Tag Archives: david brooks

Bill Cosby Was Proud To Seduce Women, According To New York Times Piece

The New York Times has been taking plenty losses this week, including comparing Serena Williams to a man, advising that peas would go good with guacamole and running David Brooks drivel…

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Bill Cosby Was Proud To Seduce Women, According To New York Times Piece

Bill Cosby Was Proud To Seduce Women, According To New York Times Piece

The New York Times has been taking plenty losses this week, including comparing Serena Williams to a man, advising that peas would go good with guacamole and running David Brooks drivel…

Follow this link:
Bill Cosby Was Proud To Seduce Women, According To New York Times Piece

Cupid Counterpoint: What’s the Most Heart-Shattering Break-Up in Movies?

You might have heard that it’s Valentine’s Day, which means romantic ruminations and reflections and perhaps an irresponsible outlay of cash in the humiliating pursuit of way more than a kiss goodnight. You know who you are. For others, it’s a chance to look on at the utter futility of love in all its heart-shattering horror. We know who we are, and it’s time to represent. To wit: Let’s talk about the most pulverizing break-ups in cinema. I’ll just get right to my pick: Cloris Leachman letting Timothy Bottoms have it at the end of The Last Picture Show . No Valentine’s Day is complete without a good, wracking cry, and I now can say I’ve had mine: Mrs. Popper’s classic “Never you mind” does technically open her relationship status with Sonny up to some ambiguity, but “You shouldn’t have come here; I’m around that corner now” pretty much cements the deal for me every single time . I’d also argue it cemented Leachman’s Oscar win for her performance; alas, that’s a conversation for another time. Your emotional mileage may and likely will vary, of course, so let’s hear about it below. Life is too short for love. Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Cupid Counterpoint: What’s the Most Heart-Shattering Break-Up in Movies?

Exclusive Clip and New Images from Single-Location Thriller ATM

Three pretty young friends find themselves trapped by a shadowy stranger — in an ATM vestibule! — in David Brooks’ directorial debut, ATM . Get a glimpse of the single-location thriller, from the writer of Buried , in an exclusive clip and new images. Josh Peck, Alice Eve, and Brian Geraghty star in ATM as a trio of co-workers who find their late-night stop off for cash interrupted by a menacing figure who stands between them and sweet, sweet freedom. ATM debuts on March 2nd on VOD and select digital outlets (SundanceNOW, iTunes, Amazon, Xbox) before opening in theaters on April 6. Want more? Check out three new images from the film and ponder how bad things will get for our intrepid heroes in that freezing cold vestibule…

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Exclusive Clip and New Images from Single-Location Thriller ATM

Exclusive Clip and New Images from Single-Location Thriller ATM

Three pretty young friends find themselves trapped by a shadowy stranger — in an ATM vestibule! — in David Brooks’ directorial debut, ATM . Get a glimpse of the single-location thriller, from the writer of Buried , in an exclusive clip and new images. Josh Peck, Alice Eve, and Brian Geraghty star in ATM as a trio of co-workers who find their late-night stop off for cash interrupted by a menacing figure who stands between them and sweet, sweet freedom. ATM debuts on March 2nd on VOD and select digital outlets (SundanceNOW, iTunes, Amazon, Xbox) before opening in theaters on April 6. Want more? Check out three new images from the film and ponder how bad things will get for our intrepid heroes in that freezing cold vestibule…

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Exclusive Clip and New Images from Single-Location Thriller ATM

Brooks: ‘Tragedy’ If Republicans Reject More Government, Higher Taxes

If a RINO is a Republican In Name Only, let’s coin a new acronym for David Brooks: RINYTO: Republican In New York Times Only.  For only in the Gray Lady’s bailiwick could Brooks be considered much of a Republican. Take his current column in the Times.  Brooks warns Republicans on the verge of regaining power that it would be nothing short of a “tragedy” if they were to oppose . . . more government and higher taxes. Excerpt [emphasis added]: If the current Republican Party regards every new bit of government action as a step on the road to serfdom , then the party will be taking this long, mainstream American tradition and exiling it from the G.O.P. That will be a political tragedy. There are millions of voters who, while alarmed by the Democrats’ lavish spending, still look to government to play some positive role. They fled the G.O.P. after the government shutdown of 1995, and they would do so again. It would be a fiscal tragedy. Over the next decade there will have to be spending cuts and tax increases. If Republicans decide that even the smallest tax increases put us on the road to serfdom , then there will never be a deal, and the country will careen toward bankruptcy. Brooks apparently believes we don’t have enough government and that taxes are too low.  I’d say that makes him a Republican only in the rarefied air of 8th Ave. between 40th & 41st streets.

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Brooks: ‘Tragedy’ If Republicans Reject More Government, Higher Taxes

David Brooks Discusses Iraq War’s Success Without Mentioning Bush

New York Times columnist David Brooks wrote an article Tuesday largely about the success America has had rebuilding Iraq without ever mentioning the name of former President George W. Bush. To be sure, ” Nation Building Works ” also addressed some of the failures: the absence of “social trust,” the lack of doctors and engineers, as well as rampant corruption to name a few. But in a column published the very day President Obama is to address the nation about Iraq, it seems particularly odd that the man at the helm when America invaded – and who against public sentiment as well as the will of the current White House resident orchestrated a surge of military forces in 2007 largely responsible for the success of this mission – is conspicuously absent: “Iraq has made substantial progress since 2003,” the International Monetary Fund reports. Inflation is reasonably stable. A budget surplus is expected by 2012. Unemployment, though still 15 percent, is down from stratospheric levels. Oil production is back around prewar levels, and there are some who say Iraq may be able to rival Saudi production. That’s probably unrealistic, but Iraq will have a healthy oil economy, for better and for worse. In the most recent Gallup poll, 69 percent of Iraqis rated their personal finances positively, up from 36 percent in March 2007. Baghdad residents say the markets are vibrant again, with new electronics, clothing and even liquor stores. About half the U.S. money has been spent building up Iraqi security forces, and here, too, the trends are positive. Violence is down 90 percent from pre-surge days. There are now more than 400,000 Iraqi police officers and 200,000 Iraqi soldiers, with operational performance improving gradually. According to an ABC News/BBC poll last year, nearly three-quarters of Iraqis had a positive view of the army and the police, including, for the first time, a majority of Sunnis. Sounds pretty darned good, right? Yet Bush’s name is not even mentioned nor is the fact that Obama as Senator voted against the surge and campaigned against the wisdom of it on his road to the White House. As such, who got the de facto credit for the current condition in Iraq as far as this piece was concerned? When President Obama speaks to the country on Iraq, he’ll be able to point to a large national project that has contributed to measurable, positive results. If he is honest, Obama will have to balance pride with caution. He’ll have to acknowledge that the gains the U.S. is enabling may vanish if the U.S. military withdraws entirely next year. He’ll have to acknowledge that bottom-up social change requires time and patience. He’ll have to heed the advice of serious Iraq hands like Crocker, Michael O’Hanlon of Brookings and Stephen Biddle of the Council on Foreign Relations, and shelve plans to withdraw completely. Yes, but nowhere did Brooks advise this President to congratulate or at least acknowledge the former one for going against Obama’s senatorial wishes by orchestrating a surge that made any of the success possible. I’m sure this was just an oversight on Brooks’s part.

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David Brooks Discusses Iraq War’s Success Without Mentioning Bush