Tag Archives: bully

‘Kids Are Going to Come See This Film’: A Chat With Bully Director Lee Hirsch

How do you come to the rescue of the millions of children who need someone — anyone — to do what they can’t: get their bullies off their backs? Director Lee Hirsch has sounded a call to action with his new documentary Bully , which exposes bullying from the front lines. Opening today, the film follows several kids and families struggling to stop the taunting and violence. Hirsch captures the frustration and helplessness among not only the victims but also their parents, who have lost trust in our modern school system. There’s Alex, 12, who seems convinced his bullies are his friends; Ja’Meya, 14, locked up after brandishing a gun on the bus where she faced her tormenters; and Kelby, 16, whose whole family retreated into isolation after she came out as a lesbian. Also profiled are the families of a teenager, Tyler, and an 11-year-old, Ty, whose bullying-related suicides devastated their communities and served as a wake-up call. If the film is taken to heart, it should be among the catalysts for changing the “kids will be kids” mentality among some educators and other authority figures. On a micro level, parents who participated in the film are speaking out in their communities and persuading kids to protect one another. Hirsch is working on getting his movie into schools, where it can have more influence. After a whiplash-inducing saga over its MPAA rating, initially an R for strong language, Bully will be released unrated in New York and Los Angeles before expanding to other cities on April 13. Hirsch spoke to Movieline about the movement that has grown out of his project, the newly famous Bully kids, and whether minors will go to the theater to see the film. When were you made aware of the rampant bullying going on in schools these days, and what led to your decision to make a documentary about it? The drive to make the documentary film is that I was bullied as a kid, so it’s very much a piece of my narrative. You know it’s bad, and I had talked about it over the years with people and sort of sensed that it’s a problem greater than my own. I didn’t really understand until we saw the extent to which people were affected by this, to the millionth. It’s funny you ask that because I feel like I dish out these statistics as if I’ve know them forever, but actually there was a process of discovering how big this really was. Then you start doing the math and thinking, if 13 million kids get bullied a year, and you start adding that up from generation to generation, there’s a lot of folks that have this narrative, that have a story, when it comes to bullying. So all those things came together when we started getting into it. Now it’s been three years that I’ve been working on this. It’s interesting you asked me that, I hadn’t thought about that. Did you have any problem getting kids or parents to participate in the film? No, not at all. We shot so many more stories than we were able to include in the final version of the film. We had people reaching out to us. We reached out to a lot of families. It was so different, because we filmed kids like Kelby, where they were outwardly looking for somebody to hear their story and share their outrage, and then Alex, who we very much stumbled upon while being allowed to film inside this school and see how adults and folks were handling certain situations. I wasn’t surprised by the willingness of people, because I remember that feeling of wishing someone would listen to me. I thought it was really brave of Ty’s friend to admit that he’d been a bully at one time. I wondered if you considered putting more kids in the film who shared that side of the story. I had. I think ultimately the narrative of this film is it tells the story of families that are on the victim side, and so you just settle into a world where you’re seeing what they see, as they see it and they deal with it. Ultimately it became less about, “what are the arguments on this side and that side, and what’s this position and that position,” or a full, drawn-out exploration of the psychology of bullying, but rather it became about telling five stories. We didn’t even know how many stories we were going to tell as we shot it. We were just looking to tell stories that allowed you to walk in the shoes of the kids and families who were dealing with this. Now that the Weinstein Company is releasing the film unrated, how do you imagine kids seeing the movie? Do you think they’ll be going to the theater or seeing it in school? We still have school districts reaching out to us every day. We’re in discussions for how to facilitate that. We have a goal of a million kids seeing the film. On their own and with groups. Within their schools and with organizations. Engaging on our website, bullyproject.com , and participating in the movement. We want to have real engagement. That’s the goal now. I think we want to be able to support viewers after they see the film with how they can be involved, how to make a difference. How to do anything from stand up and how to make that meaningful and supportive, to how parents navigate the school system when they’re advocating on behalf of their kids. I think that’s a long-winded answer to say that yes, I really do think that kids are going to come see this film. I think we owe a lot of that to Katy Butler for inspiring hundreds of thousands of teens to sign this petition , and it’s also thanks to so many of the celebrities who have spoken out for the film. It’s exciting. You’re talking to me the day before it opens. I can’t wait to see what happens. Have you seen any positive changes in schools since you started the project? In Alex’s school? In any school, or in any aspect of it, actually. Have you seen anything positive happen as a result of just making the film and building the website? I feel like, how do you measure half a million signatures and people sharing their stories? I think that’s impact. How do you measure the thousands of people that have written on our wall? People are supporting each other and writing to each other and building a community that feels like it’s turning into a movement. I feel that the film has already had impact in ways that I couldn’t have dreamed. I think that already the conversations are rich and deep that people are having about bullying at their schools, about what the climate and culture are like in their community. I think that those conversations are happening, and that’s change, that’s transformation. It’s very exciting. Do you have any plans to do follow-ups with the kids from your film? I don’t have time to do a follow-up film of any kind, but I am in touch with all of the families on a regular basis. Certainly Alex and his family, in particular, and we see them all the time, with Kelby and her family. They come to screenings. They’re doing press. Alex went and argued before the MPAA with Harvey Weinstein. These families are like my second family now. They mean the world to me, and it’s been awesome to get to spend a year with them. Other people are putting cameras in front of them, but it’s not me. I wonder if years down the road we’ll hear from them. I think there would always be an interest in hearing how they’re doing. The families are going to have to make a decision about whether they want this press to continue. For them, boy, this was unexpected, right? I had a sense that maybe we would do some press. It’s been extraordinary for me. I couldn’t have seen this, but for them, it’s been a confusing and extraordinary ride. We just give them as much support as we humanly can. I’ll always be in their lives, and I feel that in my film work I always develop strong bonds with the people that end up in my films, my subjects. It always matters that they see the film and that they’re part of the process and that that relationship stays strong. That comes through in the film. I’m so proud of them — in particular, because I see them so often, Kelby and Alex — because they’ve become advocates. People are writing me and saying, “Can you please send this to Alex? He’s my hero.” It’s incredible. It’s harder for the families that have lost kids. That’s … I … I think about them a lot because they have suffered such an ultimate loss. And they’ve embarked on a new path of advocating for kids and inspiring kids. They’ve been incredible advocates. I’ve seen that a lot with families of kids who have committed suicide that’s been linked to bullying. Can you imagine that sense of injustice that they feel? No. No, you can’t. I can’t either. They’re so engaged, and they’re such powerful advocates. I see many of these families doing such powerful work out in the world. Bully opens today in New York and Los Angeles, with additional cities to come on April 13. Read Stephanie Zacharek’s review here . [Photo: Getty Images]

See the original post here:
‘Kids Are Going to Come See This Film’: A Chat With Bully Director Lee Hirsch

Citizen Ruth: Looking Back at Alexander Payne’s Prescient Abortion Satire

What’s the Film : Citizen Ruth (1996), available on DVD and Hulu Why it’s an Inessential Essential : The premise — one woman’s attempt to have an abortion turns into a national debate and bidding war — was a bold choice out of the gate for writer-director Alexander Payne. Citizen Ruth is his first feature film, and like his subsequent work, it has a biting wit, absurdities from every corner, and deeply flawed characters. Ruth (Laura Dern) is a dim-witted screw-up who is pregnant for the fifth time; her four offspring have been placed elsewhere because of her addiction to inhalants. When she is charged with a felony for huffing “patio sealant,” the judge coerces her to terminate the pregnancy. In jail, she meets anti-abortion crusaders who start a tug-of-war with pro-choice rivals over the unborn child, who becomes widely known as Baby Tanya after a clinic doctor manipulates Ruth into imagining keeping it. Tackling this tricky subject matter, Payne found an unreal story to tell, except that part of it was real. In the DVD commentary, he and co-writer Jim Taylor reveal that the plot was inspired by the true story of a woman who was offered money by anti-abortion and pro-choice camps to honor their respective wishes for her fetus. The parallels to reality don’t stop there. In one of Dern’s best unhinged moments, Ruth screams at two overzealous medical staffers at a clinic, who then pull out all the stops and force her to watch a video of abortion footage. That seems far-fetched, though maybe not in places like Arizona, where a lawmaker recently proposed a bill that would require women to watch an abortion before having one. The state representative, Terri Proud, calls her idea “(The) Reproductive Games.” Truth is catchier than fiction. Why We Recommend It Now : Released in 1996, Citizen Ruth resonates today, of course, because the issue of affordable health care has evolved into a fight over reproductive rights. Although Baby Tanya, were she real/alive, would be old enough to have a Sweet 16 party this year, not much has changed in the public discourse. Payne skewers the radicals on both sides, who are largely motivated by impressing their leaders — Tippi Hedren, for example, as a mother/god figure to the lunatic pro-choice activists. Their behavior is over the top, but their ideologies still echo. Among the points the movie makes so nicely is that extremists tend to lose sight of the real people and issues involved. When Sandra Fluke testified about hormonal birth control, the point she made — that the drug treats medical conditions — was lost once Rush Limbaugh piped in and turned Fluke into an abstraction and a “prostitute.” Ruth is unfit to be a mother, yet a contingent of crazies think she should take a stab at parenthood, aided by 15 grand, because somehow it’ll just all work out. There’s something to be said for laughing so we don’t cry, and Citizen Ruth allows us to do that. The DVD has few extras, but it does feature a revealing commentary track from Payne, Taylor, Dern and production designer Jane Ann Stewart. Explaining that the film doesn’t take sides, Stewart says her team strived to make both camps look a little foolish. Payne gets to the heart of the matter, saying, “Jane, you asked me, ‘Is nothing sacred?’ And it’s true. Everything is sacred, and nothing is sacred. Everyone is open for being examined as a human being.” Other Interesting Trivia : Payne says the film’s limited release was probably the reason he didn’t receive one threatening letter over it, though he was concerned about potential violence at the time from groups like the Army of God. Dern recalls a conversation with the women who ran Planned Parenthood in Texas, who called her to say how much they loved being mocked in the film. Also, let the end credits roll a couple minutes for a hint at Ruth’s fate. PREVIOUS INESSENTIAL ESSENTIALS The Last Temptation of Christ The Sitter

Read this article:
Citizen Ruth: Looking Back at Alexander Payne’s Prescient Abortion Satire

Bully’s Latest Gambit: Permission Slips

It has come to this for “unaccompanied” teenagers desperate to see the unrated Bully : “An AMC spokesman said it will indeed allow that, but only if the child presents a signed permission slip from a parent, either via a form letter made available by the theater or an improvised note on a standard piece of paper. The move is an apparent attempt to support the film — AMC executive Gerry Lopez has two teenagers and has been vocal about its importance — while still paying deference to the Motion Picture Assn. of America and its ratings system.” Related: Is Harvey Weinstein just recycling tricks from his Kids playbook ? [ LAT ]

See the article here:
Bully’s Latest Gambit: Permission Slips

Bully’s Latest Gambit: Permission Slips

It has come to this for “unaccompanied” teenagers desperate to see the unrated Bully : “An AMC spokesman said it will indeed allow that, but only if the child presents a signed permission slip from a parent, either via a form letter made available by the theater or an improvised note on a standard piece of paper. The move is an apparent attempt to support the film — AMC executive Gerry Lopez has two teenagers and has been vocal about its importance — while still paying deference to the Motion Picture Assn. of America and its ratings system.” Related: Is Harvey Weinstein just recycling tricks from his Kids playbook ? [ LAT ]

Visit link:
Bully’s Latest Gambit: Permission Slips

For His Next Trick, Harvey Weinstein Has Bully Trending — and Misunderstood — on Twitter

Their five-time Oscar winner The Artist may have just experienced its most lucrative weekend at the box office to date, but newly installed Legionnaire of Honor Harvey Weinstein and his Weinstein Co. minions remain firmly focused today on the Great Bully Ratings Non-troversy of 2012 . How do we know? To Twitter, where #BullyMovie is this morning’s highest-ranking (promoted, ahem) trending topic. Here’s the official shout-out from the Bully gang, carrying over last week’s ” human rights ” crusade to get the Weinstein release’s R-rating reduced to a PG-13. Wildfire petition to tell the @ MPAA to give @ bullymovie a PG-13 breaks 180,000 RT to keep the fire! bit.ly/AbQWZ1 #bullymovie — Bully Movie(@bullymovie) March 2, 2012 So how’s the response? Mostly positive, naturally, with a few contrarian opinions and hilarious misunderstandings thrown in for good measure: #BullyMovie needs to be PG13. #MiddleFingerUp to the bullies at the MPAA who rated this important film R. — Extrovert (@RamiTime) March 5, 2012 I’m curious about #BullyMovie . Does it only look at the victims?Because the bullies themselves are almost always victims of bullies as well. — Scott S Kramer (@scottskramer) March 5, 2012 If @ WeinsteinFilms cannot change the R rating to #BullyMovie then no one can. Seriously, they made “The Artist” won best picture. — Natalia Cariaga (@natajunk) March 5, 2012 Sorry guys, but this #BullyMovie isn’t going to stop bullying any more than “Roots” and “The Color Purple” stopped racism. — FTKL Images (@FTKL) March 5, 2012 #BullyMovie Mean Girls — Erica Mabrey (@adagewhentola67) March 5, 2012 #BullyMovie Precious! — Aidan DeVaughn (@adm1022) March 5, 2012 kind of a #BullyMovie The Little Rascals its the best, back in the day ! — Julian Bolton (@SupermanJr35) March 5, 2012 Harry Potter and the chamber of First Years. #bullymovie — All was well (@iManageMischief) March 5, 2012 Harvey’s secret weapon? What else? @ KhloeKardashian calls @ BULLYMOVIE trailer “heartbreaking” – WATCH THE #BULLYMOVIE TRAILER: bit.ly/znJ8C0 — Bully Movie(@bullymovie) March 5, 2012 What a grotesque fucking circus. Knowledge is power! Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Read more:
For His Next Trick, Harvey Weinstein Has Bully Trending — and Misunderstood — on Twitter

Harvey Weinstein To Battle Doc Bully’s R-Rating For the Children

Says storied MPAA-fighter Harvey : “I have been compelled by the filmmakers and the children to fight for an exception so we can change this R rating brought on by some bad language. As a father of four, I worry every day about bullying; it’s a serious and ever-present concern for me and my family. I want every child, parent, and educator in America to see Bully , so it is imperative for us to gain a PG-13 rating. It’s better that children see bad language than bad behavior, so my wish is that the MPAA considers the importance of this matter as we make this appeal.” [Press release via IndieWire ]

Continued here:
Harvey Weinstein To Battle Doc Bully’s R-Rating For the Children

"Can they say yes to anything?"

http://www.youtube.com/v/Q8MvUiK7n90

Go here to read the rest:

It’s good to see President Obama using the bully pulpit. His press conference was spot-on. And to answer this question: No, the Republicans can not say yes to anything. Because saying yes to anything means they’re working with Barack Obama,… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : boy culture Discovery Date : 23/07/2011 02:45 Number of articles : 2

"Can they say yes to anything?"

10 Bullies Get Pwned Videos

There was a time when bullies actually lorded it over schools and neighborhoods. Not anymore. The bullied are starting to fight back. Or at least getting someone else fight back for them, compared to the times when all people did was watch, particularly when the trouble involves women . The point is, bullies are starting to get what they deserve. And thanks to modern technology and the Internet, we get to see all that via videos on Youtube. For anyone who has been bullied, these guys are heroes. 1. Bully Becomes Someone’s Bitch Bully wants to fight, the bullied didn’t want to, bully attacks the bullied, and bully becomes the bullied’s bitch. That’s the way it should be. 2. Bully Clotheslines Girl, Turned Into Punching Bag By Girl’s BF The next time you clothesline some girl, make sure she doesn’t have Manny Pacquiao for a boyfriend. 3. TapOut Guy Gets Tapped Out This bully just gave TapOut merch a bad name. 4. Bully Gets In A Karate Expert’s Face, Gets One In the Face Honestly, this punk stood a better chance against the garbage bin. 5. Scrawny Bully Gets Owned By Lanky Victim This bully also stood a better chance against the skateboard. 6. Old Man Knocks Young Bully Down Seriously, what’s with kids picking on weaker old men? Too bad for this one his victim’s not that weak. 7. Blonde Bully Gets Suckerpunched Victims of bullying should be this smart. Pretend to not want to fight, then unleash a knockout punch. 8. Abraham Lincoln Pulls Down Bully’s Pants OK, so the guy was probably harassing an ex-girlfriend, but The Great Emancipator would never stand for any of that crap and does the righteous thing of pulling the bully’s pants down. 9. Old Guy Gives Bully A Beatdown This is just so wrong. Bearded old guy should also have slapped the crap out of the potty mouth bitch holding the camera and egging the bully on, and later stealing his bag. 10. Casey Heynes, Hero He actually did what millions of bullying victims the world over have only fantasized about. What an inspiration. Related Posts: Top 10 Live Performance Falls of Singers The 25 Most Important Dating Tips (Videos) 10 Crazy Chick Fight Videos 101 Most Popular Celebrity Nipple Slip Videos and Clips 10 Hollywood Actors Who Can Actually Sing

Read this article:
10 Bullies Get Pwned Videos

‘Glee’-Cap: Celebrate The Birth Of ‘Furt’

We’re not sure what was up with that Carol Burnett storyline, but sing along anyway. By Jim Cantiello, with additional reporting by Vaughn Trudeau Schoonmaker Chris Colfer and Cory Monteith in the “Furt” episode of “Glee” Photo: FOX This week’s “Glee” episode, “Furt,” featured not one, but two weddings — and not one, but two Bruno Mars songs . More important, it actually took the Kurt/bullying storyline somewhere. Celebrate with us and sing along! Do you want a wedding episode? I do! I do! Do I want “Glee” in a happy mode? I do! Do you Know why I’m crying When this show Used to Be funny and so shiny? But now I feel sad For tortured Kurt and lonely Sue His bully’s mad Kurt doesn’t know what he should do But cheer up, dude! Your bully’s dad is from “Lost.” He totally explodes. [ “Lost” clip of Arzt holding dynamite and exploding. ] Anyone remember that? Season one? Do you believe the boys stood up for Kurt? I do, I do Except for Finn, who tried his best to avert. So boo to Him until the wedding scene where We saw Finn Dedicate a sweet song to his New half-kin. But why were the pronouns all messy, She’s a him? I guess “Glee” won’t change lyrics unless It is about transsexuals. That’s right I’m still not over that “Rocky Horror” episode. Just sayin’. Sue Sylvester marries herself ’cause she can’t find a match. Mama Sue shows up but this plot point doesn’t attach. I guess producers had the chance to shoot with Carol Burnett, So they wrote in a Nazi-hunter filled with maternal regret How can I blame them for wanting to include Carol? Ryan Murphy clearly shrugged and said, “Sure, what the hell?” A shame her singing voice now sounds like her old Tarzan yell Is she coasting on her name? [ Clip of Carol emphatically saying, “I AM NOT!” ] [ Jim speaks ] Sorry, no disrespect! [ Tugs on his earlobe. ] [ Singing ] Do you want to know how “Glee” ends up? I do! I do! Sue expels the bully but the school board sucks, So Sue Resigns as principal in protest Mr. Schue Says regionals are coming next But Kurt’s to do List includes dodging closet cases Out to bruise His porcelain skin with so much hate He chooses to Transfer to the private school that’s basically paradise for gays. Let’s all praise! This storyline is great! What did you think of this week’s “Glee”? Share your thoughts in the comments below. Related Videos Musical ‘Glee-Caps’ Of Season Two Related Photos What Other ‘Glee’ Music Videos Do We Want To See?

Read the original here:
‘Glee’-Cap: Celebrate The Birth Of ‘Furt’

Gossip Girl: You’ll Get Yours in the End [Video]

Oh my god this show is still on. Still on! After all those twists and turns and lover’s burns, it soldiers on. Despite everything, it believes it is still interesting at heart. More