Category: Top Stories

2 Docs on 2 Inspirational Women

  • Michael Snyder reviews two docs.
  • “Mercedes Sosa.”
  • “Maiden Trip.”

Listen to the original broadcast

David: Michael Snyder is our resident film critic. Every now and then he stops by with documentaries that all of us should be catching. He has two for us today — “Maiden Trip” and “Mercedes Sosa.” So tell me about “Mercedes Sosa, was it so-so?

Michael: It was so good. She is, in fact, the most influential Argentine singer and songwriter. Unfortunately, she passed away back in 2009, but over a 50 year plus career she had an amazing impact. The subtitle of this documentary is “The Voice of Latin America.” She was terribly influential. She was known as “La Negra,” popular throughout Latin America, won some Latin Grammys, also reached outside the continent and became a very important figure in a movement that was known as “Nueva Cancion,” I guess the “new song.”

Michael recommends this new doc on singer Mercedes Sosa.

Michael recommends this new doc on singer Mercedes Sosa.

These people were like very, very hip to folk-trad in Latin America, but they also had a real sense of populist importance supporting the disenfranchised. This woman was very, very outspoken against a lot of the dictatorships in Latin America, and she was known and beloved throughout the continent. She got in trouble because of her refusal to back down in a lot of situations like that. She sung her songs, stated what she wanted to state, and was, again, incredibly beloved.

This movie, in addition to featuring her in her own voice on camera throughout parts of her life, also has interviews with the likes of David Byrne and Milton Nascimento and other performers that may not be as well-known in the U.S.

David: David Byrne from the Talking Heads?

Michael: David Byrne from the Talking Heads, who was a great exponent of Latin American music and has made a couple albums, one of which is absolutely off-the-hook great. One of his solo records is devoted purely and utterly to a series of different styles of Latin music that he interprets beautifully, I may add. This movie is worth seeing, and if you’ve never heard of Mercedes Sosa, by all means get a chance to watch this movie and learn about someone who was brave and courageous and incredibly talented and was a wonderful singer and songwriter.

David: “Maiden Trip”?

Michael: “Maiden Trip” is another movie about a very brave woman, but a very young woman. At 14 years old, a young Dutch girl named Laura Dekker decides, after learning how to sail with her father since childhood, she decides that she’s going to take a solo trip in a boat around the world. A sailboat circumnavigating the globe and the only person on board is 14-year-old Laura Dekker. It’s an amazing tale of determination and bravery and pluck. This girl also had to fight the authorities with her parents in order to get the approval to do this. There are scenes set in the court. You have a little backstory here and there told through some footage from her younger years, and she had cameras on the boat by herself and she did all these video selfies during her trip.

Michael also raved about Maiden Trip.

Michael also raved about Maiden Trip.

David: It was controversial?

Michael: She’s controversial insofar as the government did not want her to make this trip. They thought it was child endangerment on some level.

David: Sending a 14-year-old girl in a boat around the world by herself?

Michael: They didn’t send her. She wanted to go.

David: I won’t even let my daughter go to the 7-Eleven after 7:00 in the evening.

Michael: Well, this movie “Maiden Trip” is basically a collaboration between Jillian Schlesinger, the director, and little Laura Dekker, who does all this video on the boat. One thing that should be clear here that Laura Dekker, in addition to doing this, comes from a broken home. Her mother and father divorced, and at one point her mother and sibling meet up with her in one country. She would stop in various ports of call. She was in the Galapagos Islands. She went to a lot of really different, cool places, French Polynesia, South Africa, and of course Australia.

David: She’s 14 though!

Michael: Well, I think she maybe even turned 15 at one point. This was a couple years ago. She’s no longer 14. But the idea of a 14-year-old girl traveling the world, traveling the globe in a sailboat by herself is a little daunting, but her assurance on a boat, her comfort zone, her capabilities as a sailor are way beyond her years.

David: Well, I’m appalled that you would recommend this movie.

Michael: No, you’re always looking for a way to kind of undermine something inspiring. I think it’s something internal. I think it’s just something you really don’t like the idea of people doing something when it’s easier for you to just sit and criticize in your sound booth.

David: A 14-year-old girl, that’s child endangerment.

Michael: No, not when you’re this adept. It’s inspiring. She’s confident. She’s talented. She did it.

David: She can’t wait till she’s 18?

Michael: Well, you know what? If you were her dad, I think she might have asked for emancipation at 14. What I don’t like, there’s something called “bull-crit” when people start talking about something after they haven’t seen it.

David: Well, a 14-year-old girl should not be sent around the world on a boat by herself, unless it’s a Disney cruise.

Michael: You know, you’re just making a great mistake because this is not what happens here.

David: Well, if any kids are listening, it’s my responsibility. If you’re a child, do not go sailing around the world in a boat by yourself.

Michael: It’s very, very exciting and very inspiring. It’s called “Maiden Trip,” and it’s available right now.

David: Thank you, Michael Snyder.

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What do you think? I’d like to know. Please join the conversation below by offering up your comments.

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Have A Cold? Blame The FDA

  • FDA withheld study linking antibiotics to deadly superbugs.
  • NRDC sued to make the study public.
  • NRDC won, and this week released what’s in this disturbing study
  • Avinash Kar from NRDC joins us.

The Centers For Disease Control issued a report late last year warning that, conservatively speaking, antibiotic-resistant infections kill more than 2 million Americans and sicken 23,000 annually. This adds twenty billion dollars to healthcare costs and 35 billion dollars in lost productivity each year. The CDC went on to warn that half of all antibiotic prescriptions for humans are unnecessary.

Meanwhile 80 percent of all antibiotics used in America are placed in animal feed. The CDC warns that cows, chickens and pigs eat antibiotic laced feed, develop antibiotic resistant bacteria in their guts which then show up on meat in the grocery. The drug resistant bacteria also show up on our vegetables as the superbug leaches from animal manure into water and fertilizer.

fdagead

Now comes word that the Food and Drug Administration conducted a ten-year study of 30 animal feed antibiotics and concluded that 18 of them posed a “high risk” for developing anti bacterial resistant superbugs which can make their way into humans. The FDA withheld the study, but through the Freedom Of Information Act the Natural Resources Defense Council got its hands on the study and is making it public this week.

Avinash Kar is one of the attorneys with the Natural Resources Defense Council who sued for the release of the FDA study and he joins us from Washington DC.

Originally heard on the David Feldman Show. Please subscribe on iTunes and Stitcher or grab our OFFICIAL podcast feed, which contains no antibiotics:
http://davidfeldmanshow.libsyn.com/rss

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Two Docs, One on Iraq, One on Egypt

  • Michael Snyder looks at 2 documentaries.
  • The Unknown Known
  • And The Square

Listen to the original broadcast

David: Michael Snyder, our resident film critic, stops by every once in a while to recommend documentaries that we should all be catching. Today, you have two for us, The Square and The Unknown Known directed by Errol Morris. The Unknown Known stars the matinee idol and Defense Secretary who brought democracy and liberation to Iraq, and things are going swimmingly over there lately, Donald Rumsfeld. Tell me about The Unknown Known.

Michael Snyder: The heinous Donald Rumsfeld. Hey, hey, the opinions expressed here are mine.

Donald Rumsfeld was Secretary of Defense in 2003 and planned the invasion of Iraq.

Donald Rumsfeld was Secretary of Defense in 2003 and planned the invasion of Iraq.

David: The views here expressed are those of KPFK management and the listeners.

Michael Snyder: How dare you put words into their mouths when I have plenty from my own. Errol Morris is a terrific documentary filmmaker who directed a movie called The Fog of War about Robert McNamara’s career and one of the most controversial wars in the history of the United States, the Vietnam conflict.

David: We should point out Vietnam was controversial. The war in Iraq was not controversial. Everybody agrees it was the worst thing this country has ever done.

Michael Snyder: Certainly came out over time that it was a war waged behind a fallacy. It’s said…

David: You mean a lie?

Michael Snyder: Well, say what you will, but Donald Rumsfeld has had a career in Washington as a bureaucrat.  Has served a variety of Presidents during that career and seemingly thinks he has never done a wrong thing or made an error in the entire history of his professional career.

Any inquiries that are made, whether they’re about the morality of the war in Iraq or certain things that were done in previous administrations, are met with a very glib, confident and, I think one person said ‘sphinx like demeanor,’ particularly when Rumsfeld is caught in a contradiction – which happens on a couple of occasions in the course of the film. The camera is trained directly on him. He must have ice water in his veins. It’s a remarkable and chilling…

David: Any remorse, any remorse?

As President Reagan's special Middle East envoy, Rumsfeld met with Saddam Hussein in 1983.

As President Reagan’s special Middle East envoy, Rumsfeld met with Saddam Hussein in 1983.

Michael Snyder: …chilling look… It seems that he has none. There is a period where he talks about visiting wounded veterans in the hospital. He seems to weep crocodile tears. I really wonder how this man sleeps at night. But, then again, watching him in the cold unflinching gaze of the camera’s eye it’s probable that he has no problem sleeping.

David: Does he weep for the 1,000,000 Iraqis who died?

Michael Snyder: Next to no remorse. Basically, he doesn’t seem to have any kind of regrets whatsoever about everything that happened…

David: If he had to do it over again would he still go in?

Michael Snyder: I believe so. You know, again, Errol Morris does what he can to get as much as he can out of Rumsfeld on camera. Music by Danny Elfman, by the way, that’s very effective, and there’s a lot of archival footage throughout. It was very compelling.

Rumsfeld also served as Defense Secretary under President Ford.

Rumsfeld also served as Defense Secretary under President Ford.

David: Is there anything sympathetic about Rumsfeld? There was something sympathetic about McNamara in The Fog of War…

Michael Snyder: No. It appears that there’s virtually nothing sympathetic about Rumsfeld in this movie.

David: You know, those two cops in Orange County were acquitted yesterday for murdering a homeless guy. Apparently, it’s next to impossible for a cop to do time for murder. It’s impossible for a defense secretary in this country to be wrong or brought up on charges of war crimes.

People with the most lethal power in America rarely, if ever, get tried for murder. Yet, our prisons are filled with 2,000,000 Americans, but they don’t seem to find room for cops or defense secretaries. Onward!

The Square

Michael Snyder: Well, this is sort of the flip side. The Square is a documentary all about Tahrir Square which is where many of the demonstrations and the most significant rallies have occurred during this period of time basically over the past ten years or so.

Director Jehane Noujaim has done an amazing job telling the story, and this is a very complex one, by utilizing first person accounts. The very, very different people, including an actor, Khalid Abdalla, who was in United 93 and The Kite Runner.

images-13

Protestors in Egypt’s Tahrir Square are the subject of The Square.

One of the most amazing things about this film, other than the frankness with which the interviewees reveal their feelings and try to explain the why and how of what they’ve done, is you still walk away from this thinking this is a riddle wrapped in a conundrum. On one hand they wanted to overthrow Hosni Mubarak and his repressive regime and bring about democracy. In order to accomplish that the military had to take control.

So, you have a junta in charge. Then, when democracy comes to the fore and you have a choice– the choice is between a regime just like Mubarak’s or the totally nonsecular theocratic regime of the Muslim Brotherhood. It’s like you’re damned if you do and you’re damned if you do.

In any case, it was a very compelling and educational experience to watch this film for me. As we know, in the summer of 2013 Morsi, who was brought in basically as kind of a figurehead with ties to the Brotherhood, was overthrown. Where do we go from here in Egypt? That’s the question.

David: Where do we go from here? What about the silent majority? There are extremists on both sides in Egypt, but there are more people in the middle. Are they being represented?

Michael Snyder: I believe that the folks being interviewed in this movie are more centrist than you would think. They’re not crazy radicals. They want to bring democracy to Egypt.

David: Yes, democracy. We had a jury in Orange County vote, and they acquitted those cops. Maybe some cultures aren’t ready for democracy, like ours. Thank you, Michael Snyder.

Michael Snyder: You’re welcome, David.

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What do you think? I’d like to hear your thoughts, so please share you comments below.

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Cow Farts Cause German Barn to Explode

German fire officials say a massive explosion inside a barn housing 90 dairy cows was sparked by the buildup of methane from cow flatulence. Officials from Rasdorf, Germany say one cow was slightly injured and another suffered minor burns after static electricity triggered the explosion.

A single cow emits 500 liters of methane each day.

A single cow emits 500 liters of methane each day.

Utility workers later measured methane levels around what was left of the barn and concluded the explosion was caused by the buildup of cow flatulence inside the cramped quarters.

Cow flatulence is one one of the leading causes of global warming. According to the BBC, a single cow emits 500 liters of methane each day.

Read below:

METHANE MADNESS: More cows, more farts, more GHG emissions (via The Mindful Word)

Cows are controversial. You can get jail time if you kill one in India or you can get a full belly (and perhaps some indigestion) if you eat one in the West. Cow farts and burps are responsible for so much greenhouse gas emissions that the UN has even…

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