There are a few private jokes in Borat. One, which might merely be an example of a low-budget flick, is that the same bedspread appears in three different hotel room scenes. Another is that the anti-Semitic protagonist from Kazakhstan occasionally speaks fluent Hebrew throughout the movie. An Associated Press dispatch referred to him as a "Jew-fearing journalist" and stated: "In the end, it appeared that naked wrestling, toilet jokes and anti-Semitic satire hold universal appeal." In fact, Rob Eshman, editor of the Jewish Journal, confesses that he laughed so hard he spit out his gum. Moreover, the following excerpt from a review in The Jewish Week was subsequently forwarded on the Internet by an anti-Semitic listserv: "The first time I saw Borat I fell madly in love with him. For a journalist who writes about culture in a major Jewish newspaper, seeing this fictional, mustachioed, deeply offensive, thoroughly anti-Semitic man for the first time on HBO two years ago was more than entertainment. It was a clarion call... Played with fierce doggedness by Israeli-born comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, Borat - supposedly a reporter from Kazakhstan who travels the United States asking his hapless interviewees the most unthinkable of questions - was that mythological beast that all young Jews secretly dream about, a character cool and commanding who puts, if only for a moment, all things Jewish at the cutting edge of popular culture." Well, any movie that serves to unite Jews and anti-Semites can't be all bad. Certainly, both sides appreciate, for different reasons, Borat's explanation that the reason he and Azamat - his insanely fat "producer" - drive rather than fly across America in this documentary-style parody of a buddy movie is because he's scared that Jews would hijack their plane "like they did on 9/11," thereby transmutating horror into humor by a kind of comedic alchemy. (John Stauber, co-author of Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq, told me, "Skilled propagandists can plant gossip and, if it takes root and spreads successfully, it can serve a useful propaganda purpose. For instance, gossip has helped spread the false propaganda that Jews stayed home from work at the World Trade Center on 9/11 because they were warned of the attacks in advance. This is an outrageous lie, but that has not stopped it from being spread and believed by those predisposed to so believe.") To be fair, though, the anti-Semitic listserv--whose editor hasn't laughed out loud so much since he saw Schindler's List - also called the Jewish critic "hypocritical." But, in the memorable words of Morality Czar William Bennett, "Hypocrisy is better than having no values at all." Sacha can be compared to several other performers. Like Lenny Bruce, his sense of irreverence enables him to communicate from the villain's perspective; Lenny, in his most audacious satirical critique, perceived reality from Holocaust orchestrator Adolf Eichmann's point of view. Like Sarah Silverman, Sacha can make light of rape, advising the hometown rapist to keep his standards high by raping only humans, whereas Sarah pretends in The Aristocrats that she was once raped by show-biz legend Joe Franklin. Like Robin Williams, Sacha becomes the characters he plays so thoroughly it seems he loses his own center. Like Andy Kaufman, his sense of absurdity can stretch the patience of an audience beyond its ordinary limits. He is the contemporary version of a professional prankster, the latest stage in the evolution of a tradition, from Candid Camera to Tom Green to Punk'd to correspondents on The Daily Show. He stays in character with the determination of a salmon swimming upstream, blurring the line between courage and foolhardiness, just as Steven Colbert did so uncompromisingly at the White House Correspondents Dinner. On the Tonight show, as Borat, he outdid Mel Gibson's drunken outburst, informing Jay Leno that "The Jews were responsible for the end of the dinosaur period." Sacha's shtick depends on tricking people into becoming his theatrical props, who tolerate his outrageousness in order to be hospitable and not hurt his feelings. In the process, they reveal the state of their own humanity, for better or worse. Of course, everybody sees any film through the filter of their own particular subjectivity, so it's logical that my friend Nick Kazan, a screenwriter who treats his craft with great respect, would say about Sacha, "His commitment to his character is absolute and admirable, but I wish there'd been a little more narrative focus. A better plot. I wish it hadn't been just the same as the TV show." Through Kazan, I was able to find a source in the industry who gave me a montage of outtakes from the raw footage of Borat on condition that it neither be auctioned on eBay nor posted on YouTube. I was given permission to describe some of those scenes that remain on the cutting-room floor - a concept, incidentally, which has been laid to rest in the metaphor graveyard by the grace of digital editing. However, permission has been revoked concerning a specific scene showing fraternity boys getting drunk in a bar with the producers, due to their lawsuit claiming that they were duped into making racist and sexist remarks, "behavior that they otherwise would not have engaged in." (This news inspired mention of "the Mel Gibson defense" as instantly as Britney Spears' divorce inspired mention of her now-former husband Kevin Federline as "Fed-Ex.") The scene following the one with three feminists walking out of Borat's blatantly misogynous interview is left out, wherein the producers persuade them to return, only to be subjected to the unrelenting Borat's request that they remove their tops. In another scene that was omitted from the final product - if only because it would have interfered with the basic premise, a continuity of innocence, whether faked or real, of Sacha and his participant - victims alike - Pamela Anderson is forewarned that, at a bookstore signing, when he asks her to marry him, he will thrust a Kazakh wedding bag over her head, an act that would otherwise have terrorized her. A few scenes were excised because their inclusion would have resulted in an NC17 rating for Borat instead of an R. One scene involving his handing a plastic bag of his fresh feces to the hostess at a dinner party made the cut, but the preceding scene - Borat actually defecating as seen from the inside of the toilet - was deleted for that rating reason, but it was also considered too artsy-fartsy. There was a hysterical scene on a porn set where Borat wouldn't have sex with an actress because her vagina was shaved. To solve the problem, he cuts locks of his own hair off and pastes them to her crotch. But this scene was eliminated, not only because of ratings-fear, but also because it would have been inconsistent with the scene where he tells a car dealer he wants to buy a car that will be "a pussy magnet" for a woman who "shave down there," and the dealer suggests a Corvette or a Hummer. In the naked wrestling scene with the blubbery yet agile Azamat, a black rectangle would have to be superimposed on Borat's penis in post-production because of his erection, which was not a stage direction in the skillfully choreographed script. My favorite missing scene, which does allow the revelation of his penis because it's flaccid - acceptable under the rules of the ratings game - takes place in the office of a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon. Borat is there to discuss having a foreskin sewn back on because he doesn't want Pamela Anderson to think he's Jewish on their honeymoon night. After he drops his pants and fishnet underwear, he points to his penis and says, "I have seen on the televisions you will draw lines in magic marker, that is correct?" The doctor pauses. He looks puzzled. Then suddenly he realizes something, snaps his fingers and shouts, "Wait! You're Ali G! You're Ali G! You used to be on HBO! You're Ali G!" The crew's attempt to stifle their laughter fails, but Sacha stays Borat. "Aha," he says, "so you recognize it, yes?" Ironically, the more famous Sacha becomes, the less likely his shtick will work.
Paul Krassner is the author of One Hand Jerking: Reports From an Investigative Satirist, published by Seven Stories Press; he publishes The Disneyland Memorial Orgy at www.paulkrassner.com.
Join
Erin Hart on
Progressive Talk AM 760 Thanksgiving and Friday
(Nov. 23rd and 24th) when she fills in for Jay Marvin from 6am - 10am MST (8am - noon EST / 7am - 11am CST / 5am - 9am PST).
What a harvest! The first woman speaker (and YES, they made far too much of
her support of Murtha), a new day for the United States, IF Bush, Cheney and
all the Presidential henchmen LET change happen. And if they don't, history
and the country may just leave them in the dust.
Let's talk about new discoveries of worthy charities--this year one of mine is
Uplift International. We will talk to the founder and the vice-president on
Friday. So call from wherever you are digesting or shopping.
All that and some movie and entertainment surprises. Enjoy your family,
your food and the hope for change in America and around the world.
How Rich are You? (globalrichlist.com)
"$8 could buy you 15 organic apples OR 25 fruit trees for farmers in Honduras to grow and sell fruit at their local market. $73 could buy you a new mobile phone OR a new mobile health clinic to care for AIDS orphans in Uganda. $2400 could buy you a second generation High Definition TV OR schooling for an entire generation of school children in an Angolan village."
CBS begins the night with a FRESH'NCIS', followed by a FRESH'The Unit', then a FRESH'3 Lbs'.
Scheduled on a FRESHDave are Hugh Jackman, Chris Elliott, and NASCAR Nextel Cup winner Jimmie Johnson.
Scheduled on a FRESHCraig are Emilio Estevez, Eva Pigford, and Jim Short.
NBC starts the night with the FRESH'Tony Bennett: An American Classic', followed by a FRESH'Law & Order: Criminal Intent', then a FRESH'Law & Order: Special Victims Unit'.
Scheduled on a FRESHLeno are Denzel Washington, Catherine O'Hara, and Jerry Lee Lewis with Kid Rock.
Scheduled on a FRESHConan are James Spader, Amy Sedaris, Robyn Hitchcock.
Scheduled on a FRESHCarson Daly are Adam Goldberg, David Ford.
ABC fills the night with the LIVE'2006 American Music Awards' - taped & edited for the left coast.
Scheduled on a FRESHJimmy Kimmel are Teri Hatcher, Gary Brolsma, and Rock Star Supernova.
The CW here has 'NBA Basketball', with the Clips visiting the Lakers.
Faux has a FRESH'Standoff', followed by a FRESH'House'.
MY has a FRESH'Desire', followed by a FRESH'Fashion House'.
A&E has 'CSI: The 2nd One', another 'CSI: The 2nd One', and 2 hours of 'Dog The Bounty Hunter'.
AMC offers the movie 'Basic Instinct', followed by the movie 'Ghost', then the movie 'Down And Out In Beverly Hills'.
BBC -
[2:00 pm] As Time Goes By - Episode 4;
[2:40 pm] Are You Being Served - Goobye, Mr. Grainger;
[3:20 pm] Keeping Up Appearances - Episode 7;
[4:00 pm] The Avengers - Something Nasty in the Nursery;
[5:00 pm] Footballers Wives - Episode 8;
[6:00 pm] BBC World News;
[6:30 pm] Cash in the Attic - Mitchell;
[7:00 pm] The Benny Hill Show - Episode 42;
[8:00 pm] Whose Line Is It Anyway? - Episode 2;
[8:30 pm] Whose Line Is It Anyway? - Episode 3;
[9:00 pm] The Avengers - The Hidden Tiger;
[11:00 pm] Whose Line Is It Anyway? - Episode 6;
[11:30 pm] Whose Line Is It Anyway? - Episode 4;
[12:00 am] The Benny Hill Show - Episode 43;
[2:00 am] The Avengers - The Hidden Tiger;
[3:00 am] Touching Evil - Episode 2;
[5:00 am] Rocket Man - Episode 2;
[6:00 am] BBC World News. (ALL TIMES EST)
Bravo has 'Work Out', followed by the movie 'Bridget Jones's Diary', then the movie 'Bridget Jones's Diary'.
Comedy Central has 'Scrubs', another 'Scrubs', an old 'Jon Stewart', an old 'Colbert Report', 'Chappelle's Show', 'South Park', 'Mind Of Mencia', and another 'Mind Of Mencia'.
On a RERUNJon Stewart (from 11/13/06) is Tina Fey.
On a RERUNColbert Report (from 11/13/06) is Dan Rather.
History has 'Modern Marvels', 'The Presidents', another 'The Presidents', and 'Man Moment Machine'.
IFC -
[06:15 AM] The eMusic Dozens: Indie Local;
[06:25 AM] November Media Lab Results;
[06:40 AM] Passion in the Desert;
[08:15 AM] Keep The River On Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale;
[09:50 AM] Yo Soy Boricua, Pa'que Tu Lo Sepas!;
[11:20 AM] The Sleeping Dictionary;
[01:10 PM] The Trouble with Men and Women;
[02:40 PM] Passion in the Desert;
[04:15 PM] Keep The River On Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale;
[05:50 PM] Yo Soy Boricua, Pa'que Tu Lo Sepas!;
[07:15 PM] Caro Diario;
[09:00 PM] Beauty and the Beast;
[10:35 PM] Black Orpheus;
[12:25 AM] Alexander Nevsky;
[02:15 AM] Beauty and the Beast;
[03:50 AM] Black Orpheus;
[05:45 AM] Alexander Nevsky. (ALL TIMES EST)
SciFi has 'Dead Like Me', another 'Dead Like Me', 'Eureka', and 'ECW'.
Sundance -
[06:35 AM] Salvador Allende;
[08:15 AM] Dopamine;
[09:40 AM] Wetback;
[11:15 AM] Mickybo and Me;
[01:00 PM] Bruce and Me;
[02:30 PM] Dopamine;
[04:00 PM] The Corporation;
[06:30 PM] Kath & Kim - Season 3: Cactus Hour;
[07:00 PM] Hotel Infinity;
[07:15 PM] John Henrik Clarke: A Great and Mighty Walk;
[09:00 PM] City of Men - Season 3: Episode 2: Didn't Mean To;
[09:30 PM] The Nominees: Episode 5;
[10:00 PM] Mickybo and Me;
[11:45 PM] Mobutu, King of Zaire;
[02:00 AM] The Nominees: Episode 5;
[02:30 AM] City of Men - Season 3: Episode 2: Didn't Mean To;
[03:00 AM] Summer of the Serpent;
[03:30 AM] House of Boateng: Episode 6;
[04:00 AM] The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years;
[05:35 AM] The Corporation. (ALL TIMES EST)
Caroline Kennedy (L) takes the stage after being introduced by her uncle, U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA), at the 2006 John F. Kennedy New Frontier Awards ceremony at the John F. Kennedy School at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts November 20, 2006. The New Frontier Awards honor Americans under the age of 40 who are changing their communities - and the country- with their commitment to public service.
Photo by Brian Snyder
Director Peter Jackson has been told he will not be hired to direct a movie based on J.R.R. Tolkien novel "The Hobbit," despite the nearly $3 billion global box office success of his "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, according to a letter Jackson wrote to fan site TheOneRing.net.
In Jackson's letter, which was posted on the Web site late on Sunday, the director said last week a top executive with Los Angeles-based New Line Cinema called him to say the studio was moving ahead on "The Hobbit" movie without Jackson.
"This was a courtesy call to let us know that the studio was now actively looking to hire another filmmaker," Jackson wrote.
Pink Floyd's David Gilmour is to release three new tracks in tribute to former band member and friend Syd Barrett, he has announced.
Gilmour confirmed details of his "Arnold Layne" single on his official website, dedicating the release to Barrett, who died this summer of pancreatic cancer.
The material consists of an acoustic take on "Dark Globe" plus two versions of Pink Floyd's first-ever single, "Arnold Layne," all recorded at Gilmour's shows earlier this year at London's Royal Albert Hall.
One features David Bowie on vocals and the other Richard Wright from Pink Floyd. Both tracks were initially written by Barrett.
Barry Manilow sings during rehearsals for the American Music Awards, Monday, Nov. 20, 2006, in Los Angeles. The show is scheduled to air on Tuesday.
Photo by Mark J. Terrill
Fox News Channel might air two episodes of a "Daily Show"-like program with a decidedly nonliberal bent on Saturday nights in late January, with the possibility that it could become a weekly show.
The half-hour show would take aim at what executive producer Joel Surnow, the co-creator of "24," calls "the sacred cows of the left" that don't get made as much fun of by other comedy shows.
Also executive producing are "24" producer Manny Coto, a veteran of "Star Trek: Enterprise," and creator Ned Rice, who previously wrote for "Politically Incorrect" and "Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson."
The show was pitched as "This Just In" when it first got life as a 20-minute pilot presentation for Fox Broadcasting Co.'s late-night division. But when that network passed, Surnow said it attracted the attention of Fox News Channel chief Roger Ailes.
After a firestorm of criticism, News. Corp. said Monday that it has canceled the O.J. Simpson book and TV special "If I Did It."
"I and senior management agree with the American public that this was an ill-considered project," said Rupert Murdoch, News Corp. chairman. "We are sorry for any pain that this has caused the families of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson."
A dozen Fox affiliates had already said they would not air the two-part sweeps month special, planned for next week before the Nov. 30 publication of the book by ReganBooks. The publishing house is a HarperCollins imprint owned - like the Fox network - by News Corp.
Michael Richards said Monday he spewed racial epithets during a stand-up comedy routine because he lost his cool while being heckled and not because he's a bigot.
"For me to be at a comedy club and flip out and say this crap, I'm deeply, deeply sorry," the former "Seinfeld" co-star said during a satellite appearance for David Letterman's "Late Show" in New York.
Jerry Seinfeld, who had issued a statement saying he was "sick over this horrible, horrible mistake" and calling it offensive, was scheduled as a Letterman guest Monday. He encouraged Richards to make a satellite appearance to talk about the incident, a CBS publicist said.
Richards deserved the chance to apologize, Seinfeld said on the "Late Show." Seinfeld said, "He's someone that I love, and I know how shattered he is about" the incident.
Several Democratic lawmakers asked the Bush administration on Monday to replace its new family-planning chief because he has worked for a health provider that opposes the use of birth control.
Dr. Eric Keroack's record as an opponent of birth control and abortion makes him a poor choice to oversee a $280 million reproductive-health program, seven House of Representatives Democrats said in a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt.
"We are concerned that Dr. Keroack has promoted policies -- including the refusal to distribute contraception even to married women -- that directly conflict with the mission of the federal program," the letter said.
Keroack last week was named head of HHS's Office of Population Affairs, which funds birth control, pregnancy tests, breast-cancer screening and other health services for 5 million poor people annually. HHS estimates that the program helps to prevent 1.3 million unwanted pregnancies each year.
Gina Lollobrigida's wedding to her longtime boyfriend has been postponed until next year, the Italian actress said Monday.
Lollobrigida, 79, will marry Javier Rigau y Rafols, 45, of Barcelona, Spain, on Jan. 27. The couple, who met at a party in Monte Carlo, Monaco, have been dating for 22 years.
They were set to wed in New York later this month, but decided to hold the ceremony in a Rome church "given the interest and the affection of many European friends, in particular Italian and Spanish ones," the couple said in a joint statement.
Lawyers for CBS Corp. argued Monday that singer Janet Jackson's breast-baring at the Super Bowl halftime show in 2004 was unintended, took place without the knowledge of the network, and should not be considered indecent.
CBS is suing the Federal Communications Commission in the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, challenging a $550,000 fine issued by the agency over the stunt, which created a national furor.
In a court brief, CBS argued that the FCC had "failed to turn up even a shred of evidence suggesting that anyone at CBS participated" in the so-called "wardrobe malfunction," and that the commission had abandoned its long-standing approach that "fleeting, isolated or unintended" images should not automatically be considered indecent.
In the 76-page brief, the network also said the fine should be dismissed because the broadcast itself was "neither explicit nor graphic."
Dolores Huerta , co-founder of the United Farm Workers labor union is shown at the site of the former Ambassador hotel prior to groundbreaking ceremonies for a new school complex at the hotel site in Los Angeles November 20, 2006.
Photo by Fred Prouser
Rude immigration officials and visa delays keep millions of foreign visitors away from the United States, hurt the country's already battered image, and cost the U.S. billions of dollars in lost revenue, according to an advocacy group formed to push for a better system.
To drive home the point, the Discover America Partnership released the result of a global survey on Monday which showed that international travelers see the United States as the world's worst country in terms of getting a visa and, once you have it, making your way past rude immigration officials.
The survey showed that the United States was ranked "the worst" in terms of visas and immigration procedures by twice the percentage of travelers as the next destination regarded as unfriendly -- the Middle East and the Asian subcontinent.
More than half of the travelers surveyed said U.S. immigration officials were rude and two-thirds said they feared they would be detained on arriving in the United States for a simple mistake in their paperwork or for saying the wrong thing to an immigration official.
Investigators have recovered a painting by 18th century Spanish master Francisco de Goya stolen earlier this month while en route to a special exhibition in New York, officials said.
"Children with a Cart," a 1778 painting on loan from the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio, was stolen in Pennsylvania on November 8 while a professional art transportation firm was delivering it to the Guggenheim Museum.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said the painting was recovered in good condition and appeared to be unharmed, but refused to provide any details on the recovery, citing an ongoing investigation with possible charges pending.
Viacom Inc. chairman Sumner Redstone's nephew Michael Redstone has filed a lawsuit charging that the billionaire media mogul and his own father cheated him out of a stake in the media conglomerate.
Michael Redstone's lawsuit accuses his uncle and his father Edward Redstone of "self-dealing," "breaches of fiduciary duties," and "unjust enrichment" after buying back shares of National Amusements Inc., the company that controls Viacom, CBS Corp. and Midway Games, at low prices .
The suit, filed in Massachusetts Superior Court in Suffolk County on November 3, is the latest legal predicament for the 83-year-old media tycoon, who forged his father's Massachusetts-based movie theater chain into a global media empire.
Sumner's son, Brent Redstone, sued his father in February this year, also charging that his father had "breached his fiduciary duties" by arranging the buy back of shares of National Amusements at low prices.
The Global Orgasm for Peace was conceived by Donna Sheehan, 76, and Paul Reffell, 55, whose immodest goal is for everyone in the world to have an orgasm Dec. 22 while focusing on world peace.
The couple are no strangers to sex and social activism. Sheehan, no relation to anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, brought together nearly 50 women in 2002 who stripped naked and spelled out the word "Peace."
The couple have studied evolutionary psychology and believe that war is mainly an outgrowth of men trying to impress potential mates, a case of "my missile is bigger than your missile," as Reffell put it.
By promoting what they hope to be a synchronized global orgasm, they hope to get people to channel their sexual energy into something more positive.
Singer Jose Feliciano, center, performs with his sons Michael, left, and Jonathan Sunday, Nov. 19, 2006 at Iridium Jazz Club in New York. Feliciano's new album, Jose Feliciano y Amigos, is out Dec. 5 and features duets with Marc Anthony, Ramon Ayala, Christian Castro, Luis Fonsi, Lupillo Rivera and Alicia Villarreal.
Photo by Gary He
Born Feb. 28, 1924, in Walterboro, Jaffe was the oldest of four children. She grew up in Williston, where her father was the schools superintendent. After earning a bachelor's degree from Columbia College in 1945, she moved to New York City and did graduate work in theater at Columbia University.
She made her film debut in the 1959 drama "Face of Fire" and made a number of guest appearances on TV series, including "Perry Mason" and "St. Elsewhere."
Jaffe met her husband, Sam, when they appeared together in a New York stage production of Moliere's "Tartuffe" in 1955. The couple married in 1956.
They often performed together, including on "Ben Casey." She played an anesthesiologist, and he played Dr. David Zorba on the series, which ended in 1966.
Jeremy Slate, the versatile actor who co-wrote and starred in the cult film "Hell's Angels '69" and went on to appear in eight seasons on the daytime drama "One Life to Live," died Sunday, his agent said. He was 80.
Often cast as a tough guy, Slate appeared during the late 1960s in a string of biker films, including "The Born Losers" and "Hell's Angels '69," which he co-wrote.
From 1979 to 1987, he was a regular on the ABC soap "One Life to Live" as Chuck Wilson, his longest-running role.
Recording artist Kenny G poses with a saxophone borrowed from an audience fan, at ceremonies to honor him with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame November 20, 1997. G credits BMG U.S. chairman/CEO Clive Davis with coming up with the concept for his new Arista album, 'I'm in the Mood for Love ... The Most Romantic Melodies of All Time.'
You have reached the Home page of BartCop Entertainment.
Make yourself home, take your shoes off...
Go ahead, scratch it if it itches.
The idea is to have fun.
Do you have something to say?
Anything that increased your blood pressure, or, even better,
amused or entertained?
Do you have a great album no one's heard?
How about a favorite TV show, movie, book, play, cartoon, or legal amusement?
A popular artist that just plain pisses you off?
A box set the whole world should own?
Vile, filthy rumors about Republican musicians?
Just plain vile, filthy rumors?
This is your place.