Disability news, Accessibility Issues, Disability Issues, Accessiblity News

Archive for the ‘PB Articles & Essays’ Category

Readers: What’s your advice on ‘Tropic Thunder’?

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Updates earlier posts here: ‘Sorry, Mr. Stiller … You’ve crossed the line’

And here: Once upon a time … There was a retard

With the August 13 release date for Ben Stiller’s “Tropic Thunder” still more than a week away, plans for the upcoming DVD are already being shared on the Internet.

Disability rights organizations have confirmed that a meeting with DreamWorks executives has been set for 5 p.m. Pacific time Wednesday to discuss the film’s depiction of people with disabilities.

But the studio ad campaign and distribution machine is already moving forward at full throttle. As movie prints and DVDs are being readied for distribution, will the meeting come too late for any changes to be made?

Readers, please send your advice: What should the disability rights organizations be asking for? What will make you feel better about a movie that advises: “Never go full retard”? All comments will be forwarded.

A starting point:

Here are some of the many suggestions I’ve heard over the past few days:

  • Paramount/Dreamworks should pull all references to the words “retard,” “imbecile,” “moron” and “idiot” from the movie, DVD, trailers, promotional material and merchandising;
  • Paramount/DreamWorks should pull all scenes and clips that include Ben Stiller’s portrayal of “Simple Jack” from the movie, DVD, trailers, promotional material and merchandising;
  • Ben Stiller, DreamWorks and Paramount should apologize;
  • Paramount/DreamWorks should commit to employing people with intellectual and other disabilities, with specific hiring goals;
  • Paramount/Dreamworks should commit to consulting people with disabilities during the development process about scripts that portray them ;
  • Paramount/DreamWorks should fund an advocate on behalf of people with disabilities in the entertainment industry; and
  • Paramount/DreamWorks should contribute to disability rights causes a set portion of the film’s profits.

I’ve also heard from people who say that discussion of the film is premature until it can be viewed, that the disability community should not draw attention to the film by discussing its use of the word “retard”, and that boycotts and demonstrations should be considered.

What do YOU think?

Disability rights groups organizing over ‘Tropic Thunder’

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

Update here: Rights groups prepare for boycotts, protest


A national coalition of disability rights organizations has formally requested a meeting with executives at DreamWorks/Paramount to express concerns about negative portrayals of people with intellectual disabilities in “Tropic Thunder,” an R-rated raunchfest that is set to open August 13.

(Earlier posts here and here.)

Ben Stiller plays two characters in the big-budget comedy: a fading action hero (above left with Robert Downey Jr. and Jack Black), and “Simple Jack,” a kind-hearted dolt with bad teeth whose onscreen presence prompts frequent use of words like “retard,” “moron” and “imbecile.”

At a hastily convened conference call yesterday, advocates voiced dissatisfaction over studio promotional materials that feature the slogan “Once upon a time … There was a retard,” as well as worries that the Simple Jack character reinforces hurtful stereotypes. The ad-hoc coalition also requested an advance screening of the film.

Among the organizations represented were the American Association of People with Disabilities, The Arc of the United States, Special Olympics, the National Down Syndrome Congress, United Cerebral Palsy, the Autistic Self-Advocacy Network, TASH, and the Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts.

While the group was optimistic that the meeting and screening would take place next week, it also discussed possible organized efforts to attract negative attention to the film.

In a New York Times article this morning that references this website, studio executives brushed aside questions about the way the film portrays people with disabilities. Here’s a comment from Stacey Snider, chief executive of the DreamWorks unit:

Ms. Snider acknowledged the risks inherent in the film. It is the first from DreamWorks, she said, to use a so-called red band trailer, which attempts to limit access to online viewers 17 or older. (Visitors to tropicthunder.com can view it only after clicking on “Restricted” and entering name, ZIP code and birth date.)

But the film’s humor, she said, comes at the expense of its own heroes, a corps of knucklehead actors, rather than of the handicapped or anyone else. “The star-studdedness of it, and the absolute playability of it, trumps it all,” Ms. Snider said.

And from the film’s star, director and lead writer Ben Stiller, there was this:

“It’s hard for me to tell people how to react,” he said. “The whole point of the movie is about actors, and the length actors will go to to advance their careers.”

For disability rights organizations, the stakes are high. “Tropic Thunder” is among the summer’s biggest films, with major stars, a production budget of about $90 million and a promotional budget of tens of millions more.

Whatever messages are embedded in the movie will soon be seen by millions of people, and could help to define how people with apparent disabilities are viewed by the public. Current figures from the U.S. Census Bureau put the number of Americans with cognitive disabilities at 14.3 million, or 6 percent of the population 15 and older.

There will doubtless be statements from studio executives who say the film is an equal opportunity offender. It pokes fun at racial stereotypes, with Robert Downey Jr. dressing in blackface and citing the theme song of “The Jeffersons.” Jack Black does fart jokes. Everybody’s offended, right?

Let’s answer that with some questions. People of different races surely were involved in the making of this film, and were able to express opinions about which references were humorous and which might have gone too far. So were people with different sexual orientations.

How many people with cognitive disabilities were involved in the making of this film? Were any people with cognitive disabilities involved in focus groups for this film? How many are employed by Dreamworks, or by parent company Paramount?

See Dave Hingsburger’s essay on one girl’s reaction to the word “retard”:
http://davehingsburger.blogspot.com/2008/05/that-word-this-girl.html

See also: Update: Meeting set between studio, rights coalition

(Paramount Pictures image from the New York Times)

‘Never go full retard’

Friday, August 1st, 2008

From www.aceshowbiz.com:

Here’s a very unofficial transcript of a scene from the upcoming film Tropic Thunder, in which Robert Downey Jr. (right) advises Ben Stiller on how to play a character with an intellectual disability. In the scene, the two men are actors discussing a fictional film called “Simple Jack.” (Note: Includes language that may be considered offensive.)

Stiller: There were times when I was doing Jack when I actually felt retarded. Like really retarded.

Downey: Oh yeah. Damn.

Stiller: In a weird way, I had to sort of just free myself up to believe that it was okay to be stupid or dumb.

Downey: To be a moron.

Stiller: Yeah.

Downey: To be moronical.

Stiller: Exactly.

Downey: An imbecile.

Stiller: Yeah. When I was playing a character.

Downey: When you was a character.

Stiller: Yeah, I mean, as Jack. Definitely.

Downey: It’s like working with mercury. It’s how science makes art form.

Stiller: Yeah.

Downey: You an artist.

Stiller: It’s what we do, right?

Downey: Everybody knows you never do a full retard.

Stiller: What do you mean?

Downey:  Check it out. Dustin Hoffman, Rainman, look retarded, act retarded, not retarded. Count toothpicks to your cards. Autistic. Sure. Not retarded.

You know Tom Hanks, Forrest Gump. Slow, yes. Retarded, maybe. Braces on his legs. But he charmed the pants off Nixon and he won a ping-pong competition? That ain’t retarded.

You went full retard, man. Never go full retard.

Earlier post here.

Tropic Thunder: ‘Once upon a time … There was a retard’

Friday, August 1st, 2008

UPDATE: National rights organization prepares for boycott, protest

UPDATE 2: Screenings postponed as premiere looms; Boycott, protests planned

Readers, please send in your comments here

You’ve seen the trailers. Tropic Thunder, a big budget summer comedy by DreamWorks Pictures, is due out August 13. But here’s something the trailers don’t point out: Ben Stiller plays a role that leans heavily on the term “retard.”

There are those who view the word “retard” as offensive and demeaning, and think it fuels social stigma against vulnerable people. And there are others, like perhaps the R-rated film’s star, director and lead writer Ben Stiller (at left in an image from one of the studio’s marketing websites), who may think the word is inoffensive and a good complement to the film’s other gags, stunts, explosions and gross-out jokes.

Already disability advocates are registering dismay about the language on the image above — “Once upon a time … There was a retard” — and conferring about how to address it. Let’s be clear: I haven’t seen the movie, and early reviews are scant. (Click here to see what Variety and the Hollywood Reporter had to say.) Here’s what I have been able to piece together:

Tropic Thunder is a testosterone-pumped action/adventure/comedy featuring mega-stars Stiller, Robert Downey Jr. and Jack Black as self-absorbed actors filming a war movie on location.

Stiller is Tugg Speedman, a fading action star who earlier failed badly in his bid for Oscar glory as “Simple Jack,” a man with an intellectual disability. “Simple Jack” is featured as a film-within-a-film, with Stiller outfitted in a classic institutional bowl haircut and bad teeth. It even has its own marketing website — the slogan is “What he doesn’t have in his head, he makes up for in his heart.” A satirical plot synopsis posted there quotes a critic as saying that Speedman’s Jack was “one of the most retarded performances in cinema history.”

Downey, as the more distinguished actor, gives Speedman advice on maximizing his chance for future Oscars: “Never go full retard.”  When the actors are taken hostage by real guerrillas who turn out to be Jack fans, they force Speedman to re-enact the role for their entertainment.

(more…)

Kennedy-Brownback bill dies in Senate spending showdown

Monday, July 28th, 2008

From C-Span, CBS News, the Associated Press, the New York Times, the Washington Post, WashingtonWatch.com and elsewhere:

A bill aimed at providing accurate and comprehensive information to parents who receive a diagnosis of a disability for their child, either prenatally or after birth, died today in a massive Senate showdown over federal spending.

Senate Bill 1810 was among a package of about three dozen bills that went down in a partisan vote, as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid attempted to break a logjam created by  Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma (above). Coburn, who has become known as the Senate’s “Dr. No,” had used a procedural device to block the bills, which included some $10 billion worth of bipartisan legislation.

Reid had hoped to outgun Coburn by combining the three dozen bills into one massive “Advancing America’s Priorities Act”, but the measure failed to rally the required 60 senators needed to bring it to a vote. Coburn had threatened a filibuster if the measure advanced.

What happens next was not immediately clear. The Senate is supposed to adjourn at the end of the week, but Mr. Coburn, who has blocked the programs by putting a personal “hold” on them, has said he would back most items if the lawmakers laid out ways to pay for them and did something about high gasoline prices.

S. 1810, co-sponsored by Sens. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), has been promoted by a coalition of advocacy organizations as a way of providing support for prospective parents who are increasingly undergoing prenatal screening and testing during their pregnancies. Kennedy and Brownback, from opposite sides of the political spectrum, have been seeking to pass such a bill for several years.

(more…)

Hamilton Jordan: An appreciation

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

He was 32 at the time, the essence of cool and one of the most powerful men in America. I was 25, toiling in relative obscurity in the depths of the White House press office.

He dropped by my office occasionally to read editorials clipped from out-of-town newspapers. I tiptoed by, awestruck, as he thumbed through my files of tattered clippings, certain that the information he sought was destined for the President’s ear alone.

My earliest impressions of Hamilton Jordan, the former White House chief of staff, were shaped by those clippings. Young and brash, the press had said of him at the start. Cocky. Brilliant. A political boy wonder, he had devised the strategy that brought Jimmy Carter to Washington.

With that 80-page memo, Hamilton had changed my life and the lives of countless others, leading us to Washington under a banner of change. Years later, I told him that he got the credit for my marriage, since I never would have met my husband had I not been among the lucky ones swept into the White House in the spring of 1977.

Hamilton waggled his eyebrows and quipped that he hoped it was credit –- not blame. He then got down to what really interested him, asking many questions about our daughter’s battle with leukemia and offering encouragement with an earnest squeeze of my hand.

(more…)

Kennedy-Brownback bill passes Senate committee

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

A Senate committee this week passed a bill that would provide for accurate medical information to be offered to parents who receive a diagnosis of a disability either before birth or up to a year after the birth of a child.

The Prenatally and Postnatally Diagnosed Conditions Awareness Act (S.1810) would make sure that families who receive a diagnosis of Down syndrome or any other condition will be offered up-to-date and accurate information about the condition and connections with support services and networks that could offer assistance.

The measure is co-sponsored by Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) It now moves to full Senate consideration.

In a press release, Sen. Brownback applauded the action by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

“It is difficult, sometimes overwhelming, for expecting parents to receive news that their unborn child may be born with a disability,” said Brownback. “This legislation will help parents receiving such news by supplying them with current and reliable information about the many options available for caring for children with disabilities.”

(more…)

About the Blog

More than 50 million people in the United States have disabilities, a number that is growing rapidly as the population ages. Experts say disability will soon affect the lives of most Americans. This blog attempts to explore what we know about disability, and to chronicle the efforts of people who are seeking new ways to address familiar challenges.

Join journalist Patricia E. Bauer as she sifts through current news and commentary, bringing you the best information about what's happening now and what it may mean for you and your loved ones.

Read More »

Search

Categories

Read More »

Election 2008

Read More »

Not2BeMissed

Read More »

My Articles & Essays

Read More »

FAQs

Headlines

Read More »

Tropic Thunder

Read More »

News2Use

Read More »

Mailing List

Sign up for our mailing list!





RSS Our RSS Feed



Archives
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007