Showing posts with label Changed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Changed. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Malaysian military says missing jet changed course











Pictures of the two men, a 19-year old Iranian, identified by Malaysian police as Pouria Nour Mohammad Mehrdad, left, and the man on the right, his identity still not released, who boarded the now missing Malaysia Airlines jet MH370 with stolen passports, is held up by a Malaysian policewoman during a press conference, Tuesday, March 11, 2014 in Sepang, Malaysia. One of the two men traveling on a missing Malaysian Airlines jetliner was an Iranian asylum seeker, officials said Tuesday, as baffled authorities expanded their search for the Boeing 777 on the opposite side of the country from where it disappeared nearly four days ago with 239 people on board.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)






(AP) — The Malaysian military has radar data showing the missing Boeing 777 jetliner changed course and made it to the Malacca Strait, hundreds of kilometers (miles) from the last position recorded by civilian authorities, according to a senior military official.


The development injects more mystery into the investigation of the disappearance of Saturday’s flight, and raises questions about why the aircraft was not transmitting signals detectable by civilian radar.


Local newspaper Berita Harian quoted Malaysian air force chief Gen. Rodzali Daud as saying radar at a military base had detected the airliner at 2:40 a.m. near Pulau Perak at the northern approach to the strait, a busy waterway that separates the western coast of Malaysia and Indonesia’s Sumatra island.


“After that, the signal from the plane was lost,” he was quoted as saying.


A high-ranking military official involved in the investigation confirmed the report and also said the plane was believed to be flying low. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.


Authorities had earlier said the plane, which took off at 12:20 a.m. and was headed to Beijing, may have attempted to turn back to Kuala Lumpur, but they expressed surprise that it would do so without informing ground control.


The search for the plane was initially focused on waters between the eastern coast of Malaysia and Vietnam, the position where aviation authorities last tracked it. No trace of the plane, which was carrying 239 people, has been found by than 40 planes and ships from at least 10 nations searching the area.


Earlier Tuesday, Malaysia Airlines said in a statement that search and rescue teams had expanded their scope to the Malacca Strait. An earlier statement said the western coast of Malaysia was “now the focus,” but the airline subsequently said that phrase was an oversight. It didn’t elaborate. Civil aviation chief Azharuddin Abdul Rahman said the search remained “on both sides” of the country.


Associated Press



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | RFID | Amazon Affiliate

Top Headlines

Malaysian military says missing jet changed course

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Sheila Jackson Lee: The Word Welfare Should Be Changed To "Transitional Living Fund"







REP. SHEILA JACKSON LEE (D-TX): So the safety net has to be something for all of us. And as I borrow this from my good friend from California, just to show you a line of Americans possibly looking for work, we cannot point out and we cannot know at this point which one of these are near the edge of poverty or living in poverty simply because they cannot find work.


So, it is important to note that there are elements that many discard, the earned income tax credit, supplemental nutrition program, the huge job training and educational investment that President Johnson made on the war on poverty. Medicare and Medicaid. Huge safety nets, not handouts, but safety nets. Maybe the word welfare should be changed to something of a transitional living fund. For that is what it is, for people to be able to live.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Sheila Jackson Lee: The Word Welfare Should Be Changed To "Transitional Living Fund"

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

​Privacy as last line of defense: Snowden’s revelations changed the world in 2013



Annie Machon is a former intel­li­gence officer for the UK’s MI5, who resigned in 1996 to blow the whistle. She is now a writer, public speaker and a Director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition.




Published time: December 31, 2013 14:50

Demonstrators hold placards supporting former US intelligence analyst Edward Snowden during a protest against government surveillance on October 26, 2013 in Washington, DC. (AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)


When asked if Edward Snowden deserves to be the Man of the Year, and I have been many times, my answer has to be a categorical, resounding, “Yes.”


Sure, it has been an eventful year and there are a lot of contenders. But the former NSA contractor Edward Snowden stands out for me for three key reasons: his personal and conscious courage, the sheer scale of his disclosures and the continuing, global impact of what he did. Purely because of his actions, we, the world’s citizens, are now able to have a discussion about the nature of our civilization and potentially call a halt to the frightening slide into a global surveillance dystopia.


For the actions of Snowden have indeed laid bare the fact that we are living in a global crisis of civilization. To date it is estimated that we have only seen about 1 percent of the documents he disclosed – the merest hint of the tip of a monstrous iceberg. What further horrors await us in 2014 and beyond?


The personal risk


First of all, there is the personal aspect. Snowden has said that he does not want to be the story, he wants the focus to remain on the information. I respect that, but it is worth reminding ourselves of the scale of sacrifice this young, just 30-year-old man has made. He had a well-paid job with a consulting firm in Hawaii servicing the US National Security Agency, good career prospects and an apparently happy relationship. All this he threw away to alert the world to the secret, illegal and dystopian surveillance system that has stealthily been smothering the world.


But Snowden faced far more than merely throwing away a comfortable professional life. Over the last few years the US government, apparently learning well from its former colonial master the UK about the art of crushing of whistleblowers, has been waging a war against what it now deems the “insider threat” – i.e. persons of conscience who speak out. President Obama has used the Espionage Act (1917) to persecute and prosecute more whistleblowers than all previous presidents in total before him.


This is indeed a “war on whistleblowers.” John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer who refused to participate in the torture program and then exposed it, it is currently languishing in prison; Thomas Drake, an earlier NSA whistleblower, was threatened with 35 years in prison; young Chelsea Manning was maltreated in prison, faced a kangaroo court, and is currently serving a 35-year sentence for the exposure of hideous war crimes against civilians in the Middle East. So the list goes on…


So not only did Edward Snowden turn his back on his career, he knew exactly the sheer scale of the legal risk he was taking when he went public, displaying bravery very much above and beyond the call of duty.


The intelligence apologists in the media have inevitably shouted “narcissism” about his brave step to out himself, rather than just leak the information anonymously. However, these establishment windbags are the real narcissists. Snowden correctly assessed that, had he not put his name to the disclosures, there would have been a witch-hunt targeting his former colleagues and he wanted to protect them. Plus, as he said in his very first public interview, he wanted to explain why he had done what he had done and what the implications were for the world.


The disclosures


The sheer scale and nature of the disclosures so far has been breathtaking, and they just keep coming. They show that a vast, subterranean surveillance state that has crept across the whole world, unknown and unchecked by the very politicians who are supposed to hold it to account. Indeed, not only have we learned that we are all under constant electronic surveillance, but these politicians are targeted too. This is a global secret state running amok and we are all now targets.


Only on Sunday, Der Spiegel reported more egregious examples of how the spies bug us: hardware hacks, computer viruses and even microwave wavelengths attacking both our computers and us. Perhaps tinfoil hats might not be such a bad idea after all….


The implications


Snowden’s disclosures have laid bare the fact that the internet has been thoroughly hacked, subverted and indeed militarized against the people. The basic freedom of privacy, enshrined in the UN Declaration of Human Rights in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, has been destroyed.


Without free media, where we can all read, write, listen and discuss ideas freely and in privacy, we are all living in an Orwellian dystopia, and we are all potentially at risk. These media must be based on technologies that empower individual citizens, not corporations or foreign governments, and certainly not a shadowy and unaccountable secret state.


The central societal function of privacy is to create the space for citizens to resist the violation of their rights by governments and corporations. Privacy is the last line of defense historically against the most potentially dangerous organization that exists: the state.


By risking his life, Edward Snowden has allowed us all to see exactly the scale of the threat now facing us and to allow us the opportunity to resist. Every citizen on the planet owes him a debt of gratitude.


Therefore there is no ‘balance between privacy and security’ and this false dichotomy should not be part of any policy debate.


The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.




RT – Op-Edge



​Privacy as last line of defense: Snowden’s revelations changed the world in 2013

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

How Sex Changed the World - Sexpocalypse (HD)

At Alternate Viewpoint, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Alternate Viewpoint and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Alternate Viewpoint makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Alternate Viewpoint does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Alternate Viewpoint.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Alternate Viewpoint and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Alternate Viewpoint send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Alternate Viewpoint has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Alternate Viewpoint"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



How Sex Changed the World - Sexpocalypse (HD)

Friday, October 18, 2013

Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run


Terminator Star is “ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules”


Steve Watson
Infowars.com
Oct 18, 2013


Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is engaged in a campaign to change The Constitution to allow him to run for president in 2016, according to reports.


The New York Post claims that Schwarzenegger has been publicly discussing his plans to file suit that would overturn the rule written into the Constitution that bars foreign-born citizens from taking the office of President or Vice President.


“Schwarzenegger has been talking openly about working on getting the constitutional rules changed so he can run for president in 2016. He is ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules.” the Post notes, citing an unnamed source.


Section 1 of Article Two of the Constitution sets forth the eligibility requirements for serving as president of the United States:


“No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.”



The Twelfth Amendment also states, “No person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.”


Born in Austria, Schwarzenegger has been a US citizen since 1983, which enabled him to successfully run for Governorship in 2003.


The Fourteenth Amendment notes that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”


Under Article One of the United States Constitution, representatives and senators are only required to be U.S. citizens.


Schwarzenegger has said several times that he would definitely run for President, should the law be changed. Most recently he told Jay Leno in 2010 that he would jump at the opportunity “Without any doubt.”


Any amendment to the Constitution must be approved by two-thirds majority in the House and the Senate, then must be ratified by at least 38 of the 50 states.


As we have previously reported, Schwarzenegger has, over the years, made several disturbing comments to the effect that it is his dream to reach a position of power akin to a dictator.


In 1976, Arnie told Rolling Stone: “I feel you only can have a few leaders… and then the rest is followers. I feel that I am the born leader and that I’ve always impressed with being the leader. I hate to be the follower. I had this when I was a little boy… I didn’t think about money. I thought about the fame, about just being the greatest. I was dreaming about being some dictator of a country or some savior like Jesus.”


His Nazi ties are also well documented. Gustav Schwarzenegger, the actor’s father, was a member of the Sturmabteilung, or SA, the Nazi party’s paramilitary wing. News reports about the elder Schwarzenegger’s Nazi links first surfaced in 1990.


Film producer George Butler, who chronicled Schwarzenegger’s rise to fame as a champion bodybuilder in the 1970′s, circulated a book proposal in the late 90s that quoted the young Schwarzenegger expressing admiration for Hitler.


The producer wrote in his book proposal that in the 1970′s, he considered Mr. Schwarzenegger a “flagrant, outspoken admirer of Hitler.,” the New York Times reported in 2003. In the proposal, Mr. Butler also said he had witnessed Schwarzenegger playing “Nazi marching songs from long-playing records in his collection at home” and said that the actor “frequently clicked his heels and pretended to be an S.S. officer.”


Schwarzenegger was also best buddies with Kurt Waldheim, the former secretary general of the United Nations who had a past as a Nazi who participated in atrocities during World War II.


Alex Jones and Infowars have been covering Arnold’s quest to run for president for close to a decade now. In 2003 Jones set up the website Arnold Exposed.com as a hub to expose the abundance of decidedly seedy, shady and downright disturbing material associated with Schwarzenegger,  his checkered past, and his obsession with seeking the US presidency.


Here is Alex breaking down the information in an archived 2004 broadcast:



—————————————————————-


Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.


This article was posted: Friday, October 18, 2013 at 9:41 am


Tags:










Infowars



Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run

Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run


Terminator Star is “ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules”


Steve Watson
Infowars.com
Oct 18, 2013


Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is engaged in a campaign to change The Constitution to allow him to run for president in 2016, according to reports.


The New York Post claims that Schwarzenegger has been publicly discussing his plans to file suit that would overturn the rule written into the Constitution that bars foreign-born citizens from taking the office of President or Vice President.


“Schwarzenegger has been talking openly about working on getting the constitutional rules changed so he can run for president in 2016. He is ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules.” the Post notes, citing an unnamed source.


Section 1 of Article Two of the Constitution sets forth the eligibility requirements for serving as president of the United States:


“No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.”



The Twelfth Amendment also states, “No person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.”


Born in Austria, Schwarzenegger has been a US citizen since 1983, which enabled him to successfully run for Governorship in 2003.


The Fourteenth Amendment notes that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”


Under Article One of the United States Constitution, representatives and senators are only required to be U.S. citizens.


Schwarzenegger has said several times that he would definitely run for President, should the law be changed. Most recently he told Jay Leno in 2010 that he would jump at the opportunity “Without any doubt.”


Any amendment to the Constitution must be approved by two-thirds majority in the House and the Senate, then must be ratified by at least 38 of the 50 states.


As we have previously reported, Schwarzenegger has, over the years, made several disturbing comments to the effect that it is his dream to reach a position of power akin to a dictator.


In 1976, Arnie told Rolling Stone: “I feel you only can have a few leaders… and then the rest is followers. I feel that I am the born leader and that I’ve always impressed with being the leader. I hate to be the follower. I had this when I was a little boy… I didn’t think about money. I thought about the fame, about just being the greatest. I was dreaming about being some dictator of a country or some savior like Jesus.”


His Nazi ties are also well documented. Gustav Schwarzenegger, the actor’s father, was a member of the Sturmabteilung, or SA, the Nazi party’s paramilitary wing. News reports about the elder Schwarzenegger’s Nazi links first surfaced in 1990.


Film producer George Butler, who chronicled Schwarzenegger’s rise to fame as a champion bodybuilder in the 1970′s, circulated a book proposal in the late 90s that quoted the young Schwarzenegger expressing admiration for Hitler.


The producer wrote in his book proposal that in the 1970′s, he considered Mr. Schwarzenegger a “flagrant, outspoken admirer of Hitler.,” the New York Times reported in 2003. In the proposal, Mr. Butler also said he had witnessed Schwarzenegger playing “Nazi marching songs from long-playing records in his collection at home” and said that the actor “frequently clicked his heels and pretended to be an S.S. officer.”


Schwarzenegger was also best buddies with Kurt Waldheim, the former secretary general of the United Nations who had a past as a Nazi who participated in atrocities during World War II.


Alex Jones and Infowars have been covering Arnold’s quest to run for president for close to a decade now. In 2003 Jones set up the website Arnold Exposed.com as a hub to expose the abundance of decidedly seedy, shady and downright disturbing material associated with Schwarzenegger,  his checkered past, and his obsession with seeking the US presidency.


Here is Alex breaking down the information in an archived 2004 broadcast:



—————————————————————-


Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.


This article was posted: Friday, October 18, 2013 at 9:41 am


Tags: constitution










Infowars



Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run

Thursday, October 17, 2013

iGeneration - How Apple Changed The World : Documentary


iGeneration - How Apple Changed The World : Documentary

Chances are if our watching this video, you probably own an Apple device or other piece of smart technology. But is the new technological era ushered in by A…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



iGeneration - How Apple Changed The World : Documentary

Sunday, August 11, 2013

“Lovelace”: The Troubled Porn Star Who Changed History



Amanda Seyfried and Peter Sarsgaard are terrific, but the soapy "Lovelace" tells only part of a fascinating story.








Pornography, in case you haven’t noticed, is everywhere. It’s one of the inescapable phenomena of contemporary existence, like global climate change, the explosion of pharmaceutical wonder drugs or the Kardashians. As with those things, there’s no stuffing the genie back into the bottle. We can sit around and argue about whether the overall effect of widespread porn consumption on human sexuality has been liberating or deadening, though I’m not sure there’s anybody left who would argue the former position with a straight face. But we can’t do much about it.


As a parent, I’m completely fine with default blocking of porn sites (as has been proposed in Britain), a position I might well have mocked a few years ago. But let’s get real: Any savvy 12-year-old with a yen to witness once-unimaginable sex acts performed by strangers will find a way. Unless you’re planning to live off the grid or move to Saudi Arabia, there’s no going back to a world without porn – and I have a feeling those solutions wouldn’t work either. This is the world Linda Lovelace made possible, apparently without ever wanting to or meaning to.


I’m old enough to hold dim memories of the furor surrounding the release of “Deep Throat” in 1972, although I had no idea what the movie was “about,” or what sex act was suggested by the title. (I suspect my parents went to see it, although they never confessed that to me.) If anything, Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman’s biopic “Lovelace” underplays the cultural significance of “Deep Throat,” or the way in which Linda Lovelace’s ability to perform a version of fellatio then viewed as apocryphal — or attributed to rare and expensive prostitutes — was presented as a symbol of female sexual liberation. It all seems too ridiculous now, not to mention tragic. In some ways, all you really need to know is that “Deep Throat” made hundreds of millions for its producers, and Lovelace’s salary was $ 1,250.


Epstein and Friedman will always be best known as documentary filmmakers, and won Oscars for both the ground-breaking “Times of Harvey Milk” in 1985 and “Common Threads: Stories From the Quilt” in 1990. “Lovelace” is a severely mixed bag, built around gutsy and terrific performances by Amanda Seyfried as the eponymous star and Peter Sarsgaard (always so good playing a heel) as her abusive manager and husband, Chuck Traynor. It gets about halfway to being a great movie about an ambiguous cultural icon, and then gets stuck between modes: Partly it’s a good-times-gone-wrong period fable in the vein of “Boogie Nights,” “The People vs. Larry Flynt” or “Goodfellas,” and partly it’s a classed-up Lifetime melodrama about a woman who’s victimized and prostituted by a powerful husband.


Despite the vibrant presence of Seyfried, who plays Lovelace as a compelling blend of curiosity, vulnerability and naiveté, Linda herself never seems like the subject of the film, either before, during or after her brief period of porn stardom. It’s a strange outcome: She lacked clear agency in her life, and remains an unreadable cipher in the fictional version of her life story.


There’s much to enjoy in “Lovelace,” from the period R&B hits to the outrageous furniture and fashions to hambone performances by Chris Noth, Bobby Cannavale and Hank Azaria (as the sleazeball trio who made “Deep Throat”) and bit parts for James Franco as Hugh Hefner and Adam Brody as Harry Reems, Lovelace’s impressively endowed costar. Only a few simulated scenes from “Deep Throat,” none of them explicit, are seen in “Lovelace,” which hasn’t stopped the copyright holders of the original film from filing a $ 10 million lawsuit. (Among other things, they claim they hold all rights to the trademark “Linda Lovelace.” What can you even say about that?) Given the brutal hypocrisy of the way Linda Lovelace was created, manipulated and marketed, it feels bizarre and wrong to shake your groove thing at this particular party.


According to this telling of the tale, smooth-talking Chuck used young Linda Boreman — a New York transplant who’d had an illegitimate child as a teenager — as his ticket out of running a second-rate strip club in Fort Lauderdale. Performing oral sex on camera almost certainly wasn’t the worst of it. (Linda’s controversial later testimony that she was forced to do “Deep Throat” at gunpoint is not mentioned here, and was likely hyperbolic or metaphorical.) He beat and raped her frequently and pimped her out throughout their marriage, even allegedly selling her to be gang-raped at Hollywood parties after “Deep Throat” had made her famous. Perhaps the movie’s most chilling ingredient is its clear suggestion that Linda’s devout Catholic mother (a powerful supporting role for Sharon Stone) aided and abetted Chuck, repeatedly telling Linda that a wife’s role is to obey her husband, and resisting any details about exactly what Chuck ordered her to do.


Screenwriter Andy Bellin first gives us the official version of Linda’s rise, the one sold to people in the ‘70s, in which the freckled girl-next-door with an unusual aptitude for sex becomes the wholesome face that brings porn to Mr. and Mrs. America. Then we see many of the same events again from Linda’s perspective, with Chuck morphing from a pot-smoking, sideburned swinger to a sadistic, controlling creep, Franco’s Hefner as a flesh-peddling predator and Linda herself as a virtual sex slave. We see her finally escape from Traynor and the porn industry, and then tell her story to Phil Donahue several years later, when she’s become a Long Island housewife with two kids. This turnabout is dramatically effective, but it actually avoids some of the most interesting and complicated aspects of the real Linda’s story.


There’s no way to cover an entire life in a 90-minute movie, especially a life as bewildering as that of Linda Boreman-Traynor-Lovelace-Marchiano-Boreman (and occasionally Lovelace again). But “Lovelace” never mentions Linda’s involvement with the anti-pornography crusade led by feminist intellectuals like Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon, or her subsequent rejection of that movement and claims that those activists had used her for financial advantage. While many of her colleagues in the porn industry have supported her charges against Traynor, others have questioned her credibility and accused her of not taking responsibility for her own actions. After divorcing her second husband (saying he, too, was abusive) Linda briefly returned to the sex industry, doing a nude pictorial for Leg Show magazine in 1995. She died at age 53 after a Colorado car accident in 2002, a cruel ending to a life that had more questions than answers.


I’m not suggesting that Linda Lovelace was a hypocrite or that I believe she was not exploited. If anything, her later history suggests how profoundly screwed up she was, whether by her family, by Chuck Traynor, by her work in porn and her unwanted and uncompensated celebrity or by all of the above. I’m saying that Epstein and Friedman make a brave effort to wrestle with the ambiguities of Linda Lovelace’s life but ultimately come up short, turning an immensely complex story about women, men, sex and the 20th century into an old-fashioned moral fable about innocence betrayed. They have noble intentions, I guess, and Seyfried’s performance is worth the price of admission. But Linda Lovelace deserved something more.


 

Related Stories


AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed



“Lovelace”: The Troubled Porn Star Who Changed History