Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices

Conservative Voices

@conservativevoices

Graham Platner Officially Goes Out How You'd Expect: 'Free Palestine,' Vulgar Message for ICE, No Accountability or Seriousness
Favicon 
www.westernjournal.com

Graham Platner Officially Goes Out How You'd Expect: 'Free Palestine,' Vulgar Message for ICE, No Accountability or Seriousness

On Friday afternoon, disgraced Democratic Senate hopeful Graham Platner disgraced himself once again -- and made the Democratic Party and the political movement he represents look even worse. For most people who aren't political junkies, the Platner story reached its conclusion on Wednesday night. Two days after Platner was publicly...

Appeals Court Blocks Part of 'Stop WOKE Act' in Florida, Allows Professors to Openly Teach Racism Against Whites
Favicon 
www.westernjournal.com

Appeals Court Blocks Part of 'Stop WOKE Act' in Florida, Allows Professors to Openly Teach Racism Against Whites

Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis's 2022 Individual Freedom Act -- commonly referred to as the "Stop WOKE Act" -- ran up against a legal roadblock when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit upheld a preliminary injunction blocking the state from enforcing certain provisions of it. Just The...

Not Even Hiding It: Muslim Democratic Candidate Loops One Quote His Opponent Made About Israel to Build Anti-Semitic Website
Favicon 
www.westernjournal.com

Not Even Hiding It: Muslim Democratic Candidate Loops One Quote His Opponent Made About Israel to Build Anti-Semitic Website

We're still a few weeks away from Michigan's Aug. 4 primary, but the insurgent Senate campaign of far-left contender Abdul El-Sayed has Democratic Party officials worried, again, about an extremist who could usurp a nomination in a state they need to win. The favorite to win the nomination was Democratic...

Priceless: Aggressively Woke Retailer Is Suing Drag Queen for 'Harming' Their Brand
Favicon 
www.westernjournal.com

Priceless: Aggressively Woke Retailer Is Suing Drag Queen for 'Harming' Their Brand

Not even being among the wokest of the woke corporations will do you any good if you're thrown to the wolves when a drag queen allegedly violates your trademark. That's the lesson being learned in slow motion by Patagonia, the outdoor clothing giant that champions virtually every far-left cause you...

The Inner Depths We Hide From Strangers
Favicon 
www.theamericanconservative.com

The Inner Depths We Hide From Strangers

Culture The Inner Depths We Hide From Strangers In a crowded movie theater, the man next to you may have interviewed the stars on the screen. As an inhabitant of one of the cities caught up in the nationwide heatwave earlier this month—Columbus, Ohio—I can confirm that the weather was stifling. The heatwave has dropped out of the news—that will happen when a Democratic Senate candidate has ended his cataclysmically ill-advised candidacy and the Iran War peace deal has evidently failed to hold—but the temperatures remain persistently unpleasant. But, having learned from my upbringing in the reliably hot and humid suburbs of New Orleans that the solution when such weather arrives is to buy a ticket for as long a movie as possible in an air-conditioned movie theater, I did just that this past week. So, on Wednesday night, I went to one of my usual haunts in downtown Columbus, a big performing-arts venue that honors its movie palace roots by showing classic flicks each summer, to see Jack Clayton’s 1974 film version of The Great Gatsby. This movie—whose admirable fidelity to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel was confused for shallowness in its day— starred Robert Redford as Jay Gatsby, Mia Farrow as Gatsby’s longtime idée fixe Daisy Buchanan, Bruce Dern as her moneyed but ill-mannered husband Tom, Karen Black as Tom’s lover Myrtle, and Sam Waterston as the genteel narrator Nick Carraway. The screening was pitched as a tribute to Redford, who died last September at age 89. As it happens, I have interviewed three-fifths of the principal cast—though none of them about Gatsby and all by telephone. I interviewed Redford in 2017, about his experience with director Michael Ritchie on the movies Downhill Racer and The Candidate; Dern in 2019, about working with director Hal Ashby on Coming Home, and again in 2023, about his memories of director Peter Bogdanovich, whose distinguished career was preceded by a period of grunt work as Roger Corman’s assistant on The Wild Angels; and Waterston in 2009, about appearing in a play directed by my then-biographical subject James Bridges, and again in 2019, about James Thurber. (Look up my piece in The Christian Science Monitor—it’s good.) But enough about me—really. Believe it or not, while watching The Great Gatsby, I was not thinking about my fleeting telephonic encounters with Redford, Dern, or Waterston (all of whom were exceedingly nice, incidentally). This is not a matter of false modesty but of how many things I can keep in my head at once: I can either tick off each person in a given movie that I might have had some long-ago conversation with, or I can watch the movie. I’m happy when I forget that I once interviewed this or that person. Really? I once interviewed Dustin Hoffman? About what? (I did, and it was about the great prison movie Papillon.) Since I happen to love Clayton’s film—and admire the performances therein of Redford, Dern, Waterston, and the rest—the choice was simple.  Yet my principles were put to the test upon exiting the theater the other night and overhearing a conversation among my fellow moviegoers. This experience is not unknown to me. Years ago, when I reviewed classical music and dance performances for my hometown paper, I often overheard the chitchat of departing attendees (who invariably liked the show more than I did). Back then, I kept quiet out of professional integrity: I was not about to divulge my views before they had appeared in print.  This time, a few people just ahead of me were wondering among themselves whether or when Robert Redford had died—a simple matter that could have been cleared up by someone who hadn’t ever spoken to the man, though I will admit that, listening to them talk, it occurred to me I was uniquely qualified to share some insight into the star. I could have said that, yes, Redford sadly did die last year, and by the way, I interviewed him once, and he was really very nice.  Instead, I kept with tradition and said nothing. Would they have believed me if I had said I had talked to Redford once? Would I have believed myself? I did not want to taint a memorable movie experience by trying to be the star pupil. I also wanted to get home, back into air conditioning.  Yet it occurs to me, as I contemplate my own silence, what double lives we can lead. Politeness dictates that we seldom share the full breadth of our own experience. Just as no one at the theater could have guessed that among them was an interlocutor of several members of the cast of The Great Gatsby, I, by turn, would have had no way of knowing if some other ticket-buyer that night had some similarly unlikely impressive quality or story to tell. What if I had been sitting next to some distant descendant of F. Scott Fitzgerald?  It’s nice to think that the person next to you in a movie theater or in a restaurant or on a plane has some hidden depths. Of course, it is not lost on me that I am sharing my own hidden depths in a column for the world to read. I have gone this long without mentioning that another movie I plan to see this summer is the original 1961 version of West Side Story—whose talented and kindly co-director, Robert Wise, I interviewed the year before he died. Well, I have to tell someone, don’t I? The post The Inner Depths We Hide From Strangers appeared first on The American Conservative.