"Everywhere I go, as much as I can, I listen to National Public Radio. It's an oasis of clear-headed intelligence. Carefully, patiently, it presents programming designed to make me feel just a little better equipped to reenter the world of uproar."
Showing posts with label Roger Ebert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roger Ebert. Show all posts
Monday, November 29, 2010
Midnight at the oasis - Roger Ebert's Journal
"Everywhere I go, as much as I can, I listen to National Public Radio. It's an oasis of clear-headed intelligence. Carefully, patiently, it presents programming designed to make me feel just a little better equipped to reenter the world of uproar."
Friday, September 10, 2010
Ebert presents At the Movies
I'm so excited that Roger Ebert is relaunching @ The Movies, and I'm doubly excited that the insightful Elvis Mitchell with serve as one of the new co-host. Mitchell and the other co-host, Christy Lemire, look like a good pairing. Ebert has his own segment, interestingly titled Roger's Office, in this new format. It will air on PBS starting 2011; I hope audiences of various markets will be able to watch it.
For more go to Roger Ebert's Journal
For more go to Roger Ebert's Journal
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
The Great American Documentary -- Roger Ebert
Hoop Dreams, which Ebert claims as the best movie of the 90's, observed its 15 anniversary this past Wednesday at the Gene Siskel Center. I remember watching it when it first came out. I was very eager to because I had become a huge basketball fan by that time. I had elevated basketball to mythical proportion. I was obsessed with street ball, with high school basketball, professional basketball (but for some reason not college basketball).
I weaved what I heard, saw, and experienced into epic battles of skills, talents, and personalities. My teammates and I became larger-than-life characters struggling to work together to triumph over common enemies. In the professional arena, the sudden retirement of Michael Jordan left a power vaccuum to be filled by those all-stars who until then had been denied championship glory by number 23.
Such was my state of mind when I watched Hoop Dreams as a 14-15 year-old. Although I felt it was long, I knew right away it was a tremendous film. During the same time, I began to develop a social consciousness, so I was keenly aware of the social context this story took place under. I didn't realize it then, but perhaps this movie served as a companion piece to Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, the most important novel I read in high school.
These are the thoughts triggered by Ebert's blog post about Hoop Dreams. I feel as if I just ran into a good friend I haven't seen in a long time.
For Ebert's post, here.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Ebert reviews Jackson's "This is It." (4 Stars)
"This is it," Michael Jackson told his fans in London, announcing his forthcoming concert tour. "This is the final curtain call." The curtain fell sooner than expected. What is left is this extraordinary documentary, nothing at all like what I was expecting to see.
Continue reading
(article and picture from Chicago Sun-Times)
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