Showing posts with label democrat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label democrat. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2013

R.I.P. Roger Ebert ~ Movie Lover and Progressive Hero

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There are really no words. Did you know that Roger Ebert was the FIRST film critic to win a Pulitzer Prize? I think many people forget that because he was a humble person and didn't blow his own horn too much.

I grew up watching Ebert and Siskel on our local PBS station. Back then we didn't have 500 reviews online for every movie. You either read an odd review now and then in the newspaper or you had to buy Newsweek or Time. So thanks to television and PBS, Ebert and Siskel because THE movie critics of America, the only ones who really mattered. I always stayed up after 11:30 to see their show on Sunday nights, even when my husband grumbled or if I had to be at work early on Monday morning. I enjoyed it most when they disagreed and got fired up about movies they cared about - that's what a real fan does, and above all, they were movie fans.

Gene Siskel was more of a macho guy who liked "The Deer Hunter," "Raging Bull" and "Saturday Night Fever", while Ebert was the nerdy, intellectual guy who loved nostalgia and Stephen King movies. I remember his review of "Star Wars" back in the seventies, talking about the "old universe" it portrayed, and the classic coming of age story - I couldn't wait to go see it after hearing his review.

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I remember when my kids were little how much I appreciated it that Ebert would seriously review movies like "Babe" and "Free Willy" and "Toy Story." Before there was an internet, he introduced his audience to the work of the Japanese master Miyasaki, showing clips of "My Neighbor Totoro," a movie I would never have chosen for my children at the video store without his review. My kids went on to become Japanese movie junkies, and they may not realize that it all goes back to Ebert.

I also remember when he praised "Dirty Dancing," saying it reminded him of being young and in love, and I used his review to help my husband understand why I liked that movie so much. I remember he usually loved musicals, unless Madonna was the star, LOL.

But Ebert was more than a movie critic. He was also a Kick-Ass Democrat who campaigned for President Obama tirelessly last year on Twitter, and who made time each day to push Progressive causes that mattered the most. That's his most lasting legacy, I think. Cancer had stolen his ability to speak on television, but Twitter gave him a new voice and a platform with millions of new readers and fans. And now we all mourn the loss of a a great writer, communicator and powerhouse Progressive. But above all he was a really, really nice guy, certainly someone you would love to see a movie with, and go for a hamburger afterward to analyze every scene.

And like the movie heroes he loved, he was brave - he stood up for what he believed, and he fought cancer like a boss. R.I.P., Dear Critic from Chicago - I wish we had hundreds more just like you.

Roger Ebert's Last Column: "A Leave of Presence"
 
Fans and Celebrities React to the Death of Roger Ebert 

LA Times Hero Complex: A Look Back at 5 Fan Favorite Reviews by Roger Ebert





Monday, October 15, 2012

Maverick Moderate Arlen Specter Dies


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RIP, Senator Arlen Specter

Via Politico
“Arlen Specter was always a fighter,” President Obama said in a statement Sunday. “From his days stamping out corruption as a prosecutor in Philadelphia to his three decades of service in the Senate, Arlen was fiercely independent – never putting party or ideology ahead of the people he was chosen to serve.”

. . . The Pennsylvania senator announced he would switch parties April 28, 2009, saying he felt the Republican Party had swung too far to the right. “I now find my political philosophy more in line with Democrats than Republicans,” Specter said in a statement.

“I am unwilling to have my 29-year Senate record judged by the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate. I have not represented the Republican Party. I have represented the people of Pennsylvania,” he said. “I have decided to run for reelection in 2010 in the Democratic primary.”

In 2010, Specter’s political career came to its stunning end with a loss in the Democratic primary to Rep. Joe Sestak. Sestak attacked Specter for his Republican past and for switching parties “to save one job: His, not yours,” as Sestak’s campaign starkly put it in one ad. Sestak went on to lose to Republican Pat Toomey, who took over Specter’s post Jan. 3, 2011.

Via NPR
Former Sen. Arlen Specter, one of the most influential senators of the last half century, died on Sunday from complications of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He was 82.

The five-term senator, a moderate Republican-turned-Democrat, was a key member of the Judiciary Committee and a major player in the confirmation proceedings of 14 Supreme Court nominees. But he was consistently a thorn for leaders of both political parties and their presidents.

. . . A lot of things made him the voodoo doll of GOP conservatives: his outspoken support for abortion rights, his advocacy of civil rights legislation and, of course, the cardinal sin, his vote against the Supreme Court nomination of Robert Bork in 1987.

Specter was hardly the darling of the left, either. Democrats were infuriated when Specter, faced with a likely Republican primary challenge in 1991, led the hostile questioning of Anita Hill at the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas.





Thursday, October 11, 2012

Good Luck, Joe! VP Debate in Cenreville, Kentucky

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I think I speak for many Democrats in writing that I don't really want to turn the TV on tonight to watch the Veep Debate. We can't take anymore gaffes, surprises, under-reactions, or disappointments. I mean, I still have ultimate faith in Joe Biden, as well as Barack Obama, and I'll be the first in line to vote for them when early voting starts, but our national psyche can only take so much. With polls acting like roller coasters, we NEED a smackdown of Ryan, and anything less will be devastating. I'm sure our Vice President knows what he has to do. I just don't know if I'm strong enough to watch it happening live on TV. Maybe I'll watch Project Runway, sneak a peek at Twitter to see if the coast is clear, and watch the debate on YouTube if Joe did okay. We all just need some good news. I don't want to see another meltdown of epic proportions on MSNBC.

There's always bourbon, too, in keeping with the Kentucky location.

From PBS - Our Favorite Vice Presidential Debate Moments

The GOP Campaign to Intimidate Moderator Martha Raddatz









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