kathryn bigelow
"Democracy Now!": Mon. Mar. 8 2010
- activists
- African-American best writing
- best picture
- best screenplay
- best supporting actress
- Bloody Sunday
- burden of poverty
- china
- Citizen Journalism
- democracy now
- democracynow
- discriminatory laws
- disparity employment
- e won best adapted screenplay
- economic sanctions
- Geoffrey Fletcher
- hollywood
- human rights
- india
- International Women’s Day
- Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner
- kathryn bigelow
- Mo’Nique
- news
- oscars
- precious
- pregnancy-related deaths
- Selma-Montgomery march
- Shirin Ebadi
- skewed sex ratio
- the hurt locker
- wage disparity
- woman best director
- Democracy Now
Today is International Women’s Day and it is being marked around the world with activists drawing attention to discriminatory laws, the high rate of pregnancy-related deaths in many parts of the world, the skewed sex ratio in China and India, the disproportionately high number of women who are killed and victimized by wars, the comparatively heavier burden of poverty on women, and the continuing disparity between men and women regarding quality of available employment and wages received. Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi presses Iran on human rights and warns the international community against imposing economic sanctions upon his country. Sunday was a historic day in Hollywood--Kathryn Bigelow become the first woman in history to win the best director award at the Oscars. Bigelow’s film "The Hurt Locker" won a total of six Oscars including best picture and best screenplay. Geoffrey Fletcher became the first African-American to win an Oscar for best writing and Mo’Nique won the best supporting actress Oscar for her role as Mary Jones in “Precious.” The anniversary of the Selma-Montgomery march in 1965, which turned into a massacre now called Bloody Sunday, was marked yesterday by thousands reenacting the march. "Democracy Now!" is a daily independent newshour.
GRITtv: Good Year for Women in Movies?
Kathryn Bigelow received a Golden Globe nomination for The Hurt Locker and is being touted as the woman who could break the Best Director Oscar's all-male streak. Other films this year told unconventional stories of women outside the usual mold of Hollywood superstars. But was this actually a good year for women in cinema? Prairie Miller, film reporter for WBAI, Lisa Collins, filmmaker and senior editor/segment producer at Hollywood.com, and Melissa Silverstein, blogger at Women & Hollywood, discussed the movies that everyone's talking about -- and whether they're really as progressive as the rumors say.
GRITtv: Dec. 21, 2009
The holiday season is usually when the biggest movies of the year come out, but there are several that have been out for a while generating lots of buzz. Is this going to be the year of the woman in cinema, or is it just hype?; MC Tamarrod is a rapper living in Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in Lebanon who joins us to talk about his life and offer a rhyme; Alan Grayson calls for sanity in Congress; getting pennies for standing next to priceless works of art and the F Word with Laura Flanders on the Senate passage of the health-care bill.
