journal
all ![]() | Rob is 20,117 days old today. |
Sept 2002 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Nov 2002 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 2001 jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep oct nov dec
2003 jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep oct nov dec |< << more >> >| |
Entries this day: Awake Bowling_for_Columbine Church Jenny Tired calder megan Awake 8:55am CDT Sunday 20 October 2002 Amelia and I are awake at 9 so that we may go to church today. I'm actually only interested in visiting the YRUU; Kellie, one of the advisors asked for insights on getting youth to be respectful of one another. I can help more if I can see the situation or at least ask some specific questions about the stories I hear. I had dreams, and I think they involved being at the Bibby's in Dallas, but I don't recall more than that. permalinkBowling for Columbine Bowling for Columbine Full Price Feature Number one - with a bullet! If you don't know, this is Michael Moore's latest documentary, this time about the culture of violence in America, especially as per gun killing. Some terrifying statistics are reported in this film; I wish I could have recorded it to a hard disc in my head to give myself facts on hand for future discussion. It is not a personal paean of self-aggrandizement as some have suspected; C-Span has conditioned us to expect nothing but that. Regardless whether you agree with his message or not, Moore's gifts as a filmmaker cannot be denied. His editing and contrasting of footage and audio tell a greater story than the individual bytes being parsed. Shrewd editing wrings the most content from his quiet, laissez-faire interview style. Moore lets them do all the talking - it seems as though he must be leading their answers because, well, how can people be so foolish as to spout off in a way that so clearly illustrates how dangerous/wrong/deceptive they are? People do. He manages to infuse this carnival of horrors with enough humor laughter obscured dialogue. The laughter in my audience was from their delight, watching his subjects shoot themselves in the foot, as it were. He asks the right questions, and they are questions that need asking, need asking in a public forum, and the very absence of coherent answers is chilling enough. His regular guy manner and Hollywood influence get him meetings with barflies and movie stars, for great juxtaposition. I know many of us feel the same way about our society but have been unable to verbalize it. It may be too simplistic to say that our culture is the way it is due to one thing or another; no doubt it is a complex web of many things. But few have addressed this angle of the issue, and it needs addressing. If it is one-sided, it is certainly the side we don't see, unless we listen between the lines on NPR or hang out with Noam Chomsky. Why is our gun murder rate 100-300 times greater than in any other country in the world? Why are we so quick to send troops, deploy ships, whip out a shotgun and yell "Get off my lawn?" We can shoot each other because we are completely detached from a sense of community, interrelation, interdependence. Other industrialized (not just Western) countries enjoy the same supposedly inappropriate stimulus as us, have guns, have corrupt leaders, have "mixed ethnicities" in their cities, what is the difference? It is attitudes, fear, misinformation, a self-centered, consumer culture. We've heard this, as an explanation as to why "they" hate us, but we are surrounded by enough self-induced terror, who needs zealots making a move in our direction. It's a sobering movie, but very well-stated. Canada - we joke it's the largest of our 51 states, but no one there is denied medical care all ("it's a basic human right," scoffs an Ontario teen), there are 7 million guns in 10 million households, yet less than 40 gun deaths a year. The US has over 11,000 gun deaths a year, many uninsured persons. AND they are legalizing pot. Why do we make fun of Canada again? There are so many beautiful, unspoken moments in Bowling. I wish I could spoil some of it for you but you will just have to go see it. Moore quotes the social commentary as hilariously propagandized by South Park the movie, a keen social commentary on blame and social responsibility, worthy of the same audience Moore carries. Truth hurts, even when you can laugh at it. It is also delicious to hear how irrational and crazy the government officials sound, blaming Marilyn Manson for the crazy teens (but not Eminem? Explain that), yet the Artist Formerly Known As Brian had some very wise things to say. Also, there is a brilliant animated short in the middle of the film which I wish was available for download - it's a fantastic miniature summary of Moore's thesis. If you recall in the 1980's, there were picket lines around the theatres playing a little movie that dared to show the human side of Jesus' man/god nature. People who had not seen the film picketed it, reviled it, and claimed its one-sidedness was sinful. One must see both sides of any major debate, and that film operated under the premise that plenty has been done with Jesus' God-side. Moore's film is the Last Temptation of Charleton. The people who most need to see it won't, and I wish I could change that - I hope my readers who see it will help as well. Roger Ebert yapped at some length about Moore's excessive use of "theatre." Without the organized presentation, the public embarrassment of the guilty, the message would not be heard. World famous improviser Keith Johnston says that we go to the theatre to see people change. We watch Michael Moore hoping for this change. Keep the theatre, Mike, it is what makes your message both understandable and heard. I'm sure I'm going to get loads of disgruntled email from my readers, who do not have to agree with me, but I hope they will see the film and argue with me intelligently. Better yet, see the film, and challenge someone you can speak to in person to see it as well and discuss it with them. I am here to recommend (or not) films, and all politics aside, this is a fantastically made film. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ These reviews (c) 2002 Karina Montgomery. Please feel free to forward but just credit the reviewer in the text. Thanks. reviews@cinerina.com Check out previous reviews at: http://www.cinerina.com http://ofcs.rottentomatoes.com - the Online Film Critics Society http://www.hsbr.net/reviews/karina/ - Hollywood Stock Exchange Brokerage Resource http://www.mediamotions.com and http://www.capitol-city.compermalink Church 10:56am CDT Sunday 20 October 2002 I came to church with Amelia today just to talk to Kellie about a question she asked me via email. I ended up talking instead with aw man I forgot her name, the DRE. I hopefully gave her some helpful thoughts and insights. Didn't get to talk super long, but hopefully it helped. 12:21pm Amelia and I just walked Magic (the dog) around the neighborhood and she queried me on how I've found my balance between being a youth and an advisor. I told her that it took awhile for me to find the balance and that now I have been driven by at least two different thoughts: !) YRUU is my priority over all other activities. @) I have no ego in YRUU. Number (!) above might sound weird considering I'm not going to San An, but ultimately I trust this is better for the youth, though it's hard for me to see that now. Number (@) above is true in the following way: if the YRUU activity is truly being run by youth (and doesn't violate the community agreed rules) I don't care what the activity is. There are certainly other driving factors that guide my involvement with YRUU, but those are two that stand out for me. permalinkJenny 2:16pm CDT Sunday 20 October 2002 Jenny hoped I hadn't written about her today, but I will just because. She slept until 12:30pm today. That was after falling asleep during both movies that we watched last night. She's been vying for attention from Erik, Andrew, Sean, who are all playing video games. permalinkTired 5:18pm CDT Sunday 20 October 2002 I'm getting tired of my adventure I think. Maybe I'm just flat tired physically (after staying up late watching movies, and up early for church) and mentally (for working on Kim's website and reading livejournal and news.google.com) But what I'm noticing is that I'm less and less planning ahead my adventure. I gave Amelia only 1 day's notice, and I emailed Calder today to see if I can say HI to her tonight. I don't know where/if I'll stay in Tulsa overnight tonight. blah. I don't remember their phone number or Bhyllx's email address or nothin' to give them *any* advanced warning. Poop poop poop. permalinkcalder 10:55pm CDT Sunday 20 October 2002 Super awesome special thanks to Calder and her mom for getting me a place to sleep, and leading me to the place to sleep tonight. Calder's mom seems really cool and patient and funny and able to deal with inanity around her. Five minutes in the house turned to 30 minutes of animated conversation and billiard ball rolling plus five minutes of coaxing Calder out the door and into the car with all her stuff. I'm so thankful for the quick turnaround Calder did on getting me a place to stay. AND(!) ("there's more?") she got me a funny book with a funny name and a gay pride kitten made of those round melty bead things! Awesome. I think I know just the person who will love the cat. Hugs to Calder's mom and Calder as they left. permalinkmegan 11:00pm CDT Sunday 20 October 2002 So I'm at Megan's house. Super thanks also to Megan and her mom for letting me stay on such short notice 11:54pm Ah, now I remember having met Megan's mom Lee-anne (sp). We chatted for a while; she asked about my trip and upcoming plans, and told me about her brother's new job as the intake nurse at the local jail and about the awesomeness of their house (originally built in 1938, then moved to this location when Loop 244 was built), which they have been expanding and remodeling. Nice. Ahhh fuzzy flannel sheets. So perfect. Thank you so much! permalinkprev day next day |