Thursday, July 03, 2008 |
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Bill "Super Stretch" Sammon Talks to Townhall |
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Posted by:
Townhall.com Staff at
11:55 AM |
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Picture this: Brian Wilson, Fox News vice president and Washington, D.C. bureau chief, versus Bill Sammon, White House correspondent for The Washington Examiner, in a one-on-one basketball game. Who would you put your money on? According to Sammon, you should be on the side-lines rooting for him!
In the July issue of Townhall Magazine, Sammon talks to Mary Katharine Ham about everything from blocking shots on the court to the craziest thing he’s ever heard in a White House press conference to his nickname from President Bush. Read more about Sammon’s experiences in D.C. in the July issue of Townhall.
Click here to receive a free copy of Townhall. If you're already convinced, subscribe today and look for more fun facts about your favorite journalists and personalities in our “5 Questions” department every month. You'll receive a free copy of Willful Blindness: Memoir of the Jihad by Andrew McCarthy with your one-year subscription.
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Wednesday, July 02, 2008 |
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"Kitt Kitredge": An American Deception |
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Posted by:
Michael Medved at
11:19 PM |
Because of the ongoing editing process on my new book (the whole thing must be finished-- wrapped up and sent to the publisher --before our departure to Israel in late July) I wasn't able to go to the advance screening of "Kitt Kittredge". Fortunately, my wife and partner-in-all-things Dr. Diane Medved did manage to attend (with our daughter) and she files the report below as the special guest-blogger of the day---Michael M.
"Kit Kittredge:" An American Deception
My two little girls, now in college, used to read those American Girl books with their white shiny covers featuring snapshots of 'tweens in various decades of American history. I never bought my daughters the overpriced collector's dolls, dressed in period costumes, though the one who accompanied me tonight to a screening of "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl" revealed to me my cruelty in the face of her friends' displays.
Kit (Abigail Breslin) and her parents plunge from upper-crust existence into poverty in 1934 when the depression busts the dad's (Chris O'Donnell) car dealership and forces him to leave their Cincinnati home to find work in Chicago. To pay the mortgage, Mom (Julia Ormond) takes in an assortment of boarders, including a magician, husband-hungry dance instructor, mobile librarian and a down-and-out classmate of Kit's, with his fussy mom. She takes pity on a teen and his quite-young sidekick who live in the community's "Hobo Jungle" by the railroad tracks. This motley crew, plus a few plucky friends of Kit's, populate a film punctuated by thievery, deception and the kids' miraculous solving of the who-done-it. It's no spoiler to say the film's loose ends get neatly tied in a single scene at the end.
Director Patricia Rozema has pulled together some sweetly evocative sets, costumes and scenes (the movie was shot in Toronto), though it's easy for adults to spot several distracting anachronisms that the target audience will miss. Much more disturbing, however, are some of the messages implicit in the movie.
First off, by 1934, unemployment had leveled off, after a peak of almost 25% the year before. That's one out of four otherwise employable adults out of work, at the depression's worst. The movie implies that few held onto their jobs, and that those who did--including the banker who puts foreclosure signs in Kit's neighborhood front lawns--became snickering denigrators of those whose fortunes were lost. A soup kitchen scene attempts to show a kinder side, though we have no clue who sponsors it, and when Kit's school class is given an assignment to volunteer there one night, she's shocked by the variety of client?le. An aside: while the depression was certainly devastating, FDR's New Deal attempts to end it exacerbated the damage and hampered the recovery (as well-documented by Amity Shlaes in The Forgotten Man).
A second inaccuracy is the complete lack of any type of religious reference, even as Americans turned to religion as solace in a difficult time. There's not even a glimpse of a church during a street scene, and not a single character ever murmurs even a word that could be taken as a thought toward the transcendental. By calling Kit "An American Girl," and placing her in Cincinnati, one might expect at least a passing nod to a centerpiece of life at the time.
In addition, the hobo encampment is shown via Kit's journalistic "investigation" to be a place of respectable people behaving only with honesty and goodwill. Perhaps at the time such upstanding tent cities existed, but the implication for modern viewers is that the homeless sleeping in shop doorways or populating cardboard lean-tos under freeways are somehow equivalent and honorable--rather than being mentally ill or alcoholics spurning shelters and assistance programs available to them. This is a misleading message for youngsters, almost the opposite of the "don't talk to strangers" safety rules we want them to internalize.
But this isn't a history lesson, it's a 9-year-old girl's perspective, and the film does address the hurt of her father's absence, and the indignities she turns into fun, in true Pollyanna style. There's also a touch of Nancy Drew as Kit, hoping to hit print in the Cincinnati Register, uses her field notes about crimes to help her figure out, far too easily, what the law enforcement offices of several cities can't. On the surface, it's a clean, family-oriented and enjoyable plot, but those deceptive underlying lessons are troubling.
And it's a bit ironic that a movie about poverty and the Great Depression is being hyped with so much expensive stuff for little fans to buy. I'm kinda glad my two girls only got the books.
--- posted by DIANE MEDVED
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Wednesday, July 02, 2008 |
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A Sign of the Times |
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Posted by:
Carol Platt Liebau at
10:39 PM |
The Los Angeles Times is resorting to drastic cutbacks in order to survive. At the same time, radio genius Rush Limbaugh signs an unprecedented $400 million contract.
Interestingly, representatives of the Times are explaining the people canceling subscriptions are saying "that they don't have enough time to read the paper that we give them every day." Hm. Really? Because the same people seem to find time to listen to the radio and get on the computer . . .
The Times is engaging in the same kind of myopic denial that's gotten it into this mess in the first place. Consider this. Rush Limbaugh doesn't pretend to be objective, and you get a lot of opinion when you tune into his show. But when he offers a fact, it's airtight. You can take it to the bank. What's more, he's interesting.
In contrast, the Times isn't often interesting, and it is often predictable. It offers (consistently left-wing) opinions -- sometimes even irrelevantly inserted into otherwise unrelated Calendar section stories -- yet it insists it's objective. Its polls can't be trusted, as they consistently overweight Democrats in the samples (remember this, the poll that had Cruz Bustamante beating Schwarzenegger by 13 points during the recall?)
Most damning, its news accounts can't always be trusted . . . in fact, a very successful blog, Patterico's Pontifications, has come to prominence by documenting egregious lapses that smack of left-wing bias.
It's hard to shed tears for a paper that so often fails in what should be its primary mission -- to offer absolutely trustworthy reporting, to keep news and opinion separate, and to offer a variety of interesting, compelling and un-stuffy voices to its readers.
And it's impossible not to congratulate Rush -- perhaps the most influential voice of conservatism today -- on his well-deserved deal.
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Wednesday, July 02, 2008 |
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"I'm Melting! I'm Melting!" |
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Posted by:
Hugh Hewitt at
6:41 PM |
The Los Angeles Times fades to black. From the WSJ.com:
Tribune Co.'s largest newspaper, the Los Angeles Times, plans to cut about 15% of its news staff and news pages as part of the newly private media company's mandate to slash costs.
The Los Angeles Times, the country's fourth-largest paper by weekday circulation, plans to eliminate about 150 positions from its editorial staff, according to a memo released Wednesday by the paper's editor, Russ Stanton. The newsroom currently has about 840 people, a spokeswoman said. Mr. Stanton also said the number of pages published each week will be reduced by 15%. Expect even deeper cuts ahead, with perhaps as many as 300 fewer editorial employees when the slashing is done. Very few people read anything but the Sports and calender sections. Once you drive a paper so far to the left that its news is no longer trusted, you can't rebuild the brand, period.
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Wednesday, July 02, 2008 |
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Proud America Haters |
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Posted by:
Carol Platt Liebau at
5:42 PM |
Just as Barack Obama has busily insisting that he does so love his country, a couple of unapologetic leftists have emerged to explain why they don't.
A columnist in Philadelphia thinks that this year, Independence Day should be a day of "atonement" for our supposed sins in the war on terror.
At The Progressive, lefty Matthew Rothschild has produced a piece, "Why I'm Not Patriotic" -- and challenging the concept of love of country itself. With stunning moral obtuseness, he writes, "When Americans retort that this is still the greatest country in the world, I have to ask why."
Ok, Mr. Rothschild. Here's your answer. From 2002, Dan Flynn's magnificent piece: "Ten Reasons Thinking Americans Love Their Country."
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Wednesday, July 02, 2008 |
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Exercise Your Right to Free Speech |
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Posted by:
Townhall.com Staff at
3:47 PM |
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In the July issue of Townhall Magazine, Robert Bluey, director of the Center for Media and Public Policy at The Heritage Foundation, explains why the Internet plays a fundamental role in expanding our right to free speech and how it will influence the 2008 elections. Bluey's piece, "Web of Influence," is a foray into the mass communication world via the Internet's expanding influence in U.S. politics. Bluey discusses the phenomenon:
These online innovations [e-mail, blogging, video-sharing Web sites, and social networking] are a symbol of America's strength - making virtually every citizen his or her own publisher.
You can join this "web of influence" by setting up a blog on Townhall.com. Our site gives bloggers a venue to voice their opinions and our print magazine features our very own bloggers every month! Exercise your freedom of speech - and have a chance to be published in an upcoming issue of Townhall.
Want to read more about the Internet's part in shaping culture and politics? Subscribe to Townhall and receive a free copy of Andrew McCarthy's new book, Willful Blindness: Memoir of the Jihad. Or, take Townhall for a free test-drive with a complimentary copy by clicking here.
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