Tag Archives: crist

Judith Crist, Trailblazing Film Critic, Passes Away At 90 — Watch Her Look Back On A 50 Year Career

Decades after making a name for herself as reporter and film critic at the New York Herald Tribune , New York Magazine , and the Today show, trailblazing journalist Judith Crist died Tuesday in Manhattan, confirms the New York Times . Crist additionally wrote for TV Guide , Saturday Review , Gourmet and Ladies’ Home Journal during her career, which included a longtime stint as professor of journalism at Columbia and a cameo in Woody Allen’s Stardust Memories . After the jump, watch an interview with Crist filmed in May, on her 90th birthday, in which the spry critic took a look back at her fruitful career. Speaking with Columbia J-school deans Sree Sreenivasan and Melanie Huff in May, Crist expressed her delight at making it to the year 2000, let alone 2012, with an infectious energy and wit. “The most enjoyable part of living a long time is that it happens so quickly,” she said. “I have to stop and think, ‘My word, it’s a long time.’ When I think of all the things that have changed, I don’t look back because I’ve had a wonderful life and so I’ve got nothing to bitch about.” The critic whom Roger Ebert, Tweeting today , referred to as “a tigress with high standards and great influence,” famously eviscerated then-celeb couple Liz Taylor and Richard Burton in her review of 1963’s Cleopatra . Scathing and thoughtful in good measure, Crist’s gloriously epic 1,700-word review is viewable in full on the Columbia website, and caps with one of her more famous critical nuggets: A painstaking attention to tiny details makes it all too obvious that nothing has been spared on the sets and costumes. There are indeed some beautiful and impressive photographic effects, with transitions made by having faded frescoes slowly brighten into a live scene or a scene free and dim into a fresco. But the sets themselves never create an illusion of permanence. The cardboard and paint are there. Even in their most dramatic moment, when Cleopatra and Antony are slapping each other around in her tomb, one’s most immediate image is of Miss Taylor and Mr. Burton having it out in the Egyptian Wing of the Metropolitan Museum. All is monumental – but the people are not. The mountain of notoriety has produced a mouse. Crist’s passing prompted many of her former students to take to Twitter in praise of their onetime professor. “As a former student, I paid to be in her critical crosshairs. Not fun, but 4ever instructive,” Tweeted Fast Company’s Jennifer Vilaga, while New York Times reporter Christine Haughney called Crist “one of the toughest and best professors I ever had.” “I think that journalism is in a state of flux, just as all our means of communication right now are,” Crist said in her May 2012 interview, included below. “But to me the intense curiosity that is basically journalism … a journalist’s own curiosity about why we do this the way we do it and so on, I think that’s perpetually with us.” “I still believe in the written word, I’m very old-fashioned in that respect, and I stick to it… to me, the written word is the one that counts and it’s the one that endures. Which is sort of stick-in-the-mud, but I don’t mind. The mud’s pretty good. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Judith Crist, Trailblazing Film Critic, Passes Away At 90 — Watch Her Look Back On A 50 Year Career

WaPo: ‘Florida Senate Race Begins Without a Clear Favorite’; But Paper Ignores Rubio Lead in Dem Firm’s Poll

In today’s Washington Post, Dan Balz argues that the “Florida Senate race starts without a clear favorite.” While that may be true in some sense, recent polling data has some favorable signs for conservative Republican candidate Marco Rubio. Yet nowhere in his 20-paragraph story did Balz delve into those poll numbers. Instead, Balz presented the Florida race as complete wild card that is unpredictable due to the three-way nature of the contest: Gov. Charlie Crist is the man in the middle in Florida’s high-stakes race for the Senate, a candidate without a party whose hopes of moving from Tallahassee to Washington depend on his ability to fend off a squeeze play from his Democratic and Republican rivals. The three-way campaign for the Senate is the latest in a series of important races in Florida – including the 2000 recount that helped define red-blue divisions in America – but with dynamics new to the Sunshine State.  But a look at recent polling data available on RealClearPolitics.com seems to indicate Rubio went to bed on primary election night in good shape for the general election fight ahead. The last poll taken before Tuesday’s primary was conducted of likely voters by the liberal Democrat-friendly polling firm Public Policy Polling (PPP). That poll had Rubio up eight points over Crist, 40 to 32, with Meek garnering a humble 17 percent.  Rubio had a 5-point edge over Crist in a poll by Mason-Dixon in mid-August with Meek at a paltry 18 percent. Other polls from August show a Crist lead, but those are of registered, not likely voters, and in a midterm election it’s the motivated, fired-up voters that are most likely to show up. While it’s true that the two-and-a-half months until Election Day are an eternity in politics, it seems that right now Rubio is doing pretty well. It could change for the better or for the worse, but it should have been noted by Balz.

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WaPo: ‘Florida Senate Race Begins Without a Clear Favorite’; But Paper Ignores Rubio Lead in Dem Firm’s Poll

Chris Matthews Stars in Future Marco Rubio Campaign Commercial

Are you happy with the job that the Obama administration and the Democrats are doing? If so, then vote for Charlie Crist for the U.S. Senate because Chris Matthews happily proclaimed that Crist is going to be the new star in the Democrat caucus. However, if you are dissatisfied with the direction this nation is going and want to change it, then Marco Rubio will be your choice which is why your humble correspondent won’t be a bit surprised to see this video of Matthews making his proclamation about Crist on Morning Joe end up as a Rubio campaign commercial. Here is a transcript of Matthews delivering his kiss of death product endorsement of Charlie Crist: Charlie Crist is going to be the new star of the Democratic caucus in the Senate. He’s going to be a major player in the Democratic Party down the road. He’ll be a moderate Democrat somewhere in the middle. I think he’s very shrewd and nimble. This sudden Matthews infatuation with Charlie Crist stands in sharp contrast with his attitude back in May when he was sharply critical of the Florida governor’s performance on Meet The Press where he played coy by avoiding a direct answer about which party he would caucus with and for whom he would vote for Majority Leader of the Senate as you can see in the video below: Here is a transcript of Matthews’ disgust with Crist at that time: …I used to sort of like Charlie Crist but he’s off-base on that. You have to join a party caucus before you can vote for leader. He can’t decide which leader he’s going to vote for because he’s not even voting. He must join a caucus then you get to vote for which person leads that caucus. That’s how it’s done. He doesn’t seem to know that or he rejects knowing it. What do you think? Is he just ignorant or is he playing a game here? So what changed in the past couple of months to cause Matthews to move from disgust with Charlie Crist to developing a “strange new respect” for the Florida governor? Most likely it was the realization by Matthews and fellow liberals that the likely Democrat nominees, Kendrick Meek or billionaire Jeff Greene, have little or no chance of winning the general election in November. Therefore the best chance of promoting the liberal agenda in the Senate would be to back Charlie Crist running as an independent who was too liberal to win the Republican nomination. And Marco Rubio should thank Matthews for that wonderful future campaign commercial clip reminding Florida voters (many of whom still mistakenly think of Crist as a Republican) that Charlie is a Democrat.

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Chris Matthews Stars in Future Marco Rubio Campaign Commercial