Connect with us

Media Impact

The Subversive Golden Globes 2015

Avatar

Published

on

“Good evening and welcome you bunch of despicable, spoiled, minimally talented brats.”

Tina Fey began the Golden Globes with that biting sentiment. What was significant about the night though is the same thing that’s significant about the statement: it’s fucking true. And the truth kept coming… Transgender, rape, real women, North Korea and much more.  Revolutionary moments that happened so fast it is easy to forget them between commercial breaks. Since a dear friend of mine thought it was important to draw light to these small significant moments, here’s my little recap.

I guess I should say *Spoiler Alert* … but let’s face it. If you haven’t watched the golden globes by now, chances are you won’t. Although maybe after my ramblings you’ll Youtube a few clips – I sincerely hope so, especially because the most prominent one is included at the head of the article.

Opening the show with a Bang

Okay, so where were we? Oh, yes. The truth. In multitudes. Some of you are probably thinking: “yeah, sooooo, what’s the big deal?!”

For a show that’s usually about puffing up Hollywood’s ego amidst our obvious obsession with who was the worst dressed, rude, [insert the proper snarky comment]. “Do you really think he’s gay?” Oh and “did you hear that Edward Nortan doesn’t wear underwear to award shows? He’s so ballsy.” Yes, that pun was intended. I digress.

While award shows are usually a place to plug sound bites for upcoming projects, to get more Facebook likes on your fan page – or let’s face it, just be more superficially liked in general – this award show was a little different.

Different in what way? Let’s look closer at the awesome opening dual-monologue which Tina Fey and Amy Poehler delivered to many laughs, some more uncomfortable than others. One hilarious bit was about George Clooney’s highly accomplished new wife, Amal Alamuddin.

UNICEF_UK_(14281378624)_(cropped)“George Clooney married Amal Alamuddin this year. Amal is a human rights lawyer who worked on the Enron case, was an adviser to Kofi Annan regarding Syria and was selected to a three- person U.N. commission investigating rules of war violations in the Gaza strip. So, tonight, her husband, is getting a lifetime achievement award.”

Wait – is Hollywood actually admitting that what they’re doing is not as important as, like, saving lives? Yes, Hollywood and the movie industry have a huge influence on culture and society, but at the end of the day, most of Hollywood’s elite are not working with Doctors Without Borders or even doctors in the states. Though many of them pretend to, which is basically…NOT the same thing at all. So at least for this one night, we as an audience were asked to reconsider the importance of Hollywood, especially with so much civil unrest around the world, and wake up a little. To take the lime light off of Hollywood to focus on the real issues going on around the globe. While our society puts a massive amount of focus on the industry, possibly to keep us all a little distracted from the much more important issues going on globally, tonight we were asked to pay attention.

Well, that’s not very funny is it? Infusing some humor, we allow ourselves to accept the truth that’s too painful or ugly to approach in any other form. So it was with an uncomfortable laugh at itself that Hollywood continued its night.

Also in the opening monologue: an all too truthful quip about Selma. Let me take a moment to talk about the film Selma, since a lot of people have not heard about it, It’s a film that chronicles the 1965 Selma to Montgomery voting rights marches led by James Bevel, Hosea Williams and Martin Luther King Jr. It’s directed by Ava DuVernay. Shout out to women filmmakers! Not to mention I am a fan of her work. If you haven’t seen her film I Will Follow, check it out!

Back to Selma, it’s a shame more people didn’t go out to see this movie. Especially considering the current marches, protests that have erupted around the U.S. due to widespread police brutality and racial injustices. Just a few months ago a 129 mile march from Ferguson to the capital was organized by the NAACP. Which mirrored the 1960’s marches and protests. So, yeah, the film Selma may have a bit (A LOT) of cultural relevance right now. So when Tina Fey commented about Selma and the matches stating “…and that totally worked and now we have no more problems” it hits home a little harder. In January 2015 alone, there were over 60 marches across the U.S. Yes, last month. More than 60 marches. You read that right.

Quick side note, if you’re looking to get involved in any upcoming marches and/or protests check the website Fergusonresponse.com because there are over five dozen marches against racial injustice happening in one month. Yes, in 2015.

Awards as a Means of Reflecting and Projecting Change

Then the awards came and so did Maggie Gyllenhaal. Looking out at the audience and totally present, she begins:

“ I’ve noticed a lot of people talking about the wealth of roles for powerful women in television lately. And when I look around the room at the women who are here and I think about the performances that I’ve watched this year, what I see are actually women who are sometimes powerful and sometimes not, sometimes sexy and sometimes not, sometimes honorable, sometimes not. And what I think is new is the wealth of roles for actual women in television and film. That’s what I think is revolutionary and evolutionary, and it’s what’s turning me on.”

Yeah, well, it’s turning me on too. I am sure so many people reading this are thinking “Oh great, here comes another feminist rant.” This is not that [for the record, being a feminist just means believing that women should have equal rights to men. Why is that so scary? I digress again]. Maggie is saying it’s okay to not look pretty every second of the day, inside and outside of Hollywood. To be a sexual woman and not be labled a slut, to be weak, to be strong, to be complicated and a fucking human. And Hollywood has recently started mirroring this sentiment in its portrayal of women. It’s shifted in the last few years from not only the types of roles we see women in, but also the way women are portrayed specifically during sex.

Before, good women were expected to only enjoy sex as long as it had really soft lighting and was super gentle and vanilla. Men on the other hand could enjoy sex when it’s exploitative, rough, objectifying. If a woman was portrayed as a sexual being, it was at the mercy of a man – or because she was a manipulative slut. There are exceptions to this, of course. But, lets take our beloved Game of Thrones for instance: Most of the sex in that show is cheap titillation, directed at men. It objectifies women to pairs of jiggling tits for the most part. In direct contrast, a show like Outlander, the sexual titillation is directed at both women and men, acknowledging that women can be sexual and not slutty. Women can and are more than a virgin or a slut, a powerful executive or a housewife – be everything and anything in between.

Not even the Hollywood starlets under the thickest make-up that night could hide from the truth of Maggie’s words. Here is a real woman talking about actual real women that saying, “we are complicated and that’s human and okay.” That is profound. It’s the kind of thing that makes me excited to be a writer and entertainer in the 21st century. But the night didn’t stop there.

The Golden Globes Go Online

One quick observation: there are several shows in the “TV” category of the Golden Globes that are actually only released on the internet: Orange is the New Black (Netflix), Transparent (Amazon), and House of Cards (Netflix). I know this has been happening for a few years, but did we ever stop to think: “Wow! That’s revolutionary and NOBODY IS TALKING ABOUT IT?”

We literally have a new industry in Hollywood that is exclusively online. Meaning that in the future, a web series on YouTube channel may be up for an award at the Golden Globes. Or they may have to add a category. This is a sign of a huge shift in the traditional model of dominating studios and TV networks. One other side note: none of the films nominated for best picture were produced by a studio; they were all independently produced. Granted, some of those production companies are HUGE, but still it’s worth noting.

Moving right along to Transparent.  An amazingly honest show about a transgender man in the wake of him coming out to his family. Not only did it win best musical or comedy series, but the lead actor Jeffery Tambor took the golden globe for best male actor in a musical or comedy series.

“This is about changing peoples lives. This is about freedom.”

In a country that still has states where gay marriage is illegal I think this award choice is pretty significant.

transparent

When the creator of the show Jill Soloway accepted her award, she dedicated it to Leelah Alcorn, a transgender teen who recently committed suicide because she didn’t feel accepted. This win is a great first step towards people expressing the truth even if it makes them uncomfortable, self-reflective and – heaven forbid – having to change their dogmatic beliefs.

Moving on to Gina Rodriguez in “Jane the Virgin”. [Side note:  I may skip around trying to get all my “Holy-wow moment” out before I forget them.] So, Gina got up and said:

“this award is so much more than myself. It represents a culture that wants to see themselves as heroes.”

She’s referring to the Latino culture and its relevance in the United States. She’s asking the industry to create more diverse roles and casting choices so we are not exclusively seeing the typical mold of roles given to just another white male or female. She is calling for us to break down our internal stereotypes and be more open to the diverse world we live in. Again I was just struck by the unapologetic honesty and insight. I found myself clapping while watching the awards… alone in my room.

Then we had Joanne Froggatt who won her globe for her role on Downton Abby where her character endured rape and then was wrongfully accused of murdering her attacker. She spoke on the matter “After the storyline aired, I received a lot of letters from survivors of rape. Thank you to everyone who wrote – I heard you.”

A subject matter that carries a very shameful past. In a world where 1 in 3 women will be victims of sexual harassment or assault, many of those women will not report the crime either because of fear or tarnishing their reputation. Whether out of fear of being the perpetrated or shame, it’s a hard subject to tackle and one we still hold taboo. And, there it was, at the Golden Globes out in the open. And again I am so glad to be a female writer at this time in Hollywood.

Then the ever so charming Billy Bob Thorton who won for “Fargo” came up and said: “These days, you get into a lot of trouble for anything you say. So, I’m just going to say thank you…”

Whether a comment on the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack in Paris, the Sony hack or a reference his checkered past – it stood out. And echoing his sentiment in a humorous fashion, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler had a “North Korean representative”come in. Margaret Cho, dressed up as a North Korean member of the HFPA, took a selfie with Meryl Streep and was there to “keep everyone in line. While gandering a few laughs, it was a little too true in the wake of what’s really a global issue: Free speech. On that more serious note, Hollywood Foreign Press Association president Theo Kingma went on stage and proclaimed:

“The freedom of artistic expression…is a beacon across the globe. We stand united everywhere, from North Korea to Paris.”

Truly powerful words that were supported by George Clooney, Kathy Bates and Helen Mirren who wore “Je Suis Charlie” buttons as a sign of solidarity with the people killed in the Paris terrorist attacks. And later on during George Clooney’s acceptance of his Cecil B. DeMillie Award for lifetime achievement award, he said of the Charlie Hebdo massacre and the marches that followed: “They didn’t walk in protest. They marched in support of the idea that we will not walk in fear.”

There were many more magical, thought-provoking speeches throughout the night, which is why I highly recommend you take a look. But, one thing’s for sure:

For a bunch of make-believers and pretenders, it was a night of fearless, brutally beautiful, unapologetic truth.

Filmmakers

Out of the Basement: The Social Impact of ‘Parasite’

Avatar

Published

on

When Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite won multiple Oscars at this past weekend’s 92nd Academy Awards, the reaction was one of almost unanimous joy from the attendees and much of the American audience. Setting aside the remarkable achievement of a South Korean movie being the first to win Best Picture, this was due to the fact that so many people have been able to identify with Bong’s film, engaging in its central metaphor(s) in their own individual ways. Everyone from public school students to Chrissy Teigen have expressed their affection for the film on social media, proving that the movie has reached an impressively broad audience. The irony of these reactions is noting how each viewer sees themselves in the film without critique—those public school students find nothing wrong with the extreme lengths the movie’s poor family goes to, and wealthy celebrities praise the movie one minute while blithely discussing their personal excesses the next. Parasite is a film about class with a capital “C,” not a polemic but an honest and unflinching satire that targets everyone trapped within the bonds of capitalism.

fb5c33c338f6acebb936ed9f40d5037e

Part of Parasite’s cleverness in its social commentary is how it depicts each class in such a way as to support the viewer’s inherent biases. If you’re in the middle-to-lower classes, you find the Kim’s crafty and charming, and echo their critiques of the Park’s obscene wealth and ignorance. If you’re a part of the upper class, you empathize with the Park’s juggling of responsibilities while indulging in their wealth, and have a natural suspicion toward (if not revulsion of) the poor. If you have a foot in both worlds, like housekeeper Moon-gwang and her husband Geun-sae, you can understand how the two of them wish to not upset the balance, so that they can secretly and quietly profit. All throughout Parasite, there’s a point of view to lock onto.

The point of the film is not to single out one of these groups as villainous, but to show how they’re part of a system that is the true source of evil. The movie has been criticized for lacking a person (or persons) to easily blame, which would of course be more comforting dramatically. Bong (along with co-writer Han Jin-won) instead makes the invisible systems of class and capitalism the true culprit, which is seen most prominently at the end of the film. All the characters are present at the same party, whether as hosts, guests, help, or uninvited crashers, and each class group suffers a mortal loss. It’s all part of the tension built throughout the movie coming to a head, yet there’s an inevitability to these deaths as well, a price each group inadvertently pays to keep the corrupt system they’re all a part of running. In this fashion, the movie is reminiscent of several works of dystopian fiction, such as Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery,” and Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World.” The film particularly recalls Ursula K. Le Guin’s short story “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas,” in which a utopian society is dependent on the continual torture and misery of a single child. Every system demands sacrifice, and Bong and Han make clear that that sacrifice is paid many times over.

The real twist of the knife in Parasite is the epilogue, which reveals that the real point of the class and capitalist systems is to keep as many people in their place as possible. The Park’s remain wealthy, and easily move away from their old house. The Kim’s remain in their same squalid hovel, with their patriarch now stuck in the basement hideaway of the Park’s old home. In “Omelas,” the tortured child is kept in a basement, as well, and where that story tells of individuals who reject that system and choose to leave it, Parasite shows that everyone has chosen to stay, with the erroneous belief that they can eventually change their place. The film’s intense relatability is likely the main reason for it being so beloved, yet it’s the messages it sneaks in that will hopefully be its most lasting social impact. All of us are still trapped within the system, but at least the secret of how it fails us and how it lies has managed to escape the basement. Let’s hope we can eventually escape, too.

ahuZpSlA

Continue Reading

Media Impact

“Crip Camp”: Unified Disability opens Sundance 2020

Avatar

Published

on

What happens when a bunch of teenagers go to summer camp in their height of puberty? The wreak havoc, have a great time, try some contraband drugs, and fool around with each other in a virginity-defying quest for adulthood. What happens if these teenagers have Polio, Cerebral Palsy, Down Syndrome, Spina Bifida or MS? The same thing. Just with a lot more wheelchairs involved in the baseball games and make-out sessions.

That’s the world “Crip Camp” introduces us to – for the first 40 minutes of the film, we are immersed in a wonderfully “inappropriate” summer camp Jened in upstate New York. This camp, founded by parents of kids with Cerebral Palsy, operated for nearly 20 years (approx. 1960-1980 with a second 25-year-run in another location until the early 2000s, which isn’t mentioned in the film) and provided an un-sheltered source of freedom for disabled teenagers, and an opportunity for human connection and growth to camp counselors from all over the United States.

Pity VS Profanity

Many films about disability utilize pathos, pity and pain. They are careful in the treatment of their characters  and not to step on any toes – a bit like the THR review of the film.  And while there is a lot of that in a disabled person’s life – and in many people’s lives regardless of ability – there’s plenty of joy, profanity and profound insights to be had in a film about disability. And, unlike the THR tip-toeing, it’s massively liberating how the film dealt with disability. Not as weakness or fragility, but as a simple fact of life. These are awesome people sharing hilarious and moving insights in what it’s like to be in their shoes.

I might be stepping on toes here, but in my experience with friends and acqinantes with disabilities, none of them want to be linguistically or physically babied or touched with white gloves. There are obvious physical needs that different disabilities come with, but I don’t think it’s productive to be all too sensitive around a person with a disability – it creates the same sort of “separate but equal” impression that sending them off to their own school does. And I think this true equality, making fun of each other and treating each other like we’re on the same level, leads to much more honest relationships.

One of my personal favorites of this level-headed approaches in the film was one of the camp alums recounting a story of his first date in the camp, along the lines: “A camp counselor taught me how to kiss the night before. That was the best physical therapy I’ve ever received. And then the next day, I had my first date with this girl at the camp. She touched my … cock. It was wonderful.” I’ve had similar conversations with quadruplegic friends in my personal life. Many disabled teenagers are perverts just like the rest of us.

These are simply not the things you’d expect if you’re an outsider – but they are the common thread that break assumptions and prejudice. When someone curses on screen, you know you can practically trust them, and there’s no need to put on a pity party. The use of humor is brilliantly applied in Crip Camp to remove barriers – whether it’s barriers between disabled groups, or barriers between the disabled world and the other 80-ish% of the population.

You might say, oh please, we all have disabled people in our lives, and things are much better now. Sure, most of us know a number of people with disabilities. They make up about 20% of the world’s population, practically forming the largest minority on the globe – and it’s hard to avoid getting to know 1 in 5 people. That doesn’t change anything about the fact that there’s still no true equity, and while a lot has happened since the Camp Jened era of the 1960s, 2020 is still full of employment discrimination and false assumptions. As long as you’re not personally affected by birth, disability is easy to ignore. Well, chances are that 1 in 4 of 20-year-olds will become disabled before retirement.

A line in the film profoundly illustrates this invisible divide. Jim LeBrecht, one of the two directors of the film (along Nicole Newnham) and himself having been born with Spina Bifida, recalls his father giving him advice when he was admitted to a public school: “You’ll have to introduce yourself to other kids. You have to approach them and say hello, because they will be afraid to talk to you.”

As filmmakers from all walks of life, the portrayal of people with disabilities on screen is a challenge – not so much in this film because it’s a film made by the community for the community. For those that don’t quite have good access or understanding of disability, RespectAbility’s “Hollywood Disability Toolkit” is a truly comprehensive 50-page guide to do things better. Unfortunately, the guide doesn’t directly recommend to make your disabled characters swear and talk about teenage sexuality – but that doesn’t change anything about the fact that these are powerful tools to disarm your audiences’ potential “fear of the other”. In the end, we’re all just people that can relate to each other’s human experience.

Record Occupations and Missing Footnotes

The film allows us to follow the teenage troublemakers of Camp Janed into their adult lives, where a number of them become political activists, deeply involved in pushing disability rights issues. Crip Camp focuses on one of the campers with Polio, Judy Heumann, who leads a street blockade in 1970s New York for disability rights and then graduates to West Coast activism, gaining continuous steam for the cause, up to the epic mid-point of the film, where hundreds of people with disabilities stage the “504 Sit-In” in the Health, Education and Welfare offices of the Federal Building in San Francisco. Joseph Califano, administrator of the HEW at the time, was unwilling to sign Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which was supposed to ban publicly funded discrimination against people with disabilities. Judy and a number of other well-organized community leaders took over the building and made history: The sit-in was the longest occupation of a federal building in the existence of the U.S. (which the film doesn’t quite mention in its historical gravitas). Even Drunk History made an episode on this badass move.

The "Capitol Crawl", where wheelchair users of all kinds shed their wheelchairs and climbed the non-accessible stairs to the highest symbol of U.S. politics, the capitol.

The “Capitol Crawl”, where wheelchair users of all kinds shed their wheelchairs and climbed the non-accessible stairs to the highest symbol of U.S. politics, the capitol.

Up to this point, we’re wrapped up in a beautiful storyline of these teenagers-turned-activists, and appropriately traces the tremendous power the 504 sit-in and Judy Heumann’s delegation trip to Washington had with convincing Califano (after holding candlelight vigils in front of his house and following him to public appearances) to sign 504 into power.

The film then takes a bit of a leap of faith in simplifying the history of the American Disabilities Act of 1990, which followed nearly 17 years later. For the uninitiated, this is the act that put wheelchair ramps into place in all public buildings and gave a lot of protection to people with disabilities, opening up countless new avenues of opportunity – “to assure equality of opportunity, full participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency for individuals with disabilities.” I wondered many times what stars had to align for the disabled communities to have so much unified political power (as they had 30 years ago) to push through such an incredible piece of legislation. On an international level for example, countries like Austria and Japan have had quite pitiful disability laws in comparison to the U.S., usually lagging behind 15-25 years. The ADA was the first act in the world to give such wide support to people with disabilities, and positioned the Bush Senior-era U.S. as the global leader in disability relations.

The film’s narrative centers around direct action and activism like the Capitol Crawl. While these are cinematic moments and films need to simplify history to fit a narrative in a limited amount of time, it gives us a wrong impression of how history happens.

Work like the professional lobbying of Patrisha Wright, or the institutional recommendations of government agencies like the National Council on Disability were instrumental in shifting the tide in favor of the ADA, and the film unfortunately makes no mention of it. I’m not suggesting that the film is under an oscar-speech-style obligation of rattling down all people that should be thanked for the ADA, or that it needs to dive into the complicated politics at the top that made this happen. It would have simply been a nice gesture to have one of the interviewees give a footnote a la “a lot of other things had to work out, outside of our lead character’s activism, to get a historical bill like this put on the table and signed into existence.” As this film can serve as a role model for future activists, it carries some reasonable responsibility to not accidentally further a naive, romantic narrative of “magical activism and easy social change”.

Social change is incredibly difficult, and the people that achieve it study large scale systems, build powerful alliances and invest decades of their lives to utilize the right time in history in order to make a dent in the universe.

United towards Accessibility

This film is about people from all walks of disability and ability coming together to crush an unfair system and fight for accessibility. Together. United. The way it should be. The stories of Crip Camp and the ADA are rather rare exceptions to the usually fractured communities of people with disabilities. As you can imagine, each community has their own interests and doesn’t always see an incentive to support another community. Yet, politically speaking,  individual disabilities usually make up single-digit percentages on a global level, but all disabled communities united form a 15-20% front, the “largest minority in the world”, according to the WHO. The more united this front, the more likely things like the ADA can happen again and re-balance the world.

Watch Crip Camp and get inspired. Join or support an organization like RespectAbility that actively works on re-unifying the disability community for political leverage. As humans, we are better than just shunning our fellow humans because of some genetic variation, accident or other circumstance. There’s so much to be gained from creating an equally accessible world for all – and right now, that’s not the case.

Continue Reading

Media Impact

HBO’s Chance Morrison on Storytelling and Corporate Social Responsibility

Avatar

Published

on

“You are serving up medicine to people. You should be responsible enough to give people directions on how to take that medicine.”

Chance Morrison has worked at HBO for 11 years, holding various positions and currently working in the department for Corporate Social Responsibility.

Chance is a passionate advocate for impactful cinema, serving on the board of Bowery Residents Committee as Junior Board Chairwoman, creating the Ask Chance foundation to provide young women exposure to industry professionals, and earning herself the prestigious Time Warner Richard D. Parsons Award for Community Service in 2017.

She works on impact campaigns for all HBO content, ranging from Sesame Street to Euphoria.

 

Continue Reading

Trending

© 2020-2024 SIE Society. All Rights Reserved.