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Kathryn Bigelow Wins the Director’s Guild of America Award for “The Hurt Locker” – the 1st female ever to do so

Sunday, January 31st, 2010
Director Kathryn Bigelow poses with her Feature Film Award for “The Hurt Locker” during the 62nd Annual Directors Guild Of America Awards

Director Kathryn Bigelow poses with her Feature Film Award for “The Hurt Locker” during the 62nd Annual Directors Guild Of America Awards

From the Hollywood Reporter: In an historic win, Kathryn Bigelow and her tense Iraq War drama “The Hurt Locker” from Summit Entertainment copped the DGA Award for best-directed feature film Saturday.

The win drew cheers from a packed ballroom of the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza, where throughout the night it was clear many were pulling for Bigelow to deliver a dramatic victory for female filmmakers. The DGA feature film win was a first-ever by a woman.

“This is the most incredible moment of my life,” Bigelow said.

Bigelow overcame competition including Fox-distributed “Avatar,” directed by her ex-husband James Cameron; Lee Daniels and “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire” from Lionsgate; Jason Reitman and “Up in the Air” from Paramount; and Quentin Tarantino and “Inglourious Basterds” from the Weinstein Co.

The DGA’s feature-film award is one of the best gauges of likely success in Oscar’s best-director category. The Academy Award for directing has gone to someone other than the DGA winner only six times since the guild launched its awards in 1948, most recently in 2002 when Roman Polanski copped the Oscar for “The Pianist” and the DGA crowned Rob Marshall for “Chicago.”

The DGA win for “The Hurt Locker” follows its selection by the PGA Awards — another reliable barometer of Oscar success — as the producers’ best feature film. Academy Award nominations will be announced Tuesday.

“This is amazing,” a clearly moved Bigelow said in accepting the DGA laurels. “I am so deeply stunned and honored and proud.

She accepted the “unimaginable honor” on behalf of the “men and women in the field” in the Iraq military zone.

I’m embarassed to say I still haven’t seen “The Hurt Locker” yet but I definitely will. (The only Kathryn Bigelow film I’ve seen is “Near Dark“).

Check out the trailer for “The Hurt Locker” below:

Double X – Brought to you by Slate Magazine!

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Double X

Double X

I just discovered this great new blog – Double X.

According to their About Me section,  “DoubleX is a new Web magazine, founded by women but not just for women, that Slate launched in spring 2009. The site spins off from Slate‘s XX Factor blog, where we started a conversation among women—about politics, sex, and culture—that both men and women listen in on. DoubleX takes the Slate and XX Factor sensibility and applies it to sexual politics, fashion, parenting, health, science, sex, friendship, work-life balance, and anything else you might talk about with your friends over coffee. We tackle subjects high and low with an approach that’s unabashedly intellectual but not dry or condescending. The blog is at the heart of the site, but we also publish essays, reporting, and other features.”

My favorite article so far is The Most Memorable Feminist Moments of the Decade. Check it out!

NY Times: Can Anybody Make a Movie for Women?

Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Nancy Meyers directing a scene from ‘‘It’s Complicated"

Nancy Meyers directing a scene from ‘‘It’s Complicated"

NY Times features an interesting article and biographical look at Nancy Meyers, “the most powerful female writer-director-producer currently working (not that there’s much competition).”

Hilarious trailer for “It’s Complicated” – song featured is “History Repeating” by the Propellerheads featuring Shirley Bassey

Sandra Bullock in Parade Magazine – “I’m Aware That I Can Be Annoying”

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

The Blind Side with Sandra Bullock

The Blind Side with Sandra Bullock

I’m a MAJOR Sandra Bullock fan – I’ve grown up watching her movies and went on a major Sandra Bullock film spree after seeing “The Proposal” in June.

Some of the best films I think she’s done?

The Proposal, Murder by Numbers, Miss Congeniality, Forces of Nature, and Speed.

No matter how “romantic comedy”-like her films were, Sandra’s always managed to play strong female characters, and that’s something I truly admire.

Below is an interview she did with Parade magazine to promote her newest film, The Blind Side , due out Nov. 20. Bullock plays Leigh Anne Tuohy, a flamboyant well-to-do Southerner who makes a life-changing decision to adopt a disadvantaged African-American boy who goes on to become a star football player.

Sandra Bullock told interviewer Jeanne Wolf that she didn’t have to look very far to find the inspiration to play such a strong woman.

Her unexpected passion.
“I like to iron. Ironing is comfort. It’s control. I’m a nutty person who likes to make sure everything is in its place. I am a big ball of high energy and organization and structure. Don’t forget, I’m half-German.”

She may play adorable onscreen, but in real life, she is driven.
“Listen, I know I’m not easy to deal with. I’m controlling, and I want everything orderly, and I need lists. My mind goes a mile a minute. I’m difficult on every single level. I’m aware that I can be annoying.

Her newest film, The Blind Side.
“It’s a film about people doing something for the betterment of someone else in the world. It deals with the ugly side of racial tension, which is still the truth of the South. I could really identify with my character’s determination and outspokenness. She faces some daunting challenges. I understood the fierce sense of what’s right and wrong that was driving her.”

Just like mom.
“My mom was like that. She had blinders on. She did what she did and didn’t care what people thought. But as a kid, I was like, ‘Oh, dear God, please make her stop and be normal.’ I wanted an ordinary mom. My sister, Gesine, and I were lucky enough to be raised by a mother who did things unconventionally, and a father who was fine with the kids being raised that way. There was no gender in our house. I didn’t realize that I couldn’t do what boys could do, because my dad raised me as a boy.”

Struggling to cope with grief and keep her career on track after her mother’s death in 2000.
“I thought, ‘How do I work through this?’ I don’t want to be one of those people who bottles it up. Asking for help was the biggest thing I ever learned. That was a tricky one for me. I usually feel like I can do everything. But I went for help after my mom passed away.”

Marriage was never on the to-do list.
“I didn’t grow up thinking, ‘I’m gonna get married and have someone take care of me. I always wanted to be happy, have a good time, work hard.”

Serendipity brought Bullock together with husband Jesse James. The two met when she went to his bike shop to introduce him to her godson, who was a fan.
“After that meeting, Jesse tracked me down. I had no intention of going out with him. I said no for a month, but then I got to know him. I wasn’t looking for a relationship, but he committed for the long haul.”

Finding a partner for life.
“It’s lucky when you have a partner. It took someone like him who was unafraid. My energy can be daunting. Do you really want to wake up to this at 5 in the morning? Apparently, he did.”

A changed woman.
“I was good at bolting before. I didn’t want to do the work. And I was too selfish to have kids. Now I work at what I love. If I didn’t love him, I wouldn’t be putting in the effort. I do approach things differently now that I’m married. I would never do anything that would harm his heart.”

Falling into step-motherhood.
“The universe put this in our lap. I seemed to have stepped in right when I needed to be there. I now know that anything sweet, really sweet, that I have was nothing that I planned. If you don’t have kids and animals, you don’t truly know what real life is about.”

Embracing her own unconventional nature.
“I never did anything according to what anyone else wanted. That’s why I think I am happy. I do everything 100%–even my stupidest missteps. I know when I’m getting ready to mess up, I’m going to do it full-on. That’s the way I was as a kid. Even into adulthood, I look back at some things and go, ‘I can’t believe I did that.’ But I can also go back and say, ‘I did that, I know I’m responsible for that, and I can make amends,’ and we can all laugh at it, because it’s my mistake. I try not to blame it on anyone else unless I fully know it was their fault–and then I have no problem pointing the finger.

Living with no regrets.
“I have to fight every single day to live my true life. I don’t ever want to come home saying, ‘I should have spoken my mind. I shouldn’t have let someone say something that I didn’t feel was right.’ [But] I have to remember that there’s a balance. I’m in the entertainment business. We’re here to entertain people, to make them laugh and forget.”

MSNBC: Oprah Decides to End Show “After Much Prayer”

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Oprah Winfrey

Oprah Winfrey

“Holding back tears, Oprah Winfrey told her studio audience Friday that she would end her show in 2011 after a quarter-century on the air, saying prayer and careful thought led her to her decision.

Winfrey told the audience that she loved The Oprah Winfrey Show that it had been her life and that she knew when it was time to say goodbye. ‘Twenty-five years feels right in my bones and feels right in my spirit,’ she said.

Winfrey, 55, is widely expected to start up a new talk show on OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network, a much-delayed 50-50 joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc. that is projected to debut in January 2011. OWN is to replace the Discovery Health Channel and will debut in some 80 million homes.”

Read the rest of the article at MSNBC

NY Times: 4th Wave Feminism – An Interview with Jessica Valenti, founder and editor of the blog Feministing.com

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009
Jessica Valenti for NY Times

Jessica Valenti for NY Times

NY Times did an interesting interview with Jessica Valenti, founder and editor of the blog Feministing.com. I’ve cut and paste the entire interview below.

**Interview has been condensed and edited.

“NY Times: As the founder and editor of the blog Feministing.com, how would you rate the effectiveness of online activism compared to old-style models of political engagement like rallies and marches and displays of bra-burning?
Valenti:Bra-burning never happened. It was completely made up by the media. A couple of women protesting a Miss America pageant threw some bras into a garbage can, and somehow that became this longstanding idea of feminists as bra-burners.

NY Times: You’re referring to the generation known as second-wave feminists. Do you consider yourself a third-wave feminist?
Valenti: I don’t much like the terminology, because it never seems very accurate to me. I know people who are considered third-wave feminists who are 20 years older than me.

NY Times: Maybe we’re onto the fourth wave now.
Valenti: Maybe the fourth wave is online.

NY Times: How large is your readership?
Valenti: This past month we had over 600,000 readers. Unless there’s some feminist publication I’m unaware of, we’re the most widely read feminist publication that there is.

NY Times: What publications are you comparing yourself with?
Valenti: There’s Ms. magazine and there’s Bitch. Bust used to be a feminist magazine, but now it’s more crafty and about making things out of yarn. I’m not a D.I.Y. feminist. I once tried knitting a scarf but threw it away after 15 minutes.

NY Times: Why is your site called Feministing.com?
Valenti: I wanted to verb the noun.

NY Times: Verb the noun? Why would you use such ungainly language, especially as a veteran writer whose third book, “The Purity Myth,” is about to come out in paperback?
Valenti: I think talking is as casual as blogging, and sometimes writing can be as casual as talking. My informal writing style is a political choice, because I want feminism to be more accessible.

NY Times: What do you make of the glorification of male vulgarity in pop culture? Whenever I walk into my living room and find my sons watching “Entourage” or “Family Guy,” I think feminism has been a complete failure.
Valenti: The rape jokes on ‘‘Family Guy’’ make me nauseous. About three years ago, Lakshmi Chaudhry wrote this great piece called ‘‘Men Growing Up to Be Boys.’’ It’s about how the new model of masculinity is perpetual adolescence.

NY Times: What can you tell us about your childhood?
Valenti: I grew up in Long Island City. When I was growing up, my parents owned a women’s clothing store in Queens. It was for older women. I got my bras there, until I realized I didn’t want those huge, taupe bras. Everything was beige, with massive amounts of hooks.

NY Times: You just got married last month. What is life like for newlyweds in the digital age?
Valenti: We’ve instituted an 8 p.m. laptop shut. You have to.

NY Times: Does it work? You probably just switch to your BlackBerrys for the rest of the evening.
Valenti: We’re trying to cut that out as well. There’s something really terrible about having your BlackBerry next to your bed or having your laptop in the living room when you’re talking to someone. The biggest source of stress in my life is the screen, the blogging.

NY Times: Maybe the screen will be the great oppressor of women in the 21st century.
Valenti: Yes, it’s the liberator and the oppressor. It has freed us up to do amazing things, but you’re tied to the computer.

NY Times: Because it extends the workday to all hours?
Valenti: Also, when someone criticizes you in a newspaper, you can throw it away; when someone harasses you on the street, you can walk by them; but when someone writes something terrible about you online…

NY Times: You learn to ignore it. Look at Hillary Clinton. So much verbal poison has been thrown at her, and she just keeps moving forward.
Valenti: I’m in awe of her, but online harassment is going to be a huge issue in the future.”