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I think Selma was great but just came out too late.

And if the director [Ava


DuVernay] suffered from anything, it was gender discrimination, not race
discrimination. This whole race thing was spun out of control by the
press....Scott FeinbergThe RaceThe Hollywood Reporter2-22-2015
I lived through the '60s and my most heartfelt opinion is that Selma did not
suffer from racism but is just inadequate to the events that it covered to the
civil rights movement and to [Dr. Martin Luther] King [Jr.] and to the various
demonstrations that were held and to the people involved. The scenes with LBJ
and [FBI director] J. Edgar Hoover conspiring together like two little white
weasels bothered me; I thought that was incredibly misleading. And the
portrayal of Malcolm X as having an alternative way is ridiculous he had no
alternative. The whole film is kind of a left-wing, modern, black rap version
there's no white people who have any speaking parts who are favorably depicted,
when, in fact, there were white people on the scene, beyond a few ministers, who
risked their lives and who died supporting the civil rights efforts.. .Scott
FeinbergThe RaceThe Hollywood Reporter2-22-2015
The Academy Awards have no problem honoring historical dramas, period
pieces or scripts based on a true story, but has such admiration for these
themes ever extended itself to films starring Black actors talking about Black
issues, helmed by Black auteurs?...When the 2015 nominations were
announced, Selma was disappointingly absent from categories outside of Best
Picture and Best Original Song. The snub inspired the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite.
The prestigious ceremony was accused of being out of touch and flippant
in their blatant omission of one of this years most remarkable films that
portrays one the most significant eras and icons in history. The Selma blackout
prompted a discussion: does the Academy only honor the Black experience when
told through the interpretation of White filmmakers? Theres been a negligence
on their part in not recognizing the next generation of modern-day Black
narrativesShardae JobsonNew Pittsburgh Courier2-28-2015

MY FIVE BIG REASONS WHY THERE WAS NO OSCAR SNUB


OF SELMA (2014) #OSCARSSOWHITE & #SELMASNUB
DEBATE - PART 2 - 2-28-2015
2-28-2015 - Written By: David L. $Money Train$ Watts Journalist/Film Reviewer
FuTurXTV & HHBMedia.com - David Velo Stewart Editor www.hiphopbattle.com
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

The first two comments are again are from random and unidentified
Academy Award 2015 voters who have been interviewed and chronicled in
The Hollywood Reporters Scott Feinbergs The Race which is an in-depth
series of articles about what they allegedly said they would vote for on their
Oscar ballots. The last quote is from an avid supporter of the #OscarsSoWhite
and #SelmaSnub social movement that wants there to be some type of racial
cinematic justice where just making any positive Black film deserves Oscar
love from Hollywood. I have read many of these #SelmaSub articles and none
of them in my opinion ever even consider for one moment that Paramount
Pictures Oscar campaign or strategy for Selma could have been flawed or
just bad. And these articles can find no faults with Selma or anything Ava
DuVernay did or said as a director in the media that would hurt Selma either.
3. There were several glaring historical errors with the depiction of former
President Lyndon B. Johnson that made Selma easy to criticize and
mount an anti-Oscar campaign by rival film publicists. Ava DuVernay
has never had a valid explanation or historical reference of why she
portrayed LBJ as someone stereotypical civil rights/racially insensitive
film villain. Oprah, Brad Pit and Paramount Pictures had to know that
Ava would face a huge wave of media criticism by making LBJ having a
hostile relationship with MLK over supporting the Voting Rights Act of
1965. Ava initially tried to ignore all the LBJ furor by acting like many
well-respected LBJ historians were nitpicking over a couple minor LBJ
facts in her film. Ava finally went on 60 Minutes on February 8, 2015
and answered her many LBJ critics by saying, History is to be
interpreted through the lens of the people who are reading it and
experiencing it on the page or at the time. And this is my interpretation.
Ava mistakenly said she did not want to make a typical white savior
film. Ava said, I'm interested in having people of color at the center of
their own lives. We don't need to be saved by anyone. We do not have to
have someone sweeping in on a white horse or someone saving the day or
assisting us in our own narrative. So that's what that meansI think the
thing that folks are talkin' about around LBJ is that he was a vigorous
champion of civil rights. He did turn out to be that. But he didn't start that
way. To try to push the idea that he was always 100 percent in the corner
of the black man and woman in America is to not know your history.
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

But you cant watch Selma and learn anything informative or factual
about LBJ being against civil rights in the early and mid-1950s or why
he changed his mind supposedly after the 1954 Brown decision. Nope!
Nothing in Selma suggests any insights into LBJ reluctance to civil
rights a decade earlier or how that ambivalence played into the Voting
Rights Act of 1965. We are only dealing with MLKs and LBJs unique
relationship during Selma and not any years earlier. Ava does not even
attempt to seriously explore why LBJ was so gung-ho and successful at
getting the Civil Rights Act of 194 passed after JFKs death and then
suddenly soured or was angrily opposed on doing voting rights next.
And it was so sad for Ava when civil rights icons Andrew Young and
Julian Bond weighed in the LBJ controversy to correct the way LBJ
was portrayed in Selma and apparently unfairly by Ava DuVernay:
President Johnson did not say it had to wait, Young said. He said, I
have a great agenda. We did not expect him to commit. We were really
kind of letting him know that we had to pursue voting rights. His agenda,
I found out later, was that he thought that the Great Societywould be
easier for him to bring first. If he had said that, we would probably have
agreed with him. But we didnt have a choice.We could not have had
this bill without LBJ, but LBJ could not have passed it without Martin
Luther King and others, Young said. Its unfair for anybody to talk
about credit. Too many people gave their lives. Too many people risked
too much.Evan McCurryMediaite1-4-2015
Julian Bond, a civil rights leader who worked with King, praised
Selma but took issue with Johnsons depiction as an obstacle to
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

progress.He did support Kings fight for voting rights. He probably is


the best civil rights president America has ever had. The best. Absolute
best, Bond said, CBS News reported. I think the movie people wanted
Dr. King to have an antagonist. Why not have it be LBJ?Alicia
BanksHuffingtonPost
There are actual audio tapes that LBJ made between himself and Dr.
King during the height of Selmas violence and confrontations that Ava
could have listened to help guide or shape her scenes between LBJ and
MLK that would have been more historically accurate to what actually
happened in their White House meetings. Furthermore, both LBJ and
MLK knew they could not get any major civil rights bills approved if
they publicly acted like they had a great and friendly relationship:
Historians agree the men challenged each other. But Julian Bond -who organized protests in Selma at the time -- says Johnson was a key
ally for King"He was a strong person, helping Dr. King and
suggesting to him, do this, do this," said Bond. "You can tell that by
listening to the tapes, the White House tapes."During his time in the
White House, Johnson recorded nearly a dozen phone calls with King.
He first called him after hearing King's comments on the death of John
F. Kennedy"I want to tell you how grateful I am and how worthy I
am going to try and be of all your hopes," said Johnson on the
recording"Well thank you very much," replied King. "I am so happy
to hear that ..."A year later as tensions over voting rights began to
boil in the south, Johnson can be heard encouraging King to bring more
attention to injustices"...If you could find the worst condition that you
run into, and get it on the radio and get it on television, get it every
place you can," said Johnson. "Pretty soon the fellow that didn't do
anything but follow, drive a tractor, he'll say "well that's not right.
That's not fair."In one recording though, Johnson tells his press
secretary to downplay his collaboration with King"If they ask you if
I've seen him, you tell them you don't know," said Johnson. "Don't get
in there that I'm in continuous touch with him."Historians say both
Johnson and King had to appear independent of each other in order to
reach their common goal: the right to vote for all AmericansMichelle
MillerCBSNews.com1-12-2015
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

Ava DuVernay also falsely portrayed in Selma that in the Spring of 1965
President Lyndon B. Johnson was so concerned or upset over MLK
pushing his Voting Rights Act agenda in Selma that he was the one who
approved J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI illegally wiretapping MLK. And
why would LBJ later approve Hoover sending MLKs wife Coretta
audio tapes of MLK allegedly having an affair? But once again this fact
in Selma can easily be proven false by just Googling MLK and FBI.
Former Johnson domestic policy aide Joseph Califano said Ava got her
LBJ and Hoover scene dead wrong and Andrew Young again had to
correct the false record and false history that Ava tried to establish in
Selma about LBJ and the FBI investigating King during Selma:
One point on which the film appears to be on weak footing: its suggestion
that LBJ ordered the FBI surveillance and harassment of King. That I
dont think is fair to LBJ, Young said. It was actually Robert Kennedy
who signed the order allowing the FBI to wiretap all of us. We knew we
were bugged, but that was before LBJ.Evan McCurryMediaite1-42015
We also have a very public document that FBI director James Comey
keeps on his desk to remind him of the rampant and unlawful abuses of
power the FBI used against U.S. citizens like Martin Luther, Jr. King:
As FBI director, Comey has directly confronted his own agencys
.troubled legacy on race, pointing out during his remarks that the FBI was
still overwhelmingly white and maleWe have to change the numbers,
he said. Hes mandated that new FBI agents visit the Martin Luther King
Jr. memorial in Washington as part of a history lesson on one of its
darkest chapters: founder J. Edgar Hoovers blackmail campaign against
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

the famed civil rights leader. Comey told the audience that he keeps on his
desk on the seventh floor of the Hoover Building a copy of Attorney
General Robert Kennedys approval of Hoovers request to wiretap King.
The reason I do those things is to ensure that we remember our mistakes
and that we learn from them, he said. One reason we cannot forget our
law enforcement legacy is that the people we serve cannot forget it,
either..Garrett M. GraffPolitico.com2-12-2015
Ava could have easily learned with Google, Bing or Yahoo Search when
she was doing her extensive page-one rewrite of Paul Webbs Selma
script that Hoover illegally wiretapped MLK two years prior to Selma
and was also leaking MLKs alleged sexual trysts two years before
Selma. Ava cannot blame Paul Webbs script for an inaccurate LBJ.
There was no need for a dramatic LBJ and Hoover against MLK scene:
King became a target of COINTELPRO following his famous I Have a
Dream speech at the March on Washington in 1963. We must mark him
now, intelligence boss William Sullivan wrote in a government memo,
as the most dangerous Negro of the future in this Nation from the
standpoint of communism, the Negro and national security.Marked he
was. Hoover authorized the FBI to conduct wiretaps against King and his
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. While they found no obvious
ties to communism, FBI agents did learn a lot about Kings romantic life
notably, his fondness for women outside of marriage That King was
a playboy was something of a little-known, mostly disregarded secret
within the civil rights movement, according to Yale professor Beverly
Gage. But federal officials seemed genuinely surprised by Kings
womanizing. In a memo, Hoover described King as a tom cat with
obsessive degenerate sexual urges.Hoover directed FBI agents to leak
details of Kings private life to the press though reporters never took an
interest in the story. When that failed, Hoover ordered agents to make
harassing phone calls and write threatening letters to King and members
of his family...Mathew KeysThe Blot Magazine11-13-2014
Avas arrogance of not citing a single historical source to back up her
new interpretation of LBJ in Selma may have greatly contributed the
most to her downfall among potential Academy Award voters. Why
would they reward Selma or Ava DuVernay as director for making
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

Tom Wilkinson portray LBJ as a civil rights villain and antagonist to


the Voting Rights Act of 1965 over known media facts or living persons
during that era that suggested the opposite in Selma. And by causing a
LBJ character controversy in Selma Ava allowed many conservative,
neutral and liberal news outlets to question her motivations. This
ultimately was a huge distraction from making mainstream media focus
solely on MLK in Selma and the struggle of Selmas proud and poor
Blacks to defeat racism and violent racists who perpetuated overt voter
disenfranchisement in Selma and almost everywhere else in the South.
4. Selma greatly underperformed at the box office and no one has yet to be
able to easily explain why Black moviegoers and other multicultural
moviegoers did not go to see it in large numbers--even though everyone
on Black Twitter was allegedly so upset that it got snubbed by the
Oscars on the week of its widest release on MLK weekend. Oscar voters
can be influenced, rightly or wrongly, if a highly touted and historic
civil rights era film and the first serious MLK film like Selma does not
do well with its primary target audience demo of African-Americans.
Weekend Box Office (January 9 - 11, 2015):

Jumping up to second place in its first weekend of nationwide play was


the MLK drama Selma which grossed $11.3M from 2,179 locations for a
mediocre $5,189 average. It was a disappointing showing for what has
been a hot film during awards season with the PG-13 pic earning rave
reviews across the board, plenty of nominations from numerous film
groups, and having a very relevant true story about civil rights for blacks
in America. The wide opening was less than half of the $24.6M for The
Butler and the $27.5M of 42 - other dramas about real African American
men from recent history. Both played in more theaters, however Selma's
average was down 39% vs. Butler's $8,400 and off 44% compared to 42's
$9,153But Selma does have plenty of upside in its near future. Next
weekend is likely to post strong numbers given that it is the long MLK
holiday frame. Plus many Oscar nominations are expected this Thursday
including Best Picture which will ignite interest immediately. In addition,
the Paramount release's glowing A+ CinemaScore indicates a bright road
ahead as those who did show up loved the film and will be recommending
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

it. The studio is hoping that this was more like a preview session which
will spark positive buzz going into next weekend when more people will be
in the mood to see Selma. Cume to date including the limited run over the
holidays is now $13.6MStudio research showed that Selma played older,
as expected, with 83% of the audience for the 1965-set film being over 25.
Females made up 61% for the Oprah-backed project. The racial
breakdown was 43% black, 40% white, and 17% other. Though a story
about famous Americans, the cast was led by England-born actors who
played Martin Luther King, Coretta Scott King, President Lyndon B.
Johnson, and Governor George Wallace. With a $20M production budget
and promising weeks ahead, Selma should be able to reach
profitabilityGitesh PandyaBoxofficeguru.com1-9-11-2015
Weekend Box Office (January 16 - 19, 2015):

Paramount's acclaimed Selma followed with $13.9M over the long


weekend with the three-day figure off 23% in its second session of wide
play. Despite rave reviews, an Oscar nod for Best Picture, and this being
MLK weekend, the Oprah-backed film still is not bringing out large
crowds and averaged $6,197 over four days. Cume is $31.5M after 11 days
of national release which is less than what the Jackie Robinson drama 42
grossed in just its first five days.Gitesh
PandyaBoxofficeguru.com1-16-19-2015
Weekend Box Office (January 23 - 25, 2015):
Best Picture contender Selma followed with an estimated $5.5M, down
37%, for a new cume of $39.2M for Paramount which is still an
underwhelming figure for an Oscar contender with so much love from
both critics and audiences. Over 300,000 tickets have been given away to
students for free, paid for by local business leaders, contributing about $23M of the gross. Even with many getting to see the acclaimed MLK movie
at no cost, Selma looks on track to end its run below such real-life dramas
as Ray, Coach Carter, 42, and The Butler. Three weeks into its wide
release and its total is still below the $48.2M final of Malcolm X from 22
years ago when ticket prices were half as much.Gitesh
PandyaBoxofficeguru.com1-16-19-2015

David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

Selma was widely released in well over 2,200 theaters for three straight
weeks before it started dropping 500 theaters a week for the next three
straight weeks. Presently, Selma has earned $50 Million and will
probably end up making $51 or $53 Million before it is completely out
of U.S. theaters. If there had been a huge box office turnout to see Selma
like what happened for American Sniper than you would have more film
critics, the media and Industry insiders all saying loudly that Selma was
snubbed and should have gotten more respect from Hollywood. But the
fact that Selma was not a hit at the box office makes that argument that
#OscarsSoWhite and #SelmaSnub limited to the people who spent more
time Tweeting their outrage about Selma than going with their friends
to see it once or twice before they saw Taken 3 or The Wedding Ringer.
5. Selma was not best film this year or even one of the best five nominated
films, Ava DuVernay was not the best director or even one of the best
five directors nominated and David Oyewole was not even the best
Black actor this year. Chadwick Boseman playing a multi-generational
James Brown for Get On Up got subbed and deserved to be nominated
as a Best actor choice more than David. I can actually say all those
statements because I did something that #OscarSoWhite or #SelmaSnub
supporters rarely or maybe are incapable of saying which is that I
actually saw all of the other Best Picture film nominees, American
Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation
Game, Selma, The Theory of Everything and Whiplash. One cannot
honestly, intelligently or credibly demand that Selma, Ava and David
faced a massive conspiracy winning Oscars unless you took the time to
see what Selma was being compared to for this years Oscars. I do not
think anyone in Hollywood thought Selma didnt deserve a Best Picture
nomination. But no one seriously thought that Ava would get a Best
Director Nomination after the DGA passed her over and David would
get a Best Actor nomination after SAG passed him over as well. But
everyone in the Hollywood trades did have a prevailing mindset that
Selmas Glory by John Legend and Common would easily win an
Oscar for Best Original Song for Oscar was never really in doubt or
question. Glory was going to get a gold statue because it was the best
song this year among its competitors. And one can see Oscar trends in
the same overwhelming way everyone knew and expected Frozens Let
It Go by Idina Menzel to win Best Original Song at last years Oscars.
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

I will list in order my Best Picture nominees as how would have voted if
I was an Academy Award member. I agree with Birdman winning Best
Picture because it was a very compelling and innovative drama. My
second choice would be The Theory of Everything because this is just an
amazing story of hope and triumph of the human spirit. My third choice
would be The Imitation Game because there is too much homophobia
today and maybe there would be way less if they saw this historic film.
My fourth selection is American Sniper because Clint Eastwood made
not only a superb war film, but a war film that was intensely personal.
My fifth selection is Whiplash because of the editing of Miles Teller
drumming and J.K. Simmons mesmerizing acidic performance. My
sixth selection is the wry, amusing and farcical The Grand Budapest
Hotel for really pushing the edge of being a real biopic and a fantasy
one. I give Selma the seventh place on my imaginary Best Picture List
and it would have been as high as third, fourth or fifth if it was not
riddled with historical inaccuracies between LBJ and MLK and the lack
of any strong or well-developed supporting actor roles. Ava actually had
Malcolm X in Selma and did absolutely nothing with him. And despite
Oprahs powerful scene of being cheated out of her right to vote we and
her attacking the racist Selma sheriff Oprah doesnt have any other
memorable or substantial dialogue in the film. The rest of the Selma
cast, especially the women characters, are merely window dressing roles
that do not stand out among any other similar civil rights biopics or
white savoir period films. My last Oscar Best Pic selection would have
been Boyhood only because Richard Linkletter failed to show Ethan
Hawke when his ex-wife and kids were victims of domestic abuse. So
those are my 5 reasons why Selma was not snubbed at the 2015 Oscars.
David L. $Money Train$ Watts FuTurXTV HHBMedia.com info@hhbmedia.com www.hhbmedia.com David Velo Stewart

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