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Blue Velvet (1986), Lost Highway (1997), & Mulholland Drive (2001)ALL MOVIES SPOILEDIn this film block, Eileen Jones (Filmsuck and Jacobin) and Alex Vlahov (OnlyFilmNoir) pile in the car with Jeremy and Brian to huff their oxygen mask, put on their blond wigs and head out on the highway to celebrate the life and film noirs of David Lynch.Follow Eileen here:YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@Filmsuck-t9uInstagram https://www.instagram.com/filmsuckpodcastFacebook https://www.facebook.com/filmsuckFilmsuck Podcast https://bit.ly/3kZRTRBFilm Criticism at Jacobin https://bit.ly/2UWh5hqFilmsuck USA by Eileen Jones https://amzn.to/2J5MTgWFollow Alex here:Instagram https://www.instagram.com/onlyfilmnoirHard Times https://thehardtimes.net/author/alex-vlahovWhere to watch:Be Kind Video (Burbank) https://bekindvideo.comVidéothèque (South Pasadena) https://www.vidtheque.comCinefile (Santa Monica) https://www.cinefilevideo.comBlue Velvet (4K Blu-ray)https://boxd.it/29BIhttps://amzn.to/4k1nK3YLost Highway (4K Blu-ray)https://boxd.it/29Wchttps://amzn.to/4kaiECzMulholland Drive (4K Blu-ray)https://boxd.it/297ohttps://amzn.to/3XaI7SKOther films referenced:Sunset Boulevard https://boxd.it/2a20Eraserhead https://boxd.it/299uThe Elephant Man https://boxd.it/27LQDune (1984) https://boxd.it/29tYStand by Me https://boxd.it/2aOeRiver's Edge (1986) https://boxd.it/1C7qBack to the Future https://boxd.it/2b8eSuddenly https://youtu.be/RYPjyXAa86ICause for Alarm! https://boxd.it/1mzSPitfall (1948) https://boxd.it/1vjEThe Substance https://boxd.it/zanSThe Addams Family (1991) https://boxd.it/267gMen in Black https://boxd.it/2a0IShadow of a Doubt https://boxd.it/1BtARed Rock West https://boxd.it/1Wi4Speed https://boxd.it/28qkApocalypse Now https://boxd.it/6ZSOut of the Blue https://boxd.it/1456Hoosiers https://boxd.it/22KeWild at Heart https://boxd.it/2aiiInnocent Blood https://boxd.it/1rVOThe Lives of Others https://boxd.it/2a4AA Clockwork Orange https://boxd.it/2aVEWild in the Country https://boxd.it/1gyaBus Stop https://boxd.it/1yvoDeath Wish (1974) https://boxd.it/1P5iCry-Baby https://boxd.it/1XRaIt's a Wonderful Life https://boxd.it/28xAPhantasm https://boxd.it/1YaGShrek https://boxd.it/29ziMoulin Rouge! (2001) https://boxd.it/29wIThe Piano Teacher https://boxd.it/2886No Man's Land (2001) https://boxd.it/20kIThe Man Who Wasn't There https://boxd.it/1VqcThe Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers https://boxd.it/2b5ENosferatu https://youtu.be/LVV7UutK0XkChinatown https://boxd.it/29vUVertigo https://boxd.it/2apIWoman on the Run https://boxd.it/1p5QDouble indemnity https://boxd.it/297IDrive a Crooked Road https://boxd.it/1dxeQuicksand (1950) https://boxd.it/1zlkThe Narrow Margin (1952) https://boxd.it/1itQThe Killing (1956) https://boxd.it/2aMiRosemary's Baby https://boxd.it/29zMTouch of Evil https://boxd.it/28IIBlood Simple https://boxd.it/1U16Fargo https://boxd.it/2aHMRaising Arizona https://boxd.it/2avQDetour (1945) https://youtu.be/z7Jc8GnoyhIThe Hitch-Hiker (1953) https://youtu.be/WL7P1GOin58Kiss Me Deadly https://boxd.it/1HHeThe Blue Dahlia https://boxd.it/1KQyThe Thing https://boxd.it/294OThe Fly (1986) https://boxd.it/1YIeLove Hurts (2025) https://boxd.it/KyBc
It's our first episode of Oscars Month!!! Forrest, Conan Neutron, Kristina Oakes, and Kt Baldassaro talk to Eileen Jones of Jacobin and Filmsuck about Sean Baker's Anora! Starring Mikey Madison as Ani, a dancer and sex worker from Brighton Beach, who gets married to a Russian Oligarch's son Vanya she meets at the club. When Vanya's parents find out about the marriage, they send their security to force Ani and Vanya to annul the marriage. #anora #oscars #filmpodcast #moviepodcast #oscars2025 #academyawards #mikeymadison #vanya #russian #brightonbeach #academyawards2024 #tangerine #thefloridaproject #redrocket #class #classconflict #yuri #yruiborisov #oligarch It's a look at class, position, and wealth across international lines. Also starring Yura Borisov, Mark Eidelstein, and Karren Karagulian Eileen's review of Anora in Jacobin!! https://jacobin.com/2024/11/anora-baker-class-conscious-film Conan's former Protonic Reversal cohost Brenna has thryoid cancer and is raising money for her treatment, if you can help please donate https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-brennas-fight-against-thyroid-cancer Watch KT Baldassaro & Jared Skolnick's Girl in the Basement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcn2Q57VXEQ Join our discord: https://discord.gg/ZPejN3ej The Movie Night Extravaganza Patreon helps us keep the show going.. become a Patron and support the show!! https://patreon.com/MovieNightExtra
Der kürzlich verstorbene Regisseur David Lynch hat in den Abgrund des amerikanischen Traums geblickt. Und ihm gelang, was nur wenige andere Filmemacher schafften: Er brachte die Avantgarde in die Mainstream-Kinos. Artikel vom 22. Januar 2025: https://jacobin.de/artikel/david-lynch-nachruf Seit 2011 veröffentlicht JACOBIN täglich Kommentare und Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft, seit 2020 auch in deutscher Sprache. Die besten Beiträge gibt es als Audioformat zum Nachhören. Nur dank der Unterstützung von Magazin-Abonnentinnen und Abonnenten können wir unsere Arbeit machen, mehr Menschen erreichen und kostenlose Audio-Inhalte wie diesen produzieren. Und wenn Du schon ein Abo hast und mehr tun möchtest, kannst Du gerne auch etwas regelmäßig an uns spenden via www.jacobin.de/podcast. Zu unseren anderen Kanälen: Instagram: www.instagram.com/jacobinmag_de X: www.twitter.com/jacobinmag_de YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/JacobinMagazin Webseite: www.jacobin.de
...in which we unwrap a selection box of our favourite clips from the year past in the company of Cumbria Wildlife Trust's Jamie Normington and Low Sizergh Barn co-owner Alison Park. Featuring clips from, among others, James Robinson, Eileen Jones, Mark Hatton, Phoebe Smith, April Windle, Mark Cropper, Angus Winchester and Peter Todhunter, we sift through 19 episodes and 20 hours of recordings from as far flung as Newlands, Windermere, Seathwaite, Orton and Great Moss. In our annual extended fire-side chat – in which we pick our Cumbrian Book of the Year and Walk of the year – we cover buses, bars and burial cairns; we discuss rainforests, regeneration and gathering the Rough Fell; we visit Barrow, Borrowdale and the Back o' Skiddaw; we reflect on the increasingly precarious business of hill farming; we consider Cumbria Wildlife Trust's acquisition of 3,000 acres of Skiddaw Forest, and we close by remembering King of the Fells, Joss Naylor. Alison can be found at Low Sizergh Barn.
Forrest Miller, Conan Neutron, Kristina Oakes and KT Baldassaro talk to @JacobinMag and @filmsuckpodcast1517 film critic Eileen Jones about Tim Burton's new film Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Tim Burton is BACK!! #timburton #michaelkeaton #beetlejuice #beetlejuicebeetlejuicebeetlejuice #jennaortega #winonaryder #catherineohara #monicabelluci The new sequel to the original 1988 Beetlejuice has the Deetz Family back at it, with Lydia Deetz starring in the Reality TV Show Ghost House and her daughter Astrid feeling like her mom cares more about ghosts than her.. when Charles Deetz dies in a plane crash.. Lydia, Astrid, and Deliah must go back to the GHOST HOUSE for his funeral. Watch KT Baldassaro & Jared Skolnick's Girl in the Basement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcn2Q57VXEQ Join our discord: https://discord.gg/ZHU8W55pnh The Movie Night Extravaganza Patreon helps us keep the show going.. become a Patron and support the show!! https://patreon.com/MovieNightExtra Conan Neutron has music available from Conan Neutron & The Secret Friends https://neutronfriends.bandcamp.com OR if you want to become a Protonic Reversal patron: patreon.com/protonicreversal
…in which we climb one of the Lake District's most popular heights, Loughrigg Fell, to celebrate the launch of a new book, Loughrigg: Tales of a small mountain. In the company of author Eileen Jones and botanist Pete Martin, we consider why this rambling maze of a fell – the classic 'first and last hill' – holds such a special place in so many people's hearts. Arriving at sequestered Lily Tarn, we survey the rich diversity of hillside flora, from bog asphodel and meadowsweet to grass-of-parnassus and bogbean. Weaving along the ever-popular spine path – past 'Kite Gnoll', 'The Sometimes Pond' and 'The Knobbly-Bobblies' – we reflect on how memories are grafted onto hills, and how landscapes become personal: From the summit, with its repaired – if diminished – trig point (just the right height to perch a G&T) we discuss the changing relationship with ‘local' that emerged during Covid, before backtracking past the former Ambleside Golf Course, where Eileen recalls ‘vapours' on Striding Edge, picks Les Mis as a walking soundtrack… and details an unlikely case of happily-ever-after wife swapping at Pine Rigg. Loughrigg: Tales of a small mountain, by Eileen Jones, is available from Gritstone Publishing: https://gritstonecoop.co.uk/product/loughrigg-by-eileen-jones/ Work to nurture the trees on Loughrigg is being undertaken by Ambleside Action for a Future, one of our favourite Lakes charities: . https://aafaf.uk/index.html
Forrest, J. Andrew World, and Conan Neutron talk to Jacobin and FilmSuck Film Critic Eileen Jones about Craig Gillespie's 2023 Biographical Comedy Dumb Comedy. A comedy about the 2021 Reddit GameStop Saga. #dumbmoney #reddit #gamestop #sethrogen #pauldano #wallstreetbets #americaferrera #money #finance #petedavidson #shortsqueeze This whole month we are doing movies about money! Join our discord: discord.gg/ZHU8W55pnhConan Neutron has music available from Conan Neutron & The Secret Friends and could use music sales now more than ever.. https://neutronfriends.bandcamp.com OR if you want to become a Protonic Reversal patron: patreon.com/protonicreversal We are also now going to be sponsored by Yebiga, a Traditional Balkan Rakija, Serbian Plum Brandy. Go to Yebiga.com to see where it's available near you.
Forrest, Conan Neutron, Kristina Oakes and @JacobinMag & @filmsuckpodcast1517 Film Critic Eileen Jones talk about Alexander Payne's The Holdovers #theholdovers #oscars #alexanderpayne #academyawards #paulgiamatti Over the next month and a half, we are going to be covering the #oscars movies leading up to our Oscar Night Livestream!! #academyawards #oscars2024 We now have a discord: https://discord.gg/A4GXsNM2 Conan Neutron has music available from Conan Neutron & The Secret Friends and could use music sales now more than ever.. https://neutronfriends.bandcamp.com OR if you want to become a Protonic Reversal patron: patreon.com/protonicreversal We are also now going to be sponsored by Yebiga, a Traditional Balkan Rakija, Serbian Plum Brandy. Go to Yebiga.com to see where it's available near you.
Forrest, J. Andrew World, Conan Neutron, Kristina Oakes talk to Jacobin and FilmSuck Film Critic Eileen Jones about John Huston's 1948 adventure film Treasure of the Sierra Madre starring Humphrey Bogart. #sierramadre #treasure #johnhuston #humphreybogart #maltese #maltesefalcon #casablanca #jacobin Follow the show Letterboxd HQ: letterboxd.com/movienightextra And we now have a Movie Night Extravaganza discord community Eileen Jones writes for Jacobin Magazine as a Film Columnist https://jacobin.com/author/eileen-jones She also co-hosts FilmSuck Podcast https://www.patreon.com/filmsuck
These are bumpy times economically and for many of us it's a period of professional redefinition. What path are we on and is it the career we truly desire? How can we best showcase our skill sets and the value-add we bring? Host Chris Schembra's guest on this episode of Gratitude Through Hard Times has a methodology that focuses on these questions and much more. Loren Greiff, Founder & President at PortfolioRocket, has developed a framework that's applicable across industry sectors as well as the many phases of our career development. It's as much about defining our own core values and the expertise we offer as it is identifying the workplace culture best suited to our fundamental vision. Loren shares her proprietary four-step process for reimagining – and bringing to reality – a job that feels like exactly the right fit. You'll come away inspired to redefine what you bring to the table and leverage your network – most especially those 2nd, 3rd and 4th degree contacts that hold far more promise than you might imagine! The market right now is fluid, but the one thing that remains consistent always, says Loren, is the importance of being fully ourselves and clear about what we have to contribute: “This is not about contorting yourself and playing Cirque du Soleil with your career,” says Loren, who also hosts Career Blast in a Half. “This is about really advocating and treating yourself as somebody who is going to transform an organization.”If you're ready to retool your career trajectory, now is the time to book a discovery call with Loren, which you can do at this link. You'll also find inspiration and wisdom in her podcast, Career Blast in a Half.If you'd like to learn more about Chris and his 7:47 Virtual Gratitude Experience or subscribe to our newsletter, please visit this link.Click hereto hear more fascinating conversations with Fortune 500 CEOs, professional athletes and entertainerswho have shared their human stories on Gratitude Through Hard Times. KEY TOPICS:If you could give credit or thanks to one person in your life that you don't give enough credit or thanks to – that you've never thought to thank – who would that be and why? No doubt or hesitation – Eileen Jones, a high school English teacher who was the first person to acknowledge Loren's writing talent and develop her voice. Cheers to her!Yes, And: What enabled Loren to be both an outlier and standard-bearer; perform as a maverick while also maintaining impeccable dignity.Research shows that thought leaders are regarded as having two things:Authenticity.Information to share of value to others.Applying the Methodology: How Loren's framework has proven elastic enough to adapt easily across the full range of industry sectors, from legal to ops to HR to creative.Shedding the Cloak: What prompted Loren to break with the hiring/recruitment industry status quo in order to establish a creative alternative model.Sheltering: About putting a repeatable process in place for migrating out of blocked, unhappy workplace situations.Loren's Four-Step Proprietary Process:Step 1: Get Clear!Ask yourself what you've been doing and why.Determine your core values, the benchmark for evaluating opportunities going forward.Establish how people are going to find you via 15-20 keywords relevant to your skill set .Identify 10-15 companies that meet your ideal criteria.Showcase specific problems you've solved or successes you've had.Create boundaries around the conditions under which you want to meet.Step 2: All about Your Assets!Reimagine LinkedIn as more than a profile. It needs to convert interest and generate activity/connections.Create content – which includes strategically commenting on other people's posts. Join conversations!Develop marketing materials with effective (timely) messaging.Design collateral (visual and written) that is accessible.Step 3: Networking with strangers!Reach out to 2nd, 3rd and 4th degree links – which are going to be your more useful allies in finding a new niche.Formulate pitches that will demonstrate preparation and initiative.Learn how to ask sharper, more mind-blowing questions.Step 4: Do your homework (aka Sniff Testing)!Perform due diligence on your prospective employer.Ensure that onboarding and your 30/60/90-day plan are in place.Keep eyes and ears open for unexpected leads or connections.Scan the landscape for business challenges to which you can bring your vision, expertise and solutions.Shout-Out for Eileen Jones: Thank you for your example, bravery, wit, class – all the known and unknown gifts you've given Loren over the years! QUOTABLE“Being a rebel can be blended with a lot of discernment, decorum and the ability to be kind and loving and just a really wonderful person.” (Loren) While it's not without its merits, the whole industry of hiring and recruiting was just broken. It was a calling for me that you are either going to be part of a continuous problem or you are going to create a different kind of solution.” (Loren) “I realized that if I was going to launch a business it had to solve a big problem – a problem so relevant that it resonates with anyone in the job search process.” (Loren) “If you don't know how to navigate forward in your career, you need to have a system that is rinseable and repeatable (because) with the churn rate this will happen over and over and over again.” (Loren) “At some point in life when we realize we're miserable, we either continue the same patterns and getting the same jobs … or we take a pause and a new approach.” (Chris) “The real transformation happens when you are developing relationships with 2nd, 3rd, 4th degree connections, which are known as your weaker ties. The weak links are your stronger ties.” (Loren) “The hidden job market is available to every single one of us … and can come through multiple areas – content, conversation, somebody standing in line at the post office. You don't know so you have to keep your eyes and ears open.” (Loren) “This is not about contorting yourself and playing Cirque du Soleil with your career. This is about really advocating and treating yourself as somebody who is going to transform an organization.” (Loren) “You've got to figure out the unique problem that you can solve … You want to really know and be able to articulate what that problem is and what it will change.” (Loren) LINKS/FURTHER RESOURCES:Seneca's Letter 13 on “groundless fears” can be found here.More about Stanford's study: "Strength Through Weak Ties" by Mark Granovetter as featured in "Gratitude Through Hard Times: Finding Positive Benefits Through Our Darkest Hours,""Personal Socrates: Questions That Will Upgrade Your Life from Legends & World-Class Performers," by Marc Champagne.Learn about the podcast Big Questions with Cal Fussman.More about the marketing and branding maestro, Seth Godin, available here. ABOUT OUR GUEST:Loren Grieff's career took off in New York as a VP at J. Walter Thompson. For the past decade+ she has established herself as a top performer recognized for a unique ability to serve demanding clients, identify talent unicorns and drive excellence in the industry. PortfolioRocket is the culmination of more than 25 years of corporate design and marketing positions across global agencies, corporate in-house teams, creative staffing and management consulting. FOLLOW LOREN:WEBSITE | LINKEDIN | PODCAST ABOUT OUR HOST:Chris Schembra is a philosopher, question asker and facilitator. He's a columnist at Rolling Stone magazine, USA Today calls him their "Gratitude Guru" and he's spent the last six years traveling around the world helping people connect in meaningful ways. As the offshoot of his #1 Wall Street Journal bestselling book, "Gratitude Through Hard Times: Finding Positive Benefits Through Our Darkest Hours,"he uses this podcast to blend ancient stoic philosophy and modern-day science to teach how the principles of gratitude can be used to help people get through their hard times. FOLLOW CHRIS:WEBSITE | INSTAGRAM | LINKEDIN | BOOKS
Since I wrote a bit about nuclear contamination here in San Francisco and mentioned the work of Kate Brown on nuclear history and politics, I figured I'd repost the great interview that Evgenia and Eileen Jones did with Kate Brown a few years back — back when Evgenia still cohosted Filmsuck.Eileen and Evgenia talked to Brown about her revisionist history of Chernobyl — Manual for Survival: A Chernobyl Guide to the Future. They also talk about popular fictional portrayals of the disaster, including the HBO series Chernobyl, and about how they stack up against what actually happened. The ep was originally broadcast on March 20, 2020.Filmsuck is still going strong — rebooted with Eileen Jones and her new cohost Dolores McElroy. Check them out and subscribe!—Yasha LevineWant to know more? Check out previous episodes of The Russians. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit yasha.substack.com/subscribe
We are talking to Jacobin film critic and FilmSuck Host Eileen Jones about Martin McDonagh's The Banshees of Inisherin.
Cat People (1942), I Walked with a Zombie (1943), & The Body Snatcher (1945) ALL MOVIES SPOILED In this film block, film critic, Eileen Jones, leads Jeremy and Brian into the friendly dark of the horror cinema of Val Lewton. Follow Eileen here: Twitter Instagram Facebook Filmsuck Podcast Film Criticism Filmsuck USA by Eileen Jones Where to watch: Vidéothèque (South Pasadena) Cinefile (Santa Monica) Be Kind Video (Burbank) Cat People (Blu-Ray) I Walked with a Zombie (DVD) The Body Snatcher (Blu-Ray) Other films referenced: Frankenstein Dracula The Bride of Frankenstein Ed Wood Anchorman The Curse of the Cat People Gone with the Wind The Bad and the Beautiful The 7th Victim Valley of the Dolls Citizen Kane White Zombie Day of the Dead (1985) Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti Black Swan The Wrestler The Magnificent Ambersons The Leopard Man Isle of the Dead Cat People (1982)
We're joined by the left's preeminent cultural critics, Catherine Liu and Eileen Jones, to assess why cultural production is so awful right now and what its root causes are. We also have professor René Rojas to help us understand why the progressive constitution in Chile failed horribly after years of mounting social pressure. Jen Pan examines some new independent union alternatives and why they don't stack up to traditional labor power. Finally, we pay tribute to Barbara Ehrenreich, one of our finest socialists of the modern era, who sadly passed earlier in the month.1:00 tribute to Barbara Ehrenreich8:20 interview with Rene Rojas36:30 Jen's segment on "pseudo-unions"42:50 interview with Catherine Liu and Eileen JonesThe Jacobin Show is a weekly YouTube show offering socialist perspectives on class and capitalism in the twenty-first century, the failures of liberalism, and the prospects of rebuilding a left labor movement in the US. Music by Zonkey. This is the podcast version of the episode from September 13, 2022. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
All aboard! This week we are bringing you a one way ticket...to murder! It's Agatha Christie's 1934 novel Murder on the Orient Express. We talk about stabby eye-talians, big ole mustaches and detective fiction, and bust out some top-tier French accents. You'll feel like you're riding a bicycle built for two past the Eiffel Tower with a scarf made of cheese tied around your neck. Oui oui! This is particularly impressive when you consider that our heroic clue collector Hercule Poirot is Belgian. Who knew? We read the Harper Collins edition (1990) and for more on Agatha Christie, film adaptations of her work, and the class politics behind Christie's popularity check out Eileen Jones's 2021 Jacobin article "The Crime of the Century." Find us on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook @betterreadpod, and email us nice things at betterreadpodcast@gmail.com. Find Tristan on Twitter @tjschweiger, Katie @katiekrywo, and Megan @tuslersaurus.
Forrest, J. Andrew World, and Conan Neutron are joined by Jacobin Magazine & FilmSucks Eileen Jones to talk about Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity (1944)
Forrest, J. Andrew World, and Conan Neutron discuss Nightmare Alley (1947) with Jacobin's Eileen Jones. Nightmare Alley is a 1947 noir film starring Tyrone Power as a con artist and freak show performer who flies too close to the sun. It asks the age old question: how does a man become a geek? This is the final episode of Movie Night Extravaganza season 1!
TV and feature writer Eileen Jones talks about her career with screenwriting coach Lee Jessup. Eileen Jones made her entry into screenwriting through the Warner Brothers' Television Workshop, which led to being staffed on the TV series Lethal Weapon. Eileen has since moved into feature films, penning the original female-led action western Highwayman after participating in the inaugural Lucky Exports Pitch Program. She is currently writing the female-led spy movie Marks for New Line Cinema, The Safran Company, and Hodson Exports. Eileen talks about breaking in, sustaining her career, and how to stay inspired: "What makes you excited? What is going to be fun for you to sit down and write every day? I've certainly had experiences where I wrote a script where I was like, 'This is small, it's really personal, I just need to write it, so I'm gonna do it,' and that's been valuable. But for me, now, I'm really thinking about, 'How do I have that meaningful conversation with as many people as possible?'" Don't forget to subscribe to the Write On Podcast on iTunes! Now available on Google Podcasts!
Jacobin film critic Eileen Jones joins TJS to discuss the uses (and the limits) of art as political propaganda and the role of mass entertainment in modern society.The Jacobin Show offers socialist perspectives on class and capitalism in the twenty-first century, the failures of liberalism, and the prospects of rebuilding a left labor movement in the US. This is the podcast version of the show from September 14, 2021 with Paul Prescod and Jen Pan hosting.Subscribe to Jacobin for just $10: https://jacobinmag.com/subscribe/?code=JACOBINYTMusic provided by Zonkey: https://linktr.ee/zonkeyPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/jacobinmag
Ross and Ian are joined by the incredibly insightful and incredibly funny Eileen Jones of the Filmsuck Podcast as well as Jacobin magazine to pick the absolute best from the worst batch! Imagine being stuck on an island with only a handful of DVDs to keep you company, and they're most likely the films you wish sank. If you are a casual fan or a film obsessive, you will love to hear these folks (whose only qualifications are playing bass [or in this case being a professional film critic]) chat about all things film in this very special episode of Film Basics with Bassists That Love Film. Be sure to keep up with all things Eileen at The FIlmsuck podast and Patreon page wherever you listen to podcasts and via this link: https://www.patreon.com/filmsuck and be sure to keep up with her reviews at http://www.jacobinmag.com To hear the extended version of this conversation and support the podcast, head over to www.patreon.com/rigsofdad and click away, OR just download the Patreon ap, search for Rigs of Dad, and you can support creators like me and so many more in the process! We take deep dives into "Dune" vs the small screen, Val Kilmer, "The Green Knight", "CODA", and more. Beyond this episode, you will have access to extended interviews with interview guests, merch discount codes, and much more. Follow all things Ross on instagram at @rigsofdad and his band @burialwaves Be sure to stay in tune with all things Ian at @morbidkales BUT be sure to check out the new Kowloon Walled City jam here: http://smarturl.it/oxygentent The band Age of Ruin just put out a total best of a track called "Dying Days". Head to their IG page www.instagram.com/thisistheageofruin and scope this total banger of a track recorded by friend of the pod: Mike Schleibaum of Darkest Hour Big shout out to the homies at www.shearrevival.com as well... Take care of yourself. Look good, feel good. Treat your body and neighbors nose with love using Shear Revival! Use the code CLEANTONE10 to get 10% off your next order! Artists need your support now more than ever. Let's make sure bands like LaPêche are able to hit the road again by making sure you buy direct. Check them out at www.lapecheband.bandcamp.com Much love to the fine folks at Custom District Pedalboards for allowing me to pack the heaviest tones on the lightest boards. Get yours over at www.customdistrictpedalboards.com Huge loves to the incredible Sacha Dunable. Check out www.dunableguitars.com if you need some real tone in your life. I also want to give a shoutout to Quantum Industries. These dudes are putting out true tanks of guitar cases. Check them out at https://www.quantumindustries.jp/ BE SURE to enter ROD10 for a discount on your order!!!
On the latest CounterPunch Radio: Film critic and host of the Filmsuck podcast, Eileen Jones, stops by to chat with Eric about American movies, the birth and death of indie cinema, why so many movies are so bad these days, and, of course, her Top 5 films all leftists must see. More The post Eileen Jones appeared first on CounterPunch.org.
In this episode we review the book 'How parkrun changed our lives' by Eileen Jones. Jak and Char welcome Bookhounds members and parkrun addicts Egg and Jo to the virtual studio to chat about parkrun tourism, what we do with our stats and why it's so much more than just a 5km run. About the book: It's been hailed as the greatest public health initiative of our time; a social movement for the common good; and even a new religion. Eileen Jones set out to find why so many people love parkrun, and why almost seven million worldwide have signed up to take part in the weekly event. In her journey around the UK she visited many of the 730 parkrun venues, and talked to people who explained how a 5k run on a Saturday morning had changed their lives. Useful links: Bookhounds is a monthly book subscription box delivering running inspiration to your door. Join the club at bookhounds.club. Follow Eileen Jones on Instagram and Twitter. Bookhounds: The Run Down podcast is presented by Char Binns and Jak Smithson, in association with Bookhounds, the club for people who love reading and running. The podcast is edited by Char Binns. With music by Joe Smithson.
Hello! President Biden sparked a major debate when he described spending on social care and childcare as an investment in infrastructure. We’re exploring why the question of what counts as ‘infrastructure’ really matters. US policy expert Julie Kashen talks us through the US infrastructure debate then Professor Sue Himmelweit from the Women’s Budget Group explains why it could have far-reaching implications around the world.Plus author Eileen Jones tells us about her new book ‘How Parkrun Changed Our Lives’ and the unconventional way she launched it… See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We're thrilled to bring you our first interview episode, with film luminary Eileen Jones. Jones is the author of Filmsuck, USA, host of the Filmsuck podcast, and film critic at Jacobin. We asked Eileen to help us understand why ZSJL is so singularly bad, which she did. Read Eileen's Justice League review here. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/miscarriage-of-justice/message
In this week's packed episode the parkrun adventurers share in a whole lot of parkrun excitement across opposite sides of the globe. Author and parkrunner, Eileen Jones joins Mel to discuss the 330-mile Bookrun relay across the UK celebrating the launch of her new book “How parkrun changed our lives” while former Main Beach parkrun ED Paul Relf shares some of his Main Beach experiences with Olly ahead of this weekend's 10th anniversary! We hear from the Channel 5 Team with roving reports from Cam at Rockingham parkrun, TOC at Peppertree parkrun, Alison at Tauranga parkrun and Mark at Lalor parkrun, plus have a debut roving report from our first Channel 2 News Crew member, James! And of course, we enjoy a relaxed post-parkrun cuppa at Dazza's and hear what The Informant really thinks...
My Friends in the North is a twenty-minute podcast series from North East entrepreneur Sarah Waddington in which she interviews some of the North’s leading business and community figures. Here she speaks to Eileen Jones from Cumbria PR, who has just published a wonderful paperback called ‘How parkrun changed our lives’ about: What inspired Eileen to write a book about parkrun How she organised a book launch which, despite COVID-19, saw 104 relay runners carry a book via a parkrun all the way from the Lake District to London, where the book was handed to the original founder of parkrun in Bushy Park Why parkrun resonates so much with people What makes an impactful marketing event with the means to grow About Ambleside and Cumbria where Eileen lives and more. If you’d like to pick up a copy of ‘How parkrun changed our lives’ by Eileen Jones, you can get that here. You can also keep up to date with the story and Eileen’s news on Twitter via @CumbriaPR. If you or anyone you know might make an interesting guest, please do drop me a line at Sarah@Astute.Work.
Eileen Jones, author of “how parkrun changed our lives” is our special guest this week. She tells us about the inspiration to write the book and the novel way she decided to launch it. Also, parkrun’s Head of Support Jane Niven tells us how things are progressing ahead junior parkrun’s return.
Eileen Jones is a journalist, author and publicist based in Ambleside in the Lake District. How parkrun changed our lives is her first book for Gritstone Publishing which ‘set out to see why so many people love the Saturday morning run around the park, and how it has changed their lives'. She has her own one-woman business, Cumbria PR, promoting tourism and heritage organisations including William Wordsworth's home at Rydal Mount, the Heaton Cooper Studio and Gallery, and Zeffirellis cinemas and restaurants. She has worked for newspapers and magazines including the Yorkshire Post and Holland Herald, the KLM inflight magazine based in Amsterdam, and for 12 years she was course leader for the journalism and public relations degrees at Huddersfield University. A former fell-runner who once won a teapot in the 33-mile Haworth Hobble, Eileen has competed in many of the big fell races, including Wasdale, Borrowdale, Ben Nevis and Bens of Jura. But when she slowed down “I started to feel guilty about the marshals waiting for me on summit checkpoints. It was no fun being so far off the back of the pack.” Now she describes herself as a born-again parkrunner. She's done 260 parkruns at 104 locations and was once proud to be first “old dear” at Old Deer parkrun. She helped set up the parkrun at Fell Foot, Windermere in 2014 where she is still a member of the core volunteer team, and also helped set up the new Rothay parkrun in Ambleside. In her spare time, Eileen is a theatre reviewer and has a popular – if currently dormant - theatre blog, Stagey Lady. She has two sons, one of whom was a member of the West End cast of Les Miserables (2015-16); and the other played the Les Mis lead, Jean Valjean, in a junior production. Eileen's dream project, for which she's gaining considerable and not entirely fantastical support, is the production of a new show : parkrun the musical. How parkrun changed our lives is her first book for Gritstone Publishing. It's available from Amazon, from bookshop.org, the independent online store, and from the publisher's website: https://gritstonecoop.co.uk/books/how-parkrun-changed-our-lives/ Original video on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rt0lyDCHxvA
Save Yourselves! is an alien invasion dramedy with touches of horror starring Sunita Mani (from Glow, much-missed in this parish) and John Reynolds (Search Party) as a couple who escape to the country just as society starts to fall apart. And they've just cut themselves off from the internet so for a number of days the couple remain blissfully unaware of their impending doom. Emmet and Stevie discuss Save Yourselves as an unlikely response to COVID-pandemic and quarantine boredom, and its indie-feature budget inventiveness. Also: Emmet delivers some bad news to Stevie. The Eileen Jones article on John Carpenter can be found here. Just to note as well, this episode was pre-recorded before the latest lockdown in Victoria.
The Shining (1980), The Haunting (1963), & The Innocents (1961) ALL MOVIES SPOILED In this film block, film critic, Eileen Jones, takes Jeremy and Brian into the realm of Gothic horror. It’s an exploration of one of Eileen’s favorite horror sub-genres, the ghost story, in particular, the Gothic ghost story, and why they are way scarier than they are given credit for. Eileen Jones Check out Eileen’s excellent podcast, Filmsuck. Follow Eileen on Twitter Read her film criticism at Jacobin and her book, Filmsuck USA. Where to watch: The Shining (Blu-Ray) The Haunting (1963) (Blu-Ray) The Innocents (1961) (Blu-Ray) Books The Shining by Stephen King The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson The Turn Of The Screw by Henry James Other films referenced: Cat People (1942) I Walked with a Zombie The Leopard Man Ghostbusters (1984) The Haunting of Hill House (2018) Doctor Sleep (2019) The Haunting of Bly Manor (2020) Shirley (2020) Rebecca (1940) Eyes Wide Shut Poltergeist
In this episode of SPS, Sophia and Pamela discuss the moral panic surrounding Netflix's new film, Cuties (2020), and take up the responses by Spiked Online and Jacobin magazine. Platypus members Marco Torres and David Faes join us to reflect on Polanski's critically-acclaimed J'Accuse (2019)and how it speaks to the present. In the final segment, Sophia interviews Jack Conrad from the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). They consider how the 'Left' uses and abuses Karl Kautsky's legacy in order to avoid Kautsky's Marxism and discuss what the CPGB is up to. If you want to learn more about Platypus, and get involved, read the Platypus review, visit us on Facebook under the Platypus Affiliated Society or visit www.platypus1917.org. You can follow us on Instagram: ShitPlatypusSays, and on Twitter: @PlatypusSays. If you like the podcast, share it, rate it, and write us a review. Mentioned: (0) Theodor W. Adorno, "Sexual Taboos and the Law Today" (1963) https://platypus1917.org/wp-content/uploads/readings/adorno_sexualtaboostoday.pdf (1) Brendan O'Neill, Cuties Review https://www.spiked-online.com/2020/09/15/in-defence-of-cuties/ (2) Eileen Jones, Cuties Review https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/09/cuties-scandal-netflix-controversy-french-movie (3) The Spartacist League on Polanski, “Stop the Puritan Witchhunt Against Roman Polanski!” printed in the Workers Vanguard, No. 192, 10 February 1978 https://www.icl-fi.org/english/wv/944/polanski.html (4) Platypus' 'Kautsky in the 21st Century' Panel (2020) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aL2TWNd1ntc (5) Communist Party of Great Britain's website https://communistparty.co.uk (6) The CPGB's Weekly Worker website https://weeklyworker.co.uk (7) The CPGB's Communist University 2020 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOkaFWQNpCTrQfT65UszE4A Hosted by Pamela C., Sophia F., with editing assistance by Michael Woodson, Audrey Crescenti and music from Tamas Vilaghy.
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED:On this edition of Parallax Views, 2020's began the "Prestige TV" season earlier this year with FX's Mrs. America leading the charge. This show, based on the battles of the feminist Women's Liberation Movement of the 1970s, centers on the anti-feminist arch-conservative Phyllis Schlafly. The show gained a lot of attention upon it's release for being "timely" in regards to the American political moment of polarization and dealing with the fights between the right (Schalfly) and the left (Gloria Steinem, who is also features in the series) that echo today. Eileen Jones, a film critic at Jacobin, however, has a different take on the series that is decidedly more critical. Eileen, J.G., and Casey discuss the real Phyllis Schalfly and her contributions to the American right wing in the 20th century as well as her often covered-up ties to the fringe John Birch Society. Then we begin to discuss the portrayal of Schlafly in Mrs. America as well as the portrayal of Gloria Steinem. Additionally we discuss the contradictions in Schalfly own life. We also talk about Schlafly's involvement with the Barry Goldwater movement and the role she played in promoting the elite Republican or RINO (Republican in Name Only) narrative within conservative circles through her book A Choice Not an Echo. Eileen and J.G. also note that Schlafly was a huge part of integral part of movement conservatism up until her death and, in fact, even after - her last book, The Conservative Case for Trump, was published posthumously after her death. Eileen expresses her issues with the way Mrs. America doesn't tackle the grotesqueness of Schlafly's legacy and the attempts to psychologize Schlafly and the liberal use of fictionalized dramatization. J.G., on the other hand, notes the conservative backlash against the TV series. This leads us into a discussion of the show's repeated "poor Phyllis" trope to explain Schlafly's politics and what Eileen considers the lame symbolism utilized in the series. And, of course we address the conservatism criticism of the show that claims Schlafly's is portrayed as a cynical operator rather than a true believer, anti-communist ideologue and the racist element of Schlafly's career and activism that is often overlooked. All that and much more on this previously unreleased edition of Parallax Views.
If the year in film went the way film critics said it was, Joker would have caused an incel uprising and Little Women would have solved misogyny. This was a year that hyperbole and Think Pieces took over film criticism, with every film being touted as the Most Important Ever or the Best Ever or You Will Definitely Die If You See This in the Theater. Jacobin film critic and co-host of the podcast Filmsuck Eileen Jones joins Jessa Crispin to discuss the year that was in film, the year that definitely wasn't, and why we are both firmly Against Meryl Streep. Support this podcast: http://patreon.com/publicintellectual http://jessacrispin.com
Lexicon editor Eileen Jones chats with her friend Angela about interesting characters from Gryffindor House, focusing on on Ginny and Dean. The post Fan Conversations: Gryffindor Characters appeared first on Harry Potter Lexicon.
Lexicon editor Eileen Jones chats with her friend Angela about interesting characters from Gryffindor House, focusing on on Ginny and Dean. The post Fan Conversations: Gryffindor Characters appeared first on The Harry Potter Lexicon.
Lexicon editor Eileen Jones continues her conversation with her friend Angela about characters each of them feels a connection to. Angela talks about Filius Flitwick which Eileen discusses Cho Chang. The post Fan Conversations: Ravenclaw Characters appeared first on Harry Potter Lexicon.
Lexicon editor Eileen Jones continues her conversation with her friend Angela about characters each of them feels a connection to. Angela talks about Filius Flitwick which Eileen discusses Cho Chang. The post Fan Conversations: Ravenclaw Characters appeared first on The Harry Potter Lexicon.
'Joker' is not an ode to the alt right. It is a film about the devastating consequences of austerity. This is an objective fact, which I spoke with Jacobin story editor Connor Kilpatrick about. You can read my review of 'Joker,' which touches on many of the themes we talk about in this discussion, for the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/oct/10/joker-far-right-warning-austerity Eileen Jones's piece about 'Joker' and America's long history of movie moral panics is here: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/09/joker-and-the-long-history-of-movie-moral-panics
Come see us Friday in Chicago at the hideout! http://bit.ly/sfsschi19 On today's special Struggle Session we discuss the world's finest movie franchise John Wick with the world's finest film critic Eileen Jones (Jacobin, Filmsuck). Keanu Reeves is the people's action star! Subscribe to Filmsuck at patreon.com/filmsuck https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/05/john-wick-keanu-reeves-review
When President Trump talked of Africa as a continent of “shithole countries” where people lived in huts, he was drawing on a set of ideas made popular in the 19th century. “Darkest Africa” became a favorite trope of explorers like Henry Morton Stanley who promoted his books and lectures by pushing the idea of Africa as a dark place – a phrase that had all kinds of meanings – racial, intellectual, geographical. Today I speak with Jeannette Eileen Jones, author of In Search of Brightest Africa, Reimagining the Dark Continent in American Culture, 1884-1936 (University of Georgia Press, 2011). Jones talks about the many different groups, from naturalists and conservationists to African American artists and intellectuals, who begin to recast Africa in the America imagination in the early 20th century. Jones is associate professor of history and ethnic studies at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Michael F. Robinson is professor of history at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. He's the author of The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture (University of Chicago Press, 2006) and The Lost White Tribe: Scientists, Explorers, and the Theory that Changed a Continent (Oxford University Press, 2016). He's also the host of the podcast Time to Eat the Dogs, a weekly podcast about science, history, and exploration. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When President Trump talked of Africa as a continent of “shithole countries” where people lived in huts, he was drawing on a set of ideas made popular in the 19th century. “Darkest Africa” became a favorite trope of explorers like Henry Morton Stanley who promoted his books and lectures by pushing the idea of Africa as a dark place – a phrase that had all kinds of meanings – racial, intellectual, geographical. Today I speak with Jeannette Eileen Jones, author of In Search of Brightest Africa, Reimagining the Dark Continent in American Culture, 1884-1936 (University of Georgia Press, 2011). Jones talks about the many different groups, from naturalists and conservationists to African American artists and intellectuals, who begin to recast Africa in the America imagination in the early 20th century. Jones is associate professor of history and ethnic studies at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Michael F. Robinson is professor of history at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. He's the author of The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture (University of Chicago Press, 2006) and The Lost White Tribe: Scientists, Explorers, and the Theory that Changed a Continent (Oxford University Press, 2016). He's also the host of the podcast Time to Eat the Dogs, a weekly podcast about science, history, and exploration. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When President Trump talked of Africa as a continent of “shithole countries” where people lived in huts, he was drawing on a set of ideas made popular in the 19th century. “Darkest Africa” became a favorite trope of explorers like Henry Morton Stanley who promoted his books and lectures by pushing the idea of Africa as a dark place – a phrase that had all kinds of meanings – racial, intellectual, geographical. Today I speak with Jeannette Eileen Jones, author of In Search of Brightest Africa, Reimagining the Dark Continent in American Culture, 1884-1936 (University of Georgia Press, 2011). Jones talks about the many different groups, from naturalists and conservationists to African American artists and intellectuals, who begin to recast Africa in the America imagination in the early 20th century. Jones is associate professor of history and ethnic studies at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Michael F. Robinson is professor of history at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. He's the author of The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture (University of Chicago Press, 2006) and The Lost White Tribe: Scientists, Explorers, and the Theory that Changed a Continent (Oxford University Press, 2016). He's also the host of the podcast Time to Eat the Dogs, a weekly podcast about science, history, and exploration. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When President Trump talked of Africa as a continent of “shithole countries” where people lived in huts, he was drawing on a set of ideas made popular in the 19th century. “Darkest Africa” became a favorite trope of explorers like Henry Morton Stanley who promoted his books and lectures by pushing the idea of Africa as a dark place – a phrase that had all kinds of meanings – racial, intellectual, geographical. Today I speak with Jeannette Eileen Jones, author of In Search of Brightest Africa, Reimagining the Dark Continent in American Culture, 1884-1936 (University of Georgia Press, 2011). Jones talks about the many different groups, from naturalists and conservationists to African American artists and intellectuals, who begin to recast Africa in the America imagination in the early 20th century. Jones is associate professor of history and ethnic studies at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Michael F. Robinson is professor of history at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. He's the author of The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture (University of Chicago Press, 2006) and The Lost White Tribe: Scientists, Explorers, and the Theory that Changed a Continent (Oxford University Press, 2016). He's also the host of the podcast Time to Eat the Dogs, a weekly podcast about science, history, and exploration. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When President Trump talked of Africa as a continent of “shithole countries” where people lived in huts, he was drawing on a set of ideas made popular in the 19th century. “Darkest Africa” became a favorite trope of explorers like Henry Morton Stanley who promoted his books and lectures by pushing the idea of Africa as a dark place – a phrase that had all kinds of meanings – racial, intellectual, geographical. Today I speak with Jeannette Eileen Jones, author of In Search of Brightest Africa, Reimagining the Dark Continent in American Culture, 1884-1936 (University of Georgia Press, 2011). Jones talks about the many different groups, from naturalists and conservationists to African American artists and intellectuals, who begin to recast Africa in the America imagination in the early 20th century. Jones is associate professor of history and ethnic studies at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Michael F. Robinson is professor of history at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. He's the author of The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture (University of Chicago Press, 2006) and The Lost White Tribe: Scientists, Explorers, and the Theory that Changed a Continent (Oxford University Press, 2016). He's also the host of the podcast Time to Eat the Dogs, a weekly podcast about science, history, and exploration. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On today's special Struggle Session we discuss the world's finest movie franchise John Wick with the world's finest film critic Eileen Jones (Jacobin, Filmsuck). Keanu Reeves is the people's action star! Subscribe to Filmsuck at patreon.com/filmsuck https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/05/john-wick-keanu-reeves-review
Vassos shares his experience of attending his first parkrun in Australia at the weekend, which obviously included getting lost! Louise explains why we don't promote inaugural parkruns and in an FWT first, one listener tells us about a dream she had that featured Vassos. We are joined by Eileen Jones, a regular at Fell Foot parkrun in the Lake District. She tells us about the challenges they face in that part of the country, how she combines musical theatre and tourism and why she's called Bambi!
Eileen Jones is a film critic and professor whose biting, polemical movie reviews are featured in Jacobin and a number of other publications. Her recent book Filmsuck, USA investigates the persistently horrific state of American cinema, while outlining Jones’ vision of a liberatory movie culture that honors the medium’s working class roots. In this conversation, she explains how her early experiences watching Hollywood genre films influenced her ideas about movies, why the Coen brothers are her preferred auteurs, and why she thinks the language of cinema can play such a vital role in challenging the organizing principles of capitalism.
In this episode, we talk about the film Sorry to Bother You! We read two interviews with Boots Riley in Vox (https://bit.ly/2MC1h1w) and Jacobin Magazine (https://bit.ly/2ojKHVC). We also draw from the thoughts in this review by Eileen Jones (https://bit.ly/2LzzyZJ) and in this feminist critique in Bitch Magazine (https://bit.ly/2nL2rcc). Other texts we mention: - We briefly talk about nurses strikes at the 22 minute mark, and it's a topic we plan on returning to after we've done some more reading! This is the Labor Notes article that came to Lydia's mind mid-discussion: https://bit.ly/2MQvNEf - Martin took this quiz, "Which dystopia have I found myself in?" Super fun, very bleak: https://bit.ly/2PfAGEd - Here's a link to the SNL sketch we mention at the 25 minute mark, "Prison Job": https://bit.ly/2wu86Y9 Recorded August 12, 2018
This is a preview of a bonus premium episode. Support the show and get double the episodes by subscribing to bonus episodes for $5/month at patreon.com/champagnesharks. This will not only give you access to this current premium episode you’re previewing, but also all the back premium episodes you may have missed as well and all future bonus premium episodes. Also, remember to review and rate the podcast in Itunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/champ…d1242690393?mt=2. We discuss Stranger Things 2, which oddly enough wasn't even what we originally planned to discuss. Show Notes: An article by Henri de Corinth on Stranger Things and the current age of cynical nostalgia "The Age of Imitation: A Primer of New American Nostalgia, 2007-2017" https://henridecorinth.wordpress.com/2017/04/16/the-age-of-imitation-a-primer-of-new-american-nostalgia-2007-2017/ Fake Controversy, Terrible Comedy by Eileen Jones https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/07/ghostbusters-paul-feig-feminism-mccarthy-murray/ Ghostbusters and Guilt-vertising: Or How The “Right” Product Can Make You A Better Person by Josh Bray https://supernerdland.com/ghostbusters-guiltvertising/ About the Ghostbusters manufactured gender war controversy 1: Why Being Honest about Ghostbusters is Important by Comic Book Girl 19 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sn_vAcFGTJU About the Ghostbusters manufactured gender war controversy 2: Ghostbusters Review by Red Letter Media http://redlettermedia.com/half-in-the-bag-ghostbusters-2016/
Eileen Jones is the Founder of Desert Divas for Dogs, a non-profit organization that supports rescues by providing food, bedding, or any other supplies that may be needed to support the care of animals. Before starting her own non-profit, Eileen spent twenty years working as a Human Resources professional and consultant. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app