âYou Canât Be Neutral on a Moving Trainâ and more election day viewing ideas
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone looking for something to inspire them â or soothe them â as election day arrives.
This week, Screen Gab editor Matt Brennan recommends the always timely wisdom of historian Howard Zinn, whose perspective shapes the documentaries âYou Canât Be Neutral on a Moving Trainâ and âA Peopleâs History of the United States.â
Also in issue No. 155, we suggest rewatching âThe West Wingâ and setting a reminder for âThe Daily Showâ election special. Plus, we talk baseball with the director of Netflixâs new docuseries âThe Comeback.â
Screen Gab Live: 'Before'
What: Free screening of Apple TV+âs âBefore,â followed by a Q&A with star Billy Crystal and showrunner Sarah Thorp. Free 3-hour parking with validation; free popcorn and refreshments provided
When: Monday, Nov. 4 | 7 p.m.
Where: The Culver Theater, 9500 Culver Blvd., Culver City, CA 90232
How: Be sure to RSVP today!
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Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
âThe Daily Show Presents a Live Election Night Specialâ (Comedy Central, simulcast)
If youâve been doomscrolling and viewing clips and political news nonstop like me (and if youâre not, congratulations on keeping your sanity), youâre probably wondering what you should watch on election night to keep track of the races. I tend to flip through the networks, but I always make a stop at âThe Daily Show.â This yearâs election-night episode, titled âIndecision 2024: Nothing We Can Do About It Now,â marks 24 years of the âDaily Showâ special, which originated during Jon Stewartâs first run on Comedy Centralâs satirical news program. And it feels like deja vu not just because Stewart is back as host, but because there is a high probability that weâll have a repeat of 2000, where we wonât know the winner of the presidential race until after election day. (Remember those hanging chads?) At minimum, the show serves as an hour to deride the maps, magic walls and needles that will inevitably rule the night. And Stewart, who plans to stick around through 2025 in his once a week hosting gig, can continue to help us make sense of it all once we know who prevails. âMaira Garcia
READ MORE: Election news is heavy on video clips. Go deeper with these 10 documentaries, series and specials
âThe West Wingâ (Max)
Folks are doing, and advising, all sorts of things to remain calm during this uniquely stressful presidential election. Iâm sure yoga and burning sage offer some relief but I have chosen to rewatch âThe West Wing.â Currently celebrating its 25th anniversary, Aaron Sorkinâs workplace drama offers the soothing combination of nostalgia â gather round while I tell of a time when broadcast networks could win Emmys for best drama â and political aspiration. Was there ever a White House run by a mere half dozen quick-witted, friendship-bound aides with no ambition beyond serving their quantifiably brilliant economist president and the people? Of course not. Does it remain deeply pleasurable to watch an extraordinary group of writers, directors and actors attempt to convince us otherwise? Yes indeed. Also a tiny bit sad. âThe West Wingâ was followed by the darker (but undeniably entertaining) visions of â24,â âScandalâ and âVeepâ and the more general rise of the antihero. âWest Wingâ was often pointed and certainly partisan â it was in many ways a centrist Democratâs fever dream â but it was never politically mean-spirited. Which makes it even more of a revelation, 25 years later, than it was when it premiered. âMary McNamara
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
In the documentaries âYou Canât Be Neutral on a Moving Trainâ (2004) and âA Peopleâs History of the United Statesâ (2015), both streaming on Kanopy, scholar Howard Zinn lays claim to the original meaning of radicalism: Going to the root of the problem.
Born in Brooklyn to working-class immigrant parents and raised in a series of cold water flats, Zinn â by turns shipyard organizer, Air Force veteran, civil rights activist, antiwar protester, university professor, public intellectual â did not so much escape poverty and injustice as spend a lifetime confronting their causes, ultimately fashioning a survey of the American experience written from the perspective of its ârabbits,â rather than its âhunters.â First published in 1980, âA Peopleâs Historyâ placed sit-ins and wildcat strikes at the center of our national narrative, and interpreted such direct action â even when unsuccessful â as evidence of opposition to capitalism, militarism and white supremacy that had too often been written out of the story. âI start from the supposition that the world is topsy-turvy, that things are all wrong,â Zinn, who died in 2010, once described the perspective that led him to write history from below: âThat the wrong people are in power, and the wrong people are out of power.â As a result, his work awakened readers to the role played by class conflict, racial injustice, gender inequality and imperial might in a country whose history has traditionally been framed as a victory march.
Of course, at a brisk 78 and 90 minutes, respectively, âYou Canât Be Neutralâ and âA Peopleâs Historyâ barely scratch the surface of the Jamestown settlement or the Ludlow Massacre. (Ken Burns, take note: The survey text practically cries out for the âCivil Warâ treatment.) The films focus instead on Zinnâs conceptual innovations, particularly his understanding that the government, the law, the police and other major institutions in American life are officially or unofficially owned by, and act in the service of, wealthy, powerful interests â who in turn treat the decisions of those institutions as âholy writ.â Moral outrage and grassroots resistance to those interests, Zinn posited, were the only means of genuine social change; to be silent in the face of the establishment was indeed to endorse it. âI donât believe itâs possible to be neutral,â he said. âThe world is already moving in certain directions, and to be neutral, to be passive, in a situation like that is to collaborate with whateverâs going on.â â Matt Brennan
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A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
When the Dodgers had the Yankees down 3-0 in the World Series earlier this week, the trailing teamâs desperate fans and loyal supporters of their archrival Boston Red Sox could agree on at least one thing: âThe Comebackâ was the only historical precedent the men in pinstripes had for hope. Netflix, now streaming a new docuseries of the same name, could scarcely have planned it any better. Colin Barnicleâs three-part deep dive into Red Soxâs epic victory over the Yanks in the 2004 American League Championship Series, a prelude to their first World Series title in 86 years, is catnip to those, like me, who watched our team âreverse the curseâ in real time â and a reminder, for everyone else, that baseball is a game of miracles. Barnicle stopped by Screen Gab recently to discuss his memories of â04, what heâs watching and more. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that youâre recommending to everyone you know?
I just saw Jason Reitmanâs film âSaturday Night,â which was great. Iâm not a âSaturday Night Liveâ aficionado or anything but it had all the things I really enjoy â amazing characters with high stakes â and it really let you into that experience of trying to accomplish something youâre overzealous about and yet doubtful of the outcome. On the documentary side, âSuper/Man: The Christopher Reeve Storyâ (VOD) and âThe Greatest Night in Popâ [Netflix] are two spectacularly executed pieces where you follow the characters through the story, rather than it being the other way around.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the film or TV show you return to again and again?
If âRaiders of the Lost Arkâ [Prime Video, Paramount+] or âButch Cassidy and the Sundance Kidâ [VOD] are on, Iâm watching. But at night, after my wife and I put the children to bed, weâre putting on âSeinfeldâ [Netflix]. The whole idea of no good deed goes unpunished, trying to force an outcome, it never gets old and itâs never not funny.
Whatâs your most potent personal memory of the Soxâs championship run in 2004?
Itâs the first time Iâd ever taken a picture with my cellphone. A year prior, my father took my younger brother, Tim, and I to Yankee Stadium for Game 7 and the Red Sox lost. It was devastating. Tim was bawling his eyes out â I donât know, maybe I was too â and my father leaned down and hugged my brother and said, âI canât believe I did this to you.â Heâd given him something that didnât love him back: the Red Sox. A year later, we were there again. Same seats, same Game 7, and the Red Sox won and in the chaos of the moment, Tim and I snuck onto the field and Tim ran the bases. He was 11, could barely make it around, winded as all hell as he rounded third base to home and he shouted, âI canât believe itâ and I pulled out my cellphone and took a picture. Itâs on the wall at my parentsâ house right when you walk in the door.
Between âThe Comebackâ and âThis Is a Robbery,â your two highest profile series to date have taken on Boston-centric subjects. Whatâs a Boston story youâd still like to tell, if you could do anything?
Boston is a city of neighborhoods. Each one has their own story. The old adage used to be that you either had a priest, a cop, a criminal or all three in your family and this in a place with the best higher education, best hospitals and an outsized punch in politics. Thereâs no shortage of good stories in Beantown. You can never limit it to just one. Thatâs the best part.
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