Richard Prince's popular column on the news media, published by the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education (www.mije.org).
FEBRUARY 7 | CNN Suspends Roland Martin Over Tweets
FEBRUARY 5 | AP Lays Off Diversity Advocate
FEBRUARY 2 | News of Don Cornelius' Death Goes Viral
FEBRUARY 10 | Diverse Support for Contraception Law
FEBRUARY 9 | Obama: Foreclosure Settlement Is 'a Start'
FEBRUARY 8 | Santorum Wins; Doubts About Romney
Lee Daniels and Push take Sundance
Producer-director Lee Daniels [Monster's Ball, The Woodsman] has hit the high mark with Push. A coming of age tale about Precious, a pregnant Harlem teen who navigates through incest, physical and emotional abuse, racism, self-hatred, illiteracy, HIV and obsesity [this is not a Disney flick]... Precious struggles until she stumbles upon a radical schoolteacher who offers her a revolutionary way out—literature and finding her voice through writing. The film is based on Sapphire's 1996 novel Push and it has earned both Sundance's top-tier Grand Jury Prize as well as the Audience Award. Mo'Nique [The Parkers] earned the Sundance's Special Jury for Acting for her portrayal of the abusive mother. I was lucky enough to perform in a stage adaptation of Sapphire's American Dreams several years ago in NYC. I played one of the culprits in the legendary Central Park "wilding" incident and it launched my short-lived acting career. As an actor, I had never been asked to tap into that much poetic-ugly in order to spread such human truth. There's nothing about Push that's easy. It's unrelenting in its honesty and horror, and some [you know, easily-scared, moral police types] will turn up their noises at the film's gift for poetic truth-telling. But it's a story with a pure happy ending—Precious discovers the breadth of her own value and that's everything. Hats off to Lee Daniels for his courage and gift!











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