Edward
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Actors, eh? Always pretending to be something they're not, the swines!
Depending on the definition, show me a person who isn't. Absolutism serves nothing, and duality is human. I'm not watching Yellowstone. I don't know Costner's views on guns. I do seem to remember he is a dedicated advocate for the outdoors, Native cultures, and issues related to the land. I have no skin in this. But Edward already said it better than I've attempted. Personal opinions and what they do creatively aren't necessarily locked in step. They couldn't be.I have a hard time with hypocrites.
Actors, eh? Always pretending to be something they're not, the swines!
Depending on the definition, show me a person who isn't. Absolutism serves nothing, and duality is human. I'm not watching Yellowstone. I don't know Costner's views on guns. I do seem to remember he is a dedicated advocate for the outdoors, Native cultures, and issues related to the land. I have no skin in this. But Edward already said it better than I've attempted. Personal opinions and what they do creatively aren't necessarily locked in step. They couldn't be.
I'm not sure that is what happens a lot of the time. The difference between them and us most often is simply that they have a platform, and we don't. They talk. People listen. I talk. Nobody listens. That's not their fault. That's our culture. I can tell you that if I could influence people towards the things I value, I probably would. I'd be foolish not to, and on some level, if I really cared about an issue, not using my influence would be shameful. As for the "real world" vs "not real world", I don't know what that means. An awful lot of rich, or successful, or celebrity, or whatever gives them a higher profile than most of us, people seem to struggle with the exact same things as we all do: vices, mental illness, illness, death, etc. And they care about the exact same things as we do: family, faith, protecting what they value, etc. If you distill the situations down, the real difference is that platform. That's about it. I'm sure there's a percentage of them that think they have the whole world figured out better than everyone else...but wait...I meet people like that every day of my life, and they aren't part of Hollywood. Hell, I have a bunch of them in my own family. It's a human ugliness. On the other hand, if shoe cobblers are the only ones who can have an opinion on shoes, then we're dead in the water.Certainly, no human is perfect, and every situation is different. Actors who don’t live in the real world have no business telling me how to live my life. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, certainly. But somehow many Hollywood folks have the impression that their political views are more important, enlightened, and correct than those of us commoners.
I understand what you're saying, but I have a hunch this Yellowstone series and Costner's personal opinions have more in common than they don't. It isn't a zero-sum game. Again, I know a little about Costner and less about Yellowstone. My other hunch is there are a whole lot of touchstones with this situation. It's complex and nuanced. Most meaningful things are.Would you buy hats from a vendor who made good money selling fur felt hats, but actively lobbied against your right to wear a fur coat? It’s fine for him to make money off of it, but you have no right to do the same?
I believe that it is one the best series I have ever watched. Let us know how you feel.Binge watching Boardwalk Empire have the complete set !
Hi Touch of Evil how have you been my friend . Just checked back in a few days ago after a hiatus ! Glad to see your still here and doing well ! Yes I agree with you I love this series and bought it a few years ago after the series ended . Watched it all the time and was pissed when it ended, don’t know why they ended it,I have to assume it was the price of the sets and clothes etc etc etc .I believe that it is one the best series I have ever watched. Let us know how you feel.
I am doing well and you. Glad you have returned. I figured your absence was more of a absence from the discussions that I frequent. Do not be a stranger. There are many good people, new and old to The Lounge, with which to have entertaining conversations.Hi Touch of Evil how have you been my friend . Just checked back in a few days ago after a hiatus ! Glad to see your still here and doing well ! Yes I agree with you I love this series and bought it a few years ago after the series ended . Watched it all the time and was pissed when it ended, don’t know why they ended it,I have to assume it was the price of the sets and clothes etc etc etc .
All The Best my Friend , Fashion Frank
I share that with you except my list extends to all actors who pontificate on matters political so I strike them from my "watchable" list......now I have painted myself into a corner as there are not many Hollywood actors I will allow myself to watch. These days I watch mostly oldies on TCM and foreign films so I can be consciously unaware of the actor's political stripe. It works for me anyways!My wife and I almost quit watching Yellowstone after the first couple of episodes, but it is getting better. I struggle with anything "western" with Kevin Costner in it, knowing his political views on firearms. I have a hard time with hypocrites.
I think my favorite scene so far is Beth in the cowboy/redneck bar with the developer! She's a real viper, but at least she's honest about it!
Stars in the Era certainly had their political moments. Eddie Cantor lost his radio and movie contracts in 1940 after blasting Father Coughlin as an anti-Semite and a Nazi sympathizer (which of course he was.) Groucho Marx had a very thick FBI file after he came to J. Edgar's attention for his associations with persons of left-wing sympathies, and as late as the Nixon era he was considered "a threat to the President." A large number of Hollywood figures, including Humphret Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Edward G. Robinson, Bette Davis, Judy Garland, Lucille Ball, Henry Fonda, John Garfield, Katharine Hepburn, Billy Wilder, and Frank Sinatra, came together in 1947 for a radio broadcast called "Hollywood Fights Back," in defense of the Hollywood Ten and in opposition to the HUAC, even as a number of other Hollywood figures -- notably Robert Taylor, John Wayne, Adolphe Menjou, Walt Disney, and Ginger Rogers -- took loud and aggressive public stands in favor of blacklisting. And of course, there's the case of Mr. Chaplin, who was finally run out of the USA for his political beliefs.
That's just scratching the surface. The idea that stars of the Era kept their politics to themselves has no support in the reality of those times. They were just as vocal in their views as performers are today.
As someone who would have been blacklisted myself, had I been active in broadcasting in 1950, I admit I do find it hard sometimes to watch personalities who supported such things, but I can usually put that aside. Ginger Rogers is still one of my favorite performers, even though we would never have been pals, and the same is true of Barbara Stanwyck -- I can understand where her views came from, even if i don't agree with them. The only two stars of the Era I can't stomach for political reasons are Errol Flynn and Frank Fay, both of whom were simply despicable human beings on top of their fascist politics.
Speaking of blacklisting, I've been watching episodes of "The Goldbergs" lately --not the current sitcom, but the Gertrude Berg comedy-drama of Jewish family life adapted from the radio serial for television in 1949-50. Jake Goldberg is beautifully portrayed by Philip Loeb, who only had two years in the part before blacklisters hounded him off the air -- and eventually to suicide. It's hard to watch these shows -- and his performance especially -- knowing what fate has in store for him, but it's still an absolutely riveting example of live 1940s television before everything was reduced to cheap formula.