Does anybody really believe someone like Obama doesn't know his black liberation theology well-enough to make an informed decision about being in such a church until now?
And, for all the times the Big O says he wasn't in church when Wright said this or that, we can probably conclude he isn't such a great parishioner. Until it's time to write a check or return a political favor.
I didn't care for the final episode of The Wire, but it doesn't change the fact that it was and will always be one of the very best and most socially relevant TV shows ever made. From my Examiner column.
Not much to comment on about the Oscars Sunday night. Without
question, Cate Blanchett should have won the supporting actress award
for playing Bob Dylan in I'm Not There.
And No Country for Old Men,
rightly, won for best picture, director(s), adapted screenplay and
supporting actor and should have won for its cinematography, which was
by far the best I've seen in as long as I can remember. (There Will Be Blood, which won, looked great too, to be fair.)
The one thing that made me glad I watched was the duo of Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova from Once. They performed "Falling Slowly," which was nominated for best song, and soon thereafter won.
Both
were so happy, and Hansard's acceptace speech was the definition of
gratitude. Irglova got cut off by the music leading to a commercial,
but Jon Stewart, in a truly classy move, brought her back out after the
break and gave her all the time she wanted.
No Country and Once were my two favorite films of 2007, one dark and bleak, the other hopeful and real.