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jared moshe
Jared Moshé's Blog
Jared Moshé is a producer based in New York City. He also loves westerns. More at Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, YouTube.

The car wreck we can’t help but keep watching

I’ve been debating whether to post a link to the big Sarah Palin Vanity Fair article that has started making the rounds today.  On one hand, she is looked upon as a possible leader of one of our two political parties and therefore her narrative (and future narrative) are an important part of our country’s story.  On the other hand, the news media has the power to keep anyone they want as part of the national conversation.  It’s an unspoken truth that the press decides what is news and should outlets stop covering Palin’s speeches, press releases, travel, etc she would lose much of the value she brings to the table: which is media driven (in that way she’s sort of like the Megan Fox of the Political scene - her influence is built up by the establishment).  In the end though, the Palin narrative is just too mesmerizing, too interesting to ignore.  Take this paragraph from the Vanity Fair article:

The consensus is that Palin’s rollout, and even her first television interview, with ABC’s Charles Gibson, conducted after an awkward two-week press blackout to allow for intensive cramming at her home in Wasilla, went more or less fine, though it had its embarrassing moments (“You can’t blink,” Palin said, when Gibson asked if she’d hesitated to accept McCain’s offer) and was much parodied. At least one savvy politician—Barack Obama—believed Palin would never have time to get up to speed. He told his aides that it had taken him four months to learn how to be a national candidate, and added, “I don’t care how talented she is, this is really a leap.” The paramount strategic goal in picking Palin was that the choice of a running mate had to ensure a successful convention and a competitive race right after; in that limited sense, the choice worked. But no serious vetting had been done before the selection (by either the McCain or the Obama team), and there was trouble in nailing down basic facts about Palin’s life. After she was picked, the campaign belatedly sent a dozen lawyers and researchers, led by a veteran Bush aide, Taylor Griffin, to Alaska, in a desperate race against the national reporters descending on the state. At one point, trying out a debating point that she believed showed she could empathize with uninsured Americans, Palin told McCain aides that she and Todd in the early years of their marriage had been unable to afford health insurance of any kind, and had gone without it until he got his union card and went to work for British Petroleum on the North Slope of Alaska. Checking with Todd Palin himself revealed that, no, they had had catastrophic coverage all along. She insisted that catastrophic insurance didn’t really count and need not be revealed. This sort of slipperiness—about both what the truth was and whether the truth even mattered—persisted on questions great and small. By late September, when the time came to coach Palin for her second major interview, this time with Katie Couric, there were severe tensions between Palin and the campaign.

We have deceit, mistakes, lying (to herself probably as much as the outside world), dissension, immaturity, well the list goes on and on.  The strange effect of all these negative qualities is that they make Palin strangely human… and almost identifiable.  Like a car crash, we are entranced by the destruction, secretly happy to not be part of it, yet also know deep down that the mistakes we are witnessing could be our own.

Fight for our Right to Healthy Care (and yes, I know it’s not as sexy as partying)

Iran and Health Care are front and center in the political world right now, and whereas the the former is mentioned, tweeted, and discussed among many film folk everywhere, the latter seems to be strangely missing.  I admit the plight of Iran is much more compelling then a procedural debate about health insurance, a topic that feels to many old and worn over.  But we’re Americans dammit! We’re supposed to be self interested!  And reforming the health care system is something that is very much in the self interest of producers, directors, writers, crew, publicists, even assistants and interns… so much of the indie film community is made up of small companies, sole proprietors, and freelancers that the rising cost of health care becomes a real drain on the bottom line, on our livelihoods.  Especially given the current state of the industry - another topic that is foremost on folks’ minds. 

Right now Health Care is in trouble. 

See yesterday’s op-ed by Paul Krugman where he calls the centrist Democrats in the Senate, who whenever there is a big piece of legislation seek to change it purely to hold onto their power, to task:

“The real risk is that health care reform will be undermined by “centrist” Democratic senators who either prevent the passage of a bill or insist on watering down key elements of reform. I use scare quotes around “centrist,” by the way, because if the center means the position held by most Americans, the self-proclaimed centrists are in fact way out in right field.

What the balking Democrats seem most determined to do is to kill the public option, either by eliminating it or by carrying out a bait-and-switch, replacing a true public option with something meaningless. For the record, neither regional health cooperatives nor state-level public plans, both of which have been proposed as alternatives, would have the financial stability and bargaining power needed to bring down health care costs.

Whatever may be motivating these Democrats, they don’t seem able to explain their reasons in public.”

Check out Robert Reich’s Memo to Obama where he among other things calls on President Obama to stand forcefully in the face of opposition:

“Be LBJ. So far, Lyndon Johnson has been the only president to defeat American Medical Association and the rest of the medical-industrial complex. He got Medicare and Medicaid enacted despite their cries of “socialized medicine” because he knocked heads on the Hill. He told Congress exactly what he wanted, cajoled and threatened those who resisted, and counted noses every hour until he had the votes he needed. When you’re not on the road, you need to be twisting congressional arms and drawing a line in the sand. Be tough.”

Recent polls shows that 72% of Americans want a public health insurance option.  The 2008 election showed that together we can be more than we can ever be apart.  And that unity must extend beyond just getting a Obama into the White House - because we voted for him to get legislation passed, and that legislation doesn’t come to pass, all our efforts were for naught.

 

 

Power that puppy

Because all the Obama idolatry was not too much already we now get ” ‘Puppy Power: Bo Obama,’ written by Paul J. Salamoff and drawn by Emmy Award winning Disney and Warner Brothers artist Keith Tucker. In his book, Bo gives children an insider’s look at the White House. Readers will discover who is the real “top dog” in Washington. There will also be two covers for the “Puppy Power: Bo Obama” comic by ‘Female Force: Michelle Obama” artist Joshua Labello and Keith Tucker.’ ”

Look, make a children’s comic book about Bo for educational purposes but dear god, does it need to be entitled PUPPY POWER!?

Torture Sans Porn

With today’s announcement from the Obama administration denying the release of any torture photographs taken during the Bush Adminstration (I hope to god there was nothing to photograph during the last 100 and some days), it seems to me that it is up to filmmakers to make sure Americans face their role as the purveyors of torture policy.  The news media seems unwilling to push the issue with some notable exceptions, including Andrew Sullivan who cuts through the daily noise of the 24 hour news cycle to continuously pursue the issue.  People need to be held accountable.  And by “people” I do mean me, you, the person sitting outside your office or next to you or who you buy a drink from later tonight.  As Michael Kinsley recently put it, “Between April and November of [2004], there were dozens of articles about torture in general and waterboarding in particular in major print media outlets, on the Web and on TV, many describing it in detail and some straightforwardly labeling it as torture. Millions of people saw these reports, knew that torture was going on and voted for Bush anyway.”  Their is a collective guilt here, and it needs to be faced.  Alex Gibney’s incredible Oscar winning doc Taxi to the Dark Side was a good start.  But it was just that a start.  I hope more filmmakers - both documentary and narrative - put torture front and center and don’t let us Americans continue to avoid responsibility. 

Three points - Holy Shit Arlen Spector edition

1)  I was originally very optimistic about Tim Geithner as Treasury Secretary.  Now, not so much.  Larry Summers seems to be running the show, and Geithner’s relationship with the good old boys seems no different than it ever was.  Is the only kind of change the banks get the type that comes after a decimal point?

2) Robert Rodriguez is bringing back the Predator franchise.  I hear hundreds of people with dreams of one day being state governors will be lined to audition.

3) Arlen Specter is now a democrat.  I am still processing.  The 60 seats thing is pretty meaningless to me as it is basically meaningless in the Senate given the Democrats inability to get party line votes.  More interesting is what pressure this puts on other moderate senators.  Also, it’s a direct result of a right wing primary challenge to Specter making me wonder will this push the other right wing challenges be supported at the risk of more defections or have the Republicans become truly run by the whackjobs (and I mean whackjob in the nicest sense of the word)?

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