Life in the Sprung

Life. Life's absurdities. And TV news in the most powerful city in the world. Blogging 8 miles north of the White House

Saturday, August 26, 2006

26 August 2006

Finally. Perhaps some GOOD news.

This from the AP just a little while ago: "Palestinian officials said Saturday they expected to have 'good news' about two kidnapped Fox News journalists within two days, despite an approaching deadline over their fate."

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

23 August 2006

UPDATE: After 8 days, FINALLY some video of our captured colleagues and a claim of responsibility from the group who took them: an unknown group called the "Holy Jihad Brigades." Hopefully, now we know who captured these guys the network can finally start negotiating for their release.

Saw the final two parts of Spike Lee's documentary on HBO. It focused on the slow and painful rebuilding of evacuee's lives--and the many inhumanities along the way. It was extremely painful to watch--(especially the recovery of bodies several months after the storm). It also focused on the COLLOSAL failure of the government and the Army Corps of Engineers on the woefully inadequate levee system. Terence Blanchard is right: somebody SHOULD go to jail for that. There was also not a lot of Harry Belafonte in parts 3 & 4--just the narratives and stories of people in NOLA (and in Mississippi.) This is just what it should be. It's just a brilliant piece of work.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

22 August 2006


The girl and I watched parts 1 & 2 of Spike Lee's four-part HBO documentary on Hurricane Katrina last night, called "WHEN THE LEVEES BROKE: A REQUIEM IN FOUR ACTS."

I was a bit skeptical...I was bracing for a Michael Moore-esque examination of the tragedy. I was waiting for it to be manipulative, inflammatory and heavy-handed -- an excuse for the right to dismiss it as meaningless anti-Bush propaganda (to dismiss this work would have been--in itself--a tragedy.)

So far, it is masterful. We heard stories from victims all across the racial and socio-economic strata: black, white, young, old, rich, poor. (This, despite the fact that the storm affected poor blacks disproportionately.)

Lee also (I think) wisely realized he didn't need to "sex up" his documentary -- the images, the stories, the pain, the desperation, the frustration, the helplessness, the guilt that we, as Americans, feel over this tragedy--is powerful enough without having to embellish it. And the point came across loud and clear: our government (on ALL levels) let the people of New Orleans people down, it's utterly unforgiveable, and we must never forget it.

The only thing I found a little indulgent was Spike including Harry Belafonte in the documentary. He has little personal connection to Katrina and New Orleans -- but he was included because he's a visceral and high-profile Bush hater. To be sure, Bush and Brownie and Chertoff are easy targets and deserve to be ripped to shreds. But I felt it would have been more effective to have an actual resident (or at least someone less polarizing) slam the Bush administration for their ineptitude. It's like using a sledgehammer to swat a fly. (Conversely, I thought Michael Eric Dyson's contributions to the documentary were brilliant.)

((Belafonte--if your mind needs refreshing-- has called Bush "the world's greatest terrorist," compared Bush to Hitler, is a vocal advocate for socialism, and has befriended anti-American world figures such as Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez. He's also called Colin Powell and Condi Rice "house slaves." Look, I am NO fan of Bush--and Belafonte has made major contributions to the civil rights movement and should be hailed for that--but I think he's totally marginalized himself with some of his crazy and irresponsible tirades of recent years. Belafonte has an audience, to be sure--but I feel it's outside the mainstream.))

I find it interesting that I'm not at all ready to watch any of the 9/11 retrospectives and movies out there--but I can't get enough of the Katrina One Year Later specials. It's still raw--it's still painful--but I feel strongly about watching these specials and ripping "the band-aid" off. I guess the event just exposed -- for all the world too see--the racial and socio-economic ills of this country and the utter fecklessness of our government.

I also wonder about the political impact of these documentaries/retrospectives heading into the mid-term elections. It's a devastating portrayal of the Bush administration.