories we were hearing as horrific but even far worse. And so we just dove in and started making the film.

RS: So before I -- and that's Amy Ziering, who's the producer of the film -- but before I get to your director, Kirby Dick, let me just ask: you know, on these campuses we all, and particularly in California, have to take sexual harassment classes. Certainly most of the faculty talks a good game, and the administrations do. They're aware you can not only have lawsuits, but you can violate people's human rights, that you are on the wrong side of history; we don't live in a more primitive time. Why is there so much pushback? And I would go right to the heart of the matter; you know, I watched this film, and I thought wow, a smashing job -- you know, and can quibble about this or that, but I thought it was a very powerful movie, again, about resistance; about people speaking up for themselves, having the courage to speak up for themselves. And why has there been such a fierce sense of controversy and reaction, it seems to me, from college administrations? Or at least from some departments. Maybe we should start with Harvard, which has been sort of the center of that controversy, hasn't it, the Harvard Law School?

Kirby Dick: Well, it's been one of the places that some criticism has been coming from. First of all, I'd like to say most schools have actually embraced the film to some degree. I mean, we've had nearly a thousand screenings on college campuses; we've been invited by students, we've been invited by faculty, we've even been invited by many administrators who know that it's a problem on their campus and realize that a film that focuses on it is a tool toward helping to address the problem. There have been, unfortunately, a few colleges that have actually chosen rather than to sort of look at the problem on their own campus, to attack the messenger, as you say. Certainly Florida State University, President Thrasher came out very strong against the film and actually made the claim that Florida State University was a model for other schools in terms of how they handle sexual assault. And then only three or four days later The New York Times broke this big story on the fact that how they'd covered up rape, in terms of athletes, and how they'd had -- I think 800 -- the number was astonishing, reports of rape and harassment, something like that. And so we haven't heard much from President Thrasher in the last few days. And then you know, you mentioned Harvard; Harvard has some real problems. I mean, we knew that when we started making the film, I think. They did a good thing; they did a survey of their students, and they found out that nearly 30 percent of women had been sexually assaulted in some way. So it's a very significant problem. What you did see is you saw, unfortunately, some professors at Harvard Law decide to come out and attack the film. I mean, we know in fact one of them had not even seen the film and they were attacking it. And it was just a completely erroneous attack; they made an accusation that the film had implied that the attack was, that the assault that we portray in the film was committed with force; it was not, we never said that. And it was just astonishing that they, they --

RS: Well, just to interrupt, the situation you were talking about was a Harvard Law student and her friend, or roommate, who got drunk at a party, and with another student who offered to give them a ride home, and that student was accused by them of having violated their body --

KD: Exactly, exactly, while they were completely incapacitated --

RS: -- digital penetration, to be precise. While they were incapacitated.

KD: Right, right. And what happened was, is Harvard actually handled the investigation really well. They hired an independent fact-finder who found, you know, the, found the accused not credible and found him responsible. They found, you know, the woman who we profiled who was assaulted, they found her credible. It went to an administrative board who found the accused responsible, and applied the sanction of dismission. And that was all fine; it went through the process really well, until it got to this body of Harvard Law professors who went ahead and overturned that. And really, it was really unfortunate the way they did; in fact, the Department of Education Office of Civil Rights actually has had a complaint against Harvard Law. And they pointed, we believe, to that one case as being a problem; and also to their entire appeal process, that the Harvard Law professors were involved in, as being a problem, and compelled them to actually change that process.

RS: Yeah, and there were some members of the Harvard Law faculty who took the opposite position.

KD: Exactly.

AZ: Absolutely, and this was a minority of Harvard Law school professors, I want to say, that wrote this statement. You know, and there's a, we have a point-by-point rebuttal on our website to every allegation they made.

RS: Right.

AZ: And some of it was so outrageous and so erroneous, we were very puzzled by it. But what was interesting or striking to me was the film itself, as you know 'cause you saw it, is a critique of the way in which institutions will go to extreme lengths just to protect their reputation, even if it means protecting criminals. And what we see played out in this sort of, you know, attack on us is the very same thing. I mean, the extent they will go, you know, even to make incredulous arguments, just to sort of again maintain that unblemished facade of you know, the sanctity and righteousness and integrity of Harvard Law. It's pretty crazy, you know, and seems so sort of overdetermined -- the same, Thrasher reaction is exactly what we prefigure in the film. [Laughs] So they play it out now against the film itself instead of against the people who report assault.

RS: Yeah, the irony here is that their reaction seems to have been even more untempered and, you know, one-sided than the military's reaction to the film you made about rape. I mean, here is the American institution, the military, that has been pretty good about guarding its reputation. And yet I think that movie, which made very strong charges and so forth, actually led to reform. Hopefully that will be the case here. I should point out, by the way, you are here at USC today because we are showing the film tonight, and so far everyone I've talked to is very happy that we're showing the film. And I think there is an awareness on this campus; I may be naive, but I've taught here about 20 years, and I get the feeling it's better to solve these problems and not then have lawsuits and disgrace your reputation, than to put them aside or pretend they don't exist.

AZ: Yeah.

RS: So I must say I had a number of very influential faculty people thank me for scheduling the screening. And one of whom -- I don't want to use her name because her privacy's at stake -- said 'Listen, I'm not naive on this subject. I was attacked as a college student 40 years ago, so I'm painfully aware how the victim is often made to be the, you know, the person responsible for the problem.' I do want to ask you about the Florida State issue. Again, it goes to the question of innocent until proven guilty, and there it involves a quarterback who is actually a No. 1 in the draft, and who has not had charges brought against him. So how do you respond to that concern?

KD: Well, that's a fair question. What we, you know, show in our film and what The New York Times certainly showed in some very extensive and excellent reporting, was that when the Tallahassee Police Department conducted that investigation, it was so flawed that, you know, there were things that they could have found out within 24 hours. They could have actually gotten to Jameis Winston, the accused, right away. It took two months until the -- the survivor had actually recognized him somewhere and identified him, you know, appropriately. And so, and so finally when the case went to the prosecutor, the state prosecutor -- the state prosecutor said, basically to us said that, you know, 'This investigation done by the Tallahassee Police Department was so flawed that there's, I really don't have enough of a case here to move forward with prosecution.' And I mean, you just need to read the New York Times or see our film, and it's very evident, the Tallahassee Police Department -- the investigator himself worked part time for Florida State University; that says a lot right there.

RS: Yeah. I don't mean to center too much on the controversy or the criticism of the film, but let's dispose of one, the other remaining one, I think. And that is the question of whether you relied too heavily on the data of one researcher that stressed the role of serial rapists on campus. And my own, watching the film, my own concern about that is while I'm perfectly willing to accept the statistics, if they're accurate, that serial [rapists] -- it seems to me the real problem in a lot of sporting events, our campuses and everywhere -- from my point of view, but I'm eyeballing it -- is alcohol. And you know, alcoholism and what it does, and the objectification of people and the excuse it gives to everyone, not just college students, maybe top political officials and presidents and so forth. And I just, I know you objected to my, in one of our emails, so let's meet it head-on. Is this a problem of serial rapists?

AZ: If someone's driving a car drunk, is it the problem of the alcohol, or should they not have gotten behind the wheel?

RS: Oh, oh, let me put that one aside. I'm not excusing the -- I'm not using alcohol as an excuse; no, no. I'm being very precise. I'm not saying that is a buy, and therefore ignore it. No, no, no, no, at all. What I am asking, the criticism that has been made is you stressed very much the serial rapists.

KD: Repeat offenders, right.

RS: And suggest a sort of steep psychological and biological motivation for a minority of people -- I think the figure was eight percent or something --

KD: Right, less than eight percent, completed more than 90 percent of the sexual assaults.

RS: And all I suggest there is it seems to take the onus off the rape that occurs and the sexual -- for instance, one of your earlier movies was about a Catholic priest and abuse by Catholic priests. As you indicate in your movie, it's quite widespread in the clergy, abuse of young boys, right?

KD:
Right. No, no, well it's interesting you bring that up, because the repeat offenders was a very serious problem there in the Catholic church. Definitely true in the military; statistics show that. And the statistics show the same on college campuses. You know, there's no question that a large percentage of these assaults are caused by repeat offenders. And we actually saw that anecdotally; I mean, we interviewed on camera 70 survivors, spoke to nearly 200; and over and over again, you could get a sense, just anecdotally, that -- and then you would even later --

AZ: It wasn't just getting a sense. It was literally, people would say 'The only reason I'm talking to you, I never was going to report, but when I found out he did it to other people, I felt compelled to report to help protect anyone else from it happening to them.'

RS: OK, so then help me here. You have -- let's, so we have -- well, let me -- let me just say, so you have repeat offenders. You had 'em in the Catholic church, you had 'em in the military, and now you find them on the campuses. Why do these institutions feel a need to defend repeat offenders? Why?

AZ: Well, they don't -- they feel a need to defend -- they feel a need not to sort of move forward on these crimes because I think there's a profound misunderstanding of them. And I really think that what the film does is, one thing the film does is help really reframe and re-explain this issue in a way people don't understand it. There's so many common mythologies around it; it's he-said she-said, it's about hookup, it's sloppy sex, we can't really know. I mean, and so, I think that that's part of what impedes anyone from even moving forward in a way and taking this issue seriously, is because people really don't understand it as a crime like any other crime in our society. And that really needs to be changed and transformed.

KD:
And then I just want to add to that, that you know, it's obviously, nobody wants repeat sexual assault offenders on their campus, of course. But they, you know, institutions and colleges and universities are very concerned about their reputation, and that's what we saw again and again, is that they would -- rather than addressing the problem, they would do things -- they would try to cover it up. And they're also concerned about their funding sources, donations, and they're afraid that if, you know, if there's a story of an assault on their campus and that story gets out, that perhaps it will lower the amount of donations they receive. So what you've seen is these colleges and universities putting their own reputation and their financial well-being ahead of the safety of their students.

AZ: And to circle back to what we were just talking about with repeat offenders, I mean, it's why we also called the film The Hunting Ground, was to sort of also combat these rape myths which think, like, oh, it's just sort of obscure and it's what are you going to do, and it just happens. It's like, no, actually, it's a highly calculated, premeditated crime. And we want to sort of change the terminology from date rape to target rape. I mean, we saw it over and over again. And the reason why you ask -- you know, rape happens in society at large; why are we focusing on campuses? Why are we focusing on the military? Because there are certain institutions that provide perfect-storm conditions for this to occur. They're target-rich environments; you know, it's a transient population; there's really poor adjudication and investigation processes in place, so that perpetrators can target victims and commit these crimes over and over again with impunity, which is why you see these epidemic numbers.

RS:
This is Robert Scheer. I'm talking to Amy Ziering and Kirby Dick, the producer and director, respectively, of the incredibly significant movie The Hunting Ground, which deals with the problem of rape on college campuses that has been largely ignored. Let me ask you a follow-up on what you just said, though. These institutions -- the army, university, as with most major institutions -- are male-dominated. And even though we have a great opening and we want to improve the number of women in positions of power, you take an institution like Harvard, and it's still the Harvard male that is held out as the example, in fact, with the male institution. And then you have someone like Lawrence Summers, being the head of Harvard, rewarded for his failure in the economic crisis as Treasury Secretary, and actually making disparaging remarks about the ability of women to learn science and so forth. There is an old-boy network. And it seems to me, because I must say, I'll indicate my prejudice here -- I really like this movie; I think it raises incredibly important questions, and it does it in a very thoughtful way. But then I got these criticisms I'm reading, so I'm thinking well, I have to do due diligence; what is it all about? And it's very much the way these discussions proceed generally in a male-dominated society; the woman has to prove -- although you did have examples in your film of, I guess, homosexual rape -- it wasn't quite clear --

KD:
It's not necessarily homosexual, but definitely male-on-male; sometimes it's straight males who are assaulting men.

RS: Male-on-male, OK, male-on-male rape. But nonetheless the main thing here is women who have, in your film, the courage to speak up. That's really what it is, in an environment in which people are saying hey, get over it, or did you do it or did you cause it, or was it just booze or was it just kids having fun. And your movie, as you did previously in your movie about rape in the military is that hey -- no. This is a major crime, major violation of people's rights, and --

AZ:
And people just don't make it up.

RS: Yeah. OK. So let's talk about that, because -- the first issue, though, is the difficulty -- despite laws about harassment, despite protection, supposedly -- why was it so difficult for the women you interviewed to bring it up?

AZ: Again, because of these common rape myths! I mean, as we show in the film, 92 to 98 percent of the time when someone reports a rape, they're telling the truth. That is statistically consistent with every other crime in our society, and yet you never hear someone say, 'Were you drinking when you say he took the TV? Are you sure you didn't mean to give him the TV?' I mean, you have, you know, any other crime, and yet -- it'd be as likely for someone to be lying about any other crime they were reporting as they were lying about rape, but we treat it completely different in our society.

KD: Yeah, women, women aren't believed in this situation. I mean, it's, the reality is that most people who come forward and report a sexual assault, the vast majority are telling the truth. That's the reality.

RS: Yeah. Could I just back off a little to defend that other, not the other point, but to take a shot at alcohol.

KD: OK.

RS: OK? Let's just assume that yes, I mean -- and I accept, because I've read your response; the stats do support your case, there's no question -- but we do have an atmosphere of machismo; we have an atmosphere of bravado around sporting events. We have a coarsening of culture, and I'm not saying that's an excuse; but the fact is, colleges create an environment of abandon in certain respects.

AZ: Yeah, well, that doesn't give you license to violate someone else's body.

RS: No, absolutely not. But is it possible that your, this movie is provocative or threatening in the sense that it dominates a view of an ideal college life?

AZ: No, I think it's provocative and threatening because it puts limits on men's entitlement to a woman's body. Honestly, profoundly and deep down, it's when you said -- you know, it's interesting; we didn't get the same backlash with the military that we've gotten with this film. And when you look at why is that, or if you, you know, sort of dig deep and question, the military -- the critique is of a male population in the military, whereas the critique of our film is of a white, middle-class or upper-class, privileged male population. And so now you're seeing, suddenly it's a controversy; suddenly there's a problem with the statistics. No problem with statistics when it's about serial predators in the military. Suddenly now there's, you know, a fake -- you know, and this whole even -- I'm so irritated, like really, we're spending 40 minutes talking about a controversy? There's no controversy. It's like talking about climate change and controversy right now. It's exactly analogous. But what you're hearing is this backlash because there's a threat to the dominant white male power. That's the deep-down thing, and that's why all these sort of crazy, hysterical articles; that's why a crazy reaction from Harvard Law professors; this is nothing -- all we have is a film in which people are going forward to report a crime, and most of the time they're only going forward to report a crime because someone committed it to someone else! So this is not about any kind of glory -- I wish -- I've got better things to do with my time than run around talking about fake [accusations]! This is happening, it's a horrible thing; there's no controversy; let's just get busy worrying about the problem!

RS: Sure, but what the reaction underscores is the depth of the problem. And with all due respect, people went out, as far as I could see, to destroy this film, and found it threatening -- well, come on --

DK: No, I think, I think some people -- yes, I think people associated with certain institutions did not want this message to get out. There's no question about that. But for the most part, I just want to say, most institutions have not reacted that way. And we've been pleased. I mean, they --

AZ: The [interim chancellor] of [the University of Alaska-Fairbanks] gave a speech and apologized to the students and thanked us for the film after seeing the film -- we don't even know him -- and wrote a beautiful speech. The president of Amherst [College] called me when I was at Sundance, I mean, wrote me a beautiful email, and invited the film, and me to come and talk about it at Amherst, and afterward she invited everybody to come back to the Lord Jeff and talk about it. So we've had this mixed response. But I'm just frustrated that so much is about, you know, an alleged controversy.

RS: Well, it's not just a controversy about the film. Let's take the individuals that your film describes. They were attacked viciously -- that woman with the mattress, I'm sorry, I don't remember her name --

AZ: and DK: Emma Sulkowicz.

RS: Yeah, she was ridiculed. She was considered an embarrassment to the campus. The administration at first was not supportive. And the stories that the women in your film tell, and the few men that you have who were victims, is a story of bureaucratic indifference; of universities not -- they weren't telling tales of, 'Oh, we got a lot of support on campus' -- I mean, the recurring theme in your film is 'Oh, the dean I talked to' or 'The advisor I talked to basically said get over it or are you sure.' So this is not just a question of criticism made of the film after the fact; what your film describes in very powerful terms is institutional bias against the victims. Right? That's the --

AZ: Right, yes--

DK: You're absolutely correct, is that I mean, they don't believe the survivors; if they do, they oftentimes delay the investigation or do things to cover it up; sometimes if they even want to move forward, the person who's accused is so powerful, perhaps the son of a donor, and they feel the pressure and so they don't do something. Yeah, I mean, this is what we saw over and over and over again. And this is why -- I mean, this has been a problem for 40, 50 years at least, right? And yet you know, this has been kept buried for so long. Fortunately, it's really because of the students, the women, the young women and men who kept coming forward and told their story, and then really got together with other students around the country and brought this to the national agenda. I mean, that's what this film does; it covers the rise of a new student movement, and I think we owe such a debt of gratitude to these survivors who are speaking out and who are kind of rallying students around the country to confront their institutions and say, 'Let's do this right; let's protect students here.'

RS: Yeah, and the narrative in this film -- I'm talking to Kirby Dick, the director, and Amy Ziering, the producer of The Hunting Ground -- the powerful narrative in the film is how people find their voice. And I think the two or three women who end up in the car driving around the country to take the story -- I mean, they become the reporters of the story that the media is not reporting sufficiently. And they are basically then organizing on the basis of this data. And you know, I think that's really the powerful point of the film, is the point about resistance on the people who start out in the beginning of the film so happy that they got into these colleges -- I mean, it's a very, I thought, very powerful theatrical device; you know, these are people who are not complainers. They have worked hard to go to these schools --

KD: They love their schools.

RS: They are thrilled, their families are thrilled. Sometimes they have family connection with these schools going back. And boom, disaster hits and nobody believes them, or very few people do. And the story is, let's just be clear about this, a very positive message about people saying, 'I'm not going to take it; I'm going to change.' And hopefully this film will be registered as one of those things that change the way business is done and change history. I mean, that's the challenge. So let me wrap this up a little bit by getting back to sort of my original theme of American originals. You know, we're here at an institution where people are out in the hallway here, the Wallace Annenberg hall learning how to go into media, go into communications and so forth. And looking at the work that you two have done, it's a work informed by integrity. That you didn't take the easy shots; you didn't go for the, you know, amusing stuff; you didn't go for the win-win of, you know, let's all wear pink and fight breast cancer. You took on hard subjects, and frankly, and I don't want to pile on here, but you're going through a little bit of it now. You know, come on, let's not kid ourselves --

KD: No, it's, we're hitting a nerve. We're hitting a nerve.

RS: Yeah, you're hitting a nerve. So I want to ask, as an American original [laughs], what motivates you? Where did you get this, what was your background in terms of your education, why are you the way you are and why have you taken on these difficult, controversial projects?

KD: Wow. Um, well, I think you know, we look for challenging projects to begin with, and we're looking for situations -- you know what, I'll tell you what it is. I think we take outsider positions. That's what we've seen, I think, in all our films, is these, you know, you look at these young women and men in our films -- I mean, there's no one who's more an outsider than somebody who's 19 or 20 years old trying to challenge a 200-year-old institution. And we think that those are the stories that are really important to tell to the American public, is that this is how change happens. It's when people, you know, who have the courage to stand up and confront an institution -- and why are they confronting that institution? Because they love it. They care enough about that institution that they want it to do the right thing. And so I think part of where this comes from us is just the desire to profile those kinds of stories.

RS: And where did you get your background, your education, your film --

KD: Um, I went to art school and never graduated, so -- [laughs] I don't have any allegiance to any college or university. But you know, I've been making documentaries for 30 years now. A lot of them have been very focused on people who've experienced profound trauma, and how they've reacted to that and what they've done with that. You know, I think trauma is very debilitating in one way, but it can also really strengthen you and cause you to see the world in different ways. And cause you even, or motivate you, to actually accomplish great things.

RS: And Amy, what is your --

AZ: Ah, I -- I don't know, I don't know. [Laughs]

KD: You have an impassioned philosophy --

RS: How did you come to film?

AZ: Ah, I was doing a PhD in comparative literature and working with Jacques Derrida, and I just wanted to make a movie on him, so I sort of fell into it that way. It was not a -- it was not a film-quo-film desire, and sort of Derrida's work -- he's the philosopher that coined the term deconstruction, and it's all about sort of overthrowing conventional conceptions of any kind of hierarchical relationships, and sort of -- it's, you know, power structure and ideology, and what the political implications are of any kind of ideological position. So I've always been sort of just innately drawn to sort of politics, social justice, you know, those kinds of issues.

RS: So for people listening to this who now want to watch it, what's the best way? Are there theatrical screenings? Should they book it for their campus? Do they download it? What's the future of this film now? And hopefully we've provoked people to want to see it and discuss it. I certainly would, that's why I'm having you here to speak in my class today; I think it's probably as important a movie as you can show, certainly on a college campus, or to people who--well, anybody, actually.

AZ: Anybody. Students, parents.

RS: So how, what is the -- a lot of great documentaries are made, and one of my disappointments is I show them, I meet the directors, and then most people don't even know they exist, even when they win the Academy Award, you know? Inside Job -- I happened to write a book on the same subject; I met the guy, talked to him; I thought, wow! He's won the Academy Award; he'll expose the whole banking thing. No; none of those deans he exposed, none of the business lawyers, they didn't change their ways. You know, so the documentary as a forum is not as powerful as one would hope.

KD: Well, you know, some -- taking on the banking industry, that's a big one. [Laughter] I mean we, The Invisible War, the film that we made, you know, did change the way the military -- they changed policy; you know, Congress passed dozens of reforms directly in the wake of seeing the movie. So they still have a long way to go, the military, but changes can be made.

AZ: So training, too, on bases, and --

KD: Right. And we're seeing that, too, here. I mean, every time the film plays on a college campus, it starts a discussion; it starts a debate. And it starts change. That's one of the reasons we made this film, was to show it in your class; that's what we want to do. The discussions among the professors preceding the showing -- we wanted that.

AZ: And it changes hearts and minds. The reason people need to see it is it provides information you simply are not getting anywhere else and is really necessary and actually can save lives. So it's super important.

KD: And just to say where you can see it, it's come out on DVD today, so --

RS: Oh. And today is December 1st, so it's available.

AZ: It's on DVD.

KD: Yeah, it's available on DVD now; it's available on iTunes; it's available on video on demand. So it's definitely out there, and it will be out on Netflix shortly.

AZ: And we have a website. You can sign up to host a screening; you can also sign up to bring it to a campus or high school.

RS: And what's the website?

AZ: HuntingGround.com.

RS: And we'll put that on the podcast post. Let me end this by criticizing or asking for your criticism of my interviewing style. Because I get the sense, Amy in particular, that you feel I harped on criticism of the film.

AZ: No, no, it's not that! It's just instructive for us all to look at that. Like, really? It's interesting that because there's been a few fringe articles which have created white noise around this issue, that that really sucks all the oxygen and pulls the conversation, right? Because if I had talked to you after Sundance, you wouldn't have had a questions about statistics; you wouldn't have had Harvard Law professors -- you wouldn't have had any of those --

RS: Exactly --

AZ: We would have really talked about the issue. But what we've seen here is, in real time played out, how pernicious and how, you know, and the impact and effect of how spreading these seeds of, you know, doubt, which are completely spurious and ill-founded -- but then what does it do? You know, we could have had a really fabulous -- that was my frustration. It wasn't with you, but it's just, it's been interesting, you know? And it's not, and it's not just you, it's what we see over and over again. So now, really? -- We're spending 30 minutes talking about statistics, when the same statistics were in the military, but there was no -- you understand what I'm saying? No chatter about the problems which are manufactured. Does that make sense?

RS: Well, it makes sense, but let's not deny the value of controversy, as Michael Moore has shown. [Laughter] And I personally welcome the controversy, because too much good stuff goes unnoticed. That doesn't mean you should distort the product to make it controversial at all. But the fact is, you know, when a bunch of Harvard Law professors want to attack you --

AZ: You got something right.

RS: And people like Laurence Tribe and others who have big reputations, and they go gunning for you -- well, for someone like myself, it makes me want to see the movie. [Laughter] That was my response right away. I'm going to tune in --

AZ: Seriously?

RS: Yeah, absolutely! That's why I watched it on CNN. I'm going to watch this thing. And that's why I've gotten it since, and that's why I scheduled this class. And I think a lot of people feel that way. And when you watch the movie and you read the attacks, which I've had my students do, and I've read the attacks, you realize that they are really weak and besides the point, and shoot the messenger and blame the victim, and so forth. And so, but I think this movie deserves a wide audience. That's why I've asked you to come, that's why I've done the podcast. I don't think people should be put off -- I mean, this is not the first time a bunch of Harvard professors, and as you point out they're a minority of Harvard professors -- but it's not the first time a bunch of them have gotten things terribly wrong. And you have to really ask, you know, maybe it hit too close to home. Where were they when a student was being harassed? What are they teaching -- and this is true on any campus and on any issue. What do we really teach? You know, mentioned banking -- what do we really teach in our business school or law school about the ethics of the banking system, you know? What do we do about race, what do we do about gender? And so forth. We've had reports come out about the failure of colleges to deal with minorities or even a four-year college degree. Maybe that could be your next documentary -- fails black and brown people terribly, even the ones who've gone right through. So there are these issues that make big institutions and the people who run them uncomfortable. I'm not apologizing for bringing them up. But if you feel there's something we've missed about this film in this discussion, now is the time to let me in on it. I mean, what do you think is the importance of this film that you want everyone listening to this to get and go watch the movie?

KD: Well, I think it's important that, you know, there's -- no one has asked for a retraction of any fact in the film. I mean, it's been a lot of noise--as you pointed out -- and it's been an attempt to distract. I think what it comes right down to is, you know, we hit too close to home. That's why they came out. I mean, you know, some of these institutions were happy just letting business as usual; they were too powerful, you know, their own fiefdoms; and they could kind of run their affairs as they wanted to. And when somebody comes in from the outside and critiques them, and says hey, you know, 20 percent, 30 percent of women on your college campus are getting assaulted and this has been going on for a long time -- that hit too close to home. I do want to say, though, that there is movement. There is movement. The schools have a long, long way to go, but there is movement. And that's a good sign. It's just, this is not something, as you know, one year, two years, one film is going to change; this is a societal problem, and this society really has to look at it. Not only sexual assault on college campuses; it's throughout society. So hopefully this is just one step toward addressing that.

RS: Amy, you have a last word?

AZ: No, that was good.

RS: Well, I want to thank you for coming in, speaking to our students--

AZ: Thank you very much.

RS: At USC, and for making this terrifically important film. This is Robert Scheer. I've been talking to Amy Ziering, the producer of this film, and Kirby Dick. They've done a lot of great work. They are American originals, and I want to thank our producers, Joshua Scheer and Rebecca Mooney, for producing this program of Scheer Intelligence. And I want to give a special shout-out to Sebastian Grubaugh for taking time in a late evening at USC -- I don't know if he's being paid, but to turn over the studios and help us out. So thank you, Sebastian.

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'The Hateful Eight' and Twenty-Six Other Films Where Worse Things Happen to Jennifer Jason Leigh

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I would have given a lot to see Jennifer Jason Leigh in Cabaret a few years ago, but I'm probably going to skip the new Tarantino movie, The Hateful Eight. If I wanted to spend three hours hearing fake cowboys say the N-word in the snow, I'd change planes in Calgary. I'm also sort of done with hilarious violence, and whatever irony there was to the way Tarantino employs it, the surprise wore off in about 1998. Maybe we could all use a break.

I'm not blaming violent movies for gun violence, that's silly. I don't think Tarantino causes anything except ennui. But ever since the theatre shootings in Paris and Aurora, and this summer in Lafayette at a showing of Trainwreck, I've enjoyed thinking about the audience massacre in Inglourious Basterds even less than when I saw it the first time. It's farce repeated as tragedy.

Now Variety reports that "whispers of misogyny" are setting The Hateful Eight up for a "possible" backlash. Everyone shoots everyone in The Hateful Eight, obviously, but the film's lone female lead, Leigh, reportedly gets the worst of it.

The film's executive producer, Harvey Weinstein, says critics are "fishing for stupidity" when they object to three hours of snickering brutality inflicted on a woman and if Harvey Weinstein says it, that's good enough for me.

But while Weinstein defends the violence against Leigh in Hateful Eight by saying sissies are overreacting, Tarantino defends it by saying the opposite: it's shocking on purpose.

'When John Ruth [played by Kurt Russell] cracks her over the head that very first time, you feel this ripple going through the audience -- because it almost does seem like one of the last taboos left,' the two-time Oscar winner told Variety in a recent interview. 'You're supposed to say, 'Oh my God. John Ruth is a brutal bastard!' That is what you're supposed to say.'


So it's either a revolution in cinema to see someone hurt Jennifer Jason Leigh or just another day at the office. Either Weinstein is being disingenuous or Tarantino is. They should get their story nailed down.

But if Tarantino is going to seriously claim that manhandling Jennifer Jason Leigh is breaking "one of the last taboos," he's either a preening dipstick or he should get to the movies more often, and we know that's impossible.

If I want to see Jennifer Jason Leigh murdered, abducted, pimped, menaced, tortured, terrorized, degraded, objectified or sexually brutalized I'll watch:

A

Angel City (AKA Field of Tears) (1980) JJL is kidnapped and gang raped.

B

Bastard Out of Carolina
(1996) JJL's boyfriend rapes her daughter.

Buried Alive (1990) JJL is an adulterous attempted-murderer who gets murdered.

C

Crossed Over (2002) JJL is Karla Faye Tucker, state-executed ax-murdering prostitute.

D

Dolores Claiborne (1995) JJL's mother murders her father for molesting JJL.

E

Eyes of a Stranger (1981) JJL is kidnapped and raped by a serial killer.

F

Flesh+Blood (1985) JJL is gang raped in the Late Middle Ages by murderers.

G

Georgia (1995) JJL is a folk singer and drug addict.

Girls of the White Orchid (AKA Death Ride to Osaka)
(1983) JJL is forced into prostitution by Japanese murderers.

H

Heart of Midnight (1988) JJL, recovering from a nervous breakdown, inherits and brothel and is violently gang raped.

The Hitcher (1986) JJL is dismembered by a serial killer.

I

In the Cut (2003) JJL is dismembered by a serial killer.

K

The King is Alive (2000) JJL is an ex-prostitute.

L

Last Exit to Brooklyn (1989) JJL is an Eisenhower-Era Brooklyn prostitute who gets violently gang raped.

M

The Machinist (2004) JJL is a prostitute involved with a skinny psychotic murderer.

Miami Blues (1990) JJL is a prostitute involved with buff psychotic murderer.

The Men's Club (1986) JJL is a prostitute involved with Frank Langella.

O

"Open Season" (Episode of Baretta, 1976) JJL dies of a drug overdose.

P

The Prom (1992) JJL is an erotic dancer in a seedy peep show.

R

Road to Perdition (2002) JJL is murdered by a psychotic.

Rush (1991) JJL is a murderous crooked cop and drug addict.

S

Short Cuts (1993) JJL is a phone sex worker married to a psychotic murder.

Single White Female (1992) JJL is a psychotic murderer.

Sister, Sister (1987) JJL is haunted by memories of the rapist she murdered.

T

A Thousand Acres (1997) JJL's father rapes her sisters.

W

Wrong is Right (1982) JJL dreams of poisoning her parents.

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A Rey of Sunshine

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Be forewarned. Star Wars spoilers ahead.

Again, in all caps, just so you're clear. MAJOR STAR WARS SPOILERS INSIDE. ABANDON ALL HOPE OF REMAINING UNSPOILT, YE WHO VENTURE PAST THIS POINT.

One more time for those just joining us. THIS POST WILL CONTAIN STAR WARS SPOILERS.

*hold music hums while you decide*

We all good? Okay. By reading on, you hereby agree to hold the author of this post harmless for any potential Star Wars-ruining experience that may occur, in perpetuity until the heat death of the universe.

I saw The Force Awakens yesterday afternoon. When you hit your fifth decade of life, and you've seen so many movies in those forty years that the tropes and cliches of cinematic storytelling have embedded themselves in your neural pathways to the point where your response to them becomes almost Pavlovian, you tend to approach any new theatrical venture, particularly one that has been so excessively hyped, with an unavoidable sense of cynicism. Here we are now, you say warily, paraphrasing Kurt Cobain, entertain us. And how often do you walk away feeling satisfied, or surprised? Rather infrequently, I have to admit. I enjoy the movies for what they are, but I always see the seams at the edges. And I went into The Force Awakens with a healthy distrust of its director, J.J. Abrams, a man whose storytelling style relies primarily on frustratingly circular references to the movies he grew up watching, rather than any particular unique vision.

J.J., you sly, sly dog you.

Granted, one does not walk into the seventh installment of a 40-year-old movie franchise expecting mind-blowing originality (I certainly don't expect it from Bond, my other great cinema love). I did receive the anticipated reprises of old favorite characters and the homages and tributes to everything that has made the world love Star Wars all these years. But what I also got, and what made me walk out of the theater with a broad, dumb smile on my face, was something that I'd been longing to see realized on screen for ages, and finding it in a Star Wars movie of all places was like the surprise toy inside the chocolate egg. I knew too, that as happy as I was to discover this, there were millions of girls and women to whom it would mean so much more. I'm happy for them most of all.

To wit: the absolutely compelling character of Rey, played by English actress Daisy Ridley, is the center of the movie. The "awakening" referred to in the title is hers. She is brave, skilled, resourceful, determined, and over the course of the story, as her connection to the Force deepens, grows immensely powerful. She has a past that is not spelled out for us but rather is left as a tantalizing mystery. She is no one's love interest, and is not defined by her relationships with or unrequited longings for any particular man. And she kicks tremendous ass, whether it's outrunning TIE Fighters in a rusty old Millennium Falcon or confronting and defeating Dark Side villain Kylo Ren and saving Finn, the male character whom the movie's poster and trailers would have you presume is the new Jedi of this trilogy. (Abrams' controversial "mystery box" promotion style has worked very well here, which is why again, I hope you've already seen the movie as you're reading this.) And Rey achieves all of these things without descending into sassy or sexualized caricature, or a neon sign flashing above her head reading "LOOK AT THIS AUDACIOUS, ENLIGHTENED STATEMENT OF FEMINISM WE MALE FILMMAKERS ARE MAKING."

Rey just is who she is, and frankly, it's glorious.

I've always found the term "empowered women" a bit troubling, as it suggests that a powerful woman is somehow an anomaly, a deviation from the accepted norm. It is better to say that a woman is powerful by her very nature as a woman. Goes with the territory, folks. And yet in science fiction and fantasy this is too often the exception and not the rule. Looking back, there has never really been a good reason why in genre movies, women have not been able to take the forefront of the story, other than the increasingly outdated notion that the young boys who make up the presumed primary target demographic for this genre somehow won't be interested in seeing girls buckle their swash, or that somehow casting a female lead means you have to turn the story into a pedestrian rom-com with true love as the object of the quest.

Instead, women are usually relegated to the secondary roles of eye candy, love interests or over-the-top man-hating villainesses, their characterizations as sketchy as the anatomically impossible poses in which they are often rendered in comic books. Why have we had eighteen Marvel movies without a female lead? Your guess is as good as mine, but it seems to stem largely from writers, producers and directors (and executives) unable to arrive at what feels like, in the light of The Force Awakens, should be a very obvious conclusion: that women with power and agency won't, in fact, scare men away from fantasy and science fiction movies. They belong there, as much as the boys do, and audiences will thank you for it. And yes, the dudes will love these characters too.

Thankfully, there have been huge exceptions of late that may be, at last, softening this attitude. Frozen was a story in the fantasy genre about the bond between two sisters (one with tremendous magical powers), with male characters shunted to the background, and it only became the highest-grossing animated movie of all time. As I write this The Force Awakens has already become the fastest movie to hit $1 billion at the box office, and I'll wager here and now that it will eventually blast past Avatar and take its place on top of the all-time list. Because audiences love Luke, Leia, Han and Chewie, but it's Rey's story they are going to want to see again and again. (Unfortunately, merchandisers have not kept pace with the storytellers, as noted by the embarrassing lack of Rey toys on shelves this Christmas. We can only hope that Disney and its partners recognize this, the same way they were slow to react to Frozen's unanticipated popularity. Failing that, fans will delve into the imaginations that have been ignited by Rey and create their own toys and costumes from spare parts and clothes instead.)

Criticism of Rey centers largely on the speed with which she acquires her Force abilities in the movie without any training, suggesting that this pushes her into Mary Sue territory (a trope from fan fiction where a gifted, basically perfect female character, usually a surrogate for the author, runs effortless circles around the established regulars). I would suggest that there are two responses to this, one "in-universe" and another examining the broader question. The in-universe explanation is found in a line from the very first movie, where Luke and Ben are discussing the Force and noting that while it obeys your commands, it also controls your actions. The Force is sentient and has an awareness of when people's greed and lust for power has pushed it out of balance, so it creates what it needs to set the universe right again. Rey's awakening is in response to the rising threat represented by dark-sider Kylo Ren and his mysterious master Snoke, and the speed at which it happens is perhaps a reflection of the urgency with which it is needed. (And it also makes for the movie's best scene in which Rey tries the Jedi Mind Trick on a Stormtrooper played by a very famous actor in disguise...)

You could also suggest that Rey is just that damn gifted, which is where the Mary Sue question comes in, and my answer to that is, so effing what? In how many movies across how many genres have we seen preternaturally skilled guys? How many times have we seen a young male screw-up transformed into an unstoppable fighting machine in the space of a five-minute training montage? Why is this somehow more valid storytelling technique than seeing it happen to a woman? Yes, Rey may be in some ways an expression of wish fulfillment for fangirls, but thanks to some great writing (by Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan) and Daisy Ridley's magnetic performance she doesn't come off like that, and even if she does, I fail to see why this is a bad thing. We gents have plenty of examples on our side to choose from. I'd love to see more women like Rey in genre films, treated with all the maturity and complexity that those characters deserve, and I'm glad that the gauntlet has been thrown down. All those involved with her creation deserve accolades. (It should also be noted that The Force Awakens passes the Bechdel Test too.)

I know a fair number of women who are big genre fans, and I'm excited to hear what they thought of Rey. I imagine they'll be able to articulate what Rey means to girls and women far better than I possibly could, so I'll sign off for the time being and let them take the stage and enjoy their well-deserved moment. And I will wait with bated breath for Episode VIII and the joy of discovering where Rey's story takes her next, my faith in the ability of the movies, and genre movies in particular, to surprise me renewed, and hungry for more.

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Top Ten Films of 2015

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When you read other Top Ten Film lists, consider that the journalists do not give equal weight to docs, animation and dramatic features, nor foreign versus American indies and studio pictures. Perhaps, they should call their lists "Top Ten Films That We All Generally Write About."

1. Wild Tales (dir. Damian Szifron)
Argentine writer-director Damian Szifron has a darkly hilarious confection in these six wonderfully imaginative scenarios. Oscar nominated for Foreign film, Wild Tales also swept through the Argentine Academy Awards, its crazy tales of retribution due to road rage, infidelity at a wedding and the like connecting with the common man and woman.

2. Spotlight (dir. Tom McCarthy)
Can Michael Keaton pick them or what? Last year, he headlined Birdman, the best film of the year. Now, he leads a tremendous ensemble cast, including Rachel McAdams, Mark Ruffalo, Stanley Tucci and Jamey Sheridan, in the story of the Boston Globe's expose of molestation in the Catholic Church. McCarthy and co-writer Josh Singer did remarkable research and this procedural never fails to engage.

3. Steve Jobs (dir. Danny Boyle)
It is no surprise the remarkable Aaron Sorkin has turned in another astounding work, but this one reaches new depths of delineation for its titular character. Wisely, Boyle cast Michael Fassbender as the brilliant, coldly calculating corporate giant, during three product launches, battling with not only his vision of our digital future but his own riotous personal relationships.

4. The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared (dir. Felix Herngren)
Swedish director Herngren and co-writer Hans Ingemansson took the zany, unpredictable novel of Jonas Jonasson and made a richly humorous gem of a movie that is outrageously entertaining. The titular centenarian escapes his old age home, winding up on a globe-trotting adventure, oblivious to the criminals and physical wreckage that attend him.

5. Güeros (dir. Alonso Ruizpalacios)
An unheralded masterpiece by Mexican director Ruizpalacios. This black and white picaresque depicts a rebellious young boy allowed to live with his older brother in 1999 Mexico City, during student unrest. It is filled with passion, dimensionality and heart. Its long list of awards includes the nod for its gorgeous cinematography at Tribeca, Audience and Grand Jury prizes at AFI Fest and of course, the Ariel for Best Picture and all other major categories in its home country.

6. Trumbo (dir. Jay Roach)
The biopic of blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo is a throwback to classic American films, rich in dialogue, subtle in its use of music, highly moderated in its emotionality. And it does not hurt that one of our finest and most adaptable actors, Bryan Cranston, along with the always luminous Diane Lane, topline this heartbreaking tale of political intolerance that, alas, resonates fully today.

7. Inside Out (dir. Pete Docter, Ronnie del Carmen) Pixar has topped itself with this conceptually adventurous animated feature that includes characters as emotions, led by one of the most memorable voice-over performances in film history by Amy Poehler as Joy. Docter and del Carmen also have plenty of adult jokes and a delightful section where the dimensions of characters rapidly and staggeringly changes before our thrilled eyes.

8. Cartel Land (dir. Matthew Heineman)
Rarely has a documentary created such tension, as we wonder whether a physician, Dr. Jose Mireles, who leads a citizen revolt against a drug cartel in Mexico, will be murdered before the film is complete. The shocking complicity of Mexican police in the drug dealing has a huge impact in Cartel Land, as well as an Arizona vet who fights the encroachment of drug trafficking in the US.

9. Anomalisa (dir. Charlie Kaufman, Duke Johnson)
We never expect anything normal from Kaufman and here, he again messes with our minds, in an animated film about a miserable consultant, voiced by David Thewlis, who enters into a strange affair with a mousy woman (Jennifer Jason Leigh) at a conference. There is great humanity on display, as well as the world's most uncomfortable, animated sex scene and a dream sequence that reminds us how marvelously demented Kaufman is.

10. Lambert & Stamp (dir. James D. Cooper)
Cooper captures the untold story of the ascendancy of the seminal rock group The Who, via two highly divergent personalities, producer-managers Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp. In the process, we see how things between these two and their relationship with the band tragically dissolved. Most significantly, Pete Townshend's honest self-condemnation in interviews makes this a rare and revealing music doc.

Honorable Mention: 1001 Grams, Banksy Does New York, Best of Enemies, The Big Short, Merchants of Doubt, Red Army, Salt of the Earth, Slow Learners.

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CAT AND DOG--Ep.14

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Updated every Monday

Copyright ⓒ 2015 RollingStory Inc.

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MOSS Ep.29

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Updated every Monday

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Michael Moore on Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, The Extreme Right, God and His New Movie, Where To Invade Next

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Even in short a conversation with documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, things quickly turn to politics. Long before anyone was really acknowledging Bernie Sanders, from a bustling red carpet of the Chicago International film Festival, Michael Moore was predicting Sanders as a force to contend with. In addition, he told me he would like to bend Hillary's ear about just how to run her campaign.

In the most recent episode of The Dinner Party with Elysabeth Alfano on WGN Radio's WGN Plus, I speak with Michael about his newest film, Where To Invade Next, his proof that God exists, junk food and, of course, politics! Where To Invade Next opened nationally December 23.



Michael Francis Moore is an American documentary filmmaker, screenwriter, author, journalist, actor and left-wing political activist. His very first film, the award winning 1989 movie, Roger and Me, documented what happened to Flint, Michigan after General Motors closed its factories and opened new ones in Mexico. Roger and Me established Michael Moore as one of the most influential voices in documentary filmmaking. His 2002 film, Bowling for Columbine, which examined the causes of the Columbine High School massacre, won the Academy Award for Documentary Feature.

Moore was the director and producer of the 2004 film, Fahrenheit 9/11, which took a critical look at the presidency of George W. Bush and the War on Terror. According to Wikipedia, Farenheit 911 is the highest-grossing documentary of all time at the American box office. It was also the winner of the Palme d'Or. His 2007 film Sicko, which documented the health care system in the United States, is among the top ten highest-grossing documentaries. Moore released his first free movie on the Internet, Slacker Uprising, in 2008 which documented his personal quest to encourage more Americans to vote in presidential elections.

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Beyond Bono: Music and Philanthropy

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I wish I could sing, and belt out every feeling like Nina Simone or sing a love letter to my daughter like Paul Simon. I love music and have long been impressed with the artists that enrich our world in so many ways. A while back I started exploring the idea of writing a thoughtful compilation of the efforts in philanthropy made by the music industry. The deeper I dug, the more I uncovered a world of beautiful people destined to create, heal, and challenge humanity to be better. Musicians give us the soundtrack to our lives and define our times, and can also show us how to truly make an impact by giving back.

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John Legend performed at an event benefitting nonprofit organization Common Threads. Photo courtesy of Common Threads.

This is a topic that I have visited and revisited over the last few years. Through my research it became clear that the music industry's cup of givers is flowing over, full of inspiring individuals making the world a better place.

"Perhaps the artist best known for his incredible philanthropic work is Bono," explains Dave Boxenbaum, co-founder and COO of A&M/Octone Records. "Through his Red campaign, advocacy work in between tours, meetings with world leaders, and work with nonprofits improving communities in Africa, he has become the public face of musicians making a difference," affirms Boxenbaum. The global activist co-founded DATA, EDUN, the ONE Campaign and Product Red - raising money and awareness for the fight against AIDS in Africa. (RED) is the largest business sector contributor to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.

Clearly, Bono has given of himself, his fame and his music selflessly - changing the lives of people across the globe. Most recently, he is reportedly organizing a concert to raise funds to benefit and support the victims of the tragic terrorist attack in Paris, France. He is not the only one using his star power to give back - far from it. "There are many musicians who dedicate themselves, their talents, and their fame to raising awareness about important causes and making difference in our lives and world," said Boxenbaum.

There are various avenues that musicians use to carry out their bigheartedness, and the amazing work of this diverse group has affected people and communities all around the world. Just like the artists themselves, the acts come in all shapes and sizes, but in collaboration create a beautiful melody. This is a tune we can all admire and sing along to!

1. Concerts: Live Aid and Beyond
Music and charitable work often go hand in hand. Bands use concerts to advocate a charitable purpose in different ways. The most obvious is the benefit concert - popularized by the "Concert of Bangladesh", organized by George Harrison in 1971. A charity concert allows musicians to leverage their position to great philanthropic success, raising funds to be donated to countries around the globe to assist where famine, war, and disease are prevalent. Paving the way for benefit concerts were the exceptionally noteworthy efforts including "Live Aid" (1985) and "Band Aid" (1984), launched to raise awareness about suffering in Africa and fundraise for anti-poverty efforts. Bob Geldof, lead singer of the band The Boomtown Rats and arguably the pioneer of the modern musical philanthropic concept, organized both concerts.

Benefit concerts are held most often as a response to a disaster and in an effort to uplift and raise funds for a specific humanitarian crisis. In 2001, K'naan (Keinan Abdi Warsame) performed before the UN High Commissioner for Refugees against their unsuccessful efforts to aid Somalia, his home nation. In 2011 he was back in Somalia to bring attention to the devastating famine.

Some benefit concerts go beyond raising funds to influence policy and legislation, such as "Live 8" (2005) and "Farm Aid" (1985). On July 2, 2005, Geldof and Bono organized "Live 8," a set of 8 concerts held in 8 cities around the world on the same day as part of a campaign to persuade the G8 member governments to increase their fight to eradicate poverty in third-world countries. The first "Farm Aid" concert, organized by renowned artists Willie Nelson and John Mellencamp, was established to raise money for family farmers in the United States. There have been more than 30 Farm Aid concerts to date, held in new locations each time.

Musicians have the unique ability to educate and engage concert attendees - bands like Maroon 5 make continuous efforts. "Maroon 5 is extremely philanthropic and supports a variety of environmental and cause related initiatives," says Boxenbaum. For their 2008 tour Maroon 5 partnered with Reverb, an environmentally focused non-profit. The tour focused on educating fans while reducing their carbon footprint by providing better recycling facilities at shows, an online carpooling service for fans, and eco-friendly merchandise. In 2013 they partnered together and asked concert attendees to bring old cell phones to the show to be donated to victims of domestic violence.

Another particularly charitable band is Dispatch. Dispatch is "deeply committed to the greater good and make their philanthropic agenda front and center stage...definitely leaders in our music community," Boxenbaum says. Dispatch supports organizations that work to improve health and education, they want to empower people and communities, build leaders, alleviate poverty, stop hunger, and eradicate disease. In 2007 Dispatch sold out three nights at Madison Square Garden and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars from those shows to fund humanitarian relief efforts in Zimbabwe. The band established the Dispatch Foundation on the heels of these New York City benefit concerts. The organization provides hope and opportunity to Zimbabwean youth. For their 2013 tour, Dispatch donated hundreds of thousands of dollars in support of their Amplifying Education Initiative. Earlier this year they released their first new song in several years and attached that and the live weekend to a campaign to fight hunger in the US. All proceeds through July of 2015 benefitted various hunger initiatives.

"Dispatch has always used their music as a vehicle for change. They took the position early on in their career that if they were going to be fortunate enough to be given an incredible platform, that they had an obligation to use it to do good," says Steve Bursky, Manager and Founder at Foundations Artist Management. "Unlike so many who 'talk' about making a difference, Chad, Pete, and Brad live and breathe it - volunteering alongside their fans to do good - both here and abroad."

"The Concert for Sandy Relief" is another example of musicians' ability to help those in need. Held in NYC's Madison Square Garden on December 12, 2012, the concert featured legendary names like Paul McCartney, Eric Clapton, The Who, Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band, Billy Joel, Bon Jovi, and more. Efforts were a huge testament to the power of organizations coming together to increase impact - according to Business Pundit, "the Madison Square Garden show reached over 2 billion viewers compliments of 34 national networks who carried the broadcast. Additionally, over 30 websites aired a live stream of the broadcast to extend the audience base and expand donations." The benefit raised more than $35 million and all proceeds went to the Robin Hood Relief Fund, which provides money, material and know-how to local organizations that are helping the victims of the hurricane in regions hardest hit by the storm.

The Green Music Group (GMG), a coalition created by Reverb, is a notable illustration of musicians joining forces for a common cause. GMG is a large-scale, high profile environmental coalition of musicians, industry leaders, and music fans using their collective power to bring about widespread environmental change. The founders of GMG include Willie Nelson, Sheryl Crow, the Dave Matthews Band, The Roots, Linkin Park, Bonnie Raitt, Maroon 5, Barenaked Ladies, and Jack Johnson. Leading by example, GMG magnifies the work of national nonprofits allowing them to expand their reach and support base while building a vibrant community committed to environmental action. The support of the founding members as environmental stewards enables GMG to inspire millions to action. It is the first organization to harness the collective power of the entire music community to bring about measurable global environmental change.

2. Songs: Beyond "We Are the World" (the song that taught me to love the piano): Using Their Voices and Music as a Part of a Message for The Greater Good
Sarah McLachlan kept her "World On Fire" video simple, and donated the $150,000 that would normally be needed to make a music video, to a variety of charities. According to Looktothestars.org, the Red Hot Chili Peppers are another band that has made significant charitable contributions. "Since 2000, the Red Hot Chili Peppers have donated ¼ of their touring profits to a variety of charities...The band donated their "Stadium Arcadium Box" with signature to the 19th Annual Rock N Roll Charity Auction in 2007 to support Chicago's homeless and underprivileged children."

Maroon 5 released a documentary which was released exclusively on the Amnesty International website, and displayed their fight for human rights all over the globe. The band also contributed their cover of the Bob Dylan song "I Shall Be Released" to the "Chimes of Freedom" album commemorating 50 years of Amnesty International.

3. Giving: Their Names, Their Voices, Their Music, Their Time, and Their Money
Perhaps the greatest way in which musicians give back is through their creation of foundations and non-profit organizations, the gift that continues to give. Working towards sustainability and seeing your organization come full circle means something different to every nonprofit founder.

Hip-Hop Artist Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr., aka "Common," founded the Common Ground Foundation, a non-profit seeking to empower underprivileged youth to be strong citizens and citizens of the world. Journey founded the Arnel Pineda Foundation, Inc. (APFI), a Philippine non-profit that provides underprivileged children quality education, scholarship programs, health services, and medical attention. Madonna established Raising Malawi, a volunteer organization that helps orphans in Malawi - and she matches every dollar donated to the organization.

Sting co-founded The Rainforest Foundation to help save rainforests in South America. Simon Counsell, Executive Director for The Rainforest Foundation UK, explains the magnitude of support that Stong and his wife, Trudie Styler, have provided. "Sting and his wife Trudie Styler have provided extraordinary support, stretching back nearly 25 years, to the international programmes of the Rainforest Foundation. The greatest value has always been in funding innovative projects and campaigning efforts which other mainstream funders might be reluctant to support."

Other artists lend their name, time, and efforts to organizations that are already fighting the good fight. Christina Aguilera is an ambassador for the World Food Programme and contributes her time volunteering in third-world countries with the organization. Maroon 5 is committed to volunteering and has helped the Pablove Foundation in their efforts for pediatric cancer research and advancement for treatment, educating and empowering cancer families and improving the quality of life for children living with cancer through hospital play, music, and an arts program.

A number of musicians bring it back to their core by establishing music schools to bring resources, services, and support to children and families who need them. Neil Young, Sarah McLachlan, and the ever-cool bass player for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Flea, created organizations and/or schools to do just that.

Others lead by example through volunteering which in turn encourages their fans to get involved. While launching his singing career, John Legend created Management Leadership for Tomorrow's Career Prep program and continues to provide leadership and support through his role on the organization's Governing Board. John, who oozes charm and grace, is the founder of the Show Me Campaign, whose goal is to end economic and spiritual poverty through sustainable development. The campaign challenges fans to become their own forces for good. In partnership with Jeffrey Sachs' Millennium Promise organization, the Show Me Campaign adopted the village of Mbola, in Tanzania, and has pledged to raise $1.6 million dollars to support Mbola in its efforts to lift itself out of poverty.

Elton John has not only created a legacy with his own foundation, but has also made considerable donations to Andy Roddick's foundation, Andy Roddick Foundation, through his six headlining performances at the organization's yearly gala. "In 1992, Elton established the Elton John AIDS Foundation (EJAF) to support innovative HIV prevention programs, efforts to eliminate stigma and discrimination associated with HIV/AIDS, and direct care and support services for people living with HIV/AIDS. Since its inception, the EJAF has raised over $321 million in support of projects in 55 countries around the world," reads the Andy Roddick Foundation 2015 gala announcement.

Environmentalist and philanthropist James Taylor has long supported a variety of related causes. In 2007, Taylor was the very first artist to sign on to build and support efforts for a free, scalable platform to do good and have impact, Tickets for Charity. As of 2013, Taylor had raised just over $1.8 million in support of the NRDC and other organizations including the Berkshire Natural Resource Council.

And of course, there is Eric Clapton. It isn't hard to feel something when you just think of him, his story, survival, and his healing. In 2013 Clapton organized The Crossroads Festival in New York City's Madison Square Garden - all the profits allocated directly towards Clapton's Crossroads Center in Antigua, which educates and treats chemically dependent people. The festival was designed to bring together the past, present, and future of guitarists from various genres of music.

I have touched on some high points but the inspiring fact is that there are too many to mention here. I hope that the trend of giving back - just like our favorite musicians' fashion and hairstyle trends - becomes all the rage. I commend these artists and would like to insert a standing ovation here - they sit at the top of the charts in my book. I enjoyed taking a closer look at the lyrics to some of these very satisfying acts of generosity.

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Podcast Review: How To Be Amazing With David Sedaris

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2015-12-28-1451328873-8562941-HTBA.jpegNo stranger to co-hosting a podcast, Michael Ian Black (Mike And Tom Eat Snacks, Topics) handles the hosting duties solo on How To Be Amazing with Michael Ian Black. Produced at a leisurely pace since its launch a year ago come February -- there are less than 20 episodes so far -- and in conjunction with Audible, the audio book folks, and PRX, Black focuses his guest list primarily on authors.

In the case of his latest two-parter, his guest is David Sedaris, an author who is used to talking. Famed for his humorous, often autobiographical and frequently self-deprecating essays and wry delivery style, Sedaris brings every bit of that to the mic when he visits with Black in the studio.

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Black is not only clearly well-read but also a fan of Sedaris, playing alternately to the subjects that his guest has written about while also knocking the conversational ball into areas of the court where Sedaris is a little less comfortable playing.

A creature of many habits, he speaks several times of his latest affectation -- picking up trash on the streets in the village where he lives in England. "I sometimes get gifts from people who live there because they see me picking up garbage," says Sedaris. A few excerpts from readings done in public are played and, by comparison, it's delightful to hear how equally glib he is speaking candidly and off the cuff as he fields Black's questions.

Also helpful to the flow of the interview is that Sedaris makes it clear that he's listened to previous episodes of How To Be Amazing. So when Black concludes the show with the regular feature, "The Amazing Five", Sedaris is prepared to rattle his five choices in the categories the host tosses out -- such as Bob's Red Mill Pinhead Oatmeal in response to the topic of "Food".

Very specific, pretty unexpected, and innately humorous...not unlike the author himself.

• • •


Podcasts I'm also listening to this week: We've Got This -- Best Christmas Movie; Chillpack Hollywood Hour -- Epi 449: The WGA's 101 Funniest Screenplays; and Royal And Doodall - The Comeback Episode

• • •


Marc Hershon is the host and executive producer of Succotash, The Comedy Podcast Podcast, featuring clips from comedy podcasts from across the Internet as well as interviews with podcasters, comedians, and assorted show biz folk.

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Top 10 PR Blunders of 2015

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Attention all schadenfreude enthusiasts, it's time to take a look back and see who really shined in this year's public relations blunders, bloopers and boners (trademark pending):

Dishonorable mentions

What better place to start out than with Donald Trump? For his campaign announcement, which included a slow, ridiculous ride down an escalator in NYC's Trump Tower, the hair-challenged candidate hired fake supporters to fill the room... just like that daytime talkshow that is sure to fail after six weeks. We all should have seen the sh*tstorm coming.

A bunch of cadets at The Citadel thought it would be funny to do a skit dressed up in pillowcases resembling KKK hoods. Their suspension was probably just as hilarious.

The Environmental Protection Agency accidentally turned a river in Colorado toxic and orange, operating in the exact opposite direction of its mission statement. This is the second time in three years that I've written about this agency, which is not good for anybody.

The Hillary Clinton campaign literally roped off reporters as they moved along with a parade that featured Madame Secretary. "Terrible optics" is putting it mildly.

General Motors' crack PR shop crafted a press release with nothing but emojis, which gave me a headache when I tried to decipher it. The automaker sent out a Rosetta stone release to the press the following day, so you know, ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

The Washington Nationals printed up its 2016 team calendar with a cover photo of Boston's Fenway Park. Seriously. As I try to comprehend how that could happen, I'm still waiting to hear if the Nats are gonna dump Jonathan Papelbon for choking Bryce Harper, the National League MVP and hero to a zillion young baseball fans. In other Major League Baseball news, the Mets' Wilmer Flores broke out in tears - during a game - upon hearing that he was going to be traded. A sensitive moment yes, but as everybody knows, there is no crying in baseball.

...And a quick word about Twitter Q&As: Don't. Ask Trump, Bobby Jindal and E.L. James how theirs went. BTW, clicking on those links is HIGHLY recommended.

OK, enough of the kids' table... on to the main stage!

10. Not a good way to impress the boss.

Alaska Airlines managed to lose the luggage of its CEO, Bradley Tilden, on a flight to an airline summit in Washington, D.C. And it wasn't the first time.

Ironically, the air carrier offers a guarantee to get passengers' bags to them within 20 minutes of reaching the gate or it will pony up a $25 credit toward a future flight or 2,500 miles in its reward program. Go with the miles, right?

9. Has ISIS infiltrated a multinational financial services company? Let's go to the video.

HSBC fired six of its bankers after a video was posted online in which they depicted a mock Islamist State beheading of an Asian co-worker. It was supposed to be a team-building exercise, but precisely for which team wasn't exactly clear.

8. Using software to cheat and destroy the atmosphere.

The good folks at Volkswagen purposely installed software in diesel cars built in the United States that would allow the vehicles to circumvent emission tests. It was reported 11 million cars worldwide contained the shady software and CEO Martin Winterkorn resigned in disgrace. Sorry, I can't think of anything funny to say about this one.

7. This is exactly NOT how a free press works.

A University of Missouri communications professor was caught on tape blocking a freelance photographer attempting to shoot photos at a protest on campus. On the video, Dr. Melissa Click is seen getting in the face of photog Tim Tai and asking for some "muscle" to remove him from the public area.

This kind of fascism is expected from, I dunno, the Trump campaign, but is completely inexcusable on a college campus... and by a media instructor, no less. Pro tip: Use the "relations" part in media relations, not jack-booted thuggery.

6. He had one job.

At the climax of this year's Miss Universe contest in Las Vegas, Steve Harvey called out the name of Ariadna Gutierrez-Arévalo, Miss Colombia, as the pageant's winner. Funny story: the actual winner was Miss Philippines, Pia Alonzo.

Right on cue, Twitter exploded. Harvey quickly said he was sorry on the platform, tweeting "I want to apologize emphatically to Miss Philippians and Miss Columbia. This was a terribly honest human mistake and I am so regretful." Yep, misspelling BOTH countries, capping off one of his funniest nights ever as a comedian.

5. Can only a good a-hole with a gun stop a bad a-hole with a gun?

Self-evident a-hole and Minnesota dentist Walter Palmer went to Africa on a big game hunt and for $55,000, was allowed to shoot a lion. It turned out, the poor animal the cowardly doctor killed was Cecil the Lion, a beloved 13-year old great cat which was a favorite of tourist photographers in the Hwange park in Zimbabwe. Apparently, our society has not evolved past the point where we get our jollies out of killing innocent, defenseless animals.

4. Insert your own 12-inch joke here.

Jared Fogle, chubby schlub-turned-Subway sandwich pitchman, ran into a bit of a legal problem this year. He was charged with receiving and distributing child pornography and worse, repeatedly paying to engage in sexually-explicit acts with children. He pleaded guilty and got 15 years in prison, knowing no doubt, about the warm reception that awaited him.

3. A reality show star's one-man scandal industrial complex.

Josh Duggar, conservative Christian activist and eldest son of TV's 19 Kids and Counting family tried to fend off a host of scandals, including molestation of his sisters and other girls, as well as cheating on his wife Anna. Like a baller, Duggar was even caught up in the Ashely Madison data hack. TLC, the network that was airing the family's "reality" program, canned it in July. Sorry, this one's not funny either.

2. Well, we all know what karma is...

Notorious "Pharma Bro" Martin Shkreli first became publicly known when his company, Turing Pharmaceuticals, jacked up the price of Daraprim, a life-saving drug from $13.50 to $750 per pill. Not a great PR move by any stretch, but it gets even better.

In numerous subsequent TV interviews, not only did he defend the move, but actually boasted of his business prowess and kept making comments about how women find him irresistible, etc. All of which elevated his douche factor off the scale. But things can change quickly in the public arena.

In December he was arrested by the FBI, charged with federal securities fraud and was fired from his CEO perch.

1. Poor, sweet Jeb!

The season finale of Saturday Night Live contained a skit of cutting mockery on the debate circumstances of John Ellis Bush, son and brother to two members of the Former POTUS Club.

It was merely the latest in a long series of PR woes for a presidential candidate that seems either in over his head, or one that really isn't trying very hard to become our nation's chief executive. How bad has it been? The ex-Florida governor has amassed an impressive collection of memorable flubs:

  • He said even knowing what we know now, he would have invaded Iraq. Three qualifications later, he admitted he would not have invaded.


  • When discussing Planned Parenthood, he said, "I'm not sure we need half a billion dollars for women's health issues."


  • On getting to 4 percent GDP growth, "it means that people need to work longer hours."


  • Asked how the GOP could expand its attraction to black voters, he said the party needs a message of hope, not one "of division and get in line and we'll take care of you with free stuff."


  • In defending his use of the term 'anchor babies' he explained that it wasn't derogatory and that "frankly, it's more related to Asian people."


  • On Medicare, Bush said "...we need to make sure we fulfill the commitment to people that already received the benefits, that are receiving the benefits. But we need to figure out a way to phase out this program for others."


  • On a mass shooting in Oregon, Bush commented, "Stuff happens."


  • On the topic of 9/11 he pulled out the tired trope that his brother "kept us safe" while seemingly ignoring the unpleasant fact that big bro was actually president when the United States was attacked.


And I haven't mentioned the exclamation point, which has been a goldmine for ridicule from the campaign's genesis. There is so much more, but you get the picture.

For running one of the most wretched American presidential campaigns in modern history, Jeb(!) has earned our top spot... and with any luck he'll still be in the race all the way to the convention next summer.

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The 2016 Movie Blockbuster Calendar You Know You Need

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2015 was a great year for CGI-filled films such as Jurassic World, The Avengers: Age Of Ultron and of course Star Wars: The Force Awakens. One would say "It's not possible to sneak in any more huge-budget films in one year." 2016 laughs. We haven't yet realized how crowded with blockbusters the next year is going to be. I would fear for the indies, but at least they have The Academy.

Here is a list I compiled with the most likely contenders to break the 2016 box office (domestically and internationally):

JANUARY
22nd: The 5th Wave
29th: Kung Fu Panda 3

FEBRUARY
12nd: Deadpool, Zoolander 2
26th: Gods Of Egypt

MARCH
18th: The Divergent Series: Allegiant
25th: Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice

APRIL
15th: The Junglebook
22nd: The Huntsman: Winter's War

MAY
6th: Captain America: Civil War
20th: Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising
27th: Alice Through The Looking Glass, X-Men: Apocalypse

JUNE
3rd: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out Of The Shadows
10th: Warcraft, The Conjuring 2: The Enfield Poltergeist
17th: Finding Dory
24th: Independence Day: Resurgence

JULY
1st: The Legend Of Tarzan
15th: Ghostbusters
23rd: Star Trek Beyond

AUGUST
5th: Suicide Squad

SEPTEMBER
16th: Bridget Jones's Baby

OCTOBER
7th: The Girl On The Train
21st: Underworld 5

NOVEMBER
4th: Doctor Strange
18th: Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them

DECEMBER
16th: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
21st: Assassin's Creed

In this list I focused on films with a great amount of budget. I can't possibly predict every movie that's going to become a blockbuster next year. With star-studded films like We Are Your Friendshaving one of the worst box office openings in history, I decided to only mention the safest picks of 2016.

I created a (gigantic) poster pinpointing these dates. You are not able to see it in full resolution here but if you click on it, you can check it out, save it or share it.
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The poster doesn't include the long-anticipated animated films, Finding Dory and Kung Fu Panda 3 which are going to definitely crash the box office. I also skipped the upcoming Untitled Matt Damon/Bourne Sequel since it doesn't have an official title yet and the official US date has changed a couple of times.

With the movie ticket prices increasing at a steady rate and hitting a record high in 2015, 2016 is going to be a tough year for every faithful movie goer's wallet. I know it's going to be hard for mine. I've already sent my virtual goodbyes to a lot of Saturday night outs, new clothes and my emergency fund. But honestly, who cares. The freaking Marvel Civil War is coming.


Sofia Katsali is a Social Media & Online Community Manager, Co-Founder of the non-profit organization Echelon Donates& a Computer Science final-year student. She has been interviewed by MTV Act for her online charity work and has a great passion for all things digital, entertainment and design. You can find her in Linkedin where she occasionally shares her personal experiences.

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Disney's Star Wars Creates the First True Warrior Princess

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I just watched Stars Wars and I am so proud of Disney for creating the first true Warrior Princess.

From the very beginning of the movie, I love how deliberately Disney shows that Rey does not need any saving. In the opening fight scene, Finn sees a damsel in distress, and his instinctive response is to run over and save her. As soon as he gets close, he sees Rey take out her attackers.

Then in the first explosion, Finn passes out, and Rey shakes him awake. His instinctive reaction is "Are you okay?!" and she looks at him puzzled and says, "yea, are you?" (thinking what a strange question coming from the person laying down when she's alert, standing, and unharmed). Then Finn tries to take her hand and run, and she responds, "Why do you keep trying to grab my hand?" as she explains how difficult it is to run while holding hands.

Star Wars continues to show how strong and clever Rey is when she pilots the Millennium Falcon and takes out Stormtroopers without ever having flown one before. She even knows more about how to fix it than its owner, Han Solo. How exciting to show young girls the happy ending that can come from understanding how things work!

Rey and Finn's roles are also powerful for men. Men often feel immense pressure to be the knight in shining armor, and feel that their masculinity is tied to how well they're able to protect and provide for a woman. A man's ability to win a woman's heart comes from his ability to save her and keep her safe (look at all previous Disney stories).

It is therefore not unusual for men to feel their masculinity threatened (albeit often subconsciously) by a woman who does not need him. So it is no wonder that smart, strong, and successful women do not make a man feel particularly 'manly' according to the traditional, narrowly defined concept of what it means to be a man. The fact that Rey values Finn for his heart, how well-intentioned he is, doing what he believes to be right has huge potential impact on redefining the values that can lead to winning someone's heart.

More subtly, Finn even tries to run away from the fight. Instead of calling him a coward, or asking him to "man up," Rey just asks him to please stay... He explains that he simply cannot go back. She is disappointed but accepts it and they say goodbye and part ways.

The best part comes in the final forest battle scene when Kylo Ren tells Rey, "Let me train you and teach you about the Force" and she replies, "the Force?" and is basically like, I got this, no training necessary. Perhaps it is unrealistic that she needed no training to use the Force or master Jedi mind tricks. And I know it helps Disney sell even more merchandise, rides, etc. by bringing in the other half of the population into its fan base, but I am still psyched. It's great when companies are rewarded (Star Wars crossed $1B global box office breaking the world record) for doing good, for using their powers for good.

Rey's happy ending does not come from being saved by prince charming and living happily ever after together but from discovering the Force within herself, and stepping into her own power. I hope more people and companies choose the light side and follow Disney's lead in using its platform and influence to create positive cultural change.

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Interviewing Hamill, Fisher and Ford in 1977 Before 'The Force' Was With Them

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The box office news just keeps on comin'. Having already passed $1 billion in ticket sales faster than any movie in history, Star Wars: The Force Awakens is set to overtake Avatar as the highest grossing film of all time within days.

I watched it a couple of days ago in a movie theater that features seats that vibrate, wobble and rock along with the action onscreen. One youngster was so unnerved by the first jolt that he leapt from his $15 seat and onto his mother's lap.

But I wobbled along merrily throughout, my enjoyment of this current installment enhanced by a memory that none of the other enthralled audience members could share. You see, in 1977 I interviewed the three actors most were waiting to see more than all the rest: Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill.

It was just another last minute assignment at the time. In fact, the first Star Wars had not yet been released when my old Chicago Sun Times pal, the late Roger Ebert left two oversized preview tickets shaped like the Millennium Falcon on my desk. He wanted me to interview the lead actors in his stead. He had other irons in the fire that week -- that, friends, is how totally unfazed we all were at the time.

In fact, the fanciful tickets were, frankly, off putting. More suitable for a children's film, I thought. But Ebert had chosen me because as the resident rock crit I was used to "gang interviews," after years on the road with the top bands of the day. Three actors would, we both thought, be child's play for me.

We were wrong.

The three actors I met that fateful day at one of Chicago's toniest hotels were more like raucous rock musicians than any of the other actors I'd previously met. The mayhem was mostly verbal jousting and playful pranks -- no televisions thrown through windows or other more dangerous antics, thankfully.

But all three were clearly determined to have as much fun as possible while they had the chance. They were kids in a candy store, with publicists bowing and scraping and attending to their slightest whims. And their whims were whimsical indeed, each one trying to outdo the other by asking for the silliest room service items imaginable just to see if their wishes would be granted.

They just did not see it coming, all the hoopla that was about to change their lives and film history forever. They were grateful for the experience of shooting such an ambitious film with a genius at the helm. Awed, actually, would be a better word.

But what I remember most vividly was the moment Harrison Ford shrugged, gave me that now-famously wry smile and said, "I mean, it doesn't matter, really. I'm a carpenter. I can always go back to that."

I'd heard lots of celebrities say something similar, usually defensively, to beat me to the "punch." But this man meant what he said. I could see it in his eyes, hear it in his voice. Harrison Ford, who was destined to become one of the biggest stars, ever, was the only celebrity I'd ever met who sincerely did not want to be one.

He knew, in fact, that he was probably happier at that moment than he would ever be again. Stardom, he believed, might put an end to the euphoria. And I wish I still had the Sun Times article to quote him word for word because the way he expressed his feelings stayed with me for years.

In fact, whenever my fast lane life spun out of control I would try to visualize the innate serenity I'd found in the eyes of Harrison Ford that day in 1977. He'd been the wise cracking father figure of the trio, looking on as the other two mugged and quipped incessantly. And I adored all three, and left the hotel hoping their "crazy sci fi flick" would do well, if only so that I could see them again sometime.

Harrison Ford, however, was the one I was sure I would see again. That slightly cynical smile would be irresistible--Hollywood loves people who don't love Hollywood. People who see through what Joni Mitchell called the "star maker machinery," and disarm it with a well-place quip or smirk. So he was doomed from day one.

I told Ebert that very thing as I rushed to make my deadline moments after that interview. I said that I wasn't so sure about Star Wars, but "that Ford dude" was going to be around a while.

Okay, stop laughing. I was half right, anyway.






Photo credit: Plamdi, Deviant Art, http://fav.me/dx7h8y (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)

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