Monday, December 24, 2018

TV: MURPHY BROWN is no friend to women

What is with truth and representation?  We saw two fake asses last week.  One of them had a special, the other had a TV series.

a new illst


The TV show is CBS' MURPHY BROWN.

Last week, we wrote about YOUNG SHELDON because, without THE BIG BANG THEORY as a lead-in, YOUNG SHELDON is going to be news -- possibly spun as "Look how bad things are for CBS without Leslie Moonves!"  Yes, we can hear some idiots insisting that.  But that's why we wrote it last week.  Moonves greenlit the crap that is YOUNG SHELDON and he gave it a season two.  He's now gone from CBS but he could have put a real show on after THE BIG BANG THEORY, he could have used that spot to groom a follow up show that audiences would love.  He didn't.  He just tossed YOUNG SHELDON on after it and, come this spring, THE BIG BANG THEORY wraps up and is no more.  CBS should have been planning for that day.

But when we got home two Saturdays ago, we had a copy of that week's MURPHY BROWN.  It was a good episode, a strong one.  And friends with the show wanted us to note that.  But we had to cover YOUNG SHELDON and we get tired of doing several pieces every week.  We were going to do one and only one article and we hoped we could work MURPHY BROWN into it.  But we couldn't.


Yes, the episode was a marked improvement over the first ones we saw.

And we felt bad that we couldn't note it.  So one of us worked it into an "Iraq snapshot" at THE COMMON ILLS last week.


Try to do someone a favor, right?


Anything men can do, women can do better!







Huh?

Anything men can do, women can do better?  Women rule?

We're not questioning the idea or notion being expressed, we're questioning whom it's coming from.

MURPHY BROWN?  The Twitter feed for the show has the nerve to offer that?

"Ava and C.I., what do you mean by the nerve?  It's just a little slogan and many of us agree with it."

Yeah but it's a damn shame Diane English doesn't.

To note the Afghanistan episode, the writers had to be noted and we were both surprised to find that two men wrote it.

Which made us curious.

"Don't look, don't look," we told ourselves repeatedly.

But like a woman in a horror film stumbling across a closed closet door, we had to open it up.


One woman directed four episodes -- Pamela Fryman.  There were thirteen episodes.  Nine were directed by men.

Anything men can do, women can do better?

Okay, maybe they did better with writing.  Diane English, creator of the show, after all is a writer.

And, it turns out, she wrote for this season.

One episode.

One.

Laura Kraftt wrote two episodes.

And Gina Ippolito co-wrote one and got credit (along with three male writers) on another.

So if you're generous women were responsible -- partly or in whole -- for five episodes.

Out of thirteen.

And men are responsible -- partly or in whole -- for nine episodes.

Dianne English has long presented herself as the last word in feminism and we're supposed to celebrate and support everything she does.

But, as her track record demonstrates, she doesn't do the same.

She had thirteen episodes.

She apparently doesn't believe women can direct because only four were directed by women -- leaving, again, nine to be directed by men.  And the writing credits are equally troubling.


Why are we applauding Diane English?  And, excuse us, Candice Bergen, all your pro-woman talk promoting this show?  Shouldn't you have noticed how poorly the show was with representation?

Speaking of, we called out the show for its portrayal/treatment of African-American characters -- they were repeatedly being told to shut up or being interrupted -- in bit roles.  We weren't the only ones making that complaint to CBS or to friends with the show (and we made it here when we first reviewed it).

In the fourth episode, Merle Dandridge, a bi-racial actress, was added as their boss Diana.  And she came off like "Black bitch" on a reality show.  We took on that nonsense, that stereotypical crap, when we covered the first season of the reality show the current President of the United States used to host.  It was racist then and it's racist now.

On episode 13, it got worse.

She's the boss and she kissed her subordinate Miles.  She's the boss.

At a time when Diane English and Candice Bergen wanted to insist in their publicity that this was the time for the return, it was #MeToo! (though that didn't stop either woman from supporting Leslie Moonves and insisting he was innocent -- he wasn't), they're going to air that storyline?

And they're going to push it off on their token character?


We try to be nice, over and over.  And then it becomes clear why we can't be.

MURPHY BROWN returned and it was offensive and not funny.  And it's made by people who have no clue what year it is or what world they are living in.  But they want to hector the country about politics?  Instead of delivering laughs, they want to deliver lectures.  And this coming from a group so pathetic that they  confuse meaningless Tweets with actually doing something like hiring an equal number of women to direct and to write.



Roundtable

Jess: It's been awhile but it's roundtable time again.  Remember the e-mail address is thethirdestatesundayreview@yahoo.com.  Participating in our roundtable are  The Third Estate Sunday Review's  Ava and me, Jess; Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude;  C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review; Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills); Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix; Mike of Mikey Likes It!; Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz); Ruth of Ruth's Report; Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ; Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends; Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts; Ann of Ann's Mega Dub and Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man, Betty's kids did the illustration. You are reading a rush transcript.




Roundtable

Jess (Con't): Okay, Syria.  President Donald Trump has stated he's pulling US troops out of Iraq.  Thoughts?

Rebecca: If it happens, I'm all for it.  Bring US troops home, end all the wars.  So if it happens, I'm all for it.

Ruth: "If" is what we're all feeling, honestly.  We have had a 'withdrawal' before.  Barack Obama 'withdrew' troops from Iraq at the end of 2011.  It was a drawdown, not a withdrawal.  The number of US troops never went to zero and, a year later, he was sending a division of special-ops back in and the number of US troops sent back in only grew and grew.  So "if" is really key.

Isaiah: Right.  We've been fooled before.  If Trump's really doing this, great.  I'll praise him for it.  But I'm not going to offer any praise before the actions take place.

Jess: He's getting grief just for the announcement.  Elaine, you noted that in your "That disgusting Rachel Maddow."

Elaine: Big surprise, Rachel Maddow's in alarmist mode yet again.  Big surprise, the War Hawk is opposed to US troops coming home.  She's a fake ass and always has been.

Mike: What do you think the shelf-life is for liars like her?  I mean, prior to the internet, a Cokie Roberts could have a long career.  These days, with the internet and a faster pace, the liars are exposed earlier.

Betty: I agree with that.  For example, Amy Goodman's influence continues to drop.  She's been exposed as what she really is and for the liar she is.  I think she will continue to lose audiences because of her fake ass ways.  But someone like Rachel?  She's built her popularity on hating Trump.  Until he's out of office, she's got an audience.  It doesn't grow, you might have noticed.  That's because her reputation is out there.  Her lies and War Hawk ways are well known.  Despite massive promotion, she cannot grow her audience -- and it's a small audience -- even by basic cable standards.

Cedric: Betty makes some great points and I agree that Mike's point about the internet is true.  Look at Norman Solomon, for example.  In 2006, he was everywhere.  He then went on to whore and lie so much that he really can't come back.  He's tried repeatedly but he trashed his won reputation.  He was a pledged delegate for Barack, for example, and as Ava and C.I. noted, he would reveal that in his columns because he could be dropped as a columnist if he didn't.  But during the same time, he went on KPFA and other PACIFICA stations repeatedly to offer commentary and never once revealed -- while praising Barack endlessly -- that he was a pledged delegate.

Ruth: I agree that something like that seriously hurt him.  However, the real wound was his refusal to follow through on Iraq.  He -- like so many others -- just dropped it as a topic once Barack Obama was elected.  And he had grand standed repeatedly on the topic of the Iraq War -- in books, in columns, in film and on radio and TV.  So when he walked away from the still ongoing war, he exposed himself as the fraud.

Ann: I voted for Jill Stein.  I'm a Green, my parents are, I was raised a Green.  That said, I was thrilled last week when C.I. noted Jill's Tweet about Iraq and that it was in contrast to Jill's 2012 presidential run and 2016 presidential run where she couldn't even address the war.  That was really disgusting.  I do not think she should be the 2020 presidential nominee but, if she is, she damn well better be talking about ending the wars.

Kat: Do you think they realize it?  That they've lost influence or even why they have?  I think they realize that they've lost influence but that they make excuses like "The corporate media is shutting me out!"

Ann: I think you're right, Kat.  They think they can be believed and that proves that they think this is some temporary thing.  It's not.  They demanded accountability from the liars of the corporate press and we heard them do that.  But they think accountability doesn't apply to them.

Mike: I would love to read a Norman Solomon column that opened with, "One of the stupidest thing I did was to walk away from the Iraq War.  As we all know, the war continues."  I would have so much respect for him -- for anyone that did that, that took accountability for what they did and acknowledged that this was damaging for the people of Iraq.

Marcia: Instead, we live in a world where Michelle Obama and War Criminal Bully Boy Bush are oohed and aaahed because he gives her candy.  Not to embarrass you, Isaiah, but I'm noting your latest THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Even Monsters Love Candy."

even monsters love candy

Stan: It's so disgusting.  But Michelle is not a saint or a Civil Rights activist.  She's just a corporate stooge and she proved that long before she became First Lady.  Post First Lady, she's just an embarrassment.  And, Martha, I loved your "Michelle and her hideous boots."

Betty: Put me down for that too!  Support!

Cedric: It's really sad that this is what she's choosing to do with her life.  Yes, she's a fake.  Yes, she's greedy.  But you'd think she'd at least try to find some sense of purpose.  She has none.

Stan: Except for grabbing as much money as she can.  Greed is her sense of purpose.

Marcia: Exactly.  One thing I wanted to note about Isaiah's comic, we see her all over Bully Boy Bush repeatedly.  Do you notice how little we see of her with her own husband?  She's not hugging in him public.  I find it strange.

Ruth: While we are singing praises, let me take a moment to note Elaine's "Was anything accomplished in the Afghanistan War?" which applies to Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.

Elaine: Thank you, Ruth.  But let me knock that back to you with praise for everything you wrote last week:



Elaine (Con't): You tackled topics that others did not in the community and you did so in a way that was uniquely your own.  So thank you.


Jess: Okay, e-mail from reader Vanessa.  She wants to know if we have a favorite film franchise?

Mike: James Bond!  Claiming it first!  I love James Bond.  Favorite film?  Tie: YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE and CASINO ROYAL.

Kat: I'll bite.  GREASE.  But as much as I love the first film, I really love GREASE II even more.  That's not a popular opinion.  But I think GREASE II really upends a lot of norms and I also prefer the soundtrack.  And Maxwell Caulfield is a hottie.

Betty: It's not really a franchise but I love MAHOGANY and LADY SINGS THE BLUES -- two films that pair Diana Ross and Billy Dee Williams.  I thought they had real chemistry.  I wish they had a third movie.  Considering all the money NETFLIX is throwing around, why can't they do a film with Diana and Billy Dee?

Ann: Because they're really not about people of color at NETFLIX, I've noticed.  I'd love to see Diana in a NETFLIX movie.  I also am surprised they haven't tried to put Pam Grier in a film -- either a new action character or as one of her 70s heroes like FOXY BROWN.  Again, NETFLIX has a real problem with African-American stars.

Cedric: I loved the RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK franchise.  It was fun.  I grew up on it and it's one I'll always buy a ticket to.

Jess: I'm surprised no one has said STAR WARS.

Marcia: I won't say STAR WARS but I will say STAR TREK.  I love the reboot with Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto but I loved the original cast in the early films as well as when they did the Patrick Stewart films.  There's no bad STAR TREK film.  There are ones that are better -- THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK, for example, but they are all solid films.

Rebecca:  Let me go left field, I'll toss out Frankie and Annette -- the beach movies.  BEACH BLANKET BINGO, etc.  And include the DR. GOLDFOOT films as well because I love those too.

Ava: Tim Burton's two Batman movies -- BATMAN and BATMAN RETURNS.  They are classic.  I continue to watch Batman films -- with Christian Bale, Ben Affleck, Val Kilmer or George Clooney -- but none of them pack the life and texture that Tim Burton's first two films do.

Isaiah:  I think I'll go with TOY STORY but I agree with Ava regarding the Batmans and Tim Burton is my all time favorite director.

Stan:  I'll go with the ALIENS franchise -- as long as Weaver is in it.  Don't care for the films without her -- including the reboot.  And my two favorites are ALIENS and ALIENS III.

Ruth: The movies with Myrna Loy and William Powell -- THE THIN MAN movies, where they are Nick and Nora Charles.  I love those movies.  They still sparkle.

Jess: Elaine?

Elaine: C.I. and I have the same one.  It's the British franchise CARRY ON . . .  My favorite is CARRY ON SCREAMING -- their spoof of the Hammer films.

C.I.: And mine is CARRY ON SPYING -- the spoof of spy films.  It makes me laugh repeatedly.

Elaine: They're really funny and there are a ton of them -- there may be more CARRY ON films than even James Bond.  If that's the case, I'm sure Bond will surpass it at some point in the near future.  CARRY ON CLEO is another great one.

Jess: I'll go with LORD OF THE RINGS or the Sam Rami SPIDER-MAN films.  Betty had a point she wanted to note so let's make this the last topic before we close.  Betty?

Betty: I don't think it's the holiday but maybe it is.  I just feel like people feel a lot more hopeful right now.  Anybody else sensing that?

Rebecca: I am.  People seem tired of being scared and frightened and the daily outrage being ginned up every morning.  I think we're wanting to move beyond it.

Stan: I'd agree.  And I've noticed it too.  Maybe because of the Russia-gate going up in flames? I don't know.

Ava: And we've now endured two years of Donald Trump.  Supposedly, the world was going to immediately end, remember?  There are two more years left -- if we can get real candidates in 2020 -- and an end is in sight.

Jess: Okay, let's close on that hopeful note.  There's one more weekend left in the year.  For those celebrating Christmas, Merry Christmas.






A Congressional Committee moment

Last week, the House Veterans Affairs Committee and the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee held a joint hearing.   Appearing before the Committees were VA Secretary Robert Wilkie who was accompanied by VA's Melissa Glynn and Steven Lieberman.

The stand out moment?  Senator Patty Murray.


pm




Senator Patty Murray: But I do want to ask about the caregivers program because according to briefings from the VA, the Department has ruled out trying to narrow the eligibility criteria for the caregiver program.  But I'm still very concerned that there is a number of issues the VA is looking at that I'm concerned about including changes to the stipend, restricting veterans based on their type of injury or requiring a minimum disability rating.  This seems to be VA still focused on keeping people out of the program instead of making it work better for our veterans.  And yesterday, NPR reported on several cases where veterans --  including a double and a triple amputee -- were downgraded or kicked out of the program completely, inappropriately.  And these are, by the way, not one-off VA cases.  We're hearing that this is a continuing problem in the VA's management of this program.  When the VA previously downgraded and terminated caregivers, the VA assured me that it had resolved the problems that led to these type of actions but it's very clear that's not true and I would like you to immediately re-instate a ban on downgrades and terminations until VA can demonstrate to us that the serious management problems have been corrected and these type of outrageous errors will not occur again.

Secretary Robert Wilkie: Senator, I will say that caregivers is especially important to me.  I am the son of a gravely wounded Vietnam warrior.

Senator Patty Murray:  I appreciate that.

Secretary Robert Wilkie:  Uh, and I've seen my mother and family, uh, take care of my father prior to his passing last --

Senator Patty Murray:  I appreciate that.

Secretary Robert Wilkie:  The stories --

Senator Patty Murray:  Will you reinstate the ban?

Secretary Robert Wilkie:  I --

Senator Patty Murray:  Will you reinstate the ban?

Secretary Robert Wilkie:  I-I-I'm not familiar with all the rules but I will tell you the National Public Radio story, that, uh, problem was corrected within 24 to 48 hours.

Senator Patty Murray:  Those are not isolated cases.  We're hearing many of them.

Secretary Robert Wilkie:  And-and those cases, is my understanding, have been corrected because of directives from this department that people were not reading the regulations properly. So my promise to you is that I am going to do everything I can to make sure everybody stays in the program.  It's that important to me personally.

Senator Patty Murray:  Can I have your assurance that no one else will be downgraded or kicked out of the program until you look and make sure that the regulations are being implemented at every level correctly?

Secretary Robert Wilkie:  Absolutely, I will -- I will make that commitment and will brief these Committees.
















xx
The hearing was reported on at THE COMMON ILLS in "Iraq snapshot" and "Iraq snapshot."

Scandal free Obama administration?

Barack Obama and many in the press like to claim his administration was scandal free.

Not true.

He had plenty of scandals -- he just also had a press willing to look the other way.

Imagine the scandal if Wilbur Ross, the current Secretary of Commerce, had hit a car that had stopped for a railroad train.  Imagine if Wilbur then got out of the car, spoke to three people in the car he hit, ran back to his car and then sped off?

That would be, yes, a hit and run.

Guess what?

But it was John Bryson.  CBS NEWS reported in June 11, 2012:

According to the written statement by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, Bryson, 68, was allegedly behind the wheel of a Lexus that rear-ended another vehicle waiting for a train to pass in the city of San Gabriel at around 5:05 p.m. PT. The statement says Bryson spoke with the three males in the other car, then allegedly drove away, hitting their Buick again in the process.


It was briefly reported and then quickly ignored -- Bryson was Secretary of Commerce at the time.

He pretended to have a health crisis and resigned ten days later.  This was an election year.  Yet the press never speculated on what it said about Barack's 'character' that one of his Cabinet members was a hit and run driver.



commerce driver



Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "The Trusted Driver of Commerce."


In 2018, we read books




library



In 2018, we upped the book coverage community wide.  We'd like to do it again in 2019 but that's next year.  This year, we'll just note that we accomplished it.


Non-fiction, fiction, poetry, graphic novel, humor, there was hopefully a little something for everyone.

"ALL THAT HEAVEN ALLOWS: A BIOGRAPHY OF ROCK HUDSON" -- Stan.
"EXIT STAGE LEFT: THE SNAGGLEPUSS CHRONICLES" -- Isaiah.

"Tina Turner's love story" -- Betty.

"Chris Hedges' AMERICA: THE FAREWELL TOUR bids adie..." -- C.I. 
"Leslie Bennetts writes about something but it's not Joan Rivers" -- Trina.
"Iraq snapshot" -- C.I. reviews Michelle Obama's BECOMING (pair it with Ava and C.I.'s "TV: The Selfie").
"THE INHERITANCE: POISONED FRUIT OF JFK'S ASSASSINATION" -- Ruth.

"The Women’s Suffrage Movement is an awful (and rac..." and "Penguin's embarrassing and racist book on feminism" -- Ann and Elaine.

"Alice Isn't Dead" -- Marcia.


"I NEVER LOVED A MAN THE WAY I LOVE YOU: ARETHA FRANKLIN, RESPECT, AND 
THE MAKING OF A SOUL MUSIC MASTERPIECE" -- Elaine.


"WHEN BLANCHE MET BRANDO" -- Betty.


"When a book no longer pleases" -- Betty.


"I HATE EVERYONE . . . STARTING WITH ME (Jess)" -- Jess.


"Parker Posey's YOU'RE ON AN AIRPLANE" -- Mike.


"Sally Field IN PIECES" -- C.I. 


"Neil deGrasse Tyson and his superficial book" -- Betty.


"Alice Walker's The Chicken Chronicles" -- Marcia.


"The really bad book The Bridge" -- Ann.

"The Third Hotel by Laura Van Den Berg" -- Trina. 


"T.J. Berry's Space Unicorn Blues" -- Marcia.  


"HELLO GORGEOUS by William Mann" -- Stan.


"CLEOPATRA: HISTORIES, DREAMS AND DISTORTIONS" -- Mike.


"Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany's and the Dawn of the Modern Woman Paperback" -- Ann.


"No one Peter Bogdanovich knows is ever gay" -- Marcia.


"Seymour Hersh meanders throughout REPORTER: A MEMOIR" -- C.I. 


"Dusty (by Karen Bartlett)" -- Marcia.


"Media critiques -- Nora Ephron's SCRIBBLE SCRABBLE" -- Mike.


"Judy Garland (the biographies)" -- Kat.


"JEAN HARLOW: TARNISHED ANGEL" -- Betty.  


"UNCOMMON TYPES: Let's kill whomever taught Tom Hanks to type" -- Elaine.


"THE YELLOW WALLPAPER" -- Marcia.


"Anne Sexton: THE COMPLETE POEMS" -- C.I.


"Charlotte Chandler's MARLENE" -- Elaine.


"A sexist woman writes She's a Rebel and distorts music history" -- Ann.


"barbara ehrenreich's 'natural causes'" -- Rebecca. 


"Weight Watchers New Complete Cookbook" -- Trina.


"IN SEARCH OF OUR MOTHERS' GARDENS" -- Elaine.


"Blackfish City" -- Marcia.



"THE CHICKEN CHRONICLES by Alice Walker" -- Ruth.



"Harry Belafonte" -- Mike.



"THE SAME RIVER TWICE (Alice Walker)" -- Isaiah.





"Dancing with Demons: The Authorized Biography of Dusty Springfield" -- Marcia.


"Good for Jimmy Stewart, bad for readers" -- Stan.

"Conversations with Toni Morrison" -- Marcia.

"Forced Into Glory: Abraham Lincoln's White Dream" -- Ann.


"He Ran All The Way" -- Trina.



And we'll also note Ann's "How a book store could stay alive in today's economy" about the book business.

This edition's playlist


alicia


1) Alicia Keys' HERE.



2) Diana Ross' WONDERFUL CHRISTMAS TIME.



3) Janet Jackson's UNBREAKABLE.



4)  Cher's DANCING QUEEN.




5) Ben Harper's BOTH SIDES OF THE GUN



6) Diana Ross' SURRENDER.



7) Diana Ross' EVERY DAY IS A NEW DAY.


8) Jody Watley's JODY WATLEY.


9) George Michael's LISTEN WITHOUT PREJUDICE.


10) Diana Ross' SWEPT AWAY.





VETERANS: Senator Murray Applauds VA Secretary’s Announcement That Will Keep All Veterans in Caregiver Support Program While Reforms Made


 pm

Senator Patty Murray's office issued the following Friday:

VETERANS: Senator Murray Applauds VA Secretary’s Announcement That Will Keep All Veterans in Caregiver Support Program While Reforms Made

Dec 21 2018
Announcement comes two days after Senator Murray asked VA Secretary Wilkie during a Congressional hearing to allow veterans to stay in the program until reforms are made to ensure decisions are being made accurately
Senator Murray’s request comes after NPR report of veterans being kicked out or downgraded from program arbitrarily
Senator Murray: “I commend Secretary Wilkie for taking these concerns seriously...But this is just the first step….I urge the Secretary to use this time to get it right”
WATCH: Senator Murray’s exchange with VA Secretary Wilkie about the Caregiver Support Program eligibility

(Washington, D.C.)  –U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) commended Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie for announcing today that VA will temporarily suspend discharges and downgrades for veterans enrolled in VA’s Caregiver Support Program. The program, which Senator Murray helped implement in 2011 when she was Chairman of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, supports those who provide care for veterans injured as a result of their service to our country. Senator Murray had expressed her deep concerns to Secretary Wilkie two days ago during a Congressional hearing about reports of veterans who’d lost eligibility in the program for arbitrary reasons. (Watch their exchange here.)
“I commend Secretary Wilkie for taking these concerns seriously and putting forth this moratorium. But this is just the first step. On behalf of veterans and their caregivers across the country, I urge the Secretary to use this time to get it right. Our military families, who sacrificed so much on our country’s behalf, deserve nothing less,” said Senator Murray.
Senator Murray has consistently worked to hold senior VA officials accountable for implementing the Caregivers program in a way that works best for veterans and their caregivers, not the least of which is creating clear, standardized eligibility requirements. In June 2018, Senator Murray helped secure additional federal investments in the program to ensure VA had the resources that VA leaders have long said is necessary to make the program a success. Additionally, in May, Senator Murray’s proposal to expand the program to make veterans of all eras eligible for the program passed Congress and was signed into law as part of the VA MISSION Act.

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