Why I want to see TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD at Trinity


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The reactions are coming in and word has it that Trinity Repertory’s adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird is a hit. With a few weeks left to see the show, it is worthwhile here to consider its meaning.

Mockingbird smallObviously it begins with a book, the classic novel by the recently-deceased Harper Lee. As made clear last year with the release of her sequel volume Go Set a Watchman, she continues to hold many millions enchanted by her semi-autobiographical story of a small town lawyer who defends a black man in the 1930’s south in a trial that holds up to the lens the inner logic of racism, all witnessed through the eyes of his daughter and her best friend (a stand-in for that old southern belle Truman Capote). Though she denied it for decades, many felt that the plot was a re-imagining of the infamous Scottsboro boys trial from around the same time. I am not certain either way, particularly considering how the text eschews anything remotely akin to the Old Left notion of class solidarity against racism in exchange for some middle class Liberal ideology.

Yet despite those points, the story is still important precisely because it serves as a stark reminder of why Liberalism’s effort at desegregation without liberation, Gregory Peck instead of Malcolm X, has led us to the funerals of Trayvon and so many other successors of Tom Robinson. As an effort to update the text, the stars have included breakaway monologues narrating their own modern struggles with issues stemming from the text. Yet until we find a way to embrace liberation, it seems like no update is necessary.

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An ode to stamps: ‘Thousands of Little Colored Windows’


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hendrix stampWhen I was a boy I had a next door neighbor who had shelves in his office lined with stamp albums. He gave me and my brother a starter album and a few stamps each and we were on our merry way. From time to time I find a stamp in the mail that I like and I archive it with a bit of nostalgia for this childhood hobby.

Students in Brown’s Museum Collecting and Collections class know this nostalgia. Professor Steven Lubar’s class curated the University stamp collection for an exhibition of postage stamps until May 13, 2016 at the John Hay Library.

“Their research uncovers the breadth of the collections and highlights the numerous ways in which postage stamps and postal history hold relevance to social history, political and cultural studies,” says a preview of the show.

Said another way: You can learn so much about a person based on the stamp they use. I always get a little kick when Ray Rickman drops an envelope in the mail for me because he quite often decorates it with the visage of an important figure in American black history. It was Ray who gave me a Martin Luther King, Jr. stamp that I treasure and put beside my Rosa Parks ikons.

From stamps, you can learn if a person prefers Elvis or Jimi Hendrix. Try gleaning that from their email address! There are Soviet stamps that carried images of Palestinians, Nelson Mandela, and Che Guevara! Stamps provide these small opportunities to understand the effort a government makes to tap into a populist current within the culture and utilize it so to encourage investment in infrastructure (which the postal service is, by the way).

The insight into the statecraft of a given year a stamp is issued and the psychology of a given sender (especially if they are one of those diabolical masterminds who only buys stamps featuring finches, a true sign of megalomania) is fascinating. Did you know that the person who is constantly sending you mail using Disney characters might in fact be a certifiable serial killer? I’m not sure either but anyone perverted enough to buy those stamps must be a little Huey, Dewy, and Louie upstairs! When you begin seeing correspondents sending you stamps featuring the Olympic emblem and various sports, you can easily build a computerized database of people that know where you live who got beat up by the jocks in high school and might go postal in a relatively short time!

Considering the major disappointment that came to baseball card collectors when the steroids report showed there had not been a valid World Series in my lifetime, I am very proud I stayed with philately instead of that philistinism. I know for sure I will never hear about the Postmaster General using the juice!

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While Obama is in Havana, watch Steven Soderbergh’s CHE films


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There is a profound irony, no doubt influenced by President Barack Obama’s neoliberal pedigree, that comes with watching the nation’s first black president touch down in a country whose revolution was successful in part because its leaders abolished American-imposed Jim Crow racism laws overnight as part of their ascent to power. I am personally one who finds a huge level of solidarity with the Cuban revolution and look with great anxiety at what could take place in the coming years. And to encourage others to find similar solidarity, I would highly encourage they watch Steven Soderbergh’s epic two part Che film.

Released in 2008 just after capitalism had proven yet again it is a force of destruction, the pictures bombed at the box office for a few reasons. It was long, in Spanish, and there was just enough anti-Communism left in the wider American public, prior to the Occupy Wall Street movement, to hinder a potential audience. But after eight years of an abysmal neoliberal presidency that has been one disaster after another, along with the revelations from Assange, Snowden, and Manning that show the NSA behaves worse than the Stasi ever did, I think there is a fresh audience waiting to watch this picture.

Part 1, The Argentine, is a fantastic war movie that retells the story of Che Guevara’s leadership in the mountains of Cuba as they creep towards Havana, converting peasants and workers who live in poverty to their cause. As a frame narrative, Soderbergh shows in stark black and white Guevara’s visit to the United Nations several years later wherein he rebukes the NATO-aligned western imperialists to cheers from the delegates representing the Soviet Union and Africa. Watching the film gives one a tremendous amount of respect for the cause of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, and Che. Watching Benicio Del Toro as Che lecture the UN about patria o muerte, one recalls the words of Frantz Fanon in The Wretched of the Earth:

Castro attending the UN in military uniform does not scandalize the underdeveloped countries. What Castro is demonstrating is how aware he is of the continuing regime of violence. What is surprisings is that he did not enter the UN with his submachine gun; but perhaps they wouldn’t have allowed that.

Indeed.

Part 2, Guerilla, is about the ill-fated effort Che led in Bolivia trying to foment revolution. Due to a series of circumstances beyond his control, including sectarianism in the Latin American Communist movement caused by the Sino-Soviet split and a lack of tactical advantage that Che has responsibility for ultimately, the operation is an ill-fated debacle. Whereas the first film was a picture made up of wide panoramas, this second one is full of tight close-ups and atmospheric shots that make the story feel more like a suspense thriller. As we watch the mission fail, it brings home for the viewer why the efforts of Hugo Chavez, Evo Morales, Lula, and the rest of the Bolivarian revolution was so vital for the Global South. And that is how a film that ends with the death of the protagonist can be a happy ending, for we know the future has potential.

I am of course quite disturbed by recent developments in the Global South that demonstrate the empire is on the offensive. Recent events in South Africa led one ANC official to say that a coup was being fomented by agents in the American embassy and was based around Obama’s Young African Leadership Initiative, an organization which expanded into the country shortly after the death of President Nelson Mandela. This is important to understand because Cuba is a historic ally of the ANC, having sent troops and weapons to aid them in the anti-apartheid border wars. At the same time, Argentina and Venezuela have seen American-backed electoral victories that deliver their people back into the maw of neoliberalism. Events in Bolivia and Ecuador also indicate this trend is a serious threat. Should Obama get his way, Cuba would be encircled by enemies once again while being wracked by debt that CEOs are arriving in Havana to unleash this week. Looking again to Fanon, we find these words: [T]he liquidation of the Castro regime will be quite peaceful.

For now, all we can do as Leftists is stand in solidarity against empire and war while agitating others to the cause.

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Hip Hop 4 Flint in Providence Saturday


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Hip Hop for FlintHip Hop 4 Flint, an all ages show, is this Saturday, March 19 from 2-6pm at Avenue Concept, 304 Lockwood Street in Providence. Tickets are available here.

Providence, Rhode Island is one of 42 cities that will participate in a global fundraising initiative bringing together the Hip-Hop community in solidarity and support for the people of Flint and in partnership with the non-profit Price of Peace Missionary Baptist Church. Hip Hop 4 Flint will gather local, national, and international hip-hop artists, journalists, activists, educators and supporters to raise funds to purchase water filtration systems for the homes of the residents of Flint, MI. The lead organizer for Providence is Chenae Bullock. She has built a team of local Providence businesses, organizations, and talent to host an artist showcase that will help to raise $80,000 for the people involved in the Flint water crisis in Flint, MI.

YoNasDa Lonewolf, an emcee, published writer and activist who focuses her work on human rights, indigenous rights, and social justice, is the national leader for Hip-Hop 4 Flint. She was the creator of Hip-Hop 4 Haiti which took place on January 30, 2010 in 32 major cities. The youth and hip hop community hosted events to raise money, relief and awareness for the survivors of the devastating hurricane that hit Haiti in 2010.

Hip Hop 4 Flint will bring together notable Hip Hop artists such as Du “Doital” Kelly of Legendary Lords of the Underground, Hakim Green from Channel Live, Jon Connor of Afterman, Nappy Roots, and local artists from each city to join hearts and hands in support of the people of Flint. To help the cause, we have partnered with emcees OCKZ, SKYZOO, and QUADIR LATEEF who will donate 20 percent of the proceeds from the “Rise Up” iTunes single to #HIPHOP4FLINT. The single sells for $.99 on iTunes.

The overall goal is to raise $80,000 collectively among the 45 cities, about $2,000 from each city. The money will go to purchase water filters that will get the lead & other things out of the water. We are shooting to get two per household, one for the kitchen and one for the bathroom as well as plumbers to install them correctly. Prince of Peace Church is the designated 501c3 organization that will accept the money.

The city of Flint, MI is home to 100,000 residents, of which 40 percent are living in poverty, with an average income of $25,000. In 2014, while the city was under the control of a state appointed emergency manager, the city switched its water source from Lake Huron to the Flint River. The city saw a sharp increase in lead levels that were well above the EPA’s standards of safety, exposing the city’s 9,000 children to water with lead levels that are classified as toxic waste and leading to the declaration of a citywide state of emergency. The children of Flint have been hit the hardest, which some experience permanent and devastating health defects from lead poisoning. In addition to lead contamination, there is a larger problem looming in Flint with a recent outbreak of legionella bacteria, which infects the lungs, causing pneumonia, which is then referred to as Legionnaires Disease. To date there have been ten deaths due to Legionnaires Disease.

Providence will be one of the 42 cities organizing and fundraising to purchase home water filtration systems for residents that will filter both lead and bacteria throughout the entire home, making the water safe for both consumption and washing.

Hip Hop 4 Flint Providence will host an artist showcase that will be streamed live on ALLHIPHOP.com and Stagehound TV.

We currently have a Go Fund Me for those that would like to make a donation. All money will go toward the purchase of filters, which will be delivered personally, home by home, to the residents of Flint by the Hip Hop 4 Flint delegation.

IWW to screen The Wind That Shakes the Barley for St. Patrick’s Day


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The Providence Industrial Workers of the World will be holding a screening of the award-winning Irish war film The Wind That Shakes the Barley on St. Patrick’s Day at their new space at 375 Smith Street in Providence.

Set during the early days of the Irish Republic, it tells the story of the War for Independence and Civil War from the perspective of two brothers caught in the divisive politics of the Irish Republican Army at the time of the partition of the country. It stars Cillian Murphy, Orla Fitzgerald, and Pádraic Delaney. Directed by radical artist Ken Loach, the film proposes a socialist alternative to the historiography of the Irish struggle and frames the violence as part of a wider post-colonial national liberation struggle.

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DONALDETICUS TRUMPILIUS

Human Evolution from Ape to Man Royalty Free Stock Photography

American Neanderthal
Seems like the perfect name to call
Those goons who crowd around his stage
Like cavemen from the Iron Age

Their eyes are bugged, their mouths are wide
They wave their fists from side to side
A thousand strong to hear the king
Yet they don’t bother listening

Hateful language The Donald spews
For them is hardly breaking news
Their lack of judging right from wrong
Was theirs before Trump came along

But what they never had was hope
Some pride when being called a dope
Trump proved dumb is worth defending!”
#Neanderthal may soon be trending.

c2016pn

Review: Where to Invade Next


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Michael Moore is one of the most frustrating documentary film makers in human history and Where to Invade Next is no exception to that rule. On the one hand, he is on the Progressive/Left side of the spectrum and that means almost by default one must show support for a film advocating to a mass audience policy moves only a crazy person would deny are vital to any future for America. On the other hand, his sight-gag style of slogan suggestions instead of actual policy advocacy are so underwhelming it begs comparison with a Utopian college kid who has no idea how governance works. And after over thirty years of this repeated modus operandi, one cannot help but seriously ask if his efforts have been failures because of his own designs.

The plot is amazingly simple: Moore goes on an idealized European vacation and “invades” countries to “steal” policy ideas that he thinks we need to implement in America. In Italy, he falls in love with a vibrant union movement and their multiple weeks of paid vacation per year along with a two hour lunch break. In France, the fact that kids are served real food on actual tableware and the mealtime is a class on table manners that astounds him. The Portuguese drug decriminalization policies which reduced fatalities and drug arrests are obviously meant to be emulated, according to several cops who offer words of wisdom to their American counterparts. The German and Finnish education systems, with emphasis on child well-being and education about reparations for past genocides, are obviously vitally needed. The Icelandic feminist revolution is jaw-dropping in power and breadth, making the battle in the 1970s over the Equal Right Amendment look pitiful. Slovenia’s free college education is genius. And his stop by Tunisia, where the healthcare system subsidizes family planning and abortion care in a majority-Muslim country, proves a great deal is possible within the confines of Islamic governance.

Yet at the same time, all Moore offers are slogans. This is a repeated motif in his work that has hindered his success and sometimes ends up being detrimental to his efforts. For example, if he had been more articulate in Sicko about the exact details regarding healthcare reform, would we have ended up with the detestable Affordable Care Act, a law that does not provide single-payer healthcare and instead levies fines against you for not buying insurance from a private company? If he had made a genuine set of platform planks to hold John Kerry to in Fahrenheit 9/11, would the 2004 campaign ended in a victory for Bush?

I decided to sit down for an in-depth conversation with Louis Proyect, a New York-based film critic whose reviews of the film impressed me greatly, for a Left-leaning film critique that is based in both a Marxist philosophical view and our mutual love of film. It is worth noting that Louis and I have a variety of disagreements on any number of other topics in the news cycle and when we disagree it can be quite passionate. But it seems that here our conversation was quite fruitful. He has previously written on Moore’s work in a variety of essays that are quite good.

Furthermore, it is not like Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel always loved each other.

WTIN

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Artist Susanna Segaloff’s work shines at Little Falls


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Little Falls Bakery and Cafe, located on Broad Street in Pawtuxet Village, exhibits artworks by local creators every month. This month features the work of Susanna Segaloff, whose medium is based around use of paint and pastels on a variety of surfaces. She writes in her artistic statement:

I am a Rhode Island based Artist. My influences are my Father, my Aunt, and my Grandmother (Rivka Angel) who was a well known Artist in her day.
I have grown up around art my whole life and I have a feel and respect for nature and the world. I have always taken the time to stop and look at colors, shapes, wind, sounds, faces, and every part of the world in which we live. My art to me represents my mind’s view of life, death, happiness, and pain. It is my hand’s interpretation of what I see. This is who I am as an artist.

Interested parties can contact her via the following methods:

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Sunday night movie: American Radical- The Trials of Norman Finklestein


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Rhode Island’s Future is dedicated to providing both quality news and analysis while also giving showcase to amazing arts and entertainment programming. As part of this, we will host a new Sunday Night Movie column that goes out of the way to find the quirky, kooky, and weird material we know our readers will enjoy. This week we present the documentary AMERICAN RADICAL.

AMERICAN RADICAL is an engaging, at times infuriating story of the son of two Holocaust survivors who gave his career and life to the cause of Palestinians and said loudly “not in my name”. Well worth your time.

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Sunday Night Movie: MANUFACTURING CONSENT: NOAM CHOMSKY AND THE MEDIA


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MANUFACTURING CONSENT is a fantastic primer on the great anarchist and activist Noam Chomsky. This film is truly one of my all-time favorites and is highly recommended.

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Sunday Night Movie: THE SHOCK DOCTRINE


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Rhode Island’s Future is dedicated to providing both quality news and analysis while also giving showcase to amazing arts and entertainment programming. As part of this, we will host a new Sunday Night Movie column that goes out of the way to find the quirky, kooky, and weird material we know our readers will enjoy. This week we present the documentary adaptation of Naomi Klein’s THE SHOCK DOCTRINE.

This is not a perfect film. However, I think it is quite accessible and helps us better understand the trends in this ideology that we all need to be wary of.

Shock Doctrine poster

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Sunday Night Movie: THE INCONVENIENT TRUTH BEHIND WAITING FOR SUPERMAN


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Rhode Island’s Future is dedicated to providing both quality news and analysis while also giving showcase to amazing arts and entertainment programming. As part of this, we will host a new Sunday Night Movie column that goes out of the way to find the quirky, kooky, and weird material we know our readers will enjoy. This week we show you the movie that the corporate charter school lobby doesn’t want you to see, THE INCONVENIENT TRUTH BEHIND WAITING FOR SUPERMAN.

Produced by a group of activist-teachers and students in New York, this film defenestrates the charter school argument and proves why unionized teachers in public schools are the hope for America’s future. Perhaps Mayor Elorza and his cronies in the Mayoral Academies should listen up!

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Sunday Night Movie: LAKE OF FIRE


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Rhode Island’s Future is dedicated to providing both quality news and analysis while also giving showcase to amazing arts and entertainment programming. As part of this, we will host a new Sunday Night Movie column that goes out of the way to find the quirky, kooky, and weird material we know our readers will enjoy. This week following the banal nonsense of the anti-choice crowd, led by theoverwrought Barth Bracy, we present Tony Kaye’s amazing documentary LAKE OF FIRE.

LAKE OF FIRE is quite honestly one of the most difficult films I ever have seen. Tony Kaye, director of AMERICAN HISTORY X, spent over a decade filming an examination of every aspect of the American abortion debate and created a chilling, heartbreaking journey through not just a controversial medical procedure but feminism and misogyny in America itself. Along with leading feminists and philosophers, we also take a chilling look at the anti-choice jihadi army that Bishop Tobin has no problem fraternizing with on a regular basis. I have previously written about why I feel it is the duty of all feminists to get this shown to as many audiences as possible and protect the right to choose from a bunch of goons who did not give a good damn about child safety when Bishop Gelineau was the Bishop of Providence.

As a final note, it is worth emphasizing that when I say the film examines everything, I mean EVERYTHING, so there is some graphic footage contained herein.

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Poetically Correct


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Mom's Family: Alice vs. The Electric Typewriter

POETICALLY CORRECT

Hurry up imagination
Breaking news on every station
Need to cover each disaster
Wish the words were coming faster
Something for the Paris sorrow
Said they wanted it tomorrow
San Bernardino needs a verse
To help dispel their ISIS curse
The global warming wears me out
Deadly floods and quakes and drought
Are squeezing me day after day
For still another way to say
That life is just a coin that’s tossed
Some lives are saved, some lives are lost
A tale for novelists to tell
“My cell phone’s ringing. Where the hell…?”
c2016pn

Sunday Night Movie: FORGIVENESS


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Rhode Island’s Future is dedicated to providing both quality news and analysis while also giving showcase to amazing arts and entertainment programming. As part of this, we will begin a new Sunday Night Movie column that goes out of the way to find the quirky, kooky, and weird material we know our readers will enjoy. This week we present the amazing Israeli film FORGIVENESS, directed by Udi Aloni!

Udi Aloni has created an amazing, haunting film that can rightfully be equated with the best works of Stanley Kubrick. He takes on the ever-divisive issue of the Israel-Palestine conflict and delivers a film that is blistering in its critique. Aloni spares no punches and presents an anti-colonialist rebuttal to the morally-decrepit but masterfully-animated WALTZ WITH BASHIR. He follows the journey of David, a New York boy who joins the IDF and ends up shooting a young Palestinian girl. After having a breakdown, he goes for treatment in a mental institution built over the ruins of Deir Yassin, the Palestinian village that was the site of a massacre of brutal proportions during the 1948 Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine overseen by the various Zionist militias that would soon after coalesce into the IDF. Aloni, the son of a culture minister in one of Yitzak Rabin’s governments, has created a picture that will go down as one of the finest his country has ever produced. Viewers should take note of the level of critique Aloni uses and allow it to strengthen their own resolve when confronting racism at home and abroad.

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The Bernie Sanders audio documentary about Eugene V. Debs


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Screen Shot 2016-01-23 at 2.31.30 PMBack in 1979, Bernie Sanders, well before he was elected as Mayor of Burlington that launched his political career, produced with the Smithsonian Folkways label an audio documentary about Prisoner Number 9563 himself, Eugene V. Debs. Some folks have kindly uploaded the material to YouTube and so we are proud to feature it here, along with the liner notes.

Debs was a monumental figure whose life continues to define the American Left. His famous railroad strike was described as such by one website:

The Pullman Strike of 1894 was the first national strike in United States history. Before coming to an end, it involved over 150,000 persons and twenty-seven states and territories and would paralyze the nations railway system. The entire rail labor force of the nation would walk away from their jobs. In supporting the capital side of this strike President Cleveland for the first time in the Nation’s history would send in federal troops, who would fire on and kill United States Citizens, against the wishes of the states. The federal courts of the nation would outlaw striking by the passing of the Omnibus indictment. This blow to unionized labor would not be struck down until the passing of the Wagner act in 1935. This all began in the little town of Pullman, Illinois, just south of Chicago.

Upon the outbreak of World War I, he decried the imperialist carnage and agitated despite the use of the espionage act to silence the anti-war movement that was telling the proletariat that they had nothing to gain from serving in an army that obeyed the whims of the capitalist class. His imprisonment for this agitation made it hard for him to keep abreast of the exciting and divisive events that happened in the American Left following the Bolshevik Revolution and the rise of the Communist movement across the globe. Debs wished for socialist unity despite the schism between pro- and anti-Leninist currents in the Left but also found a great deal of agreement with the Bolshevik calls for peace, land, and bread. Arguably no greater socialist has followed in his footsteps in the century since this climactic period of his life.

For a good selection of primary sources related to Debs, visit the Marxist Internet Archive.

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About that Godfather Epic on HBO…


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The big hoopla this weekend is that HBO is airing the so-called GODFATHER EPIC, a 7-hour version of the first two Coppola classics that is loaded with extra scenes (thankfully they have decided to avoid the final picture, most remembered for Sofia Coppola impersonating a bowl of spaghetti while getting into some freaky incest with her bastard cousin). Of course, anyone in the know should understand that this is not new territory. In fact, it speaks to how bad things are at HBO when they are scraping the bottom of the barrel and re-airing things that ran on network television back in 1977.

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That’s right, this is actually quite an old tatarella.

Back in that once upon a time of the late 70’s, before the VCR made home videos of theatrical films the norm, the world was a darker place. Not only was it impossible for your toddler to watch their favorite Disney film 9,000 times per week, there were three television networks and PBS, which tended to actually be the most entertaining channel of all because they ran footage of a British mental asylum titled Monty Python‘s Flying Circus. In such a universe, people listened to music on vinyl and 8-tracks while best-selling books had television advertisements. “Those were the days!

For some reason probably due to the fact that Francis Ford Coppola had decided to throw tons of money into a fiery pit of madness that he called Apocalypse “My film isn’t about Vietnam, it IS Vietnam” Now, the folks at American Zoetrope needed cash quick. Little Georgie Lucas had just hit the jackpot with his silly little space movie about gay robots but not even a loan from that nerd was going to save the day.

hqdefaultSo in a bout of absolute brilliance, he went to NBC with a 2-for-1 deal. He said they could have the broadcast rights for the two GODFATHER films and re-cut them into a chronological super-film to broadcast over four evenings, calling it “A Novel for Television.” And, to make up for the cuts made by the censors, he threw in a pile of cut footage. Over the years, as Coppola has proceeded to not produce anything watchable, he has gone back to this routine several times, releasing on video cassettes of the Corleone epic refashioned and re-spliced to appease the absolutists who must see every frame he ever shot for these movies.

But there are two things at play that no one dares mention: this is a complete money grab at the expense of good taste and you must be absolutely bonkers to actually want to sit for 7 hours to see all this. Honestly, is there anyone stupid enough to sit on their behind for 7 hours of anything? Baseball games don’t last that long! Women have given birth in shorter lengths of time! I have been to weddings and funerals that had a quicker pace, and I say that as an Italian whose patriarchal grandmother’s maiden name was DePasquale (no relation)! Don’t people who are thinking of watching this have lives?

Of course, the other problem I have is that this whole thing is the storytelling equivalent of a decapitated horse’s head.

Let’s begin with the idea that you should rip apart GODFATHER II, which won Best Picture for a reason. Coppola and Mario Puzo did something that was truly groundbreaking with that film, they told two totally different stories divided by 50 years and an entire language! You could almost call it dialectical (I suspect Coppola is more of a Lefty than he lets on) with what they did, creating a thesis of the rising Corleone crime family under a young Vito (played by an Italian-language only DeNiro) juxtaposed with the anti-thesis of that family’s fall under a morally-decrepit Michael (played by Pacino). The film itself as a whole is a synthesis. But by splitting them up, you get an oddly-paced, over-long soap opera.

Of course, the original film is a more traditional picture. It is tightly edited and paced so that its 3 hours pass quickly. By re-inserting scenes that were left on the cutting room floor, the entire thing is thrown off kilter. Why bother? Is it absolutely necessary to listen to every burp and fart Luca Brasi makes before he meets his fate? Before there were the Star Wars Special Editions, there was The Godfather Epic.

No thanks. Instead, I prefer my own creatively-edited fun.

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Providence Student Union launches #OurHistoryMatters campaign


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2016-01-20 PSU 014The Providence Student Union (PSU) rallied outside the Providence School Department Wednesday to demand Ethnic Study classes be taught for credit in high school. The event served as a kickoff to the PSU’s #OurHistoryMatters campaign, to counter the lack of representation of the Latino, Black, Southeast Asian, and American Indian population in the school’s classes.

PSU was joined in their effort by representatives from PrYSM, the EJLRIYouth in Action and DARE as well as community and labor leaders.

Recent studies have shown that high school students perform better when race and ethnicity classes are offered. A Guardian report on a Stanford University study said, “Student attendance increased by 21%, while grade-point averages surged nearly a grade and a half for those enrolled in the class – striking results, according to the researchers.”

Students spoke passionately about the lack of representation in their history classes (see video below). They also resented having to learn real history outside of school. “I just recently learned the truth about Columbus Day,” said Diane Gonzalez from Central High School. “I didn’t know who Columbus really was, until I learned it with Providence Student Union, in one of our mini workshops about oppression… I’m Guatemalan, and I have no idea about our history at all.”

“This is an undeniable problem,” said Afaf Akid, a senior at E-Cubed Academy and a PSU youth leader, in  a statement. “We did an analysis of the American history textbook we use in Providence, and our results were shocking. Of our textbook’s 1,192 pages, fewer than 100 pages are dedicated to people of color. That’s less than 10% of our history curriculum, in a district where 91% of the students are people of color. That is unacceptable. And, of course, the few references to people of color are problematic as well, often treating issues like slavery and colonialism as neutral or even positive developments. We deserve better.”

“The oppression of enslaved African-Americans and Native Americans is disguised as… ‘cultural exchange,'” said Licelit Caraballo, “the hardships that Asians had to endure as they migrated to the US is viewed as just ‘seeking work’ when they were also treated as slaves. Our history books don’t cover these topics.”

A very interesting part of the presentation consisted of holding up black and white posters of famous activists of color, and asking those in attendance if they knew the people pictured. First up was Bayard Rustin, a leader in civil rights, socialism, nonviolence, and gay rights written out of civil rights history because of his homosexuality and atheism. Also held up was Fred Hampton of the Black Panther Party, Grace Lee Boggs, author, social activist, philosopher and feminist born here in Providence, Dolores Huerta, labor leader and civil rights activist and Ella Baker, civil and human rights activist.

“We think it should be pretty self-evident that Providence students need a more culturally relevant curriculum,” said Justin Hernandez, a junior at Hope High School and a PSU school delegate. “But if those in charge of our school system need convincing, we are ready. We’re used to tough fights, from ending the unfair NECAP graduation requirement to expanding bus passes. And we are excited to do whatever it takes to win ethnic studies courses and move our schools a little closer towards providing us the education we deserve.”

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Sunday Night Movie: STAR WARS I-III: A PHANTOM EDIT


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Rhode Island’s Future is dedicated to providing both quality news and analysis while also giving showcase to amazing arts and entertainment programming. As part of this, we will begin a new Sunday Night Movie column that goes out of the way to find the quirky, kooky, and weird material we know our readers will enjoy. As our inaugural effort we present STAR WARS I-III: A PHANTOM EDIT!

Created by editor Andrew Kwan, this is a brilliant work that will stun both fans and the casual viewer. Kwan has remixed the six hours of problematic prequels into a tightly-edited two hours of STAR WARS bliss. Using all of five minutes of EPISODE I, fifty minutes of EPISODE II, and leaving the remainder for EPISODE III, he has created a picture that is almost totally Jar-Jar free and makes Anakin Skywalker into a truly tragic figure as opposed to a whiny brat.

David Bowie, 1947-2016


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bowie_aladin_sane_1000pxZiggy Stardust has made his final departure and is now with Major Tom, the Spiders from Mars, and the angel-ghost of Freddie Mercury, leaving a legacy of amazing music and terribly problematic personal choices. There is much that can be said about Bowie’s artistic range and output, from his early glam rock albums to his jaunt with creepy Muppets to his under-stated and quite good cameo as Nikola Tesla in Christopher Nolan’s THE PRESTIGE.

But I would prefer to go to the heart of the matter, what always defined Bowie: sex.

In these days when the Janet Jackson Nipple-Gate Super Bowl fiasco seems tame, it is almost impossible to remember just how much of a sexual performer Bowie was in 1968. In the days before Stonewall, there were exceptions like Mick Jagger, but the rock music scene was a homophobic, testosterone-saturated, misogynist locker room that allowed the public a peak at the high-class bacchanal every night via a concert auditorium. Perhaps the finest rendition of this can be found in two films, Cameron Crowe’s absolutely classic ALMOST FAMOUS and the absolutely unseen Robert Frank-Rolling Stones documentary COCKSUCKER BLUES.

The first film is about an under-aged Rolling Stone reporter who almost accidentally falls into the wonderland of a rock band’s tour of the American heartland. What we witness is a bunch of over-grown children, far more immature than the actual child in their presence, who treat women like garbage. The most stunning instance of sexism in the film is when the roadies from several bands trade female groupies around in exchange for cases of beer. The anti-heroine of the film, a Tiny Dancer named Penny Lane, is treated like a piece of meat and driven to attempted suicide by a pathetic, cowardly pig of a lead guitarist who needs to hide her from his wife. It is also worth noting the film includes in its climax a drummer who surprises everyone by coming out of the closet. What exactly do you think kept him from doing so beforehand?

The second is a legend in the annals of rock history, a treasure akin to the last bootleg tapes of the Grateful Dead live that have yet to be picked by Dick or perhaps a recording of the legendary lost weekend that Paul McCartney and John Lennon had in Manhattan in 1976. (Of course, I have owned a copy of CSB for over ten years, but that is another story.) Robert Frank was hired by the Rolling Stones to film their 1972 Exile on Main St. tour of the States. When the Stones watched the resultant picture, they had a panic attack and forbid Frank to show it, leading to a lawsuit that ruled the director can only show the film four times a year in an “archival setting” (whatever the hell that means). The film is a half-color footage of brilliant concert performances and half-monochrome (not as much black and white as blue and white) images of drugs, booze, and sex at a level not seen since Caligula’s horse was getting the royal treatment from Bob Guccione.

This does not justify and I do not pardon Bowie for his unacceptable sexual forays with underage groupies that were running around the tour buses with him and certain members of Led Zeppelin. But it also speaks to the context and nature of a period when rock music was allowing women to be treated like dirt. In all blunt honesty, are there any people walking this planet who are stupid enough to think that no one knew what Ike was doing to Tina Turner during this time period? Are there any sentient lifeforms who do not recognize the blatant sexism and racism aimed towards Yoko Ono when, in reality, Ringo, Paul, and George also had gotten married and built families in the years leading up to 1969, circumstances that dictate one must stop partying and playing music to commit that unthinkable crime of growing up?

When David Bowie came on the music scene, he was not openly homosexual or bisexual, he was blatantly androgynous, something perhaps more threatening than Liberace and Elton John having contests with Elvis for most rhinestones in one’s costume. Like the late Lou Reed shortly before him, no one was sure what exactly David Bowie was in terms of not just sexual orientation but gender. This was a period when being transgender was so taboo that one could be called a Space Oddity and here was a mainstream rock artist celebrating it. To deny his sexual misdeeds is wrong, but it is also wrong to deny that the popular dialogue was advanced in the right direction by the Bowie stage act almost in spite of his awful off-stage behavior.

In this sense, we can also have a nuanced take on his rather flaky and altogether inappropriate dalliances with fascism. In May 1976, in the persona of an album character called The Thin White Duke, a so-called “emotionless Aryan superman”, Bowie made what appeared to be a Nazi salute to a crowd of fans at Victoria Station. This was at a time when, two months later, the popular Notting Hill carnival, a British West Indian cultural festival, exploded into riots that put over 100 police officers in the hospital. At the same time, Eric Clapton had gone on stage and ranted about “black wogs and coons and Arabs and fucking Jamaicans”.

England was in the midst of an identity crisis of epic proportions, one that is hauntingly like the American political ennui in this sensationalized election year. The postwar welfare state and the promises of multiculturalism as a Labour Party political program for state-aided integration of minority populations was giving way to the infamous Winter of Discontent, a year when public sector unions were going on strike and in heated battles over wage increases with the Labour government, and the cultural angst amongst white Brits who were befuddled and scared to the point of xenophobia by an influx of postcolonial migrants from the old imperial outposts. The political Left and Right were both radicalized and trying to take hold in the seats of government while poor whites found themselves tending towards paranoid bigotry directed at Muslims and Africans. Back then the Trotskyists were trying to join the Labour Party and radically reshape the traditional mainstream left-of-center party just as Bernie Sanders does today. Margaret Thatcher’s populism and evocation of “something…deep in the English psyche: its masochism. The need which the English seem to have to be ticked off by Nanny and sent to bed without a pudding. The calculus by which every good summer has to be paid for by twenty bad winters. The Dunkirk Spirit-the worse off we are, the better we behave“, to use the words of the late Stuart Hall, is not unlike the candidacy and attendant enthusiastic support of Donald Trump, though The Donald has turned the Thatcherite animus for trade unions towards a mythical phantom haunting Asia he calls “China” (does he know where and what Japan, Vietnam, Thailand, Taiwan, and Indonesia are?).

When Bowie said two years earlier that Hitler was the first rock star and that “Britain is ready for a fascist leader… I think Britain could benefit from a fascist leader. After all, fascism is really nationalism… I believe very strongly in fascism, people have always responded with greater efficiency under a regimental leadership”, he was pretty bonkers because of addiction. But he also was speaking from an ugly, right-leaning place in the British psyche that had called the Empire beautiful. He was speaking from a part of the homo/bisexual spectrum that went well beyond embracing black rubber and leather and into the realm of militarism, nationalism, and political orgy, sexual and otherwise, that birthed the Nazi Ernst Rohm. Of course, after he spent enough time in Germany in the next decade to meet actual former Nazis and learn what was really at the core of the Third Reich, he pulled his hand back from the flames of Auschwitz. But the fact he went there shows us an artist who wanted to go in every direction with sex, even to the places in the homosexual experience that most sane gay men refuse to visit.

And all that before he met Jim Henson!

To lose David Bowie occasions and requires an honest reflection on his flaws and defects. But to merely harp on them without using them as entries into discussions to critique ourselves and the culture he changed is just as wrong as brushing off his failings as par for the course for the “time he lived in”. We cannot do anything but value the whole man, going back to the true Marxist definition of that word, “the proportion in which a certain number of use-values of one kind can be exchanged for a certain number of use-values of another kind“, here, insights and lessons.

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