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26 Jun 06:54

Ken Burns: Confederate flag isn't about heritage. It's about resistance to civil rights.

by German Lopez

Ken Burns, the documentarian behind PBS's acclaimed The Civil War series, blasted the myth that the Confederate flag isn't a symbol of racism and white supremacy during a Thursday appearance on MSNBC's Morning Joe.

"I think what happens is that we build up over time the sense of an excuse about why it came," Burns said. "If you read … South Carolina's articles of secession in November — after [Abraham] Lincoln's election of 1860 — they don't mention states' rights, they don't mention nullification. They mention slavery over and over again."

He later added, "Those [Confederate] flags came in after Brown v. Board of Education. This is not about heritage. This is about resistance to civil rights."

With these two points, Burns is demonstrating how the Confederate battle flag has always been a symbol against efforts by black Americans to gain equal rights. When South Carolina became the first state to secede after Lincoln's election, it explicitly singled out attempts to abolish slavery and grant rights to black Americans as "hostile to the South" and "destructive of its beliefs and safety." And as Vox's Libby Nelson explained, Southerners used the flag to intimidate civil rights advocates and defend segregation. So while some Southerners might not see the Confederate flag as a racist symbol, the truth is the flag's history is mired in racism.

Watch: The Charleston shooting is part of a long history of anti-black racism

Like this video? Subscribe to Vox on YouTube.

26 Jun 06:52

Dying Light devs double down on mocking Destiny Red Bull promo with DLC campaign

by Michael McWhertor

Techland, the developer behind Dying Light, seems to have enjoyed the attention it got by poking fun at Destiny's Red Bull promotional tie-in earlier this week. The developer is continuing its effort to get people to drink water by adding stretch goals to its #DrinkForDLC campaign, giving away new content for the zombie game.

The more tweets featuring Dying Light players drinking a hydrating glass of water, the more free downloadable content the Polish game developer plans to hand out.

"Techland have decided to design, create and release a number of all new free DLC packs for Dying Light throughout the second half of the year," the developer said in a release today. "The campaign will be led by the fans reaching successive stretch...

Continue reading…

26 Jun 06:42

10 High-Concept Political Satire Films That Are Worth Viewing

by Ryan Jeffrey

political satire

When a filmmaker wants to make a political statement or take a stand on a social issue, they have to translate it for the medium. Politicians make speeches, filmmakers make films — otherwise they are just making a stump speech.

They can fold it into a narrative, such as a political thriller (The Manchurian Candidate, Syriana) or maybe a courtroom drama (The Accused, Philadelphia). They can make a more abstract examination, something beyond traditional narrative or documentary technique (L’age D’or, the Qatsi trilogy, I Am Cuba). One of the most effective approaches, as evidenced by the long history of political cartoons in print, is satire.

A “High-Concept” satire is a film that has a unique and succinct premise. You want to avoid seeming preachy, or sanctimonious, regardless of how deep your convictions are, and creating a catchy concept to stitch your themes through is a great way to grab an audiences attention and keep it. Even better, make them laugh. There is no purer reaction to a film than laughter. When you find something that funny, it is almost an uncontrolled response.

Not every film on this list is bound to make you roll with laughter, but each has its own target of satirical ridicule. Below are the choices for 10 of the best high-concept films that work as sociopolitical satires. Some are light as a feather, others are darker and more foreboding, but each of them uses genre and humor to find incredible insight.

There are countless others that could have made this list, from Thank You For Smoking to Repo Man to Bob Roberts, but each of the films below encapsulate what makes a truly great satire: exaggerating reality to explore its ills.

 

10. Mr. Freedom (1969)

mr-freedom

William Klein was most known for his fashion photography in the 1950s, but he was a bit of a renaissance man. He was a painter, a soldier, a photographer, and for a period, a filmmaker. He was born in New York, but moved to France after serving in the war. There was no love lost between the artist and his native country, as plainly evidenced by Mr. Freedom, his second of only three fiction feature films.

This one is an uncompromising and, frankly, borderline insane parody of American militarization — a parody of an America that, in Klein’s view, had bought into its own image of the hero-savior, spreading democracy and defeating communism all across the globe.

If you were to name a more modern equivalent to Mr. Freedom, it would have to be Team America: World Police, both in theme, topicality and comic sensibility (it could be said that it is somehow more insane starring live actors instead of puppets, except that there are puppets in Mr. Freedom, too). This is a ridiculous movie and proud of it. Mr. Freedom himself invokes the qualities of a comic book superhero, and his visage (and makeshift uniform) is one of the best running gags of the film.

He is tall, strong and handsome, covered from head to toe in red, white and blue football pads — and for some reason he sports a jet fighter’s helmet, for good measure. Mr. Freedom is Captain America for the Vietnam War, deconstructed and reassembled as a critique of American foreign intervention.

When France is under threat of communism, Mr. Freedom comes to save the day, whether or not anybody asks [or wants] him to. He mostly moves through the world punching, insulting, and occasionally raping and/or killing anyone who gets in his way. He is a brute with a “daddy knows best” mentality and a tendency toward racism.

Klein was not going for subtlety here, creating a film that is not just critical, but a brutal assault on the way he felt America conducted itself at home and abroad. In a certain sense it almost belongs to the pantheon of films spoof films like Airplane! and Spaceballs, only with its absurd comic sights set on a parody politics instead of genre (and set to kill).

 

9. They Live (1988)

They Live

Somewhat of a less talked-about John Carpenter film, They Live puts the object of its satire right in the premise: put on these supernatural glasses, see the truth about the world, and the people, all around you.

Wrestler “Rowdy” Roddy Piper plays Nada (literally, ‘Nothing’). With his glorious mullet and plaid shirt (and eventually a shotgun, of course), he is our jacked Everyman, a drifter looking for work who ends up stumbling backward onto the hidden, menacing truths about society and machinations of the powers that be.

They Live is primarily remembered for three moments: an absurdly overlong fist fight (that has been parodied to death), an iconic line of dialogue about having no more bubblegum left, and the brilliant sequence following the discovery of the glasses’ powers, where the film’s message is laid bare. Nada walks down a main street, by shops and newsstands and fellow citizens. But when he puts on these magic glasses and takes a second look at all the ads and signs, he sees through their artifice once and for all:

A billboard advertising “Come to the Caribbean” over the image of a half naked girl on the beach becomes “MARRY AND REPRODUCE.” A storefront sign turns to “NO INDEPENDENT THOUGHT”. A wide shot reveals a plethora of others: ”BUY,” “WATCH TV,” “CONSUME,” “OBEY” and a tiny satellite atop a traffic light emits a subliminal signal over and over again: “SLEEP … SLEEP …”

At the end of the sequence he realizes it is not just the things around him that have hidden agendas, but also the people, some of whom are not as they seem. The glasses reveal their true identities as aliens, with creature design that suggests something between a well-dressed zombie and a skeleton with good hair.

That the glasses also show the world in black and white is interesting, as if implying that the filmmakers see the truth as simpler than what we see. It is also a bit of an extension of Carpenter’s B-movie heritage, an aesthetic nod to the science-fiction films of the 1950s with their plots of communist paranoia and cold war intrigue.

It’s like watching Snake Pliskin from Escape From New York in an episode of “The Twilight Zone,” and similar to Big Trouble In Little China in terms the way Carpenter embraces the inherent silliness underneath.

Carpenter feeds his sci-fi parable off of classic paranoid conspiracy theories like that of the “lizard men” (or the New World Order, or the Illuminati, et al) who control the world, keeping the masses numb as they reign over them. His point is simpler, an anti-consumerism, anti-establishment rant sold as a B genre flick (his favorite).

 

8. A Nous La Liberte (1931)

A Nous La Liberte (1931)

An early talkie with minimal sync sound, this French classic (Freedom For Us, in English) may not exactly be surrealist fare, but Rene Clair’s melding of classical storytelling and modernist design produces a work that feels not unlike a dream.

His contemporary, Jean Vigo, would come to partly define ‘poetic realism’ in his tragically short career, and A Nous La Liberte’s tone has in it some of those same affects. Clair’s vision has the purity and essence of a fairy tale; simple, neat by design, with elaborate and fantastical set pieces and, in the end, a moral (of sorts).

[One of those set pieces went on to cause a significant amount of controversy when Charlie Chaplin was accused of stealing ideas from it for Modern Times, another classic comedy in its own right, but it is difficult to call it coincidence when you view their individual “stuck in the machinery” sequences. Rene Clair was known for his graceful attitude, and never held anything personally against Chaplin, who always maintained innocence.]

In the film, a convict becomes a rich industrialist after escaping from prison with a fellow inmate. Now that he is a success, his ex-cell mate returns. It is partly a comedy of manners, touching on slapstick territory. Clair offers inventive visual flourishes, in particular with the production design.

The contrast between the sets for the prison and the factory is drummed up in the often expressionist set design, and the thoughtful choreography makes explicit comparisons between the two settings; the guards and the bosses, the prisoners and the workers, work and jail. Acute images of workers make specific reference to a life spent in prison, and much of the film’s best comic moments come from disparity between the classes.

Clair would come under criticism in the time just before his home country’s highly influential New Wave. Dismissed as “cute” and “simple,” outdated, it would be years before his work would be appreciated again for its elegant, playful visual style and, not any less importantly, its open heart.

A Nous La Liberte is a film about social order and industrialization, but its attitude is so incredibly light, and its ending borderline absurd in its strange vision of utopia. It is, first and foremost, a happy-making experience. Its politics boil down to the simplest of human notions: be happy, be free.

 

7. South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999)

South Park Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999)

Trey Parker and Matt Stone have become surprisingly influential figures in the world of comedy, from their origins in crude stop-motion animation, to the big screen, and most recently to Broadway. Team America, “The Book of Mormon” and even BASEketball each bristle with a bizarre, idiosyncratic vision.

After the gigantic success of “South Park” on television, it was inevitable that the franchise would make the journey to the big screen, and in 1999’s South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, it did—and broke box office records for R-rated comedies.

In the TV series, “Terrence and Phillip” was the show-within-the-show, a Meta stand-in for the series itself (or at least a version of how their critics perceive them).

In the movie, it gets even more self-reflexive, as the plot revolves around the kids wanting to see the new R-rated Terrence and Philip movie, “Asses of Fire” (something many real-life “South Park” fans under 17, which comprised a huge swatch of their fan base, would relate to). Their parents don’t like the potty humor and bad language they have heard about, and their ban on the film turns into a national crises and, ultimately, a brutally violent war between the US and Canada (home of Terrence and Phillip).

Perhaps the reason they have such an interesting cross section in their audience is the pairing of a juvenile (but clever) sense of humor with real social commentary. The combination is biting and feels transgressive, a quality of rebellion that is essential is making something this counter-cultural.

Among the many targets Parker and Stone aim their sights at in the film, the most pointed jabs (and the ultimate crux of the film) focus on the strange discrepancies in America’s taste for what is considered “objectionable.”

Kyle’s mom is the stand-in for a history of hypocrisy and repression, propped up to represent everything they dislike about America’s more puritanical tendencies. “Remember what the MPAA says: horrific, deplorable violence is okay, as long as people don’t say any naughty words! That’s what this war is all about!”

The anarchic plotting also includes a plea to Brian Boitano for wisdom, a parody of “Les Miserables,” a V-chip that stops kids from swearing, lots of awesome and mostly really good music, and a plot to take over the world from Satan and his emotionally abusive lover Saddam Hussein. And even with all that mayhem, the most surprising thing about the film is how intelligently it interweaves all this uncanny chaos to stitch a singular, hilarious vision.

 

6. Bamboozled (2000)

Bamboozled (2000)

Damon Wayans stars as a Pierre Delacroix, a Harvard-educated TV writer who has had enough of his job. He is constantly rejected because his ideas are not seen as “black enough.”

In an attempt to get back, or maybe prove a point, to his white bosses, he pitches a new series: a modern day minstrel show, but instead of white actors in black face, it will instead star black actorss… who also wear “even blacker face.” It feeds into every offensive stereotype in the book, and probably makes up a few new ones. He is begging to get fired, but… they love it! And it becomes a sensation.

There is a sense that Spike Lee has a similar thought in his head to make this movie. Lee’s best work comes out of his self-righteousness, a trait that has made him tougher as a celebrity persona, but keeps him held in high esteem as an artist. He is a thoughtful, politically charged mind, and when he has something to say, you can count of him not pulling his punches.

Bamboozled may not be one of his biggest successes. It doesn’t have the prestige of Malcolm X or the immediacy of Do the Right Thing, it is not one of his more autobiographical films nor one of his rare forays into genre filmmaking.

This is a very singular work to his filmography, though it does deal with similar issues of a racially charged and divided America. Delacroix realizes his would-be joke is bringing him the fortune he was looking for, but at the cost of being seen as a traitor to his race. He hates his own show and, ultimately, himself.

America (and particularly the media) still has a very complicated and sensitive relationship with race. The history of “black sitcoms” and “black TV” in general has created new problems of media segregation, and proves to have underserved their purpose (to represent those of us who feel unrepresented). Comedy is a powerful force, and it allows for some truly inventive ways to approach making a point.

The success of “Mantan: The New Millennium Minstrel Show” (the title of the show Delacroix had pitched) has an exaggerated and highly unlikely success story, but that’s what comedy does to reality, it stretches it. Like a funhouse mirror, parts of it are exaggerated – but it is, fundamentally, a true reflection.

26 Jun 06:29

Studies Supporting Use of Medical Marijuana are Mostly Poor Quality, Researchers Find

by Justine Alford
Health and Medicine
Photo credit: Atomazul/Shutterstock

The White House has just announced that it will be relaxing some of its strict regulations on marijuana research, making it easier for scientists to conduct clinical studies on the drug. This could not have come at a better time, it seems, as a comprehensive review of 40 years of human trials that examined its potential use in treating a variety of ailments has suggested that high-quality evidence supporting its therapeutic use is lacking.

26 Jun 06:24

tfw a mutual you LIKE unfollows you

26 Jun 02:27

Who Is The Watcher: Jezebel In-guess-tigates

by Bobby Finger

Yesterday, Gawker reported the horrifying story of a family that moved the hell out of their $1.3M New Jersey home after receiving countless threatening packages from a person known only as The Watcher. The full lawsuit is the stuff of recurring nightmares, and I’m desperate to find out the person’s identity.

Read more...








26 Jun 02:18

revolver-ossified: Best shop in Silent Hill



revolver-ossified:

Best shop in Silent Hill

26 Jun 02:16

Photo

by plasquatch


26 Jun 02:05

Firefighters Had To Stop Battling Wildfire Because Of Some Jerk's Drone

by Billy Gil
Firefighters Had To Stop Battling Wildfire Because Of Some Jerk's Drone Firefighters battling the huge Lake fire in the San Bernardino National Forest had to pause their actions yesterday because someone was flying a hobby drone nearby. [ more › ]






25 Jun 13:57

fashion-runways: VALENTINO Resort 2016

















fashion-runways:

VALENTINO Resort 2016

25 Jun 13:56

Low Schedules Show At Troubadour

by TheScenestar
Low has announced an upcoming fall tour in support of new album Ones and Sixes, which will be released September 11 via Sub Pop. This tour will include an all-ages show at the Troubadour on Monday, November 16, with opener...
25 Jun 06:23

tanukilovecats: I received several messages asking me to sell...







tanukilovecats:

I received several messages asking me to sell the silent hill base alone so here it is. You can use it as a night light or just hang it on the wall to save your progress XD. They cost USD$20 (shipping not included)You can order them from my fbpage http://www.facebook.com/Lovecatscollectibles. And soon on eBay:)

25 Jun 06:23

Love in the streets of Seattle.

Bridget

pfft, we have this all the time



Love in the streets of Seattle.

25 Jun 05:57

Whole Foods Being Investigated for Intentionally Overcharging Customers

by Hillary Crosley Coker

Whole Foods is under fire (again) for their overcharging their customers as far back as 2010.

Read more...








25 Jun 03:42

'Tindog,' the Tinder for Dog Lovers is Here 

by Marie Lodi

If you’ve ever looked into the loving eyes of your dog-son and thought, “If only there was some sort of dating app for dogs where I could find a match for Mister Scruffballs,” well, your wish has been granted. Tindog, a new app that connects dog lovers together based on location, has launched this week. Like Tinder, the app’s interface will suggest nearby matches, allowing users to swipe left for rejects and swipe right for the dog hotties. I’d probably feel bad swiping left on any pups, but I used to say if there was some sort of dating app for French Bulldog owners to connect, I’d be all up on it, so this sounds like the next best thing.

Read more...








25 Jun 03:39

cashcats: gotta wait til it’s dark out 2 see who’s really with...



cashcats:

gotta wait til it’s dark out 2 see who’s really with u

25 Jun 03:20

Sunset Strip's House Of Blues Has An Official Closing Date

by Juliet Bennett Rylah
Bridget

we are going to see steel panther \m/

Sunset Strip's House Of Blues Has An Official Closing Date August 7 is the venue's official closing date. [ more › ]






25 Jun 01:18

Photo



25 Jun 01:17

Rep Says Diddy's Kettlebell Attack Was 'Solely Defensive in Nature'

by Madeleine Davies

Following his arrest Monday for allegedly assaulting his son’s UCLA football coach with a kettlebell, Sean “Diddy” Combs has released a statement via his rep.

Read more...








24 Jun 23:48

too soon? 



too soon? 

24 Jun 19:16

Photos: Adorable Mountain Lion Kittens Enjoy A Meal With Mom

by Jean Trinh
  
We have photos of P-39's adorable kittens in the Santa Susana Mountains. [ more › ]






24 Jun 19:15

jennyowenyoungs: OH MY GOD



jennyowenyoungs:

OH MY GOD

24 Jun 15:49

Ben Terrett

24 Jun 15:47

Photo

by plasquatch
Bridget

brenavin



24 Jun 15:46

foxmxlder: ever wish you could just



foxmxlder:

ever wish you could just

24 Jun 03:23

New forms of payment!





New forms of payment!

23 Jun 19:26

Diddy Claims He Wielded Kettlebell In Self Defense In UCLA Attack

by Jean Trinh
Diddy Claims He Wielded Kettlebell In Self Defense In UCLA Attack Sean 'Diddy' Combs is apparently claiming self defense in the alleged attack involving a kettlebell weight. The rapper and music mogul was arrested on assault charges at UCLA on Monday. [ more › ]






23 Jun 19:26

American Apparel Reveals The Sordid Antics That Got Dov Charney Fired

by Juliet Bennett Rylah
American Apparel Reveals The Sordid Antics That Got Dov Charney Fired American Apparel alleges that Charney called employees 'Filipino pigs' and stored porn of himself on company servers. [ more › ]






23 Jun 19:22

“Vitality and Verve: Transforming the Urban Landscape.” Coming...















“Vitality and Verve: Transforming the Urban Landscape.”

Coming up on Friday, June 26th, 2015 at the Long Beach Museum of Art in Long Beach, California is the collaborative group show curated by POW! WOW! and Thinkspace Gallery, “Vitality & Verve: Transforming the Urban Landscape.”  The show is taking place in conjunction with POW! WOW! LONG BEACH, a week long street art festival, which is taking place this week.

Above is a sneak peek at on site mural installations by several of the artists included in the show: Audrey Kawasaki, Jeff Soto, Nosego, Cryptik, Esao Andrews, Andrew Schoultz and Aaron Horkey.

The exhibition will include work by the muralists as well as many other world renown artists: Brendan Monroe, Greg “Craola” Simkins, Hot Tea, James Bullough, Alex Yanes, Brandon Shigeta, John S. Culqui, Low Bros, Meggs, Nychos, Saber, and Tristan Eaton.

Please note that the show is a ticketed event and tickets can be purchased on LBMA.org.

(Photographs are by Arrested Motion, James Ng and Jordan Ahern.)

23 Jun 14:37

Endangered Baby Pygmy Hippo Takes First Public Swim In Australia’s Zoo

by Dainius

Meet Obi, a three-week-old pygmy hippopotamus that just learned how to swim. Born to hippo mum Petre and dad Felix 3 weeks ago at the Melbourne Zoo, Obi means “heart” in Igbo, a Nigerian language. He is part of an international breeding program and will be designated to breed somewhere else with another female upon maturity.

“He loves the water and spends hours in the small pool, so he is ready for the next step,” said sea manager Justin Valentine. But “he’s only little so about 10 to 15 minutes and he’s a bit tired and he has to take a break. And then he’s back into it right away,” he added.

Pygmy hippos are endangered, although it’s difficult to know their exact numbers due to their dense rain-forest habitat.

More info: Melbourne Zoo | Facebook (h/t: abcnews)

Obi is the latest addition to Melbourne Zoo’s hippo family

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-7

The cute pygmy hippo was born 3 weeks ago to mom Petre

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-10

He’s been practicing swimming in a small pool

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-11

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-13

His mother was always watching to make sure he stayed afloat

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-1

“Obi” means “heart” in a Nigerian language

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-2

“He loves the water and spends hours in the small pool, so he is ready for the next step”

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-8

Last Thursday, Obi went for his first deep-water dip

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-11

“He’s only little so about 10 to 15 minutes and he’s a bit tired and he has to take a break”

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-3

Pygmy hippos are endangered, although it’s difficult to know their exact numbers

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-4

cute-baby-pygmy-hippopotamus-obi-melbourne-zoo-australia-5