Sunday, January 22, 2017

marching for all of us

"We stand together in solidarity for the protection of our rights, our safety, our health, and our families — recognizing that our vibrant and diverse communities are the strength of our country. 

In the spirit of democracy and honoring the champions of human rights, dignity, and justice who have come before us, we join in diversity to show our presence in numbers too great to ignore. 

We stand together, recognizing that defending the most marginalized among us is defending all of us." 
 -- Women's March Los Angeles Mission Statement



Aerial view of #womensmarchla January 21, 2017 (Obviously not my photo.. I think this is from NCB4)

Saturday morning, at 7:45am, I joined my friends James and Linda and headed to the Universal Studio City metro station. We were going downtown to join the Women's March. I've never been to a political march before. I had no idea what to expect, and just hoped that there would be more of my like-minded people there to over-chant any opposing people. I hoped no one would get violent. And, bitchily, I hoped that worldwide more people would show up than had shown up at the inauguration the day before.

Well, based on the crowds of people milling about above the escalator to the underground metro tracks, any fears we had about a low turnout were immediately wiped away. The parking lot was also full... 2+ hours before the march was supposed to start. Luckily, James works across the street at Universal, so we parked at his office and then began the first trek of the day -- across the Universal/Lankershim pedestrian bridge -- and down to the trains.

When the first train headed downtown arrived from the one previous stop in North Hollywood, it was packed. No room for us. So we waved as it pulled away and waited for the next one. As it started to pull up, everyone on the platform cheered. We went to the front car and managed to get standing room in the aisle. Others followed us and soon our car was packed. And the one behind us and the one behind that. The conductor said the doors in the last car wouldn't close. People were packed in too close. After three or four requests, people moved and the doors closed. We were on our way...







When we pulled into the next stop -- Hollywood and Highland -- more people attempted to get on. Some did. Our car became a sardine can of humanity. But everyone was in good spirits so we cheered again as the train pulled away. Then, stop after stop, we looked sadly at all the people waiting on the platforms only to be denied entry. I doubt there has ever been a busier day on the LA underground Metro trains. It was like being in New York at rush hour. When we arrived at the 7th St/Metro stop, we had to force our way out of said-sardine can... all the downtown newbies were taking the train direct to Pershing Square stop (the next one) because that's where the march was starting. We decided to be rebels and walk three extra blocks, and hopefully find caffeine on the way...

All the people who didn't want to get off the train at 7th Street, and instead mass-exited into the mass of people in Pershing Square. 

Well, there would be no caffeine for me. The line at the Starbucks on the corner of 6th and Grand was about 100 people long. But, in the first of what would be many pleasant encounters that day, there were people handing out free water, bagels and coffee on the corner. If I liked coffee, I would've been set, but I don't so I gave up that idea and walked down the street towards Pershing Square. We made it as far as the first crosswalk at Olive and 6th a block away, where we stood for at least the next 45 minutes. 

We were surrounded by women and men, young people and old people, parents with kids in strollers and kids pushing their parents or grandparents in wheelchairs. All races seemed to be in attendance. Many, many people were holding signs (more on that later). And I've never been in a such a huge, crowd but felt so safe. The people in this crowd were more respectful than most people you meet in a given day... saying "Excuse me," "Sorry," and "Thank you" as they tried to work through the crowd to find their friends. They feeling was positive, hopeful and defiant at the same time.

                                       

Everyone was united in their mission -- to exercise our 1st Amendment rights to tell the new administration we won't stand by quietly as the president bullies, gaslights and disrespects just about everyone who's not a rich, white, male... and as he and his lackeys attempt to set the progress of the last eight years -- in terms of human rights and climate change -- back four decades.



About 45 minutes later we inched into the intersection. But as 10am came and went, we didn't really move. There was no where to march to. There were so many people there the crowds were gridlocked. Eventually people starting going in non-march route directions. We made our way into Pershing Square proper, and word started to filter through the crowd that City Hall was already packed and we wouldn't fit if we marched there.

We debated leaving... it was 11am by that point. But we ended up marching back the way we came down 6th Street, then we joined a crowd heading up Grand Ave. towards the Music Center and Grand Park. There were people with drums. There was an actual organized group (Citizens For Civil Discourse) chanting multiple different slogans.. the most repeated of the day being "Hey Hey, Ho, Ho. Donald Trump has got to go," "Love Trumps Hate" and "This is what democracy looks like." When we reached 5th and Grand, it was a just a sea of people looking down both streets. It was really amazing!



Marchers cross the intersection of 5th and Grand Ave. in Downtown LA near LA Central Library (in the background.) Love the "No More Mr Nice Gay" and "Free Melania" signs. There were MANY "Free Melania" signs yesterday....

People for blocks from Grand Ave. down 5th Street to the other side of Pershing Square.

A sea of people united goes for blocks and blocks down Grand Ave. in Downtown LA. This wasn't the official route. We had to break off and head up Hope in order to escape the human gridlock surrounding Pershing Square and head towards Grand Park and City Hall.


I had to leave at noon to go meet my new baby niece in Lake Elsinore. So I never made it to the finish line at City Hall. (By the number of people I saw having early lunches on my way back to the metro with their signs sitting in restaurant windows, it's safe to say I wasn't the only one who didn't make it there.)

But I left feeling incredibly inspired and hopeful by the smart, creative, respectful people making up that crowd of 750,000 Los Angelinos.  (More than at the inauguration and 250,000 more than the March in DC!)

And since we didn't do a ton of actual marching, the day actually turned into a "who has the coolest protest sign" photo opportunity for the three of us. They were all so creative and funny and serious and thoughtful. Made me feel kinda lame about my sign...


Here are many of the signs I saw and loved yesterday (did I say there were many?) ;)  



































And my favorite marchers of the day with their signs...




Finally, here's a link to the New York Times, showing images from the Women's March around the world.

Sadly, since I left the march yesterday, the current administration appears to have started using George Orwell's 1984 as a playbook, instead of the cautionary tale it was intended as. They are directly attacking freedom of the press and spouting tales of "alternative truth" bs. I have a feeling I'm going to be needing more signs... (and the LA Metro is going to need a LOT more trains!)

Sunday, January 8, 2017

random thoughts on the golden globes

Tonight kicks off Hollywood Awards season with the not-to-be-taken-too-seriously Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Golden Globes. I'll be live blogging the show live tonight with my random thoughts so keep refreshing the page if you care...

For once, I've seen almost all* of the nominated films way in advance of tonight. (Thanks bacterial throat infection that knocked me out for three days before Christmas!) And as I have cut down on TV the last two seasons, I've seen almost none of the nominated TV shows except OJ and Game of Thrones, so that should be interesting.
(*Still need to watch Hacksaw Ridge and I've never heard of Sing Street so...)

I'm making no predictions before the show starts ... other than that La La Land will win Best Musical or Comedy Film, and The People vs. OJ Simpson will win for Best Limited Series.

I am making a disclaimer though: Jimmy Fallon really annoys me lately, so my patience with him will be thin.
  • Okay.. I liked Jimmy's opening number.. pretty clever flip of La La Land's opening number to the red carpet traffic jam. And big star power included in the taped piece (Hi JT!), although I kept waiting for Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone to appear. 
  • Emma Stone and Ryan Reynolds - most beautiful presenting team ever. 
  • Okay, no one from Nocturnal Animals should win anything. Hated that film. Mahershala Ali from Moonlight should have won.
  • Billy Bob Thornton just won Best Actor in a TV Drama over Rami Malik and Matthew Rys for a show I've never heard of. 
  • Gee I wonder if Julia Louis Dreyfus will win Best Actress in a TV Comedy for Veep again?
  • Nope! Yay! Tracee Ellis Ross for Black-ish. I watch that show sometimes.. 
  • I've seen none of the nominated comedies except Mozart in the Jungle. Which reminds me, I still need to watch Season 3 of Mozart in the Jungle. 
  • PEOPLE! The Electric Light Parade is coming back to Disneyland! I'm SO excited (And now I have that song in my head instead of "City of Stars" - yes!)
  • Yeah, Hacksaw Ridge looks too violent. I can't deal with another Saving Private Ryan right now. That's why I haven't watched it yet.
  • I WILL be watching Big Little Lies on HBO because I love Reese Witherspoon, who's now presenting with Nicole Kidman. Reese does the cutest Instagram stories. 
  • Sarah Paulson won for People vs. OJ Simpson. Shocker. I wonder how this compares to her Emmy. (That's sarcasm people.) And she thanked Marcia Clark, instead of OJ like Jimmy Fallon suggested... because she's smart. 
  • Look! The People vs. OJ Simpson won for Best Limited Series. Thank you. Thank you very much. 
  • Bad comedy bit from Sofia Vergara intro-ing Sly Stallone's daughters as Miss Golden Globe.
  • Yes Jimmy. Don't even try to imitate Sting. You will never even come close to succeeding because he is eons cooler, more talented and better looking than you, even though he's 25+ years older than you.
  • Wow. La La Land won for Best Score. I agree with this choice. 
  • Best Original Song. Rooting for JT. Fear that "City of Stars" will win.. then it will be back in my head again. 
  • Dammit! It's not that I don't like "City of Stars." It's lovely. It will also stick in your head forEVER like "Row, Row, Row Your Boat." But the composers were super cute. "This is for musical theatre nerds everywhere!"




Commercial break.. when in Rome... (but it's Prosecco, not Champagne. All the bubbles, no headache!) 







  • Yeah, with the Michael Keaton intro, I'm now officially done with Jimmy Fallon. Wonder how much champagne he's had already tonight...
  • Best Supporting Actress Drama. This is a tough category. Viola was great, but I would have given it to Michelle Williams. She was heartbreaking in Manchester by the Sea.
  • Oh good! The Electric Parade commercial is back! Stick in my head Electric Parade theme, stick in my head!! Get that other thing OUT!
  • Awww. The cute little kid from Lion. He was so good in that movie! If you haven't seen Lion yet, go see it. Such a good, true story! 
  • I really hope this Goldie Hawn bit is a bit....
  • Which Ryan will win Best Actor Musical or Comedy?
  • Gosling! And thank you producers for not playing you know what!
  • If anyone has ever wondered, day-old leftover Spicy Tuna rolls are still good. 
  • Oh Felicity Jones. What are you wearing? This is not a 1960s prom...
  • Best Animated Film...This is between Moana and Zootopia, IMHO. (But I'm rooting for Moana.)
  • BTW, have you all seen this? Mind blown by this today!
  • Kristen Wiig and Steve Carell should be hosting the Golden Globes. 
  • Hmm.. Zootopia. AKA The USA in 2017. 
  • We lost Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds within ONE day, Jimmy. Not "a couple of days." 
  • Nice tribute video though....
  • If you see Manchester by the Sea, be prepared to ball your eyes out. It's really good. But the most heartbreaking movie I've seen in a really long time. You've been warned. 
  • So, anyone watching The Night Manager? Is it binge worthy?
  • New Beauty and the Beast trailer? I'm really excited for that movie. I loved the animated version, and I think Emma Watson is so excellent at everything. 
  • I feel like I should start watching The Crown. And I know I need to start watching Stranger Things. And I will no longer be watching Westworld....
  • TV Series Drama. Come on GOT!! 
  • Okay, I am now finally going to add a Streaming Plan to my Netflix. I hope my wifi can now handle it (although it crashed my Tivo watching Amazon Prime yesterday... but I made it through an entire 6 season re-watch of GOT on HBO Go in June.)
  • Meryl Streep Lifetime Achievement time. 
  • Love you Meryl.. great speech on the (not my) President Elect, the bully, and the role of the press going forward, and the role of all of us to act with empathy. "Take your broken heart. Make it into art" - the dear departed Princess Leia. :*(
  • Best Director - Damien Chazelle for La La Land.... does this make it the Oscar front-runner? (And again, thank you GG producers for playing the opening number song instead of you know what.)
  • There are a lot of actresses with small chests wearing very V-dipped-in-front dresses. Note Amy Schumer had to have a nude panel there on her V-dipped dress holding her girls in... yay for real-sized girls being famous too! 
  • Yay Ben Affleck trimmed his beard from when I saw him before Christmas at a "Live by Night" screening. 
  • So the new Lando Calrissian's show is cleaning up at the Globes this year....
  • Matt Damon is here! If the good Jimmy (Kimmel) was hosting this show instead of annoying Jimmy (Fallon), there'd be a bit here. (Other than his comment on him winning Best Actor Musical or Comedy last year for... The Martian.)
  • Think Emma Stone will win for Best Actress Musical or Comedy??
  • YEP. 
  • Brad Pitt looks GOOD for someone who's rep is being raked over the coals by a crazy anorexic lady. 
  • Okay.. I just have to make it through this win without them playing you know what.. please producers, don't let me down!
  • YES! "Another Day of Sun" again! Oh, and another correct prediction from me. La La Land = Best Musical or Comedy.
  • Um, you have 15 minutes left for like 2 categories. That play off of the La La Land team was just rude!
  • Love Bree Larson's dress!
  • Ooh Viggo got nominated for Captain Fantastic. That was a great movie that no one is talking about! Go see that one too!
  • Wow. They gave Best Actor Drama to Casey Affleck despite his personal controversy... Maybe the HFPA doesn't read US Press. (Casey needs to follow Ben's lead in the facial hair -- and normal hair -- trimming department though.) Despite all that, he was pretty amazing in this film. As I mentioned, it's a heartbreaking film and he was great. 
  • Best Actress Drama -- aka who will compete against Emma Stone for the Oscar -- is....who? Isabelle Huppert? Um.. okay. A foreign film winner? I'm going to assume that Natalie Portman, Ruth Negga and Amy Adams cancelled each other out and she snuck in.  (OH! Or based on her speech, she's really good at kissing the HFPA's asses...)
  • Yay, now I have the Rocky theme in my head.
  • Moonlight is Best Picture Drama..... VERY interesting. I liked it. Didn't love it. Probably need to watch it again now. 
Well, that concludes the show. Can Amy and Tina come back next year please? Kthxbai.