Saturday, November 10, 2018

Won't You Be My Neighbor?





  
“Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” presents the history of Fred McFeely Rogers, Presbyterian minister, children’s advocate and the most beloved Republican since Abe Lincoln. Like Honest Abe, Mr. Rogers was known for wearing a specific article of clothing and his ability to sweet talk a Congressman or two. From 1968 to 2001, Mr. Rogers kept millions of little ones out of their parents’ hair by offering a half hour program designed to counter the cartoon violence and frenetic pacing of practically every other kids’ show on the air. On PBS, he sang, offered advice and worked a cat puppet whose feline vocal tic drove my mother absolutely insane. 15 years after his death, the heroic endeavors of Fred Rogers are finally being celebrated on the big screen.

One of the many “stand up and cheer” moments in Morgan Neville’s enchanting documentary, at least for me, is when cellist Yo-Yo Ma describes his first meeting with the man who will forever be known as the proprietor of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.” “He scared the hell out of me,” says Ma. I felt vindicated, because when I was a kid, Mr. Rogers terrified me too. He made me nervous, a condition exacerbated by my cousin telling me that he was actually a serial killer. According to her, Mr. Rogers lured people on his show and then decapitated them with the Museum-Go-Round.

Whatever Mr. Rogers was up to, watching his show made me uneasy; he was just too mild-mannered, too quiet and too calm. That felt odd, because the environment of my upbringing was anything but calm and quiet. My sister thought he was magical, though, proving that old adage about girls figuring out things long before boys do. Eventually, I came around to her way of thinking, and it only took 24 years before I realized just what it was that made Mr. Rogers so beloved and so effective.

More on that later. “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” puts to rest many of the most common rumors about Mr. Rogers. It does so in the same blunt yet understated way that its subject dealt out information to kids. The “torso full of tattoos” rumor is addressed by showing Mr. Rogers swimming his daily mile in the local pool. To my chagrin, there’s no mention of on-set violence featuring buildings from the Land of Make Believe, but the film makes up for that by revealing the inspiration for the puppet who lived inside the Museum-Go-Round. It’s a hilarious moment that shows that respectable Mr. Rogers could also be mischievous—and petty!

Rather than rely on celebrities or viewers espousing what Mr. Rogers meant to them, “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” makes judicious use of a few people closest to the man or his neighborhood. These include his wife, Joanne and their children plus castmembers David “Mr. McFeely” Newell, François “Officer Clemmons” Clemmons and Joe “Handyman” Negri. Negri in particular makes the neighborhood set sound like a riotous party, but everyone leans into the idea that, under Mr. Rogers' sweet exterior was a true radical. And maybe even a clairvoyant: In a clip from the Neighborhood’s first week on the air, the Land of Make Believe’s “benevolent monarch” puppet King Friday XIII issues a proclamation to build a wall to keep “undesirables” out!

Clemmons also figures in an incident where Mr. Rogers wasn’t so enlightened. Someone from the show discovered that the then-closeted at work Clemmons had been to a gay bar. “I had a good time!” says Clemmons, who was then told that any future bar visits would result in his termination from the show. I can only imagine which Land of Make Believe puppet got tasked with informing Clemmons that Mister Roger’s Neighborhood did not have a Castro District. (I hope it was Henrietta Pussycat saying “meow meow gay bar meow meow nuh-uh meow meow fired!”) But at least Clemmons informs us that Mr. Rogers “eventually came around” to acceptance.

“Love is at the root of everything,” Mr. Rogers tells us in an early clip, “or lack of it.” Like his fellow puppeteer and PBS colleague Jim Henson, Fred Rogers used puppets to deliver much of his message. His first puppet, Daniel Striped Tiger, serves as an animated avatar between segments because, as Mrs. Rogers points out, Daniel was an evocation of her husband’s childhood feelings of insecurity and his need to be loved. It’s hinted that Mr. Rogers was bullied as a heavyset kid—he was called “fat Freddie” and picked on, which may have led to his insistence in adulthood that a child’s feelings were as important as any adult’s. Folks are quick to point out, however, that while Daniel represents innocence, Mr. Rogers also does the voice of King Friday XIII, who clearly represents that adult need to always get one’s way.

Looking at “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” with adult eyes is rather fascinating. You notice that there’s a clear distinction between imagination and reality—we’re never lead to believe that the puppet segments are anything but pretend, for example. Mr. Rogers never talks down to his viewers, nor does he really sugarcoat uncomfortable things like anger or death. He’s very matter of fact, and his manner was deliberate, constant and repetitive. Which leads me to my moment of Mr. Rogers clarity.

Many years ago, I’d come home from my Wall Street job in a state of great agitation and upset. I was stressed out, worn out and miserable beyond measure. I absent-mindedly turned on the television and went into the kitchen to make dinner. For some reason, my TV was on PBS and I could hear Mr. Rogers talking from the other room. Despite paying only half an ear’s worth of attention, I suddenly realized what it was that earned the undying love of kids like my sister: Mr. Rogers made you feel like someone gave a damn about you. He said you were special. He did NOT, as the jackasses at Fox News and the Wall Street Journal claimed in hideous failure-blaming articles, promise you success or glory. He just told you that, no matter what you looked like, how able you were or how much money you had, that you had value.

 I stood in my kitchen listening to this message, which I of course should have already known as an adult,  and I started to cry. I tell you this because I had the same reaction at the end of “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” I sat in the critics’ screening room holding my notepad up to my face so that nobody would know I was sobbing. Now, if someone like me, whose childhood memories of Mr. Rogers involve rumored mass murder sprees, could have this reaction, you can only imagine what this film will do to you if you’ve always loved this man. Bring Kleenex. Lots of it.

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Jesus Camps and Lee Atwater


Jesus Camp
  It was an eye opening experience that was downright terrifying to watch. This camp of evangelical christians was borderline child abuse, it pushed kids to believe they were children of sin and they need to repent otherwise it will bring unholyness down upon their family. It was sickening how they treated the young kids. It was like watching the process of becoming a marine, when the recruits first get there the drill instructors break them down to nothing. In the Jesus camp they did that very same thing the only difference is that the marines volunteered to that when the kids do not really have a choice if their parents pushed them into to that. For the viewer it is like what was stated before, “...nobody wants to experience real nature.” The movie was so very truthful it hurt to watch in a sense, and if the class had not watched it they would have been numb to the idea that Jesus camps do exist in this country, and would have carried on their everyday lives like nothing is wrong. That is were the problem lies is that having all this information yet, deciding not to take a deeper look and just be satisfied with the information provided to us by bias sources.

Lee Atwater
The Lee Atwater story. Harvey LeRoy “Lee” Atwater was a consultant and strategist for the Republican party. Lee worked his way up to the positions he got by starting small with his very own high school helping to be a campaign manager for the high school presidency. After that he started to take flight making his way up the latter from assisting state positions to helping with presidential races. Yet, during this time Lee learned how to work the system and get people to play into his hand, he rejected the normal way to go about winning. His goal was to win at any cost, this led to a very slippery slope of false rumors and among other reputation damaging remarks that would circulate to a  bloodthirsty groups of reporters waiting for their next victim to be pushed into to the water by Lee. During his time with the republican party he became the villain you love to hate he was working the system in a way that has never truly been done before. A revolutionary one might say, but he was playing with fire. He used taboo as his greatest weapon and used it like a spark on the dry serengeti. Then Lee came down with cancer and it lead to his demise within less than three years. During this time he wrote to all of the people he believed he had hurt during his tenure. He also searched for meaning in his life and asked for bible and other holy readings. He created another side to himself that was apologetic to what actions he had taken in the past, but after his passing the bible was still covered in plastic wrap. He created a fantasy of reality to make himself look good till the day he died. Crichton said, “ One way to measure the prevalence of fantasy is to not the number of people who died because they haven’t the least knowledge of how nature really is.” This quote in this sense is not talking about the actual death but it is trying to get across when Lee died how many people did he get to believe that his illness made him a changed man. It is aimed at the premise that if they believe his apologies at the end they truly did not understand his true nature.

Monday, November 5, 2018

Lee Atwater

It was very interesting to see the biography of Lee Atwater because he is different and have a unique character and Charisma. Wither you think Lee was successful or not this depends on you. To me I think that as a Campaign manager he was successful because he knows how to win but at what coast? Atwater ideology or way to win an election is the fundamental way of how we see elections running today. Today elections aren't  about two individuals running with an idea to make this country etter. However, it's about good and bad which is sad to see. Because of the Manipulations of the media voters do not see candidates with different believes on how to run the country. They see Good VS Evil.