Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Trick or Treat: Suburbicon: A Back-Drop For Horror or A Nasty Bit of Film Noir?

Released just before Halloween, George Clooney's sprawling comedic thriller takes to the screens nation-wide and here in Mesa on Friday, October 27th just in time for Trick-or-Treat:
So far what's in the bag for this 1950's-era action-packed oh-so-retro slow-slam are mixed audience reactions.
The question is open how it will play both here in Mesa - a Melting Pot of Diversity where [to borrow a phrase from one reviewer]
We demand our civil rights to live where we want and with who we want. And with God's help, we will overcome."
The new movie joins the big screen line-up for cinematic interpretations of that great American Promised Land arrives in Post-World War 2 Suburbia where white couples get married and breed, the wives do the shopping, the husbands do the working and the kids like to play baseball . . . too good to be true for sure. It became the Utopia we created for what is now three generations after The Baby Boomers. 
Suburbicon (2017) - Official Trailer - Paramount Pictures
Views: 2,275,752
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Some reviews:
 
'Suburbicon': Film Review | Venice 2017
COMMENTS > We've sniffed the rot beneath these manicured lawns too many times before
5:06 AM PDT 9/2/2017 by David Rooney
"It's almost inevitable, while watching Suburbicon, that you find yourself wondering about the movie Joel and Ethan Coen might have made of it, had they gone ahead with their original script. Perhaps an anarchic comedy in the constantly surprising vein of Raising Arizona? Or a daring mix of grotesque violence and deadpan humor along the lines of Fargo? In the hands of director George Clooney, the material has some nasty charms, for sure. But it pushes too hard from the start, then steadily goes off the rails from dark to dyspeptic, lacking the originality, bite or tonal consistency to make up for dipping from a very familiar James M. Cain well. Its bigger problem is a timely subplot about virulent racism among white Americans that comes off as a mishandled afterthought.
Paramount's best bet is to push the novelty of Matt Damon and Julianne Moore playing characters who appear on the surface to be regular 1950s archetypes — the dependable breadwinner and the sweet-as-pie homemaker, respectively — before being exposed as amoral schemers when their bad decisions unravel. But there's been a long history of more incisive movies about the poisonous soul lurking beneath the reassuring cookie-cutter order of suburban America, and this one ultimately brings little that's fresh. . .
A cute opening sequence, styled as a video promo for potential residents, touts Suburbicon as "a melting pot of diversity," drawing folks from places as far apart as New York, Ohio and Mississippi. But every happy family in the kitschy illustrations is lily-white, signaling a restrictive environment, even if it's not declared as such.
The cheery mailman gets a shock when he knocks on the door of a new resident and discovers that the African-American woman he assumes to be the maid is actually the lady of the house, Mrs. Meyers (Karimah Westbrook). That alarm instantly spreads, sparking a rabid town hall meeting at which homeowners protest the perceived violation of their community and the inevitable drop in property values. While it's not subtle, their appropriation of liberal language for their cause gets the point across: "We demand our civil rights to live where we want and with who we want. And with God's help, we will overcome."
Link > http://www.hollywoodreporter.com includes a podcast and video of three stars
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How movies like ‘Suburbicon’ attempt to deconstruct American suburbs

By  
rafer.guzman@newsday.com 
The wives do the shopping, the husbands do the working and the kids like to play baseball in “Suburbicon,” a fictional American town that lends its name to George Clooney’s new film, which arrives in theaters Friday, Oct. 27. As it turns out, this clean-cut, post-War scenario is too good to be true. Although “Suburbicon” begins as the story of a wholesome-seeming family — Matt Damon and Julianne Moore play dad and mom — it ends in violence, bloodshed and murder. . .
To a generation that lived through World War II, the suburbs promised peace, quiet, fresh air and a relief from urban congestion and crime. (It also drove white flight, as “Suburbicon” makes clear in a racially-charged subplot.)
Over the years, the suburbs have served as a backdrop for horror (“A Nightmare on Elm Street”), social commentary (“The Stepford Wives”) and, lest we forget, feel-good comedy (“Mr. Mom”).
Here’s a quick survey course in suburban cinema, broken down into five categories:
READ MORE an excellent round-up by reporter Rafael Guzman
Link > Newsday
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Forbes says it's a somewhat low-profile debut for such a promising picture, with reviewer Scott Mendelsohn adding, I like what Clooney was going for, but he didn’t quite pull it off. Ironically enough, while Suburbicon may not be the movie we need right now, it may well be the movie we deserve.
Link > Forbes.com
The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival to mixed reviews, and as we know movies of this nature (adult-skewing, non-tentpole, not necessarily crowd-pleasing) are at a comparative disadvantage even compared to three years ago. Absent much in the way of Oscar buzz or positive narratives, this one may struggle. The good news is that director George Clooney usually makes a point to keep his budgets in check when he makes old-school, adult-skewing studio programmers like this. I don’t have the exact budget for this one, but I’m betting that Clooney didn’t spend too much of his investors’ money.
Scott Mendelsohn's Review:
There are three distinct movies somewhat at war with each other in Suburbicon, and only two of them really mesh together while the third essentially sabotages the overwhelming narrative. To wit, the George Clooney-directed film, written by a discarded Joel and Ethan Coen screenplay (from 1986) isn’t content to just be a nasty bit of suburban film noir. The film also contains a subplot loosely based on the true story of Daisy and William Myers, an African American couple (with a young son) who moved into a lily-white suburban neighborhood and were greeted with jeers, vandalism and riots from their tolerant Northern neighbors.
At a glance, the story of the Myers is itself ripe for a cinematic telling, even if it didn’t have a conventional three-act structure (they lived in the home for four years and protests just trickled out after about two years). So, while Clooney and friends may mean well in exposing the outright racism present in supposedly liberal enclaves, the choice to use that story as topical seasoning for a black comedy about duplicitous white folks feels like a metaphor for Hollywood’s feelings on racial inclusivity in general. . .
Suburbicon is a story about a middle-class dad (Matt Damon) who attempts to cope with the home invasion murder of his wheelchair-bound wife (Julianne Moore). I guess this is a first-act spoiler, but you can probably guess that Gardner and Aunt Margaret (also Moore) had something to do with it. Noah Jupe is terrific as the young son, and the film’s best moments are when he’s dealing with the unthinkable truth about his father and his aunt. At times, with its "child’s eye view" of the crime melodrama and racial strife, it feels like Clooney is trying to craft a more cynical take on To Kill a Mockingbird.
Had that been the entire movie then the Myers’ subplot might have been applicable (Espinosa gets the most dialogue among his family) as part of a child’s-eye view of societal bigotry and parental betrayal. But, perhaps because Matt Damon and Julianne Moore are movie stars, we also get a bunch of scenes of Damon and Moore doing their best to dig themselves out of a hole. This stuff is not without entertainment value, and it picks up when Oscar Isaac shows up as a suspicious insurance investigator. But the emphasis on the adults just makes the racial strife subplot look that much more exploitative. . . Away from would-be Oscar contention and away from the current conversation about racial and gender inequities in mainstream Hollywood, Suburbicon is an entertaining potboiler that looks great and boasts a fine cast. Even within context, Matt Damon’s growing reputation as maybe not the greatest wonder boy in Hollywood history is put to good use (his final scene belongs on a highlight reel). I may have been offended by how the film appropriated painful black history for seasoning in an otherwise lily-white crime melodrama, but I was mostly entertained and it’s at least one-third of a great movie. Whether that counts as a recommendation is up to you. . .
 

Investing In Start Ups Sight Un Seen > It Works for Social Capital

Social Capital has started investing in startups, sight unseen
"There’s little question that former Facebook executive and venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya thoroughly enjoys challenging the way that startups are funded. Because he has the hot hand, so to speak, he’s able to get away with it, too.
Last month, for example, Palihapitiya’s firm, Social Capital, took the unusual step of raising $600 million in an IPO for a SPAC called Social Capital Hedosophia. The shell company will use the money to acquire all or part of a privately held tech company, thereby taking it public and circumventing what Palihapitiya sees as the unnecessarily long, expensive and distracting process of going public.
Now, Social Capital has another trick up its sleeve. It’s beginning to invest in far-flung startups, sight unseen."
QUESTION: Is Social Capital innovating its way into trouble?
https://techcrunch.com/2017/10/25
Social Capital manages $1.8 billion worth of assets and has reportedly deployed two-thirds of its third, $600 million, early-stage fund, which it closed in 2015.
How it works: entrepreneurs from anywhere in the world can fill out a questionnaire, then submit revenue figures and either raw engagement or transaction logs (or both) to Social Capital, including sometimes by granting the firm direct access to the cloud services they use.  It’s entirely self-serve. If Social Capital likes what it’s sees, it will write a check of up to $250,000. If it doesn’t, it will at least deliver feedback to the startup regarding tweaks it might make to its business model. (Entrepreneurs interested in applying can let the firm know here.)
How can Social Capital possibly know how to improve a company’s business model when it hasn’t even met its founders?



READ MORE > https://techcrunch.com/2017/10/25

This Is "An Activist Judge" Twice-Removed From The Bench

Roy Moore
One of the newest in the cast of characters who's been dis-robed two times as the Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court and given a new identity - and a costume change - for his first public début on the American political stage joining the new Greatest Show-on-Earth Political Circus of All-Time where Trump is the Circus Master for all the elephants in-the-room of the Grand Old Party GOP that's pooping-out big loads of pure shit from the shotgun attack dog mind of Steve Bannon, The Top Dog of Alt-Right Media.
Bannon couldn't get muzzled during the short stint and stunts in The White House trying to compete as the Prez's mouthpiece. Bannon is back at Breitbart, turned loose to lead the pack of attack dogs on the establishment Repub elephants who can't get whipped, punished or beaten to perform. They can, however, choose to leave "The Big Tent" with fear when hot air and hot-head candidates heat up the political climate where they can't win or hold onto their elected seats. That leaves empty seats waiting to be filled by new characters.
As we all know there's there's "no romance-without-finance". Politics is the game of finance over principles and integrity, more beholden to special interests than the public. Yesterday we found out how re-invented judge Ron Moore garbed as gun-toting upholder of the law, holds up instead a hand-gun with Old Glory as his backdrop.


Squeaky cleaned-up image
Moore forms fundraising pact with national GOP
The anti-establishment Alabama Republican will raise money with the RNC and NRSC.
Blogger Note...and Who will they get it from?
The Koch Brothers, The Mercers,

Add caption
"Roy Moore has campaigned as Mr. Anti-Establishment. Now, he and the establishment are starting to link up.
The Alabama Republican’s Senate campaign on Tuesday signed a joint fundraising agreement with the Republican National Committee, National Republican Senatorial Committee and the Alabama Republican Party, according to a filing with the Federal Election Commission.
Moore, who was twice ousted as chief justice of the Alabama state Supreme Court, has largely based his Senate run around his promise to make life difficult for Washington’s entrenched class, including his own party’s leadership. . .
Link > http://www.politico.com

How much fun is this upcoming show?
 ...It's coming to your town and your state soon! 
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Roy Moore (R)51%
Doug Jones (D)40%
Undecided/Other9%
Source: Raycom News Network/Strategy Research (Oct. 16), Margin of error: +/-~2.5, Sample size: 3,000
 

Yeah Baby! Let's Do The Twist

Tribute to Chubby Checkers:
Who can rest-in-peace after watching this? GET UP + MOVE
Grammy Hall of Fame

Published on Sep 28, 2011
Views: 1,988,433
Chubby Checker (born Ernest Evans; October 3, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter. He also popularized the dance style Twist, with his 1960 hit cover of Hank Ballard's R&B hit "The Twist". In September 2008, "The Twist" topped Billboard's list of the most popular singles to have appeared in the Hot 100 since its debut in 1958
Checker privately recorded a novelty single for Clark in which the singer portrayed a school teacher with an unruly classroom of musical performers. The premise allowed Checker to imitate such acts as Fats Domino, Frankie Avalon and The Chipmunks, each singing "Mary Had a Little Lamb". Clark sent the song out as his Christmas greeting, and it received such good response that Cameo-Parkway signed Checker to a recording contract. Titled "The Class", the single became Checker's first release, charting at #38 in the spring of 1959.
Checker introduced his version of "The Twist" in July 1960 on The Clay Cole Show, a local New York City television program broadcast live from Palisades Amusement Park. "The Twist" went on to become the only single to top the Billboard Hot 100 twice, in two separate chart runs. (Bing Crosby's "White Christmas" had done so on Billboard's earlier chart.)


"The Twist" had previously peaked at #16 on the Billboard rhythm and blues chart, in the 1959 version recorded by its author, Hank Ballard, whose band The Midnighters first performed the dance on stage. Checker's "Twist", however, was a nationwide smash. The song was so ubiquitous that Checker felt that his critics thought that he could only succeed with dance records typecasting him as a dance artist. Checker later lamented:
"...in a way, "The Twist" really ruined my life. I was on my way to becoming a big nightclub performer, and "The Twist" just wiped it out.. It got so out of proportion. No one ever believes I have talent."
—Chubby Checker

Trickle-Down Toxic Masculinity? State Houses + City Halls

Your MesaZona blogger usually is reluctant to "dig into the dirt" except in outdoor foliage plant pot culture home-horticulture on the balcony - and usually does not get into "mud-slinging" or hanging out "the dirty laundry" about rumors and gossip and innuendoes - but there's a big mainstream tsunami wave that's been flooding over a reservoir of restrained reserve not "to go there".
Women are speaking up taking courage from each other, oftentimes represented by female attorneys who bring the accusations public, rather than staying silent


Here in Mesa a recent post on this blog went there with rumors about Steven Wright in the City of Mesa newsroom that have at this point-in-time neither been confirmed nor denied - it's the typical first drip in the trickle of allegations or accusations of sexual harassment that it's best treated by getting ignored until another "trickle" drops about a certain [and un-named and un-published here] person inside City Hall who might have left his 15-year job working for a local utilities company under a cloud of sexual harassment.
Let's leave that there to get back to here-and-now: represented by high-power and highly-paid attorneys, women are emerging decades-later-after-the-fact either from the shadows or high-visibility media/entertainment positions to make accusations and bring charges again the men who harassed and exploited on the job for what they had to do "to get ahead" in "career advancement". . . they've collected million$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ in settlements or their affairs with undisclosed indiscretions when brought public have toppled even top 5-star generals like David Petraeus who revealed classified information to his mistress and biographer Paula Broadwell.
It's all quite crazy with a last name like that, getting more to the point with a dude named Anthony Wiener or even when the President of The United States brags about "pussy snatching" just weeks after marrying his third wife after two divorces.
And now the Hollywood scandals - this time it's more than entertainment
It's serious stuff that's gone on ignored or un-spoken about for generations, not only in civilian life but in the military from top-to-bottom.
On another front we've gone from "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" when dealing with homosexuality to
JUST TELL EVERYTHING
. . . it's out there, folks!

It's not just "a little thing" anymore when so many people from so many fields speak up about either discrimination or sexual harassment on-the-job:
entertainment and the media, government employess, education, police and fire departments, Wall Street finance, banking, sports and athletics, and those in public office who violate both the public trust and ethics. 
The Battle of Beauty & The Beast?
The #MeToo beast is waking and it's coming for the men behind it
The social media movement shouldn't just be about women who have been sexually assaulted - men need to own up                              

#Women who have been sexually harassed or assaulted have been writing two simple words on their #Social media accounts since last Sunday: “Me too.” While seemingly innocuous, those two words have made the Internet a triggering place. Not just for victims and survivors of assault, but anyone who has had to endure the pain caused by it.
It began with actress Alyssa Milano taking to Twitter, saying: “If all the women who have been sexually harassed or assaulted wrote ‘Me too’ as a status, we might give people a sense of the magnitude of the problem. . .
Some women aren't even sure that their experience counts as sexual assault or not because it's become all too normalised. The hashtag became a quiet roar of the beast that lies beneath our everyday mundane existence.
But the issue here should not just be about women who have experienced sexual assault; it needs to extend to men who have been part of the problem. For every "me too", there is obviously a man - or several #men - behind it, having done the assaulting. But all we hear are crickets. It’s almost as if they don’t want to admit that they’re part of the problem.
Many are of the belief that men should play no part in the dialogue about women's rights as it diverts the conversation from the plight of women to be about men.
However, in this case, it's not so straightforward. Men are the main cause of this entire movement, and it's impossible to have these conversations without men owning up for their actions - or even inactions - surrounding sexual assault.
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Weinstein fallout: Statehouses say #MeToo
"The response to sexual harassment allegations against film producer Harvey Weinstein has spread to statehouses nationwide, with hundreds of lawmakers, lobbyists and consultants coming forward to say the problem is pervasive in the halls of political power," AP's Sophia Tareen reports from Chicago:
  • Why it matters: "Several risk factors for sexual harassment identified by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission are deep-seated at state capitols: Lack of diversity, power disparities, tolerating or encouraging alcohol consumption, and many young staffers."
  • "Illinois became the latest to join the chorus, as signatures piled up [yesterday] on an open letter describing harassment and intimidation for women trying to negotiate legislation and work on campaigns."
  • "In California this week, the Senate hired a law firm to investigate after women described a culture of sexual intimidation."
  • "Lawmakers in Oregon and Rhode Island have spoken up to accuse male colleagues of inappropriate touching or suggesting that sexual favors be a condition for advancing bills."
  • What's next: "More women are coming forward with stories, some are naming names and states are making fresh promises of investigations and of legislation." 
See >>>  : axios.com
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Toxic Masculinity - MGTOW [transcript]
Published on Nov 22, 2014
Widespread systematic oppression of women appears worse to modern society as Hollywood and literary writers continuously propagandize and re-imagine how life was like in the past.
. . . In my previous video, I explained how the MGTOW philosophy rose in tandem with Feminism’s rise in the Western World. After second wave feminism solidified itself as an academic discipline, research and debate concerning the traditional family structure all but ceased to investigate a more agenda driven gynocentrist narrative. The current power structure was incorrect, and revisionist feminist academics began their campaign to re-contextualize historical events through a feminist lens. New fields of research emerged to fill in the gaps of knowledge regarding this “groundbreaking” discipline. Few had ever researched the role of women in society beyond simple characterizations, largely because women did not contribute to society in the same manner as men.

Re-contextualizing history through a feminist lens naturally induces biases in how daily life actually worked. Widespread systematic oppression of women appears worse to modern society as Hollywood and literary writers continuously propagandize and re-imagine how life was like in the past. Before second wave feminism, men in media were seen as more traditionally masculine role models that young boys could emulate. Now, turn on the television and you’re bound to witness men play a subservient role to women, and watch few if any men act traditionally masculine. The term “toxic masculinity” refers to male behaviors which damage the gynocentric imperative. These behaviors these include using logic over emotional reasoning, mental independence, courageousness and assertiveness. Essentially, for the gynocentrist agenda to push forward, society must become more feminized, as feminine behavior stems from empathy and sensitivity to one’s feelings, which are personality traits more easily manipulable by powerful governments and agenda pushers. Modern western society currently thrives on emotional facts while conveniently ignoring the difficult truths of our actions. This irrationality has fueled the current trend of social justice and female supremacy to rise without any check or application of common sense. Now more than ever, how you phrase something matters more than what you actually say, which can ironically help governments and gynocentrists achieve their goals faster as they stand to benefit the most from sugarcoating obvious admissions of fact and outright lies. I find it amusing both entities wish to label masculinity as toxic and femininity as desirable when all civilizations have advanced fastest on the back of reason and the scientific method than any emotional ideology or purely theoretical construct.

 

Meeting To Amend Proposed Changes to Arizona Emissions Bank Rules

 agency bulletin header
Air Quality Division
Stakeholder Meeting

Proposed Changes to Arizona Emissions Bank Rules
ADEQ invites you to attend the first stakeholder meeting for the development of state rules for Arizona's voluntary emissions bank. ADEQ seeks your input and ideas in amending the Arizona Administrative Code, Title 18, Chapter 2, Article 12
Earlier this year, the legislature amended the existing emissions bank statute (A.R.S. Section 49-410 or HB2152) to allow for new types of emissions reductions credits to be deposited in the bank. The amendments directed ADEQ to adopt rules implementing these changes. The rules will help promote Arizona as a more attractive option for companies seeking to locate or expand industrial operations while still maintaining healthy air quality. 
When: Friday, Nov. 3, 2017, 10:00 - 11:30 a.m.Where: ADEQ, 1110 W. Washington St., Phoenix, Room 3175 Parking>
Follow along with the presentation:
Join WebEx Meeting
Meeting number (access code): 809 146 206
Password: SYJT8qsz
Call in:
1-240-454-0879

WebEx Help

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Mesa Convention Center To Host AZ Library Conference

Oct 25 - Oct 27
Mesa Convention Center
https://www.facebook.com/arizonalibraryassociation/
The 2017 AzLA Annual Conference is aimed at transformation from within. Staff are the foundation upon which our libraries are built. Investing in the development of staff strengths and skills in an effort to boost their confidence and productivity is key to igniting the transformations our libraries are so keen to make in the 21st century. Turning meaningful conversations with community members into new programs and experiences that meet their needs begins with a helpful library worker receiving the needed support to try new things and take risks to accomplish goals. This conference is about empowering yourselves and your staff to be the change-makers in our communities as we work together to transform our libraries.
You can now access the #AzLA2017 Conference Book and printable schedule online!
Program Book:
https://goo.gl/oJriv9
Schedule: https://goo.gl/BChmuF

At this years AzLA Conference we are offering three library tours.
Sign up today, space is limited!
WEDNESDAY: Mesa Main Library.
FRIDAY: Polly Rosenbaum Archives & History & Thinkspot, Red Mountain
Branch
http://2017.azla.org/tours/See More


Mark your calendars!
The 2017 AzLA Annual Conference Happy Hour is this Wednesday, October 25th from 5:25-7:00pm at Desert Eagle Brewing.
The are located at 150 West Main Street in Mesa.http://www.deserteaglebrewing.com/
 
Free Virtual Conference: Explore emerging technologies, service models, innovative programming, new ways of sparking learning and active engagement while building access and assuring inclusion. Four high content learning tracks for and from libraries of all types—school, academic, and public—will be offered in key areas. Register at https://goo.gl/GbZV2Q
 
Unwind after Day 1 of #AzLA2017 at our evening reception!
Sponsored by The University of Arizona School of Information, with music by local "geek-folk" band, Open Beta.
RSVP for the conference here: 2017 AzLA Annual Conference
Learn more: 2017.azla.org
 
 
 
We look forward to seeing old friends and meeting new ones!
#AzLA2017 #LibrariesTransform