2009 documentary film by Michael Moore
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Rivka and Frank are joined by playwright Thalia Sablon for a conversation about the wild 2001 screwball comedy Rat Race. They discuss how the film's celebrity-packed cast represents a dying culture, the shockingly anti-capitalist character arcs, and how the movie may have been an inspiration for Squid Game. Thalia Sablon - Website For next week's movie, we'll be watching the 2009 documentary Capitalism: A Love Story.
The fallout 2008 financial crisis has been portrayed on film in a number of ways; from documentary's like Iniside Job (2010) and Capitalism: A Love Story (2009) to ficiton films "inspired" by the events like The Big Short (2015) and Margin Call (2011). Andrew Dominik's Killing Them Softly (2012) takes a different approach. It starts with George V. Higgins' 1974 crime novel, itself the third in a series, that centers on a lower level crime syndicate in Boston. Then Dominik places that story in a 2008 New Orleans during the final weeks of the Obama/McCain presidential election. We get into the obvious metaphors that occur when organized crime is compared to financial institutions. But, we also end up discussing the various ways that Nationalism can manifest itself in America; from George W. Bush, to Obama, to Trump and Biden. We'll be dipping our toes back into this Systemic Risk topic, the intersection of the 2008 crisis and it's portrayal on film. So if you have any particularly intereseting examples to suggest (documentary or fiction), send them to politicsofcinema@gmail.com Follow us at: Patreon / Twitter / Instagram / Letterboxd / Facebook
Draven and Savvy do a big no no: talk about politics and economic systems whilst being belligerently drunk.
The message is getting played out. The funds have dried up. The people are crying out for more help. Yet, the cycle repeats itself every time. There doesn't seem to be a way to stop it. We need this and that, let's call on the Democrats. Yeah, we should remember EXACTLY what happened, concerning the housing crisis...for more information, look up the movie, Capitalism: A Love Story, if you need a reminder. I send my prayers of protection and hope to all who will eventually forced out of their homes...Please, please stay strong. You're definitely not alone.
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://allenwatcheseverything.wordpress.com/2011/04/30/capitalism-a-love-story-2009-4-55/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/al625/message
In a modern retelling of Job - a Midwestern Physics Professor finds his life spiraling out of control as personal, professional, & financial setbacks all seemingly strike at once- leaving him searching for answers & meaning. Tune in as Chris talks Old Testament, Cosmic Indifference, & Jefferson Airplane as the LSCE screens the Coen Bros. 2009 black comedy "A Serious Man." Join us! Works Cited: A Serious Man Production Notes. Focus Features. August 14, 2009. Accessed 11/25/2021 https://www.focusfeatures.com/article/a_serious_man_production_notes?film=a_serious_man "Coen Bros. On Wet Horses, Kid Stars: It's A Wild West". Fresh Air with Terry Gross. NPR. January 12, 2011. Accessed 11/26/21 https://www.npr.org/transcripts/132744499 Denby, David. “Gods and Victims: ‘A Serious Man' and ‘ Capitalism: A Love Story.' The New Yorker. October 5th, 2009. Accessed 11/27/21 https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2009/10/05/gods-and-victims Ebert, Roger (October 7, 2009). “A Serious Man” Chicago Sun Times. Archived @ RogerEbert.com Accessed 11/27/21 https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/a-serious-man-2009 Evans, K.L. (2012) “How Job Begat Larry: The Present Situation in A Serious Man”. In Conrad, Mark T. (ed.) The Philosophy of the Coen Brothers. University Press of Kentucky. Pp. 289-303. McCarthy, Todd. “A Serious Man.” Daily variety 304, no. 50 (2009): 10. Morgan, David. ‘For Best Picture: “A Serious Man.”' CBS News. February 21, 2010. Accessed 11/26/21. https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/for-best-picture-a-serious-man/ Morgenstern, Joe (October 2, 2009). "A Serious Man". The Wall Street Journal. Accessed 11/27/2021. https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704471504574446962410393646 Prell, Riv-Ellen. “A Serious Man in Situ: ‘Fear and Loathing in St. Louis Park.'” AJS review 35, no. 2 (2011): 365–376. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lsce/message
Michael is joined by The Intercept's Jon Schwarz to discuss the shockingly unshocking report this week that the Saudi operatives who murdered Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi had received State Department-approved paramilitary training. They also discuss the recent foolish attacks on Rep. Ilhan Omar, the meaning and background of the phrase "moral equivalence," the AP's cowardly firing of Emily Wilder over her college advocacy for Palestinian human rights, and lies we are being told about "worker shortages." Schwarz is a friend and former colleague of Mike's, having worked on “Capitalism: A Love Story” and as the editor of MichaelMoore.com. Saudi Operatives Who Killed Khashoggi Received Paramilitary Training in U.S. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/22/us/politics/khashoggi-saudi-kill-team-us-training.html Read Jon's recent articles: Ilhan Omar And “Moral Equivalence,” A Term Of Propaganda Invented In The 1980s https://theintercept.com/2021/06/24/ilhan-omar-moral-equivalence-reagan/ Emily Wilder's Firing Is No Surprise: AP Has Always Been Right-Wing https://theintercept.com/2021/05/25/emily-wilder-firing-ap-right-wing/ The Business Class Has Been Fearmongering About Worker Shortages for Centuries https://theintercept.com/2021/05/07/worker-shortage-slavery-capitalism/ The “For The People Act” Would Make The U.S. A Democracy https://theintercept.com/2021/02/14/democracy-voting-campaign-finance-hr1/ The book Jon mentioned: The Brass Check by Upton Sinclair https://bookshop.org/a/1381/9789353866303 Free PDF https://ia800203.us.archive.org/7/items/cu31924026364251/cu31924026364251.pdf The Neftlix Doc Series Michael mentioned: High On The Hog https://www.netflix.com/title/81034518 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rumble-with-michael-moore/message
Fishing, DIY Canoe Rental, Bill Gates, Stealing Labor
After graduating from the prestigious SUNY Purchase Film School, Jessica Brunetto edited Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story, and Sicko. She went on to become a highly sought-after editor on television comedies like Comedy Central’s Another Period, FX’s Man Seeking Woman, American Vandal on Netflix, Do You Want To See A Dead Body with Rob Huebel, and Broad City. She recently made her directorial debut with Sisters, starring Sarah Burns and Mary Holland, which premiered at SXSW 2021. What you will learn: How an experience in art class creating a collages inspired her to apply to film school; Why she chose editing as her discipline within film initially; What inspired her to write and direct her first film; How Jess broke into the film industry as an editor; How her background in editing trained to create an efficient narrative, which helped her make tough decisions as a director; The logistics of making movies on a limited budget; and What the future holds for her as a filmmaker.
Michael Moore (@MMFlint) on Canada, inspiration and capitalism in this flashback interview from the start of the Obama era with Skaana (@skaanapod) host Mark Leiren-Young (@leirenyoung). Skaana connects you to stories about oceans, eco-ethics and the environment. Join the Pod…… https://www.patreon.com/mobydoll Skaana home….. skaana.org Skaana on Medium…. https://medium.com/skaana “Your Magical Week" – meditation with Rayne Benu…. digital-enlightenment.net Facebook……….. https://www.facebook.com/skaanapod/ Twitter…………… https://twitter.com/skaanapod The Killer Whale Who Changed the World… http://amzn.to/2pRNU1q Orcas Everywhere… http://www.orcaseverywhere.com Spotify…………...www.bit.ly/spotify-skaana
Michael Moore’un 2009 yapımı belgeseli üzerinden Amerikan kapitalizmine dair bir değerlendirme.
Episode SummaryIn this episode of The Tight Rope, Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore joins Dr. Cornel West and Professor Tricia Rose to shine light on the current state of crisis in America, white privilege, white fear, and citizen filmmakers. They emphatically connect the catastrophe of the criminal justice system to larger issues and discuss ways to move into a “new normal” that challenges bystander sensibility and police accountability taken out of the larger context of democratic accountability and multiracial solidarity. This is an episode of The Tight Rope that you do not want to miss. Cornel WestDr. Cornel West is Professor of the Practice of Public Philosophy at Harvard University. A prominent democratic intellectual, social critic, and political activist, West also serves as Professor Emeritus at Princeton University. He graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard in three years and obtained his M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy at Princeton. West has authored 20 books and edited 13. Most known for Race Matters and Democracy Matters, and his memoir, Brother West: Living and Loving Out Loud, West appears frequently on the Bill Maher Show, CNN, C-Span, and Democracy Now. West has appeared in over 25 documentaries and films, including Examined Life, and is the creator of three spoken word albums, including Never Forget. West brings his focus on the role of race, gender, and class in American society to The Tight Rope podcast. Tricia RoseProfessor Tricia Rose is Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America at Brown University. She also holds the Chancellor’s Professorship of Africana Studies and serves as the Associate Dean of the Faculty for Special Initiatives. A graduate of Yale (BA) and Brown University (Ph.D), Rose authored Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America (1994), Longing to Tell: Black Women Talk about Sexuality and Intimacy (2003), and The Hip Hop Wars: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop and Why It Matters (2008). She also sits on the Boards of the Nathan Cummings Foundation, Color of Change, and Black Girls Rock, Inc. Focusing on issues relating to race in America, mass media, structural inequality, popular culture, gender and sexuality, and art and social justice, Rose engages widely in scholarly and popular audience settings, and now also on The Tight Rope podcast. Michael MooreMichael Moore, one of America’s best-known documentary filmmakers and political provocateurs, has for over 30 years produced controversial and award-winning films and TV series that tackle critically important political and social issues in American society, including big business, corrupt governments and politicians, capitalism, and health care. Moore, from Flint, Michigan, won the Academy Award for best documentary for his 2002 Bowling for Columbine. He continues to produce successful and controversial films, most recently Planet of the Humans (2019), an eco-documentary and “full-frontal assault” of the failures of the environmental movement, directed by Jeff Gibbs. Moore examines and jokes about current issues on his own podcast Rumble with Michael Moore. Insight from this episode:Strategies on remaining hopeful in turbulent and violent times.Responses to the question “Now what?”Details on how to change the American police system and police accountability to empower communities.Strategies on shattering a spectatorial stance and avoiding being a bystander citizen.Strategies on creating universal solidarity without downplaying individual suffering.A call to commitment and sacrifice in the struggle for freedom and equality. Quotes from the show:“In the time of Trump, in the time of pandemic, have we been turned into a nation of bystanders?” –Michael Moore (quoting Cornel West) The Tight Rope Episode #1“If you want to end crime, end poverty. If you want to end crime, empower women.” –Michael Moore The Tight Rope Episode #1“The very first thing in terms of saving Black lives is we have to defund the police departments across the country. We have to demilitarize the police departments. And I want a racism review board in every community.” –Michael Moore The Tight Rope Episode #1“No self-respecting, self-loving people can sit and see a policeman publicly lynch and kill somebody for nearly nine minutes.” –Cornel West The Tight Rope Episode #1On recent arrests of protesters: “[There’s] a marvelous new militancy around affirming the rich and precious humanity of Black folk.” –Cornel West The Tight Rope Episode #1“The focus on extreme cop violence actually normalizes the idea that police can be functional… The whole logic of the police are designed really to extract resources and contain the poor, and contain people of color, from segregated white spaces.” –Tricia Rose The Tight Rope Episode #1On white fear: “If we don’t examine it and expose it, we don’t stand much of a chance of deeply transforming the role of the police because what drives people’s investment in the police is to keep Black people away.” –Tricia Rose The Tight Rope Episode #1On systemic and structural racism: “The police are just one little cog in a whole set of systems.” –Tricia Rose The Tight Rope Episode #1“I want this woman [Darnella Frazier] on the stage of the Oscars next year, and I want to honor her and all the other young people who can be citizen filmmakers, and to always pull your camera out and start filming that which you see which is wrong because you then expose it to the rest of the world.” –Michael Moore The Tight Rope Episode #1On white fear: “If they [white people] have to actually share or maybe even give up some of that privilege, wow, that’s a bridge too far. And that’s what they’re afraid of.” –Michael Moore The Tight Rope Episode #1“The long-distance win is only going to happen if the short-distance survival takes place.” –Tricia Rose The Tight Rope Episode #1“Revenge is always blinding. We need people who have broad vision, so that people can see things that other people don’t see and feel more deeply with love that other people don’t feel and most importantly to act more courageously for people who are too conformist and complacent and cowardly.” –Cornel West The Tight Rope Episode #1 Documentaries from Michael Moore:Planet of the Humans (2019)Fahrenheit 11/9 (2018)Trumpland (2016)Where to Invade Next (2015)Capitalism: A Love Story (2009; on Netflix)Sicko (2009; on Netflix) Slacker Uprising (2007; on Netflix)Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004; on Netflix)Bowling for Columbine (2002; on Netflix)The Big One (1997; on Netflix)Pets or Meat: The Return to Flint (1992) Roger & Me (1989; on Netflix) Stay Connected: Cornel WestWebsite: http://www.cornelwest.comTwitter: @CornelWestFacebook: Dr. Cornel West - HomeInstagram: @BrotherCornelWest Linktree: Cornel West Tricia RoseWebsite: http://www.triciarose.com/LinkedIn: Tricia RoseTwitter: @ProfTriciaRoseFacebook: Tricia RoseInstagram: @ProfTriciaRoseYoutube: Professor Tricia Rose Michael MooreWebsite: https://michaelmoore.com/Twitter: @MMFlintFacebook: Michael Moore Instagram: @MichaelFMooreYoutube: Michael MoorePodcast: https://rumble.media/ The Tight RopeWebsite: www.thetightropepodcast.comInstagram: @thetightropepodTwitter: @thetightropepodFacebook: The Tight Rope Pod This episode was produced and managed by Spkerbox Media in collaboration with Podcast Laundry.
A life-long friend of documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, Jeff Gibbs started his own film career as composer and field producer for Bowling for Columbine. He went on to write the original scores for Fahrenheit 9/11 and Capitalism: A Love Story. As well as co-producing Moore the films, Gibbs was a consulting producer for the Dixie Chicks documentary Shut Up and Sing and was co-producer of At The Edge of the World about the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Gibbs released his own film, Planet of The Humans. Executive produced by Michael Moor, this gripping and explosive documentary about the state of the planet and the future of humanity, which premiered at Traverse City Film Festival to critical acclaim. Become a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PARCMEDIAFollow Us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Vince_EmanueleFollow Us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/1713FranklinSt/Follow Us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parcmedia/?... #PARCMedia is a news and media project founded by two USMC veterans, Sergio Kochergin & Vince Emanuele. They give a working-class take on issues surrounding politics, ecology, community organizing, war, culture, and philosophy.
On Michael Moore's birthday, he reflects on birthday under quarantine, shares some updates and receives a phone call from an old friend. Senator Bernie Sanders calls in to have an honest discussion about the successes and failures of his Presidential campaign - what happened after the amazing victory in Nevada? How did the party coalesce so quickly against Bernie after he became the frontrunner? And what do we do now? Plus, Michael and Bernie discuss what America can learn from dealing with the coronavirus pandemic and how we are winning the war of ideas. *********** The movies/clips Senator Sanders referred to: FDR's 2nd Bill of rights video, first discovered during the making of "Capitalism: A Love Story": https://vimeo.com/32647556 Watch Michael's Oscar-nominated 2007 film "SiCKO" here: https://vimeo.com/76646445 or https://youtu.be/YbEQ7acb0IE?t=30 ********** Michael on Colbert: How Do We Want To Live After This Pandemic? https://youtu.be/wFKkVvUgUUk Michael on Colbert: Singing a verse from Mary Chapin Carpenter’s “Why Shouldn’t We” https://youtu.be/zp8qpa3fGxI Mary Chapin Carpenter's Version of 'Why Shouldn't We" https://youtu.be/VWiW_CXu2I4 ********** Watch the full film "Planet of the Humans" here: https://youtu.be/Zk11vI-7czE --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rumble-with-michael-moore/message
The coronavirus pandemic and all of the economic and social crises that it has exposed has politicians of all stripes calling for massive government intervention. And, funny enough, no pundit or politician is whining about how “WE CAN’T AFFORD THIS!” But just as in 2008, corporations and lobbyists are salivating at the opportunity to milk this crisis for as much government money as they can get their hands on. This is why we MUST use this moment to massively reshape our economic and healthcare systems and immediately get money in the hands of all Americans. Michael discusses what action must be taken with economist and professor Stephanie Kelton, former economist with the Senate Budget Committee and author of the forthcoming book, "The Deficit Myth: Modern Monetary Theory and the Birth of the People's Economy." ************* Call your U.S. Senators: 202-225-3121 Call your U.S. Rep: 202-224-3121 ************* Pre-order Stephanie's book "The Deficit Myth" from BookShop: https://bookshop.org/a/1381/9781541736184 Or, if you prefer Amazon, pre-order it here: https://amzn.to/2UUvrOH FDR's 2nd Bill of Rights scene from "Capitalism: A Love Story": https://vimeo.com/32647556 Stephanie's op-ed in NYT: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/21/opinion/-coronavirus-stimulus-trillion.html --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rumble-with-michael-moore/message
America's most beloved ice cream makers, Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield met up with Michael on the campaign trail in Fairfield, Iowa. They discussed how the Vermont duo built their business while maintaining their values, dead peasant insurance, where their ice cream flavor ideas came from and their support for fellow Vermonter Bernie Sanders. ***************** Watch the Dead Peasant Insurance scene from "Capitalism: A Love Story": https://youtu.be/frs25RsstoA ***************** Subscribe to “RUMBLE with Michael Moore” on: Apple https://apple.co/rumble Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5KubucWBfyJr14bD7xWBvS Google: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xMGZjOWEzMC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/michael-moore-4/rumble-with-michael-moore Anchor: https://anchor.fm/rumble-with-michael-moore Follow Michael on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/MMFlint Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mmflint/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/michaelfmoore/ ******************** --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rumble-with-michael-moore/message
Michael Moore shares his personal history with both Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, who both starred in 2009's "Capitalism: A Love Story." In very personal terms, he addresses the possible fracture within the progressive movement and why we must move past this in order to ensure the defeat of both Donald Trump and the rotten system that produced Trump. ***************************** The Credibility Gap Current Affairs https://www.currentaffairs.org/2020/01/the-credibility-gap Bernie in 1987: Lamenting that there aren’t more women in office and encouraging young girls to run: https://twitter.com/pjayevans/status/1216826375744737280 Bernie in 1988: “In my view a woman could be elected president of the United States” https://twitter.com/meaganmday/status/1216793548567113728 Bernie Sanders’s Hard Fight for Hillary Clinton The New Yorker https://www.newyorker.com/news/amy-davidson/bernie-sanderss-hard-fight-for-hillary-clinton Compilation of 40 campaign events Bernie Sanders did for Hillary Clinton in 2016: https://twitter.com/ThomasIsOnline/status/1147606198050574337 Compilation of 12 rallies and 3 fundraisers Hillary Clinton did for Barack Obama in 2008: https://twitter.com/ThomasIsOnline/status/1147614729491353603 Exit polling after the 2008 campaign showed that 15 percent of Clinton-supporting Democrats in the primary voted for John McCain in the general election over Barack Obama: https://web.archive.org/web/20081108082743/http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/11/04/exit.polls/ According to data from the Cooperative Congressional Election Study, only 12 percent of people who voted for Bernie Sanders in the 2016 Democratic presidential primaries voted for Trump in the general election: https://www.npr.org/2017/08/24/545812242/1-in-10-sanders-primary-voters-ended-up-supporting-trump-survey-finds ******* --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rumble-with-michael-moore/message
Tutti i lati del capitalismo americano raccontati attraverso lo stile e le opere di tre geniali registi! Stiamo parlando di: "The Laundromat - Panama Papers", appena uscito su Netflix con l'incredibile e pungente ironia di Steven Soderbergh; "The Big Short - La grande scommessa" di Adam McKay, che attraverso un nuovo genere di denuncia economica-politica, diverte e istruisce lo spettatore; "Capitalism: A Love Story" dell'indistruttibile Michael Moore, che in questo film si scaglia veementemente contro governo, banche e magnati, denunciando il lato oscuro della crisi del 2007. Rubrica "Birdmen consiglia" --> Il ladro di orchidee
In this ep Ljubica shares her thoughts about the neon color trend sure to dominate our wardrobes, as well as some ways to update the look so you don't give people laser tag flash backs. After that Adam leads us through a discussion of the recent controversy about whether Bernie is paying his staff enough. We point out why your faves were wrong to pile on Bernie for this one. Finally we dive into Netroots Nation, explain what it is, and why so few candidates attended. Ljubica also shares her personal Netroots experience. cw: for predatory behavior and harassment. (we don't go into super detail but we do talk about it) Links: Jaclyn Hill, Lipstick and Capitalism: A Love Story | with Maggie Mae Fish--https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Kj8rX_5qmc We ride out to deca joins Go Slow: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikn3Drf3PpU
节目摘要 这一集主要讨论了线上读书群上一期大家一起读的书:马修·德斯蒙德的《扫地出门:美国城市的贫穷与暴利》。下一期所读的书目是阿图·葛文德的《最好的告别:关于衰老与死亡,你必须知道的常识》。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 我们的电报(Telegram)听友群:不丧电报群 我们播客的邮箱地址:busangpodcast@gmail.com 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 电影&电视 《资本主义:一个爱情故事》(Capitalism: A Love Story)(2009) 《第十三修正案》(13th)(2016) 《国宝银行:小到可以进监狱》(Abacus: Small Enough to Jail)(2016) 《佛罗里达乐园》(The Florida Project)(2017) 书籍 《扫地出门:美国城市的贫穷与暴利》,马修·德斯蒙德 《我在底层的生活:当专栏作家化身女服务生》,芭芭拉·艾伦瑞克 Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America, Beth Macy 《最好的告别:关于衰老和死亡,你必须知道的常识》,阿图·葛文德 音乐 "完美的一天, 孙燕姿" "Rollercoaster, Bleachers" 其他 项飙:敢于不占有,是这个时代最大的革命 《扫地出门》的英文版学习指南 Eviction Lab, 德斯蒙德教授所带领的有关驱逐的研究项目 Just Shelter, 德斯蒙德教授成立的相关公益组织 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
节目摘要 这一集主要讨论了线上读书群上一期大家一起读的书:马修·德斯蒙德的《扫地出门:美国城市的贫穷与暴利》。下一期所读的书目是阿图·葛文德的《最好的告别:关于衰老与死亡,你必须知道的常识》。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 我们的电报(Telegram)听友群:不丧电报群 我们播客的邮箱地址:busangpodcast@gmail.com 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 电影&电视 《资本主义:一个爱情故事》(Capitalism: A Love Story)(2009) 《第十三修正案》(13th)(2016) 《国宝银行:小到可以进监狱》(Abacus: Small Enough to Jail)(2016) 《佛罗里达乐园》(The Florida Project)(2017) 书籍 《扫地出门:美国城市的贫穷与暴利》,马修·德斯蒙德 《我在底层的生活:当专栏作家化身女服务生》,芭芭拉·艾伦瑞克 Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America, Beth Macy 《最好的告别:关于衰老和死亡,你必须知道的常识》,阿图·葛文德 音乐 "完美的一天, 孙燕姿" "Rollercoaster, Bleachers" 其他 项飙:敢于不占有,是这个时代最大的革命 《扫地出门》的英文版学习指南 Eviction Lab, 德斯蒙德教授所带领的有关驱逐的研究项目 Just Shelter, 德斯蒙德教授成立的相关公益组织 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
节目摘要 这一集主要讨论了线上读书群上一期大家一起读的书:马修·德斯蒙德的《扫地出门:美国城市的贫穷与暴利》。下一期所读的书目是阿图·葛文德的《最好的告别:关于衰老与死亡,你必须知道的常识》。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 我们的电报(Telegram)听友群:不丧电报群 我们播客的邮箱地址:busangpodcast@gmail.com 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 电影&电视 《资本主义:一个爱情故事》(Capitalism: A Love Story)(2009) 《第十三修正案》(13th)(2016) 《国宝银行:小到可以进监狱》(Abacus: Small Enough to Jail)(2016) 《佛罗里达乐园》(The Florida Project)(2017) 书籍 《扫地出门:美国城市的贫穷与暴利》,马修·德斯蒙德 《我在底层的生活:当专栏作家化身女服务生》,芭芭拉·艾伦瑞克 Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America, Beth Macy 《最好的告别:关于衰老和死亡,你必须知道的常识》,阿图·葛文德 音乐 "完美的一天, 孙燕姿" "Rollercoaster, Bleachers" 其他 项飙:敢于不占有,是这个时代最大的革命 《扫地出门》的英文版学习指南 Eviction Lab, 德斯蒙德教授所带领的有关驱逐的研究项目 Just Shelter, 德斯蒙德教授成立的相关公益组织 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
What would democracy look like if it first existed at the workplace rather than in the woesome consignment of America's party-politics, which renders our dreams for The Golden Square into Squalid Shit-mash? For this episode of The Future Is A Mixtape, Jesse & Matt have a discussion about this paradise where workers actually experience freedom, equity and solidarity with two folks who've jump-started one of the first media co-ops in Southern California: Dan Nowman Niswander, creator, host, and producer of The Nowman Show and Dr. George Kallas, a political analyst and Political Science Professor at Miramar College in San Diego. We'll learn about their chance-encounter and their epiphany to do the mind-meld by creating Arete Media Productions. Principally though, they will discuss why we mislabel democracy in Da Yankeelands, define what co-ops are, and also explain what makes worker-owned co-ops so very visionary in our Age of Workplace Tyranny & DollarDoom. Mentioned In This Episode: When We Recorded This Discussion, It Was Over 100 in Los Angeles But It Was Even Hotter in Record-Breaking San Francisco @ 106 F Erick Olin Wright in Jacobin: “How to Be an Anticapitalist Today” Jim McGuigan's Cool Capitalism How Neoliberalism Ramps Up Status-Games in University Life, and In Doing So, Creates Hierarchies of Abject Misery for the Rest of Us:Mike Rose for Inside Higher Ed: “Who Is Smarter Than Whom?” Benjamin Ginsberg in the Washington Monthly: “Administrators Ate My Tuition” Academic Rankings for Various Teaching Levels of Status Brandon Jordan in The Nation: “Building Student Power Through Participatory Budgeting” Participatory Budgeting Project: What Exactly Is It? Jason Rhode in Paste Magazine: “Kamala Harris Offers No New Hope” David Graeber's Legendary Haiku-Essay on Anarchy: “Are You an Anarchist? The Answer Might Surprise You!” Sherwood Ross in Veterans Today: “U.S. Imperialism Abroad Creating Police State at Home” Douglas Kihn in Truthout: “The US Is Not a Democracy and Never Was” Naked Capitalism: Interview with David Graeber on Democracy in America Does “UC” Stand for the University of California or the University of Capitalism? Lawrence Hunter in Forbes: “Why James Madison Was Wrong About a Large Republic” Ellen Bresler Rockmore in The New York Times: “How Texas Teaches History” Gail Collins in The New York Review of Books: “How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us” James W. Loewen: “Lies My History Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong” RT America: Chris Hedges Visits Anderson, Indiana to Hear About Another “Sacrifice Zone” and How the Town Deals with the Loss of Thousands of Union Jobs Peter Richardson in The Los Angeles Times: “Democracy's Prisoner: Eugene V. Debs, the Great War, and the Right to Dissent by Ernest Freeberg” Home of Eugene Debs: Terre Haute, Indiana Biography of Eugene Debs: A Man Who Received a Million Votes for President While Still in Prison To Paraphrase Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Real Duty in Gaining a University Education Is to Ask, ‘Why?' David Graeber on Why Going to University Is About Returning to the Questions You Had as a Child: “Lecture by David Graeber: Resistance In A Time Of Total Bureaucratization / Maagdenhuis Amsterdam” Is the Internet Killing Critical Thinking? If Not, What Is? Nicholas Carr in Wired: “The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires the Brain” Dr. Paul Cartledge in BBC News: “Ancient History in Depth: The Democratic Experiment [in Greece]” Joshua Kurlantzick in The New Republic: “The Great Democracy Meltdown” The Nowman Show: KPFK Presents Richard Wolff at the Musician's Union, Hollywood Democracy at the Work: A 501(c)3 Organization Created by Richard Wolff to Inspire the Growth and Expansion of Unitary Worker Co-Ops. This Non-Profit Educational Organization Was Inspired by Wolff's Book, Democracy at Work: A Cure for Capitalism Matthew Snyder's First Confrontation with Crunchies & Organic Granola: Bellingham, Washington's Community Food Co-Op Michael Moore's Capitalism: A Love Story, which details two well-regarded unitary co-ops: Alvarado Street Bakery and Isthmus Engineering Living Utopia (Vivir la Utopia): A Documentary by Juan Gamero Who Interviews 30 Surviving Anarchists and Revolutionaries During the Catalonian Revolution from 1936-39. Barcelona Was an Entire City Made Up of Worker-Controlled Co-Ops as Seen in Manolo Gonzalez's Life in Revolutionary Barcelona Noam Chomsky's On Anarchism Equality of Opportunity Versus Equality of Outcome: Dylan Matthews in Vox: “The Case Against Equality of Opportunity” Matt, Not Michael Dukakis! It Was Vice-President Dan Quayle Who Flunked a Kid By Suggesting the Incorrect Spelling for ‘Potato' as ‘Potatoe' John Quiggen in Jacobin: “John Locke Against Freedom” {“John Locke's classical liberalism isn't a doctrine of freedom. It's a defense of expropriation and enslavement.”} First Nations and the Indigenous Did Not View Land as Personal Property or an Economic Fridge: Woo Hoo! A Lesson Plan for 6th to 8th Grade Students Europe's Diseased Paperwork as Freedom: A Title-to-Land A Historical Guide of Worker Cooperatives: Past, Present and Possible Futures Dan Niswander's Clever Lyrical Reference to Pink Floyd's Song “Brain Damage”: “The lunatic is in the hall./ The lunatics are in my hall./ The paper holds their folded faces to the floor/ And every day the paper boy brings more.” Mondragon Company: A Multi-Billion Dollar Cooperative in the Basque Region of Spain, Which Was Created and Conceived as Far Back as 1956 Mondragon's Miracle Backlight: A Documentary About This Gift from the Basque Region Gar Alperovitz's America Beyond Capitalism: Reclaiming Our Wealth, Our Liberty, Our Democracy WSDE Workers' Self-Directed Enterprises -- by Richard Wolff Dan Nowman Interviews Matt & Jesse on The Nowman Show With a Later Panel Discussion with George Kallas Feel Free to Contact Jesse & Matt on the Following Spaces & Places: Email Us: thefutureisamixtape@gmail.com Find Us Via Our Website: The Future Is A Mixtape Or Lollygagging on Social Networks: Facebook Twitter Instagram
Beyond just talking about rabbits shitting outside their cages, in this episode of The Future Is A Mixtape, Jesse & Matt will provide a sustained analysis on Michael Moore's Where to Invade Next. Not only was this the finest documentary released in 2015, but the film is Michael Moore's magnum opus without parallel or peer in his storied and fecund oeuvre. After shooting and releasing a misshapen and badly organized documentary Capitalism: A Love Story in 2009, it seemed that the director had lost his vision or was in some sleepy and lonesome lull. But it's important to remember that the same lull in vision during his early career with Canadian Bacon (1995) and The Big One (1997) also appeared right before his breakout films, Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11. By going invisible for six years after the release Capitalism: A Love Story, shooting in ‘secret locations' unknown to anyone, Michael Moore came back fully revitalized and more sophisticated in his rhetoric and tactics of persuasion, by rejecting partisanship and labels in order to reveal why other countries just simply do it better when it comes to solving daunting societal problems, such as work-stress, malnutrition, K-12 educational failures, student debt, work-life balance, drug addiction, prisons, as well as the loss of women's rights and demanding government reforms. Jesse & Matt hope to tell you why Where to Invade Next is so vital to revving up America's rudderless drift. They will also describe why the film's uses of framing and persuasion are worth stealing--especially given the left's tragic history at winning anything of lasting consequence amidst the Drum & Death March of Neoliberalism. Mentioned In This Episode: Wired Magazine's “Good Enough: Celebrating 25 Years of the Goonies” Noam Chomsky & The Rabbit Cage: Widening the Floors of the State to Eventually Shit Outside of the Rabbit Cage What Is Political Efficacy, and Why Is It a Better Measuring Stick Than Ideology? Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Manifesto Being Displayed at Campaign Tour-Stops Classical Rhetoric: The Three Means of Persuasion: Ethos, Pathos, Logos 1: Michael Moore Invades Italy - Rest & Relaxation Partial Clip of Where to Invade Next When Michael Moore Visits Italy LUXOS on the Italian Suit-Making Masters: “Lardini: A Story Made in Italy” The History and Personalities of Ducati as It Celebrates Its 90th Anniversary Italy and Its Untold History of the ‘Long Vacation': Six to Eight Weeks of Vacation Italy's History of the Paid Honeymoon & the Tradition of an Extra Month of Pay for Italian Citizen's Vacations (Called the 13th Month Paycheck by Matthew) John Maynard Keynes' Utopian Idea That the 15-Hour Work Week Was Inevitable Italian Five-Month Maternity Leave: “Maternity Leaves Around the World” Sweden's Poster Campaign for Paternity Leave: Here, Here and Here Why Do 90% of Sweden's Fathers Take Paternity Leave? Why Germans Call Americans ‘Robots': The U.S. Is the Most Overworked Nation Sam Lowry's Worker and Student Struggles in Italy: 1963-1973 Utopian, Revolutionary Socialism Requires Collective and Continual Struggle 2: France - School Lunches & Children's Nutrition Full Clip of Where to Invade Next When Michael Moore Visits France Quartz Media: “A Typical School Lunch for Kids in Paris vs. New York” British Mum & American Dad Experience French School Meals France Spends Less on School Lunches Than the U.S. France's Tax Stubs Details Where Its Taxes Go; America Doesn't ThinkProgress: “Study Confirms That Abstinence Education Has Utterly Failed At Preventing AIDS In Africa” Salon Magazine: “Abstinence only, rebranded: Failed right-wing sex-ed policy returns as “sexual risk avoidance” U.S. Teens Five Times More Likely to Become Pregnant Than French Teens Memorable Jesse Herring Quote: “Life in America Is a Maze of Electric Fences” John Oliver on Why America's Sexual Education Programs Rely on Ignorance, Fear, Shame and Punishment The Failure of America's D.A.R.E. Program: “Why ‘Just Say No' Doesn't Work” 3: Finland - Best Place for K-12 Education in the World The Atlantic: “The Place Where Ranking Schools Proves They're Actually Equal” Dr. Pasi Sahlberg's on Youtube: “What Can We Learn from the Finnish Education System?” The Bryan Callen Show: Podcast Episode 173: Pasi Sahlberg & Finland's Education System: Only 10% Finnish of Students Take Assessment Exams Because You Only Need 10% to Find the “Blood” Results; America Takes 100% of the Blood. Money in Politics: Testing Industries in America, Like Pearson, Make a Lot of Money Off Common Core and Testing Regimes The Washington Post: “Eight Problems with Common Core Standards” Chicago Study Finds Mixed Results for AVID Program Charter Schools Don't Need to Be Tested Like State Schools & Other Dirty Secrets About the Privatization of the Commons Noam Chomsky: Defund the Public Sphere, and Then Blame the Teachers When You Defund the Schools. “Manufacturing Failure” Let the things that are public fail. 4: Slovenia - Debt-Free College Education The Washington Post Highlights Slovenia: “7 Countries Where Americans Can Study at Universities, in English, for Free (or Almost Free)” Slovenian Student Protests Explode Over Worsening University Conditions BBC News: “Students Warn MPs of Tuition Fees 'Backlash'” The Daily Californian: The History of UC Tuition Since 1868 The State Hornet: “The California State University and University of California systems have changed terminology from “fees” to “tuition,” in hopes of clarifying where student money is spent and to address problems with Post-9/11 GI Bill processing.” (Published During the Tuition Crisis in 2010.) 5: Germany - Work, Labor Rights & Acknowledging State Crimes The Germans Have a 36-Hour Work week, But Are Paid for 40 Hours Boardroom Controlled by German Workers: Control Simple Majority Vote BBC News: Volkswagen's Lies About Diesel Performance Reported by Its Own German Workers; Whistleblowers Protected in Germany GQ Magazine: “The Real Story of Germanwings Flight 9525 Crash” Slate Magazine: “How Do German Students Learn About the Holocaust?” The Washington Post: “Germany welcomed more than 1 million refugees in 2015. Now, the country is searching for its soul.” The Huffington Post: “Why Doesn't America Have A Museum of Slavery” David Amsden in The New York Times: “Building the First Slavery Museum in America” 6: Portugal - Decriminalization of All Drugs Samuel Oakford in Vice News: “Portugal's Example: What Happened After It Decriminalized All Drugs, From Weed to Heroin” 7: Norway - Rehabilitation as Punishment Reddit User Posts Images of Dorms in Macedonia Versus Images of Norwegian Prisons Time Magazine Photo Narrative on Norway's Idea of Incarceration: “Inside The World's Most Humane Prison System” The New York Times: “The Radical Humaneness of Norway's Halden Prison” “A survey of inmates who were released in 2005 put Norway's two-year recidivism rate at 20 percent, the lowest in Scandinavia, which was widely praised in the Norwegian and international press. For comparison, a 2014 recidivism report from the United States Bureau of Justice Statistics announced that an estimated 68 percent of prisoners released in 30 states in 2005 were arrested for a new crime within three years.” Business Insider: Norway Has the Lowest Recidivism Rate of 20% Versus America's Recidivism Which Is 80% in ContrastHow Norway Best Expresses Ubuntu Culture? Prisoners Vote First in the Nation NPR News: Obama Is the First Standing President to Go to a Federal Prison The Express Tribune: “Norway Gunman Wants Japanese Psychiatrist: Lawyer” 8: Tunisia - Women's Rights & Governmental Reform: Part I Tunisia Live: “Abortion in Tunisia: A Shifting Landscape” ERA Movement (Equal Rights Amendment) in the US: Unfinished Business Article 46 of the Newly Passed Tunisian Constitution: “The state shall take all necessary measures in order to eradicate violence against women.” Mikhail Bakunin: “I am truly free only when all human beings, men and women, are equally free. The freedom of other men, far from negating or limiting my freedom, is, on the contrary, its necessary premise and confirmation.” Time Magazine: “Bouazizi: The Man Who Set Himself and Tunisia on Fire” Al Jazeera News: “Mohamed Bouazizi: Was the Arab Spring worth dying for?” 9: Iceland - Women's Rights & Governmental Reform: Part II BBC News: “The Day Iceland's Women Went on Strike [in 1975]” Vigdís Finnbogadóttir: The First Woman President in the World to Be Democratically Elected ThinkProgress: “Iceland, Where Bankers Actually Go To Jail For Committing White-Collar Crimes” 10: The Berlin Wall - How Ideas Like Prisons Can Be Dismantled Nations, Like Any Human-Made Structure, Can Change: Nina Turner's Riveting Speech for Single Payer in California, SB-562: “Whenever you feel like you're in a tomb, imagine you're in womb.” The Huffington Post: “Bernie Sanders' Socialism Is as American as Apple Pie” Feel Free to Contact Jesse & Matt on the Following Spaces & Places: Email Us: thefutureisamixtape@gmail.com Find Us Via Our Website . . . The Future Is A Mixtape Or Lollygagging on Social Networks: Facebook Twitter Instagram
Michael Moore's period of relevance wheezes to a conclusion with 2009's CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY, which examines the decline of the American empire one year after the financial collapse and two years before Occupy Wall Street. After struggling mightily to muster the energy to revisit this film, Will and Luke conclude that it is (for better and worse)a career-summing work.
Capitalism - A Love Story by Barak Lurie
Zabriskie Point (# | 1970) Rendező: Michelangelo Antonioni Tőzsdecápák (Wall Street | 1987) Rendező: Oliver Stone Edukators (Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei | 2004) Rendező: Hans Weingartner Kapitalizmus: szeretem! (Capitalism: A Love Story | 2009) Rendező: Michael Moore | Puzsér Róbert, Magyar Dávid
Jon Schwarz's new job is with The Intercept. He previously worked for Michael Moore's Dog Eat Dog Films and was Research Producer for Moore's Capitalism: A Love Story. He's contributed to many publications, including The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal, Mother Jones and Slate, as well as NPR and “Saturday Night Live.” In 2003 he collected on a $1,000 bet that Iraq would have no weapons of mass destruction. See: https://theintercept.com/staff/jonschwarz
Capitalismo: Una historia de amor Titulo original: Capitalism: A Love Story Dirección: Michael Moore País: USA Año: 2009 Duración: 120 min. Género: Documental Guión: Michael Moore Producción: Anne Moore Música: Jeff Gibbs Fotografía: Dan Marracino y Jayme Roy Montaje: Conor O’Neill, John Walter, Jessica Brunetto, Alex Meillier, Tanya Meillier, Pablo Proenza y T. Woody Richman Fecha Estreno: 02-10-2009 Estreno en España: 08-01-2010 Salida en Alquiler: 19-05-2010 Sinopsis: En el vigésimo aniversario de su revolucionaria obra Roger & Me, Michael Moore, con “Capitalismo: Una historia de amor”, afronta el problema que está en el centro de toda su obra: el desastroso impacto que el dominio de las corporaciones tiene sobre la vida cotidiana de los estadounidenses, y, por consiguiente, también sobre el resto del mundo. Este documental plantea una pregunta tabú: ¿cuál es el precio que paga Estados Unidos por su amor al capitalismo? Hace años, ese amor parecía absolutamente inocente. Sin embargo, hoy el sueño americano se parece cada vez más a una pesadilla, cuyo precio pagan las familias, que ven esfumarse sus puestos de trabajo, sus casas y sus ahorros. Y lo que descubre son los síntomas de un amor que acaba mal: mentiras, malos tratos, traiciones… y 14.000 puestos de trabajo perdidos cada día. Pero Moore no se rinde y nos invita a sumarnos a su lucha, incansable y llena de optimismo.
Capitalismo: Una historia de amor Titulo original: Capitalism: A Love Story Dirección: Michael Moore País: USA Año: 2009 Duración: 120 min. Género: Documental Guión: Michael Moore Producción: Anne Moore Música: Jeff Gibbs Fotografía: Dan Marracino y Jayme Roy Montaje: Conor O’Neill, John Walter, Jessica Brunetto, Alex Meillier, Tanya Meillier, Pablo Proenza y T. Woody Richman Fecha Estreno: 02-10-2009 Estreno en España: 08-01-2010 Salida en Alquiler: 19-05-2010 Sinopsis: En el vigésimo aniversario de su revolucionaria obra Roger & Me, Michael Moore, con “Capitalismo: Una historia de amor”, afronta el problema que está en el centro de toda su obra: el desastroso impacto que el dominio de las corporaciones tiene sobre la vida cotidiana de los estadounidenses, y, por consiguiente, también sobre el resto del mundo. Este documental plantea una pregunta tabú: ¿cuál es el precio que paga Estados Unidos por su amor al capitalismo? Hace años, ese amor parecía absolutamente inocente. Sin embargo, hoy el sueño americano se parece cada vez más a una pesadilla, cuyo precio pagan las familias, que ven esfumarse sus puestos de trabajo, sus casas y sus ahorros. Y lo que descubre son los síntomas de un amor que acaba mal: mentiras, malos tratos, traiciones… y 14.000 puestos de trabajo perdidos cada día. Pero Moore no se rinde y nos invita a sumarnos a su lucha, incansable y llena de optimismo.
The documentary, A Second Opinion, is debuting at Seattle’s AMC Pacific Place 11 this weekend, Fri-Sun 9/19 – 9/21, and Eric & Ralph will be hosting live Q&As there all weekend. If all shows are sold out for the weekend, AMC will take the film nationwide, so this is a make-or-break opening weekend. If you live in the Seattle area, please go see the movie this weekend! Eric and Ralph will give anyone who mentions that they heard of the film on Bulletproof Radio a free, signed copy of the DVD (with TONS of bonus materials), and admission to the live Q&A’s is free with a ticket stub from the movie theater for the documentary. A Second Opinion is a documentary by award-winning filmmaker, Eric Merola, about Ralph Moss and his whistleblowing on a massive cover-up involving the unconventional cancer therapy Laetrile at Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research. Eric has worked for Fuel TV and the WE Network, worked with Michael Moore on the documentary “Capitalism: A Love Story”, and his documentary BURZYNSKI has garnered widespread distribution and numerous international awards. Ralph has written more than 15 books on cancer research, and has received lifetime achievement awards from the American College for the Advancement of Medicine, the Cancer Control Society, The National Foundation for Alternative Medicine, and many other organizations in the cancer education and alternative medicine industries. Why you should listen – Laetrile is a natural compound that research showed stopped the growth and spread of cancer, and the info Ralph has to share is shocking for anyone that has ever had their lives touched by cancer. Ralph and Eric discuss the history of the Laetrile cancer treatment, why it was rejected and renounced, and also touch on other exciting new breakthroughs in cancer therapy that people should be aware of. Enjoy the show!
The documentary, A Second Opinion, is debuting at Seattle’s AMC Pacific Place 11 this weekend, Fri-Sun 9/19 – 9/21, and Eric & Ralph will be hosting live Q&As there all weekend. If all shows are sold out for the weekend, AMC will take the film nationwide, so this is a make-or-break opening weekend. If you live in the Seattle area, please go see the movie this weekend! Eric and Ralph will give anyone who mentions that they heard of the film on Bulletproof Radio a free, signed copy of the DVD (with TONS of bonus materials), and admission to the live Q&A’s is free with a ticket stub from the movie theater for the documentary. A Second Opinion is a documentary by award-winning filmmaker, Eric Merola, about Ralph Moss and his whistleblowing on a massive cover-up involving the unconventional cancer therapy Laetrile at Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research. Eric has worked for Fuel TV and the WE Network, worked with Michael Moore on the documentary “Capitalism: A Love Story”, and his documentary BURZYNSKI has garnered widespread distribution and numerous international awards. Ralph has written more than 15 books on cancer research, and has received lifetime achievement awards from the American College for the Advancement of Medicine, the Cancer Control Society, The National Foundation for Alternative Medicine, and many other organizations in the cancer education and alternative medicine industries. Why you should listen – Laetrile is a natural compound that research showed stopped the growth and spread of cancer, and the info Ralph has to share is shocking for anyone that has ever had their lives touched by cancer. Ralph and Eric discuss the history of the Laetrile cancer treatment, why it was rejected and renounced, and also touch on other exciting new breakthroughs in cancer therapy that people should be aware of. Enjoy the show!
Acclaimed entertainer/singer/songwriter Tony Babino talks about his remarkable show biz career, including his uncanny singing impression of Al Jolson. Tony’s music can be heard in such films as The Crew, The Ice Harvest and Capitalism: A Love Story. He has appeared on stage with stars like Michael J. Fox, Milton Berle and Patti LaBelle – and his off-Broadway debut in Rockstar earned rave reviews. Considered one of today’s power vocalists, Tony is committed to carrying on the tradition of legendary entertainers with a style and charm uniquely his own. This master entertainer has wowed audiences in venues like The Tropicana, The Sands, and Trump’s Taj Mahal. He also boasts additional credits in production shows, revues, commercials, radio, TV, film, and the BIOSHOCK INFINITE video game. Adding to the fun, George Bettinger, aka Mr. Showbiz, has been invited to call in.
The Cold Open #6 features a conversation with producer and director Carl Deal, who has worked on films including Fahrenheit 9/11, Capitalism: A Love Story, Trouble the Water, and his latest doc, Citizen Koch (co-produced and directed with his partner, Tia Lessin), which recently had its world premiere at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. After discussing Carl’s work and the state of documentary filmmaking in general, we end with a brief discussion of Girls and Carl’s recommendation of Five Broken Cameras. The Cold Open Podcast is available on Apple Podcasts and […]
William Black is a former federal bank regulator, current professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, and is the author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank Is to Own One - How Corporate Executives and Politicians Looted the S&L Industry. He appeared extensively in Michael Moore’s dcoumentary: “Capitalism: A Love Story.” Professor Black recorded a conversation with Tell Somebody on Saturday January 12, 2013, shortly before the Treasury Department announced it would not be minting the much talked about trillion dollar platinum coin. Black talks about how the platinum coin idea could have worked, why austerity is a bad idea, Timothy Geithner, Jacob Lew, and a little bit about the movie Blazing Saddles. His writings and those of some of his colleagues can be found at www.neweconomicperspectives.org. This page and the podcast are produced and maintained by Tell Somebody and may or may not reflect the edition of the show broadcast on the radio. Click on the pod icon above or the .mp3 filename below to listen to the show, or right-click and choose "save target as" to save a copy of the audio file to your computer. You can also subscribe to the podcast, for free, at the iTunes store or your podcast directory. If you have any comments or questions about the show or any problems accessing the files, send an email to: mail@tellsomebody.us Twitter: @tellsomebodynow Tell Somebody on facebook
James and Adam express their fondness for mass assassinations, throwing some D's on it, and redistributing wealth through rape. If you have a comment or question you can write us at theaftershowpodcast@gmail.com or call and leave a voicemail message at (206) 984-1298. Thanks for listening. CAPITALISM: A Love Story imdb Page: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1232207/
Capitalism: A Love Story is a 2009 American documentary film directed, written by, and starring Michael Moore. The film centers on the financial crisis of 2007–2010 and the recovery stimulus, while putting forward an indictment of the current economic order … Continue reading →
Violence: A Love Story.
Richard and Safi discuss Michael Moore’s new documentary, Capitalism: A Love Story, and whether or not its timely release is indicative of a rushed production. Richard also gives us his brief review of the new Ricky Gervais comedy, The Invention of Lying.
Matthew Socey reviews CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY, ZOMBIELAND, WHIP IT, the DVDs AWAY WE GO and MONSTERS VS. ALIENS. Plus Matthew, producer Melissa Davis and Myke Perrey discuss the worst films of the '00s.
It’s a big week for movies with Michigan ties. “Whip It” — which director Drew Barrymore shot in Detroit last year — and “Capitalism: A Love Story” — the latest from Flint-born filmmaker Michael Moore — are both new in theaters. Grand Rapids Press film critic John Serba has good things to say about both of them in this week’s New Movies Podcast, with sidekick/producer Cory Olsen kicking in some commentary as well. They also discuss the 3-D re-release of “Toy Story” and “Toy Story 2,” “Zombieland,” “The Invention of Lying,” “Cold Souls,” new DVD releases and more. Give ’em a listen:
Michael Moore starts Capitalism: A Love Story with a sequence of secuirty-camera videos showing holdups in progress, and ends it by showing himself, like some vigilante version of the environmental artist Christo, stringing great lengths of yellow crime-scene tape around banks and brokerage houses in Lower Manhattan... Clothes may make the man, but the woman makes the clothes in Coco before Chanel, Anne Fontaine's smart and sumptuous French-language account of the legendary designer during her early years when she, like her couture, was still ascending from basse to haute...
Cam, Tom and special guest Kris McRonney on Inglourious Basterds, Halloween II, The Cove, District 9, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, The Final Destination, Severed Ways, Lions For Lambs, Inception, Capitalism: A Love Story, The Wolf Man, The Men Who Stare At Goats.