Archive for the ‘Film’ Category

Are you "Sicko" yet?

July 7, 2007

I just sent this letter (without the graphics) to both of my senators:

Yesterday I went to see Michael Moore’s film, Sicko. I left the theater wondering why — if America is the smartest, richest, most innovative and powerful nation in the world — we can’t figure out how to provide good health care to all Americans.

If the Canadians, the British and the French can do it (to say nothing of the Cubans), why can’t we?

For example, did you know that in Great Britain, doctors get bonuses based on the improved health of people in their care? If their patients stop smoking, lower their blood pressure, etc., they get a bonus. In the United States, doctors get bonuses for seeing the most patients per day, for not making referrals, and for denying requests for treatment. Our insurance companies reward doctors and other employees for denying coverage and courses of treatment — for limiting costs, not for helping people. We’ve got it entirely backwards.

It is clear that our national priority has been to make health care profitable for PPOs, HMOs, insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies, not to care for people. This has to change. We need to put people first, not corporate profits. We need to make health care a national right, not a profit center.

I think it’s time to refocus the health care debate…away from incremental and useless changes like requiring people to buy insurance (so are they supposed to stop eating to pay for coverage?), or funding some coverage for poor children (at least until those funds run out — tonight I watched NOW’s Insuring the Children on PBS; it talked about how the State Children’s Health Insurance Program is running out of funds and what that means to children can’t get covered…like the Georgia girl who is likely to die without her diabetes meds).

Frankly, health insurance is not the answer. It is no guarantee of health care, not when insurance companies focus on making profits by denying claims and coverage.

One of my friends, a woman in her 50s who recently changed careers, is deeply worried about losing her job. Loss of income is bad enough, but the thing that really keeps her awake at night is the fear of losing her health insurance. She’s got a health problem and she’s worried that it will become a “pre-existing condition” and she’ll won’t be able to afford to get treated. And if she can’t get treated, she won’t be able to work.

In other developed countries, people can focus on doing their jobs, living their lives and caring for their families. They don’t have to worry about being bankrupted by an illness or injury. They don’t have to worry about dying because some bureaucrat denied them coverage or a needed treatment.

I want what other developed countries have. I want the security of knowing that if I get sick or am injured, it won’t bankrupt my family. I want to know that if I get a serious injury or illness, I won’t be allowed to die so some insurance executive can get a bonus. I want to know that, should I be unfortunate enough to end up with Alzheimer’s like my mother, my family won’t go have to through hell and destitute themselves trying to care for me.

National polls now show that health care is a top concern of a majority of Americans. That’s because even those of us who have insurance know we are just one job and one claim away from denial of treatment or loss of coverage.

Please, it’s time to change the debate on health care. It’s time to make health care a basic right, not another privatized profit-making venture. Please do something.

If you want to do something, you can start by writing your representatives a letter too. Feel free to recycle parts of mine, if you like. And go see Sicko. See through the propaganda we’ve been fed all our lives, and see how the other half of the developed world lives.

Serendipity, Trains, and Celluloid Dreams

March 17, 2007

In less than six months, I’m a convert. I love trains.

It all started last fall, with a confluence of events: gas prices spiking at more than $3.00 per gallon and a semester where I had to be on campus four days a week, instead of my normal two. I live 35 miles from campus, so it added up to a lot of time spent on the highway and a lot of money spent on gas. I decided it was time to start taking the train.

I’m lucky; there’s a CalTrain stop about a mile from my house. It backs up to Bay Meadows racetrack, so sometimes I even get to watch horses breeze around the track while I’m waiting for the train.

I like almost everything about trains…the size and heft and noise of a passing train…the excited clamor of the crossing gate alarms, and the distinctive, rhythmic clang of each train’s bell as it approaches the station.

I like it that CalTrain cars are two stories high and I can look up to them. I like waving at the engineer in his high perch at the front of the train (southbound) as it pulls into the station.

And I like the notion that the train doesn’t turn around. Instead, after delivering the last of his riders to San Jose, the engineer simply puts it in reverse and backs up all the way to San Francisco.

I like the people on trains too. Yesterday I sat across from two guys, obviously movie buffs, chatting with one of the conductors. Between stops, the conductor, a former prop man, told tales of working and partying with actors like Micheal J. Fox. And the guys, Tim Sika and Larry Jakubecz, talked about some of their favorite movies and some of actors and directors they’ve interviewed for their radio show, Celluloid Dreams (which desperately needs to update its web page). The show airs Mondays at 5 p.m. on 90.5 KSJS-FM, the campus radio station at San Jose State…where I happen to teach.

Small world, right? But there’s more….

Turns out Sika and Jakubecz really want to figure out how to create RSS feeds, so they can post podcasts of their radio show for all the world to hear…and I just happen to be teaching a new media class this semester that includes a segment on podcasting…and I have an RSS guru lined up for next week’s class.

Sometimes the stars are aligned, and the right people meet at just the right time. Sometimes a penchant for chatting with strangers is a good thing.

I’m looking forward to seeing my new friends in class next week…and maybe on the train.

To read a Spartan Daily News feature on Celluloid Dreams and its hosts, click here.

Obama, Sundance and student films

December 12, 2006

You know how sometimes one link leads to another…?

Well, this morning I was reading about Barak Obama’s recent New Hampshire appearance (I’m a N.H. native, so I tend to notice N.H. stories) in Salon.com…and isn’t it interesting how much attention he’s getting? I think it shows how hungry so many Americans are for a new path in this nation’s politics and policies. But I digress….

Anyway, from Salon.com, I clicked on a banner ad for the Sundance Channel…I mean, how could resist a TV show called “One Punk Under God”? It looked kinda interesting, but perhaps not my cuppa tea…so I clicked on a link to Sundance’s Second Life blog…and, yes, Sundance avatars (named Vincent and Maya, if you must know) will soon be appearing on a Second Life Island near you. And if you’re interested, you’re invited to tell the folks at Sundance what you’d like to see their avatars do (in a nice way, of course).

Then another Sundance link — for the “College Television Awards” — caught my eye, and ended up watching some very cool short films created by college students. My favorites were an animation, “Things That Go Bump in the Night,” and a short film, “Trojan Cow.”

Check them out!