Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Black Lives Matter campaigner included in king’s birthday honour list – DutchNews.nl – DutchNews.nl

In total, 2,830 people have been given an award in the 2023 kings birthday honours list, mainly people who are recognised for their charity or community work.

This years recipients include the first Cliniclowns, who cheer up sick children in hospital and Mitchell Esajas, one of the founders of the Kick Out Zwarte Piet protest movement and the Black Archives. He was recognised for his services to diversity and inclusion and for combating discrimination and racism.

The oldest recipient is 93-year-old Harrie Saes uit Weert who has been recognised for his volunteer work for a choir in Oudkarspel and for years of visiting dementia patients.

The youngest is Marco Peters (32) who has been on Heerlen city council for 12 years and is therefore automatically entitled to an honour.

Like last year, 64% of those given an honour are male, despite the expressed wish of the organisers to improve the balance. Just 5% of the awards are made to people in recognition of paid jobs.

Most people were made members of the Order of Oranje-Nassau which has six levels. That honour was introduced in 1892 for foreigners and the lower classes. Just 9 people were given an honour in the more exclusive Order of the Dutch Lion.

The first Dutch honour was introduced by king Willem I in 1815.

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From dress codes to equality, Phil Jackson is exactly who we thought he was – The Guardian

The former Bulls coach didnt like how NBA players dressed 20 years ago. And now he objects to them making basic requests for humanity

Wed 26 Apr 2023 04.00 EDT

I remember the NBA labor negotiations of 2005, during which I was on the players union executive committee. The talks took place in the aftermath of the Malice at the Palace, and commissioner David Stern and the league were in full crisis mode. They wanted to introduce a dress code, a much-maligned policy whose tacit aim was to make Black players less threatening to the white season-ticket holders and TV viewers who drove much of the leagues revenue.

I had worn my clothes baggy since high school. That was just my style. Phil Jackson, who had won six titles with Michael Jordan as head coach of the Chicago Bulls and three more with the Los Angeles Lakers, had a different opinion though.

The players have been dressing in prison garb the last five or six years. All the stuff that goes on, its like gangster, thuggery stuff. Its time. Its been time to do that, he told the San Gabriel Valley Tribune as the dress code was introduced.

Jackson, who by then was the head coach of the Lakers, had no problem echoing sentiments usually heard on Fox News, stereotyping an entire generation of young Black men. It was at that point that I knew exactly what Jackson thought of us.

So it came as no surprise when Jackson said last week that he has lost interest in the NBA because its too political. He seemed particularly irritated by the leagues support of the Black Lives Matter movement after the police murder of George Floyd in 2020.

[The NBA] even had slogans on the floor and on the baseline. It was trying to cater to an audience or trying to bring a certain audience to the game, Jackson said on a recent episode of music producer Rick Rubins podcast. They didnt know it was turning other people off. People want to see sports as non-political. Politics stays out of the game. It doesnt need to be there.

He added: They had things on their back like Justice. And a funny thing happened like: Justice just went to the basket and Equal Opportunity knocked him down. Some of my grandkids thought it was pretty funny to play up those names; I couldnt watch that.

The NBA was responding not only to the murder of Floyd but a summer that saw 26-year-old Breonna Taylor killed by Louisville police in her own home, and Jacob Blake shot in front of his children by officers in Kenosha, Wisconsin. And those were just the highest-profile cases.

The entire country was in an uproar as protests took place across the United States. People of all races, colors, nationalities, and cultures let their voices be heard. And NBA players were not on the sidelines but were active participants in that movement.

However, this apparently didnt sit too well with Jackson. It was particularly odd coming from a man who has been happy to lap up praise for his embrace of Buddhist teachings, peace and progressive opinions.

The things on their back that Jackson was referring to were slogans such as Justice, Equal Opportunity, Vote and Peace. Shouldnt they be right up his alley, considering his alleged forward thinking? Does peace for all not include Black people?

How is it possible that someone who made a fortune thanks to the skills of Black players such as Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Shaquille ONeal and Kobe Bryant is triggered by athletes saying that their lives matter? Is Jackson really so disgusted that he cant watch basketball, even as social activism in the league has faded from its peak in 2020?

It raises the question whether Jackson ever saw the lives of the Black athletes he coached as being of any significance outside an NBA court. Or were they to him just, as the journalist William Rhoden once wrote, $40m slaves? Men who are not respected for their opinions, minds or intellect. Men who shouldnt have the gall to say Black people should be treated as equals to people who look like Jackson.

What Jackson calls politics wasnt really political at all. It was just a request for equality.

He wasnt just disrespectful to players, though. He insulted the countless family members of victims of police brutality. They value athletes using their voices and their platforms to bring awareness to the loved ones killed at the hands of police.

It was a sentiment echoed by the Emerald Garner, the daughter of Eric Garner, in Finding My Voice, a book we wrote together.

NBA players as a whole supported my family after my father was choked to death by the NYPD. Back then, every time I turned on the TV, all I saw were people justifying his murder and saying why my father deserved to die, she wrote.

When NBA players were putting Black Lives Matter on the front of their shirts, it wasnt about promoting an organization, they were using their tremendous platforms to take a stand and saying that our lives mattered. That my fathers life mattered. That George Floyds life mattered. That Breonna Taylors life mattered. It meant so much to us impacted family members. I will forever be thankful to the NBA and all the athletes who stood with us.

Hopefully, Jackson can share this message with his grandchildren, so they no longer find it amusing that NBA athletes have the courage to take a stand against racism and police brutality, and advocate on behalf of justice and equality.

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From dress codes to equality, Phil Jackson is exactly who we thought he was - The Guardian

How Tucker Carlson rode a wave of populist outrage – BBC

25 April 2023

Image source, Getty Images/BBC

Last Wednesday night, Tucker Carlson opened his Fox News show in typical fashion. "Sometimes you wonder how filthy and dishonest our news media are," he mused.

"The question is, who is telling the truth? There are not many of those."

For the last six years, Carlson has used his perch to convince a conservative-leaning swathe of the American public that he is one of those few voices of truth - even as he aired segments that critics say featured misinformation and racism.

The approach was incredibly effective. Carlson was one of the highest-rated hosts in network news, consistently attracting about three million viewers, establishing himself as a powerful figure in the conservative movement.

But despite that success, just days after he questioned the honesty of the news media, he would be forced out of primetime.

On Monday, Fox News abruptly announced the network and its biggest star had, in its words, agreed to "part ways".

Neither party has yet provided details of the departure. But Carlson's exit comes days after Fox News paid an extraordinary $787m (633m) settlement to Dominion Voting Systems over false election claims.

The lawsuit revealed, among other things, that Carlson derided Donald Trump's election fraud claims in private messages while backing them publicly on the air. At one point, he texted that he hated the former president "passionately".

Now, the future of one of America's loudest conservative voices remains uncertain.

A steady rise and a sudden fall

Carlson got his start in the media world of the 1990s, writing for several prominent publications. He worked as a commentator for CNN in the early 2000s before joining MSNBC to host a nightly programme.

He moved over to Fox News in 2009 to work as a political analyst, eventually launching his own show, Tucker Carlson Tonight, in 2016. The debut episode attracted about 3.7 million viewers.

Around that same time, two seismic events swept through the conservative world that propelled Carlson to the media stratosphere.

The first came in 2017, when Fox News fired its biggest star at the time, Bill O'Reilly, leaving an opening for the next network star. The New York Times had reported millions in payouts made to women who had accused O'Reilly of sexual misconduct - allegations he said had no merit.

Carlson's stature ballooned during the Trump era, as he often used his new primetime slot to defend the president, riding a wave of populist outrage that fuelled his election victory.

Image source, Getty Images

Ex-president Donald Trump, Tucker Carlson and Republican lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene last summer

"The main message is a populist one," Yotam Ophir, who studies disinformation at the State University of New York at Buffalo, explained. "'They', whoever they are, are coming to get you... that the country you love is changing before our eyes. And only we at Fox are willing to say the truth and fight for people's values."

Since launching Tucker Carlson Tonight, "they" have included immigrants, political correctness, the Black Lives Matter movement, Democrats, Hollywood, an amorphous elite class, and LGBT people, to name just a few.

The populist message was potent. Republican politicians were eager to appear on his show, seeing it as a direct conduit to their political base.

His show generated $77.5m in advertising revenue last year, figures from agency Vivvix showed, with Carlson's hour attracting 45% more advertising dollars than the next biggest show in primetime.

After news of his departure broke, Republican lawmakers and right-wing pundits praised Carlson.

Donald Trump Jr., the former president's son, said Carlson was "one of the few voices in the Republican Party that would call out the nonsense from GOP senators, governors, and otherwise".

Accusations of racism and misogyny

While lauded on the right, Mr Carlson and his show frequently drew condemnation from misinformation experts, fact-checkers and activists.

He was accused of elevating racist and nativist talking points and promoting conspiracy theories.

Experts on hate speech and extremism have accused him of endorsing white supremacist ideologies.

Carlson faced condemnation outside of his show, as well.

In recordings from 2006-11 obtained by a watchdog that monitors conservative media, Carlson called women "extremely primitive", defended child marriage and made sexual comments about underage girls. Carlson responded by inviting "anyone who disagrees" with his comments to appear on his show.

In another instance, audio captured him calling Iraq a "crappy place filled with... semiliterate primitive monkeys".

In 2019, Carlson criticised Ilhan Omar, the Somali-born Muslim Democratic congresswoman, saying on his show she was "living proof that the way we practice immigration has become dangerous to this country".

Carlson also faced accusations of spreading misinformation around Covid-19 vaccine requirements, and entertaining election-denying conspiracy theories - even though, as the Dominion lawsuit revealed, he privately denounced Trump's claims to have won the 2020 election.

"Not everything he says is misinformative, but it all creates this aura of disregard for truth," said Kristy Roschke, a media literacy expert at Arizona State University.

"Those things have had a tremendous impact on our media environment and therefore on the viewer."

An unexpected exit

His controversial statements did not go unnoticed - and occasionally caused blowback for the network - such as in 2018 when he said immigrants made America "poorer and dirtier", leading several large companies to pull their advertisements. But for the most part, the network left him to his own devices.

Which makes his sudden, unexplained departure from Fox News all the more shocking.

Image source, Getty Images

Carlson - seen here on a billboard at Fox News HQ - was at the heart of its primetime schedule

BBC News contacted a lawyer said to be representing Carlson, but did not receive a reply. Carlson himself has remained silent thus far.

High profile conservatives expressed their support. Commentator Matt Walsh said the move was "disastrous" for Fox News, and called Carlson "by far the most important and relevant figure at the network".

Carlson's next move remains unclear.

Like his predecessors O'Reilly and the bombastic former opinion host Glenn Beck, who was prominent during the Obama era, he may try to pivot into his own media brand.

Both Beck and O'Reilly - who have launched news podcasts alongside other ventures - have struggled to command the same level of influence.

Nonetheless, Carlson's supporters are optimistic. "Wherever Tucker Carlson goes," Republican congresswoman Lauren Boebert tweeted, "America will follow!"

Without the powerful engine of Fox News behind him, it is unclear whether Carlson will continue to hold sway.

"It is a watershed moment," said Mr Ophir. "His departure from Fox is a big moment for the balance of our information system at large."

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When the Broadway Lights Went Out, Two Theater Workers Found … – The New York Times

Since receiving a bachelors degree in theater arts from State University of New York at New Paltz in 2014, Ms. Bonnick, 30, has worked in theater. In 2016, she had her big break as the production assistant for Hadestown at the shows Off Broadway debut at New York Theater Workshop. She went on to work on shows like The Cherry Orchard, Caroline, or Change and, more recently, Sweeney Todd. But several months into the pandemic, she was wondering if her career in theater was over. All she could think, she said, was Ive spent five years investing in something that doesnt exist anymore.

She was facing challenges on a personal level as well. In late spring 2020, Ms. Bonnicks maternal grandfather, Joseph Johnson, died, and in August, her paternal grandfather, Keith Bonnick, also died. The Black Lives Matter protests that began in late May raised difficult emotions for Ms. Bonnick. And she and her roommate found out on short notice that they had to move out of their apartment.

Mr. McDonnell, 28, who received a bachelors degree in theater from Brooklyn College in 2017, had held on to his job for the New York Theater Workshop when the pandemic began. He is currently working full time as a security guard at Madison Square Garden.

That summer, he faced a major health scare. I had a massive tumor growing along the side of my jaw, he said. It started the size of a pea and by summer it was the size of a golf ball. I started going for tests. In mid-August, I had surgery to remove it. When he went in for a follow-up, the doctors told him that the lump had been an extremely rare form of cancer called secretory carcinoma. Luckily it was a clean removal, he said.

Also that summer, Mr. McDonnells grandfather on his fathers side, James McDonnell, died, an event that deeply affected his family.

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When the Broadway Lights Went Out, Two Theater Workers Found ... - The New York Times

‘White House Plumbers’ Revisits the Fringes of Watergate – The New York Times

LOS ANGELES On June 17, 1972, five men were arrested while breaking into the Democratic National Committee offices at the Watergate office building in Washington, D.C.

Dismissed by the White House press secretary as a third-rate burglary, the break-in set off a chain of events that ultimately led to the resignation of President Richard M. Nixon in August 1974. Ever since, the gate suffix has been shorthand for scandal, and Watergate has provided fodder for movies, books, podcasts, commentaries and television.

But at a time when a former president has been indicted on charges of funneling hush money payments to an adult film star, does Watergate still shock? Is it still the riveting tale of malfeasance that it was 51 years ago?

A new five-part HBO mini-series may offer answers to those questions. White House Plumbers, premiering Monday, recreates the events that riveted a nation and upended American politics, focusing not on the usual characters no Nixon, Woodward or Bernstein on the screen here but on the men behind the crime.

These are the Plumbers, led by E. Howard Hunt, the ex-C. I. A. officer played by Woody Harrelson, and G. Gordon Liddy, the lawyer and former F.B.I. agent played by Justin Theroux. Hunt and Liddy are well-known to historians and Watergate buffs, but they are compared to a Dean, Haldeman or Mitchell secondary players in a scandal that toppled a presidency and whose particulars have faded from the popular memory over five decades.

I was pretty much in the dark about all this stuff, Harrelson said. I didnt know much about Hunt; I was 11 when this went down.

White House Plumbers comes roughly a year after another high-end Watergate series: Gaslit, a stylish Starz thriller that featured Sean Penn as John Mitchell, Nixons attorney general, and Julia Roberts as Martha Mitchell. Despite its star power, that show failed to make much of a ripple in ratings or awards, earning four technical Emmy nominations and no wins.

Even the Plumbers creators acknowledge that the Watergate offenses seem quaint compared to, say, Donald Trumps effort to overturn an election that he lost by about 7 million votes.

That was an era in which people could still be shocked that this kind of behavior went on in politics, said Peter Huyck, who created the show with Alex Gregory. People were shocked that people were breaking in and planting bugs, whereas nowadays that would seem like small potatoes.

David Mandel, who directed the series, said he learned about Watergate when he was growing up from All the Presidents Men, the book and movie about how two Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, broke the scandal that brought down Nixon.

Im sad to say, you probably have a lot of people that have no idea that there was Watergate, he said.

So why dramatize a small slice of a historical event people no longer seem all that interested in?

First and foremost, it was a great story with larger-than-life characters and astonishing twists and turns, Gregory said. If were hoping to achieve anything, its to get people interested in history in general by making it entertaining. Perhaps people would learn from history if it were served up as a cheeseburger instead of an undressed arugula salad.

White House Plumbers is a descendant of another HBO Washington series: the caustic comedy Veep. Huyck and Gregory were mainstays of that satires writers room and Mandel was a showrunner. But this is no Veep II: White House Plumbers is as sad as it is funny. Its a slapstick tragedy in the words of Frank Rich, an executive producer for the show, and a former executive producer of Veep. (A former New York Times columnist, hes also an executive producer of Succession.)

Hunt and Liddy are true believers, serving their president and, in their view, protecting the country from Communism and the political turmoil of the era. And they were prepared to break the law to do it; the series follows their clandestine effort to run a secret band of Cuban American political saboteurs at the behest of the Nixon re-election campaign.

The inaugural mission by the Plumbers was a June 1971 break-in at the Beverly Hills office of Daniel Ellsbergs psychiatrist, in a fruitless search for information to discredit Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers.

Its a wonder that this group wasnt caught sooner, said Timothy Naftali, an historian and the former director of the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. This was the gang that couldnt shoot straight. The idea that Nixon would have put his fate in the hands of this group is one of the great mysteries of that era.

Indeed, Hunt and Liddy are portrayed as being slightly pathetic, but also sympathetic, if in a bumbling kind of way. Hunt, defeated and incarcerated for his role in Watergate, learns that Nixonhas resignedby overhearing two fellow inmates talking as he is folding T-shirts in a prison laundry.

Theroux said he felt conflicted as he portrayed Liddy. I really liked him, liked playing him, he said, adding: I dont fall in love with his politics or his ethics; I did fall in love with his spirit.

Hunt, like Liddy, is a middle-aged man struggling with a flailing career, but he is also navigating a dysfunctional marriage. All your Watergate was for nothing, Hunts wife, Dorothy (Lena Headey) tells her husband after Nixon wins re-election in a landslide in 1972.

Hunt is a relatively bland character, particularly compared with Liddy, whom Mandel described as anut-ball. But Harrelson found himself fascinated by, if not terribly sympathetic to this shadowy symbol of the Watergate era.

Hes a deplorable man, he said. He just did some coldblooded stuff back in the day.

The story of Watergate has until now been typically told from the vantage point of the Oval Office and the Washington Post newsroom. But this is not your fathers All the Presidents Men, as Rich put it.

Francesca Orsi, HBOs head of drama series, said Plumbers is exploring the scandal from the point of view of the foot soldiers on the ground.

The heart and soul the psyche of the show is about these two men and the way their decisions and choices they made had wider ramifications for themselves and their families, she said.

There has been no shortage of Washington intrigue and scandal since Nixon resigned, including the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol in 2021, the impeachments of presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, and the Iran-Contra arms-for hostages scandal that shadowed Ronald Reaganssecond term. But Watergate remains a singular chapter in American history that has continued political relevance.

I dont think people are that interested in Watergate, but they are certainly interested in the questions of a deep state and questions of the weaponization of the federal government, Naftali said. The story of Hunt and Liddy and their associates is the story of a federal government gone wild of a president using federal power to hurt people who disagree with him.

Plumbers is based in part on a book by Egil Bud Krogh Jr., a Nixon White House staff member who served time for authorizing the Ellsberg psychiatrist break-in. And for all the attention paid to Watergate over the decades, Plumbers finds some lesser-known corners of this story to explore.

For one thing, there were four attempted break-ins at the Watergate, including two unsuccessful dry-runs and a return visit to repair a failed bug. Hunts wife later died in a plane crash, and the series nods (but only nods) to an old conspiracy theory We didnt want to Oliver Stone it, Gregory said that it might not have been an accident. Liddy had an odd fixation with the Nazis; at one point we see him raising his arm in a Nazi salute.

All these things that people are going to watch and go, Yeah, that didnt happen Gregory said. Those are the things that really happened.

And Dita Beard! Kathleen Turner plays the International Telephone and Telegraph lobbyist who, in this telling, is spirited out of Washington at the orders of the Nixon White House so she wouldnt give damaging testimony about an alleged quid pro quo involving an I.T.T.Corporationcampaign contribution to the Republican National Committee. Other cameos of note include the All the Presidents Men star Robert Redford (actually Redfords voice), in a scene where Woodward is heard calling Hunt.

Production on White House Plumbers was delayed by the Covid pandemic, which occurred amidturmoil, division and disruption in the country. During that period, Trump attempted to overturn the 2020election, the Black Lives Matter demonstrations were touched off whenMinneapolispolice killed George Floyd, and the violentJan. 6 rioting eruptedat the Capitol, leading to subsequenthearings all of which makes framing a political scandal as a comedy, even a black comedy, a bit of a challenge, even for the crew that brought the world Veep.

In Veep, we were going for the hard jokes, Huyck said. In this, there are no jokes.

The situation is organically absurd, he continued. You can just write completely straight dialogue and let it sit there, and it will be funny.

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'White House Plumbers' Revisits the Fringes of Watergate - The New York Times