Tag Archives: Documentary

Matthews Exclaims ‘Tea Partier Declares War!’ Warns of Movement’s ‘Lock and Load Mentality’

Chris Matthews, on Monday’s Hardball, claimed that a Tea Party candidate, in his new ad, had just declared war and warned this was an example of the “lock and load mentality” of “the Tea Party folk.” Matthews, during his Sideshow segment, played a clip from a Rick Barber for Congress ad in which the candidate engages in an imagined conversation with Sam Adams and George Washington in which Barber tells the Founding Fathers how far the government has grown in it scope, with the actor playing Washington saying at the end it’s time to “Gather your armies.” Matthews took this as a sign that Barber was “advocating taking up arms against the government.” Matthews also asserted the tea partiers view the federal government as “a foreign occupying force” and told viewers they can see “more of this sort of thing” on his new documentary “Rise of the Right” to be aired this upcoming Wednesday night on MSNBC. The following teaser, ad clip and Matthews commentary were aired on the June 14 edition of Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: Up next it’s a campaign you have to see to believe! A Republican running for Congress in Alabama, basically is advocating taking up arms against the government. This is the closet thing, well I’m not gonna say it. Well it’s the closest thing to “Let’s revolt!” that I’ve seen. You’re watching Hardball only on MSNBC. … MATTHEWS: Now to the Sideshow. First tonight, a tea partier declares war! Rick Barber, one of the candidates competing in the Republican run-off in Alabama’s second congressional district has just come out with an ad for TV that tells you the true dimension of the Tea Party mentality. The spot begins midway through an imagined meeting with Founding Fathers Sam Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and George Washington. Here it is. (Begin ad clip) RICK BARBER: And I would impeach him. And if that’s not enough, some of you men own taverns. Sam, you were a brewer. Mr. President, a distiller. You know how tough it is to run a small business without a tyrannical government on your back. Today we have an Internal Revenue Service that enforces a progressive income tax. Now the same IRS is gonna force us to buy health insurance, cram it down our throats or else. Now I took an oath to defend that with my life. I can’t stand by while these evils are perpetrated! You gentleman revolted over a tea tax – a tea tax! Now look at us! Are you with me? ACTOR PLAYING GEORGE WASHINGTON: Gather your armies. (End clip) MATTHEWS: Actually Washington put down the Whiskey Rebellion. Well this is the lock and load mentality you just saw there, of the Tea Party folk. They see themselves as involved in a battle with the federal government, which they view is a foreign occupying force, like the British during colonial days. For more on this sort of thing, watch our documentary, Rise of the New Right, this Wednesday at 7:00 o’clock Eastern.

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Matthews Exclaims ‘Tea Partier Declares War!’ Warns of Movement’s ‘Lock and Load Mentality’

Religion, Politics and the End of the World – Part 4

Author: truthdig Added: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 06:43:07 -0800 Duration: 1566 Sam Harris and Chris Hedges debate one another at UCLA’s Royce Hall in Los Angeles. Truthdig editor Robert Scheer moderates.

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Religion, Politics and the End of the World – Part 4

Robert Scheer In Conversation With Alex Gibney

Author: truthdig Added: Sun, 24 Feb 2008 04:46:19 -0800 Duration: 728 Truthdig Editor in Chief Robert Scheer interviews Academy Award nominated documentarian Alex Gibney.

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Robert Scheer In Conversation With Alex Gibney

Countdown to ZERO….

Release Date: May 2010 Genre: Documentary Cast: Graham Allison, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Tony Blair, Mikhail Gorbachev, Ahmed Rashid Director: Lucy Walker Studio: Magnolia Pictures Plot: A documentary about the escalating nuclear arms race. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mn-1LuLhrw&feature=related added by: KSirys

Real Housewife Sex Tape

Just what the world needs — another sex tape. The 75-minute video, which stars Real Housewives of New York City cast member Danielle Staub, will be distributed by Hustler Inc. The tape was allegedly shot last fall and will be released on June 14. [ TMZ ]

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Real Housewife Sex Tape

Oscar-Winner The Cove Not So Big in Japan After All

Last anyone heard, this year’s Best Documentary Feature Oscar-winner The Cove was headed for limited release in Japan, where audiences would finally be given the chance to make up their own minds about their country’s brutal, controversial dolphin-slaughtering pastime. That was in February . Here it is the second week in June, and thanks to some nationalist outrage, the film still hasn’t made its way to screens. What gives?

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Oscar-Winner The Cove Not So Big in Japan After All

The Cove Screenings Canceled in Japan as Protests Mount (Video)

After working diligently to raise money to translate The Cove into Japanese, and advocating like crazy to get it allowed into theaters in the country, the team behind the ground-breaking documentary is finding it is being met with little enthusiasm. Screenings across Japan are being canceled as pressure from protesters grow, saying that the documentary is a “betrayal of Japanese pride.” Unplugged, the distributor of the documentary in Japan, said that the two cancellations that occurred last week came about from concern over the safety of moviegoers and businesses nearby. Angry phone calls and picketers with bullhorns are proving effective at keeping t… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Cove Screenings Canceled in Japan as Protests Mount (Video)

Gary Coleman Made Undeniable Impact On Pop Culture

Onetime child actor lived a complicated public life following star-making turn on ‘Diff’rent Strokes.’ By Brian Warmoth Gary Coleman Photo: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images Gary Coleman’s career in the public eye introduced nearly as many tangled issues as his “Diff’rent Strokes” character Arnold Jackson grappled with amid laughs. The 42-year-old actor died due to an intercranial hemorrhage Friday (May 28) after being taken off life support at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, and he left behind one of television’s most iconic characters, as well as an adult life that reflected the problems he carried away from his experiences as a child actor. Coleman’s recent appearances in works like the documentary “Midgets vs. Mascots” and the TV show “Divorce Court” demonstrated the personal issues he dealt with in the shadow of a young role that defined him for many and the public displays of anger he became known for later on in life. As an actor whose early television work brought discussions about race relations and class into homes across the country, his legacy will also encompass the 1989 lawsuit he filed against his real-life adopted parents for mismanaging his money and the parodies his role as Arnold spawned, both in Coleman’s own work and elsewhere. “Diff’rent Strokes” hit on dramatic real-world topics during its run, notably inviting Nancy Reagan on during an episode focused on drugs. The show also took a stand against racism in a story where Arnold’s adopted father, Dr. Drummond, tried to get him and his brother Willis (played by Todd Bridges) into his exclusive prep-school alma mater. In that case, the criteria in the school’s entrance exam became part of the issue. During its run, “Diff’rent Strokes” revisited such themes, though, including an episode where Willis encountered more overt discrimination while trying to take a white girl to a dance. Coleman’s signature catchphrase from the 1980s — “Whatchoo talkin’ ’bout, Willis?” — cemented his prominent place in pop culture but also followed him throughout the rest of his life into works like the musical “Avenue Q,” where Coleman didn’t collaborate or necessarily approve, but was presented as a puppet landlord in the song “It Sucks to Be Me.” Coleman left his mark on video games as well, though, voice-acting the part of lemonade seller Kenny Falmouth in the cult-classic LucasArts game “The Curse of Monkey Island.” Even there, the exaggerated pouting attitude he exhibited on “Diff’rent Strokes” became part of his charm. Even the sketches and Arnold’s frequently quoted quips at his onscreen brother are a testament to the affection that still exists now for Coleman’s character. Few performers ever achieve the lasting presence in the public consciousness that Coleman grabbed playing Arnold Jackson, and his work at the age of 10 will undoubtedly outlast his talk-show and reality-television appearances later in life as he is remembered. Share your own memories and favorite Gary Coleman roles in the comments below. Related Videos Remembering Gary Coleman Related Photos Gary Coleman: A Life In Photos Related Artists Gary Coleman

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Gary Coleman Made Undeniable Impact On Pop Culture

‘South Park’ Creators Say Muhammad Episode Was Censored Without Their Approval

Trey Parker and Matt Stone claim Comedy Central censored the controversial episode after they submitted it. By Gil Kaufman Trey Parker and Matt Stone Photo: Maury Phillips/ WireImage Over the years, “South Park” creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have tried to be equal-opportunity offenders on their gleefully trash-talking cartoon, taking on everything from the Catholic church to Scientology, the mentally challenged and just about every other interest group in between with a wildly irreverent, bleep-tastic bent. But when their comic depiction of the Muslim prophet Muhammad drew strong threats for the pair this week, they said their network, Comedy Central, stepped in and took evasive action. The episode in question showed Muhammad — whose depiction in print many Muslim’s consider forbidden — dressed as a bear. A radical Muslim Web site posted a threat against the two if the material aired, which included a reference to the Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, who was brutally murdered in 2004 by Muslim extremists over his documentary about violence against Islamic women. “We have to warn Matt and Trey that what they are doing is stupid and they will probably wind up like Theo van Gogh for airing this show,” read the post. “This is not a threat, but a warning of the reality of what will likely happen to them.” The post was accompanied by a graphic picture of Van Gogh as well as the addresses of the Comedy Central offices in New York and the “South Park” production company in Los Angeles. An accompanying montage featuring photos of Parker and Stone and Van Gogh over audio from a radical Islamic preacher ends with the words “the dust will never settle down.” In the end, all references to Muhammad, including long stretches of dialogue and the offending image — which was covered up by a large black “censored” bar — were bleeped from the show by Comedy Central in the second of a two-part episode. On Thursday night, the duo posted a statement about the controversy on their Web site, writing, “In the 14 years we’ve been doing South Park we have never done a show that we couldn’t stand behind. We delivered our version of the show to Comedy Central and they made a determination to alter the episode. It wasn’t some meta-joke on our part. Comedy Central added the bleeps. In fact, Kyle’s customary final speech was about intimidation and fear. It didn’t mention Muhammad at all but it got bleeped too. We’ll be back next week with a whole new show about something completely different and we’ll see what happens to it.” A spokesperson for Comedy Central (which is owned by MTV Networks) had no comment. The offending episode was set up last week in a show in which some of the hundreds of celebrities who’ve been skewered by “South Park” over the years threaten to file a class-action lawsuit against the titular Colorado town if South Park didn’t fly in the prophet, who they believe has the power to save them from ridicule. In the second part, which aired this week, Muhammad does arrive, dressed in a bear costume. The “South Park” site notes that the pair do not have the approval to stream their original version of the episode online, so it’s unclear which bleeps were theirs and which were inserted by Comedy Central. This is not the first time Parker and Stone have walked this fine line. In a two-part 2006 episode about censorship, they tried to depict Muhammad but were censored by the network, though the prophet did make an appearance in a 2001 episode as part of the Super Best Friends, a superhero-like gathering of religious icons. The network’s decision was likely inspired not just by the Van Gogh murder and threat, but by the international uproar in 2005 over cartoons in a Danish newspaper that showed various images of Muhammad, including one in which the prophet wore a bomb as a turban.

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‘South Park’ Creators Say Muhammad Episode Was Censored Without Their Approval

Moment of Truth: Banksy is Selling, But Are You Buying?

Welcome back to Moment of Truth, Movieline’s weekly spotlight on the best in nonfiction cinema. This week, we hear from John Sloss, the veteran sales agent-turned-rookie distributor of Banksy’s directing debut Exit Through the Gift Shop. It opens Friday in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Leave it to mischievous street-art godhead Banksy to completely overturn cinema with his first foray into feature filmmaking, Exit Through the Gift Shop . More specifically, leave it to Banksy to permute the documentary genre with expert zeal, turning a film ostensibly about him into a film about its original director. It sounds both more and less complicated than it really is when you think about it — a testament to the shadowy artist’s dexterity with narrative and character. But what about his dexterity with facts?

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Moment of Truth: Banksy is Selling, But Are You Buying?