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I´m starting J School in a couple weeks (cue, Nasir), so it´s fitting I get into the news media state of mind, for a minute.
You never set out to find great movies on GV, but every now and again, as if the Internet content gods want to prove their might, they drop a gem on you (cue, Havoc).
This week´s pick is among the greatest movies put on celluloid. It won mad Oscars. And yes, it´s better than Scarface (1983) and Star Wars (1977). It stars a member of the Wild Bunch (1969), William Holden, and even Mommy Dearest (1981 ).
Playwright/screenwriter Paddy Chayefsky laid it all out like a genius. Here are the words from the iconic moment. (via)
HOWARD
I don’t want you to riot. I
don’t want you to protest. I
don’t want you to write your
congressmen. Because I wouldn’t
know what to tell you to write.
I don’t know what to do about the
depression and the inflation and
the defense budget and the Russians
and crime in the street. All
I know is first you got to get
mad. You’ve got to say: “I’m
mad as hell and I’m not going
to take this any more. I’m a
human being, goddammit. My life
has value.” So I want you to
get up now. I want you to get
out of your chairs and go to
the window. Right now. I want
you to go to the window, open
it, and stick your head out
and yell. I want you to yell:
“I’m mad as hell and I’m not
going to take this any more!”
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This 1976 movie continues to ring true, in many ways, today. There´s no Howard Beale, but you can flip on some local networks and catch Help Me Howard. Not the same thing exactly, I know. But Chayefsky´s work saw the dawn of the decline, with its satyrical look at the ¨corporatization of the news media¨. Check out this 2004 slideshow, which breaks down who owns the platter your news i s served on. It´s by ex-NYT editor, Doreen Weisenhaus of the Univ. of Hong Kong´s Journalism and Media Studies Centre.
This one is a keeper. Cop one.
Word, “Network” is GREAT. I’d add that Spike Lee’s “Bamboozled” is a pretty interesting “Network” spin-off too. Some consider it derivative but I think it’s an homage, if nothing else, to Chayefsky. The acting’s a little iffy, but its commentary on race in mainstream culture is bitingly spot-on.
What J-school are you attending, if I can ask?
Hey Monika,
Thanks for stopping by. That´s interesting you mention Bamboozled. I´ve been trying to explain to a friend in Mexico about blackface.
Your Televisa blackface post was how I discovered your blog actually. You have a great POV.