Tag Archives: more-skeptical

The Great Lorax/John Carter Hypocrisy

Stephanie Zacharek already kind of addressed this phenomenon in her review , but as John Carter postmortems go, yeesh : “[W]hat’s really sad is when you look at the Rotten Tomatoes pages for The Lorax and John Carter . Among ‘top critics,’ The Lorax has a 48 percent fresh rating, and most of the reviews I’ve seen have been pretty respectful. (Except for the New Yorker , which says ‘The badness of the picture is a shock,’ and the New York Times , which called it ‘a noisy, useless piece of junk.’) And critics pretty much piled onto John Carter — among ‘top critics,’ it’s at 35 percent fresh, with people outright gloating about how expensive it was and how much it falls short. It’s like there’s a collective agreement that The Lorax is too big and too much of a mainstream juggernaut to call out — but the herd decided it was okay to feed on John Carter .” [ io9 ]

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The Great Lorax/John Carter Hypocrisy

Chuck Norris’s Pro-Gingrich Robocall Kicks Exactly No Ass

So sorry to have missed this: Noted Newt Gingrich supporter Chuck Norris last week attempted to shore up his candidate’s standing ahead of presidential primaries in Southern states including Mississippi and Alabama, contributing his own riff on the automated telecommunications scourge known as the robocall. As you likely know, Gingrich lost. Hell, we all lost. “As my wife Jean and I watched the GOP debate and went to the website,” Norris begins, “we were trying to decide which of the candidates would be best to do head-to-head combat with President Obama. Now, I didn’t say ‘hand-to-hand combat,’ even though I think they would win there too.” Ah, yes, the hoary old “My candidate can beat up your candidate” meme. Classy. And useless, apparently: Despite Norris’s endorsement and repeated promises that Gingrich would repeal Obama’s health-care law and get gas prices down to $2.50 per gallon, Republicans largely went for Gingrich foil Rick Santorum. Lesson? Don’t bring a Norris to a God-fight . [via Filmdrunk ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Chuck Norris’s Pro-Gingrich Robocall Kicks Exactly No Ass

Richard Gere Renounces, Misses Point on Pretty Woman

“‘It’s my least favorite thing. People ask me about that movie, but I’ve forgotten it. That was a silly romantic comedy. [ Arbitrage ] is a much more serious movie that has some real cause and effect.’ Incredibly, the grumpy star also claims his Pretty Woman character Edward Lewis helped contribute to the global financial crisis, as he glorified greedy and selfish Wall Street types. ‘It made those guys seem dashing, which was so wrong,’ Richard explains. ‘Thankfully, today, we are all more skeptical of those guys.'” Except for hookers ! Some things never change. [ Woman’s Day via Big Hollywood ]

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Richard Gere Renounces, Misses Point on Pretty Woman

Asterisk Alert: AP Story on Jobless Claims Doesn’t Note Labor Dept. Report Missing Data of Nine States

What if reporters hunting and pecking for happy economic news are playing up incomplete government reports? Take this AP story by Jeannine Aversa on hopes rising over jobless claims: The number of people signing up for unemployment benefits dropped to the lowest level in two months, an encouraging sign that companies aren’t resorting to deeper layoffs even as the economy has lost momentum. The Labor Department reported Thursday that new claims for unemployment aid plunged last week by a seasonally adjusted 27,000 to 451,000. Economists had predicted a much smaller decline of just 2,000. But wait, we have an asterisk alert: did the Labor Department really get data from all 50 states? Bloomberg News explained, ahem, that nine states did not report actual numbers: For the latest reporting week, nine states didn’t file claims data to the Labor Department in Washington because of the federal holiday earlier this week, a Labor Department official told reporters. As a result, California and Virginia estimated their figures and the U.S. government estimated the other seven, the official said. There’s nothing wrong with reporting the Labor Department estimates — but every story ought to include the missing-states paragraph in their stories, and reporters ought to restrain their “hopes rise” talk considering the incompleteness of the reporting. This Aversa story (or at least this version) doesn’t have that information. If this was a GOP Labor Department, isn’t it possible reporters would be more skeptical that the government estimates might have some administration spin in them?

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Asterisk Alert: AP Story on Jobless Claims Doesn’t Note Labor Dept. Report Missing Data of Nine States