Videogum Home - designed by Guilherme Rosa

 

 

User Profile
user-pic

Rex Manning Day


On Stereogum

The bass player looks like Cro-Magnon Neil Patrick Harris.

on Grizzly Bear Do "Cheerleader" For Fallon at June 29, 2009 11:18 AM
Score = 7 Vote up Vote down

On Videogum

LINDSAY ROBERTSON FOR INDIE ROCK CRUSH 2K9

On an unrelated note, where's David After Dentist? This awards show is already a sham.

on It is Time To Vote In The 2009 Gummy Awards! at November 19, 2009 5:34 PM
Score = 18 Vote up Vote down

Again, just because they're poor people from a poor country doesn't mean you can give them any amount of money and have it be fair. It doesn't matter that this movie "almost" wasn't successful, the fact is, it WAS successful. Hundreds of millions of dollars were made, but the children who starred in it are only marginally less poor than they were before it was made.

You know, someone could build a shoe factory in a poor country and pay the locals pennies a day to fill it. Since they're already so poor, they're surely better off with that income than none at all! Reductio ad absurdem: accomplished.

Thus ends the rantings of Professor Rex Manning Day.

In reply to Godsauce's comment on Danny Boyle Moving Forward With Slummountain Onearmenaire at November 5, 2009 2:22 PM
Score = 1 Vote up Vote down

The fact that the children received some compensation does not mean they received fair compensation. Considering how much money the money made, and how poor the children continue to be, it seems reasonable to believe that their compensation was not fair. Of course, the children had no money whatsoever before the movie, so the fact that they maybe have some money now is necessarily "better" than they would be otherwise.

But giving a poor person $20 for work when they deserve $100 is exploiting them. Sure, they needed the $20, but they should have more. The fact that they're poor and will take whatever you give them doesn't mean you shouldn't pay them their fair share.

Maybe the producers did absolutely everything they could to ensure that the kids got fairly compensated, and this is the best possible outcome. Maybe it's just impossible to pay poor children for acting without having their money taken by family members or taxes or something else. But if that's the case, then it's impossible to make movies using poor children as actors without exploiting them. And exploiting poor children is bad. So maybe directors shouldn't use poor children in their movies.

Raising awareness is great. Making a for-profit movie, the stars of which remain poor no matter how much money said movie makes, is not great, no matter how much awareness it raises. Next time use real actors instead of poor children who you know can never be realistically, fairly compensated for their work.

In reply to Clambone's comment on Danny Boyle Moving Forward With Slummountain Onearmenaire at November 5, 2009 11:37 AM
Score = 7 Vote up Vote down

I just couldn't get past how much I hate the entire concept of The League. Haha, these grown men are childish and hate the confinement forced upon them by their families and their wives who don't, nay can't, understand their whimsical and brotherly need to enjoy themselves via a sports-related manly group activity. Except for the one wife who actually understands this sport better than her husband, which of course humiliates and emasculates him while nominally contradicting the women-don't-get-sports stereotype. Haha!

That said, Nick Kroll and (especially) Paul Scheer are awesome, and I will probably continue to watch to see them.

on Thursday Night TV Open Thread at October 30, 2009 12:02 PM
Score = 4 Vote up Vote down

It's not about my paternalistic guilt, it's just gross. This movie made almost $400 million, and the stars still live in poverty after being paid less than £2,000 for their performances. That's gross, whether it's the parents fault or the producers' fault. The fact that I now get to read about poverty on Videogum doesn't make it less gross.

In reply to Godsauce's comment on Does Anyone Care About The Slumdog Millionaire Kids Anymore? at October 29, 2009 5:59 PM
Score = 4 Vote up Vote down

And yet, they still live in poverty. I don't pretend to be an expert in paying poor children for being in movies for Americans, but there must be a better solution than "go to school or we won't give you this $120 per month". The kids live in slums. So yeah, make sure their parents don't exploit them, but also make sure they're not living in a shanty that's literally falling apart around them.

In reply to Godsauce's comment on Does Anyone Care About The Slumdog Millionaire Kids Anymore? at October 29, 2009 4:38 PM
Score = -2 Vote up Vote down

Because the white, obscenely wealthy benefactor of these families truly knows what is best for them, and has the right to demand that they meet certain requirements before being given the money they earned.

The kids live in fucking slums. I get that showering the destitute with money will probably not result in wise monetary choices, but its their money. Danny Boyle doesn't get to play parent and demand good behavior before giving these kids their allowance. For chrissakes, but them each a house or something. There has to be a middle ground between Corey Feldman-esque wastes of money and siphoning off stipends which barely nudge a family out of abject poverty.

In reply to Godsauce's comment on Does Anyone Care About The Slumdog Millionaire Kids Anymore? at October 29, 2009 4:03 PM
Score = 4 Vote up Vote down

You know, there's a Levi's ad out right now that uses a recording of Walt Whitman reciting a poem. And Walt Whitman is DEAD. And tons of ads have used Louis Armstrong's "What A Wonderful World." Louis Armstrong is DEAD. And hey, the aliens in Aliens were made by Stan Winston. Stan Winston is DEAD. He died last year! The memory of his death is still fresh!

/sigh. Can't we all mock David Spade for something worthwhile, like that ridiculous facial hair, instead of getting upset when yet another dead person's work is used in a commercial? It happens ALL THE TIME. I think using an already commercialized, mainstream slapstick comedy to sell things is hardly the most offensive example of it. That facial hair, however, is definitely the most offensive example of facial hair.

on David Spade Is Sorry That People Don't Realize How Cool The Dead Chris Farley Ad Is at October 29, 2009 10:24 AM
Score = 24 Vote up Vote down

This has nothing to do with empathy. He's been dead for years. Clearly his family and friends, who were actually hurt by his death, have moved on and are not hurt by this ad. One would imagine, therefore, that his fans, who I have no doubt were shocked 12 years ago at his death, have probably moved on as well and are not unduly hurt by this ad either. So "empathy" isn't really relevant. Nobody was harmed. Everybody is fine. Except arguably Farley's legacy, but like I said, I don't really think an unfunny ad reflects all that poorly on his career.

In reply to BRAAAAAAAINSSss's comment on David Spade's Publicist Makes No Apologies For Disgraceful Farley Ad at October 27, 2009 2:40 PM
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

I don't really care if he was a sweetheart, nor do I care about his drug use. I didn't know the guy. I'm sure his friends cared about him very much, but who cares? Everybody's friends care about him.

The rest of us only know him through his "comedy", and his comedy was awful. He was painfully unfunny, but he was on SNL when everybody here was in high school and he died early, so now he's held up as some comedy legend whose aesthetic we need to Respect and Honor. But we don't. This commercial is an unfunny money-grab, yes, but so was almost all of Farley's career. Time to move on.

In reply to DS3M's comment on David Spade's Publicist Makes No Apologies For Disgraceful Farley Ad at October 27, 2009 11:10 AM
Score = -7 Vote up Vote down

Staff

  • Founder/Editor-In-Chief: Scott Lapatine
  • Senior Editor: Gabe Delahaye
  • Executive Editor: Amrit Singh

Info

Contact

You Can Make It Up logo
Gabe loves fan fiction. You Can Make It Up features his own personal alternate adventures starring some of our favorite characters.

You Can Make It Up: People Tell Carrie Prejean What An Asshole She Is

Carrie Prejean turned the video camera off, put on some clothes, and stepped out of her house. It was a beautiful day outside. The air smelled like apples, and the late morning light hit the world in just such a...

MORE »

The Hunt For The Worst Movie Of All Time logo
After watching Death Sentence, a terrible movie starring Kevin Bacon as a father in search of vigilante justice directed by Saw's James Wan, Gabe embarked on The Hunt For The Worst Movie of All Time. This is his sad journey.

The Hunt For The Worst Movie Of All Time: In The Land Of The Women

If you are a sassy and sarcastic young man in an American sitcom who represents the sitcom writer's desire that a nerdy Jewish teenager can somehow be the desirable romantic hero in this world, then eventually you will get a...

MORE »

Monsters' Ball logo
This week's five highest rated comments as voted on by you, the lowest rated comment as voted on by you, and the editor's choice.

Monsters' Ball: The Week's Best Comments

I shouldn't even be here right now. I SHOULD BE GETTING INTO MY COSTUME! If I don't hurry, my facepaint won't be dry before I get to the MOONVIE theater, and everyone will be like "hahah, you look like you're...

MORE »

Double Dog logo
Blogging about TV and movies isn't all fun and videogames. Every week, Lindsay or Gabe will be presented with a physical or mental challenge that tests their bravery,patience, and taste.

Double Dog: I Took A TV Bus Tour Alone In A "Just Jack" Tshirt

The Challenge: I had to go on a 3.5 hour bus tour of totally random TV and film locations in New York City. Alone, and wearing a specific ridiculous tshirt. And I had to find someone to take my picture...

MORE »

Videogum Movie Club logo
Let's all go to the movies, and let's all see the same movie, and let's discuss it here.

The Videogum Movie Club: 2012

Uh. OK. Well, first let's address what this movie did well, like the disappointed parents we are (or at least that I am), recognizing that the negative feedback won't be useful or constructive if it isn't preceded by something positive....

MORE »