Category Archives: Current Events

12 Years a Slave Part 1

12 Years a Slave Part 1

12 YEARS A SLAVE Press Conference | Festival 2013

Movie Review

The Blood and Tears, Not the Magnolias

‘12 Years a Slave’ Holds Nothing Back in Show of Suffering

“12 Years a Slave” isn’t the first movie about slavery in the United States — but it may be the one that finally makes it impossible for American cinema to continue to sell the ugly lies it’s been hawking for more than a century. Written by John Ridley and directed by Steve McQueen, it tells the true story of Solomon Northup, an African-American freeman who, in 1841, was snatched off the streets of Washington, and sold. It’s at once a familiar, utterly strange and deeply American story in which the period trappings long beloved by Hollywood — the paternalistic gentry with their pretty plantations, their genteel manners and all the fiddle-dee-dee rest — are the backdrop for an outrage.

More About This Movie

12 Years a Slave

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A Discussion of ’12 Years a Slave’

Nelson George discusses the film “12 Years a Slave” with its director, Steve McQueen; the artist Kara Walker; the actor Chiwetel Ejiofor; and the historian Eric Foner.

Francois Duhamel/Fox Searchlight Pictures

Chiwetel Ejiofor and Michael Fassbender in “12 Years a Slave.”

The story opens with Solomon (Chiwetel Ejiofor) already enslaved and cutting sugar cane on a plantation. A series of flashbacks shifts the story to an earlier time, when Solomon, living in New York with his wife and children, accepts a job from a pair of white men to play violin in a circus. Soon the three are enjoying a civilized night out in Washington, sealing their camaraderie with heaping plates of food, flowing wine and the unstated conviction — if only on Solomon’s part — of a shared humanity, a fiction that evaporates when he wakes the next morning shackled and discovers that he’s been sold. Thereafter, he is passed from master to master.

It’s a desperate path and a story that seizes you almost immediately with a visceral force. But Mr. McQueen keeps everything moving so fluidly and efficiently that you’re too busy worrying about Solomon, following him as he travels from auction house to plantation, to linger long in the emotions and ideas that the movie churns up. Part of this is pragmatic — Mr. McQueen wants to keep you in your seat, not force you out of the theater, sobbing — but there’s something else at work here. This is, he insists, a story about Solomon, who may represent an entire subjugated people and, by extension, the peculiar institution, as well as the American past and present. Yet this is also, emphatically, the story of one individual.

Unlike most of the enslaved people whose fate he shared for a dozen years, the real Northup was born into freedom. (His memoir’s telegraphing subtitle is “Narrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of New-York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853, From a Cotton Plantation Near the Red River, in Louisiana.”) That made him an exceptional historical witness, because even while he was inside slavery — physically, psychologically, emotionally — part of him remained intellectually and culturally at a remove, which gives his book a powerful double perspective. In the North, he experienced some of the privileges of whiteness, and while he couldn’t vote, he could enjoy an outing with his family. Even so, he was still a black man in antebellum America.

Mr. McQueen is a British visual artist who made a rough transition to movie directing with his first two features, “Hunger” and “Shame,” both of which were embalmed in self-promoting visuals. “Hunger” is the sort of art film that makes a show of just how perfectly its protagonist, the Irish dissident Bobby Sands (Michael Fassbender), smears his excrement on a prison wall. “Shame,” about a sex addict (Mr. Fassbender again), was little more than glossy surfaces, canned misery and preening directorial virtuosity. For “12 Years a Slave,” by contrast, Mr. McQueen has largely dispensed with the conventions of art cinema to make something close to a classical narrative; in this movie, the emphasis isn’t on visual style but on Solomon and his unmistakable desire for freedom.

There’s nothing ambivalent about Solomon. Mr. Ejiofor has a round, softly inviting face, and he initially plays the character with the stunned bewilderment of a man who, even chained, can’t believe what is happening to him. Not long after he’s kidnapped, Solomon sits huddled with two other prisoners on a slaver’s boat headed south. One man insists that they should fight their crew. A second disagrees, saying, “Survival’s not about certain death, it’s about keeping your head down.” Seated between them, Solomon shakes his head no. Days earlier he was home. “Now,” he says, “you tell me all is lost?” For him, mere survival cannot be enough. “I want to live.”

This is Solomon’s own declaration of independence, and an assertion of his humanity that sustains him. It’s also a seamlessly structured scene that turns a discussion about the choices facing enslaved people — fight, submit, live — into cinema. In large part, “12 Years a Slave” is an argument about American slavery that, in image after image, both reveals it as a system (signified in one scene by the sights and ominous, mechanical sounds of a boat water wheel) and demolishes its canards, myths and cherished symbols. There are no lovable masters here or cheerful slaves. There are also no messages, wagging fingers or final-act summations or sermons. Mr. McQueen’s method is more effective and subversive because of its primarily old-fashioned, Hollywood-style engagement.

More About This Movie

12 Years a Slave

Related

A Discussion of ’12 Years a Slave’

Nelson George discusses the film “12 Years a Slave” with its director, Steve McQueen; the artist Kara Walker; the actor Chiwetel Ejiofor; and the historian Eric Foner.

It’s a brilliant strategy that recognizes the seductions of movies that draw you wholly into their narratives and that finds Mr. McQueen appropriating the very film language that has been historically used to perpetuate reassuring (to some) fabrications about American history. One of the shocks of “12 Years a Slave” is that it reminds you how infrequently stories about slavery have been told on the big screen, which is why it’s easy to name exceptions, like Richard Fleischer’s demented, at times dazzling 1975 film, “Mandingo.” The greater jolt, though, is that “12 Years a Slave” isn’t about another Scarlett O’Hara, but about a man who could be one of those anonymous, bent-over black bodies hoeing fields in the opening credits of “Gone With the Wind,” a very different “story of the Old South.”

At one point in Northup’s memoir, which was published a year after “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and eight years before the start of the Civil War, he interrupts an account of his own near-lynching to comment on the man largely to blame for the noose around his neck. “But whatever motive may have governed the cowardly and malignant tyrant,” he writes, “it is of no importance.” It doesn’t matter why Northup was strung up in a tree like a dead deer in the summer sun, bathed in sweat, with little water to drink. What matters is what has often been missing among the economic, social and cultural explanations of American slavery and in many of its representations: human suffering. “My wrists and ankles, and the cords of my legs and arms began to swell, burying the rope that bound them into the swollen flesh.”

Part of the significance of Northup’s memoir is its description of everyday life. Mr. McQueen recreates, with texture and sweep, scenes of slavery’s extreme privations and cruelties, but also its work rhythms and routines, sunup to sundown, along with the unsettling intimacies it produced among the owners and the owned. In Louisiana, Solomon is sold by a brutish trader (Paul Giamatti) to an outwardly decent plantation owner, William Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch), who, in turn, sells him to a madman and drunk, Edwin Epps (Mr. Fassbender). In his memoir, Northup refers to Ford charitably, doubtless for the benefit of the white readers who were the target of his abolitionist appeal. Freed from that burden, the filmmakers can instead show the hypocrisies of such paternalism.

It’s on Epps’s plantation that “12 Years a Slave” deepens, and then hardens. It’s also where the existential reality of what it meant to be enslaved, hour after hour, decade after decade, generation after generation, is laid bare, at times on the flayed backs of Epps’s human property, including that of his brutalized favorite, Patsey (Lupita Nyong’o). Mr. Fassbender, skittish and weirdly spiderlike, grabs your attention with curdled intensity. He’s so arresting that at first it seems as if the performance will soon slip out of Mr. McQueen’s control, and that the character will become just another irresistibly watchable, flamboyant heavy. Movie villainy is so easy, partly because it allows actors to showboat, but also because a lot of filmmakers can’t resist siding with power.

Mr. McQueen’s sympathies are as unqualified as his control. There is much to admire about “12 Years a Slave,” including the cleareyed, unsentimental quality of its images — this is a place where trees hang with beautiful moss and black bodies — and how Mr. Ejiofor’s restrained, open, translucent performance works as a ballast, something to cling onto, especially during the frenzies of violence. These are rightly hard to watch and bring to mind the startling moment in “Maus,” Art Spiegelman’s cartoon opus about the Holocaust, in which he asks his “shrink” to explain what it felt like to be in Auschwitz. “Boo! It felt like that. But ALWAYS!” The genius of “12 Years a Slave” is its insistence on banal evil, and on terror, that seeped into souls, bound bodies and reaped an enduring, terrible price.

“12 Years a Slave” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Slave-trade violence.

12 Years a Slave

Opens on Friday in Los Angeles and Manhattan.

Directed by Steve McQueen; written by John Ridley, based on the book by Solomon Northup; director of photography, Sean Bobbitt; edited by Joe Walker; music by Hans Zimmer; production design by Adam Stockhausen; costumes by Patricia Norris; produced by Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Bill Pohlad, Mr. McQueen, Arnon Milchan and Anthony Katagas; released by Fox Searchlight Pictures. Running time: 2 hours 14 minutes.

WITH: Chiwetel Ejiofor (Solomon Northup), Michael Fassbender (Edwin Epps), Benedict Cumberbatch (Ford), Paul Dano (Tibeats), Garret Dillahunt (Armsby), Paul Giamatti (Freeman), Scoot McNairy (Brown), Lupita Nyong’o (Patsey), Adepero Oduye (Eliza), Sarah Paulson (Mistress Epps), Brad Pitt (Bass), Michael Kenneth Williams (Robert), Alfre Woodard (Mistress Shaw), Chris Chalk (Clemens), Taran Killam (Hamilton) and Bill Camp (Radburn).

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Mitch Mustain does a fine job at 10-14-13 Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 4

2010: Notre Dame vs. USC

Below in this article you will see that Mitch Mustain did not say it was wrong to pull him. I am glad that he did not say that because we were winning with him but it was because we had the best two running backs that ever played together. He did have a big pass against Alabama to Ben Cleveland that was the game winner but Mustain also had some key interceptions through the season if I remember right. When he was pulled against South Carolina we went on to win and we had our best game of the season the next week against Tennessee and I have put a story about that this one that discusses the film about Mitch Mustain.

Doc Harper: Mitch Mustain Movie Gives Fascinating Glimpse At Polarizing Story

Doc Harper Bio Page
The Identity Theft of Mitch Mustain opens with a home video of Mustain as a small child playing football in his yard, just as millions of other children did at the same age. Nolan Richardson’s voice narrates over the raw footage, describing sports in the most innocent terms.  “Sports are good!” he exclaims, citing the important role sports can have in teaching teamwork and organization and so on and so forth.

Then, the movie spends the next 90 minutes apparently trying to disprove that theory.

The story involves most of all the worst parts of college sports. The filthiness of recruiting. Coaches pushing their own agendas at the expense of their players. Inappropriately meddlesome boosters. Media and fans twisting teenagers into demigods. Power, corruption, deceit, influence, ambition. It’s all very Game of Thrones, with the Broyles Center taking place of the Iron Throne and everybody forgetting that the point of high-level college football is the crystal football. And no dragons.

It’s red meat for those that despise the extravagance of big-time college athletics.

The movie is well-done. Interviews with Mustain, several members of the Arkansas media and a few others are inter-spliced with old game and news footage. Those who have followed the story closely through the years may not find much new information (although Mustain’s description of former USC teammate Mark Sanchez was an unexpected highlight), but it does provide an interesting perspective on who Mustain was and is and how he’s dealt with the events that, at least to many people in his home state, will always define him.

This, in effect, is where the title of the film comes from.  That Mustain, regardless of what actually happened in those tumultuous years in Fayetteville or will happen in the future, has been strongly defined one way or the other by nearly everyone in Arkansas and around the country who’s ever heard some piece of his story. The film even features quick clips from locals around what is presumably the Fayetteville area giving their varied opinions on the quarterback.  To the public, Mitch Mustain is much like a one-hit wonder band. Regardless whatever happens, the Hanson boys will always be the kids responsible for “MMMBop”.

But the title is also somewhat of a misnomer, as Mitch Mustain doesn’t come across at somebody stuck in a cage of the world’s expectations. He comes across as a 25-year old still searching for his own identity. Some kids, as Mustain describes USC quarterback Matt Barkley, have their future figured out when they’re small kids. Some people figure out who they are in college, and some people are well into their 20s before they figure it out. The end of the movie focuses on the many different things Mustain has tried his hand at doing since leaving USC, which include professional baseball, selling cars, and his current role as an Arena League quarterback. He doesn’t come across as angry, bitter, or regretful. He comes across as a young guy trying different things out.

Mitch Mustain is frequently described in the film as having difficulty being a high-profile quarterback without having the personality of a typical jock. He’s described as a shy, introverted guy who is interested in things like military history and broader culture, who just happens to be good at this thing called football.  That’s understandable.

But even though football may not be his primary interest, he’s still clinging to it after he’s had several opportunities to remove himself from it. Playing in the Arena League suggests he either actually loves football quite a bit, or at least finds the lifestyle comfortable. He’s obviously free to leave the sport behind and use his degree in international relations to begin a different type of career for himself, but he’s choosing to continue playing the sport with which most people identify him with.  And good luck to him for that.

If anything, you leave the movie just hoping Mustain is eventually able to figure out what he wants to do and put the insanity of his past behind him.

It’s very easy for people to look at someone like Mustain and try to pinpoint exactly what it is he should do with his life. It’s something we do all-too-frequently with recruits choosing colleges as well as generally every public figure facing a choice. But no matter what we think of Mustain playing Arena League football or selling cars or talking about joining the military, it’s up to Mustain to figure that out for himself, just as it is for all of us.

Our identities are not something that just happens instantaneously, even if others may define us by one action. A person’s true sense of self is developed slowly over time. Mustain’s life experiences aren’t normal. They’re not even normal for a high-profile quarterback. It’s a unique story that’s taken him time to make sense of it all. Mitch Mustain is a young man trying to figure out what he can do with his life. His identity hasn’t been stolen. It’s still being developed.

I watched it with The Wife, who lived through the story as a fan along with me. I asked her if the movie made her feel any differently about Mustain or his saga and she said that it did. She feels she has a much more thorough understanding about the story and sees Mustain in a much more positive light.

Overall I think it’s a good movie. Even if you think you know the whole story, it may still be worthwhile to see it. If nothing else, it is interesting to see Mustain openly discuss the whole thing. Recommended.

One really big pet peeve I have with this saga, and it was relied on heavily in the film, is the reference to Mustain being 8-0 as a starter. While that’s technically true in the same sense that it’s technically true to argue Tim Tebow led the Denver Broncos to the second round of the NFL Playoffs, it doesn’t exactly tell the entire story.

Yes, Mustain showed flashes of greatness as a freshman (Vanderbilt, Ole Miss, and the game-winner to Ben Cleveland against Alabama), but he also had his share of struggles on the field. Infamously, he only threw one pass in the eighth victory over South Carolina. It’s not like he was playing really amazing football, threw a pick and then was pulled that night in Columbia (to his credit, Mustain admits as much in the film).

Can we please give more credit to Darren McFadden for the success of 2006? From the Auburn game on, McFadden became a legend that season, earning his first of two Heisman runner-ups. I know we all know that. But McFadden and Felix Jones only received a couple of passing references in the movie. Specifically, that Carolina game was one of McFadden’s greatest games as a Razorback.

Mustain deserves his credit for what he did well on the field that year, but so does McFadden, Jones, Hillis, Monk and everybody else. All the more reason for McFadden and others to be featured on some sort of in-stadium ring of honor-type designation.

Okay, that’s it. Rant over.

UPDATE: I’ve gotten several questions about this and I want to make it clear: at no point in the movie does Mustain actively promote that he was 8-0 and/or that pulling him was a mistake.  At no point does he take credit from anybody else for those victories – he doesn’t even give credit to himself. Mustain comes across well in the film and is very humble about the 2006 season. He describes himself as “trying to keep [his] head above water.” He does mention the rest of the team as being key to the 10 wins the team earned that season, and even that he never believed he was the best option to quarterback the team that year.

This rant is directed not towards Mustain, but to any fan or media member (some of whom are included in the movie, many of whom are not but easily found on message boards and social media) who point to the 8-0 stat as definitive proof that Mustain was the trigger for that team’s success. There were, remarkably, 14 NFL Draft picks on that team. It was one of the most loaded Arkansas teams since joining the SEC. Mustain was a big part of many of those victories, but it was much more than any single player. He admits as much.

In other words, this isn’t even directed so much at the movie, but to anyone still using this general talking point.  If Mustain’s story was still a timely topic on a routine basis, I’d save this for that time, but this story doesn’t come up as often as it used to, so I wanted to make sure I got this out. And it is referenced in the film, so I felt it was apt.

McFadden, Arkansas rout Tennessee

Nov 12, 2006 – 5:08 AM FAYETTEVILLE, Arkansas (Ticker) — No matter where he lined up, Darren McFadden caused Tennessee tons of problems.

McFadden rushed for 181 yards and two touchdowns and passed for a score as No. 11 Arkansas remained perfect in Southeastern Conference play with a 31-14 rout of the 13th-ranked Volunteers.

Marcus Monk had eight catches for 137 yards and two TDs for the Razorbacks (9-1, 6-0 SEC West), who can clinch a berth against sixth-ranked Florida in the conference championship game with a win next week at lowly Mississippi State.

“Our guys see things and see that we might be able to win an SEC title, and they are excited,” Razorbacks coach Houston Nutt said. “They know what’s in front of them and they are loving it.”

Arkansas is 6-0 in SEC play for the first time.

“With what happened in the Auburn game (a loss to Georgia), we knew coming in that if we won tonight we would have more cushion in the SEC,” McFadden said. “The offensive line did a great job opening the holes tonight and I just had to hit them hard.”

A sophomore, McFadden gave Arkansas a 14-0 lead with a 17-yard run with 12:37 remaining in the second quarter. After Tennessee halved its deficit on a 27-yard pass from first-time starter Jonathan Crompton to Robert Meachem, McFadden restored a two-score advantage with a 12-yard TD toss to Monk with 6:51 to go in the period.

“When Darren is at quarterback we are very versatile and can keep the defense guessing,” Monk said. “He can hand it off to Felix (Jones), throw it or run the ball.”

McFadden added a five-yard TD run with 2:46 left in the half, and Jeremy Davis opened a 31-7 cushion on a 28-yard field goal with 9:40 to play.

“It’s hard to simulate the speed of No. 5 (McFadden),” Vols coach Phillip Fulmer said. “He is the best back we have seen this year.”

A redshirt freshman taking over for the injured Erik Ainge, Crompton completed 16-of-31 passes for 174 yards, two TDs and an interception for Tennessee (7-3, 3-3 East), which saw its slim chances of winning its division disappear with a 28-24 home loss to Louisiana State last week.

“I expected it to be loud and hostile, but I don’t think it affected me as much as I thought it would,” Crompton said. “(But) I wasn’t as mentally prepared for (the environment) as I should have been.”

“(He’s) a young guy,” Fulmer said. “This environment would get to anybody. It’s tough to ask him to come here and carry this team.”

Casey Dick, who took over for true freshman quarterback Mitch Mustain early in a 26-20 win last week at South Carolina, went 10-of-15 for 154 yards.

“Some teams in front of us in the polls lost today, so it gave us some opportunity,” Dick said. “Now after our win tonight, hopefully we will get respect.”

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The Staple Singers Part 5

The Staple Singers Part 5

The Staple Singers – I’ll Take You There (1972)

Uploaded on Sep 10, 2009

There are certain songs that were so universally popular that they define moments in our lives. Well the Staple Singers’ “I’ll Take You There” definitely qualifies as one of those songs. Written by Alvertis Isbell, produced by Al Bell this song was the number one song nationally by June of 1972 and it hasn’t stopped playing somewhere since!

There sound has never been duplicated and I don’t believe it ever will. Here’s just a small taste of a classic.

Here they are: Pops, Mavis, Cleotha and Yvonne hailing from Chicago by way of Mississippi! The Staple Singers!

That pattern finally changed with Staples’ 2004 album Have a Little Faith, her first release following the death of her father in 2000. Have a Little Faith received rave reviews, paving the way for Staples to achieve a late career renaissance with the albums We’ll Never Turn Back (2007) and Live: Hope at the Hideout (2008). Her most recent album, 2010’s You Are Not Alone, won the Grammy Award for Best Americana Album.

Impact on Music

Mavis Staples will doubtlessly go down in history as one of the greatest gospel singers of all time, the breathtaking voice powering one of America’s great family bands, The Staple Singers. From the traditional gospel music of the 1950s to the 1960s protest songs that underscored some of the decade’s most dramatic social changes, from the self-empowerment anthems of the 1970s to the soulful love tunes and mature Americana of more recent years, Staples and her family have consistently created some of the best and most inspirational music of the past half-century.

And although Staples is now more than 70 years old, she has no intention of giving up the calling that has consumed her since she was a child. “Ain’t no stopping me, I will sing,” Staples declared in a recent interview. “You know, you’d have to come and scoop me off the stage. I’m gonna sing till I die.”

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Sometimes when I get down about Arkansas Football like I am now after losing 52-7 to South Carolina, I like to think about the years that Arkansas was still in the hunt for the national title in November. There are not that many years since Lou Holtz left that you can say that. 1998, 2006 and 2011 come to mind. In 2006 we lost to LSU in Little Rock and I was at that game. In 2011 we had a chance to beat LSU and we would be in a 3 way tie for the SEC West and possibly go to the SEC Championship game and we even started that game with two quick touchdowns to take a 14-0 lead but we could not hold on.

The best opportunity to win a national title may have been the one that we let slip through our fingers in 1998 in November in Knoxville, Tennessee.

________________

72560375_crop_north Former Tennessee RB Travis Henry
Tom Hauck/Getty Images

Every Friday, The SEC Blog will feature one classic game from the storied history of SEC football.

For almost every team that wins a national championship, there’s always that one game that stands out. That one game that’s viewed as an escape more than a win.

In 1998, the Arkansas game was “that game” for the Tennessee Volunteers.

The game matched two unbeaten teams, with the Vols sporting the No. 1 ranking while the Razorbacks were ranked No. 9.

Arkansas capitalized on two Tennessee first half turnovers to surge out to a 21-10 lead at the half, stunning the crowd of 106.365 fans at Neyland Stadium.

The two teams swapped field goals and Tennessee quarterback Tee Martin scored from four yards out to cut Arkansas’ lead to 24-20 heading into the fourth quarter.

For more than 12 minutes in the fourth quarter, the two teams weren’t able to crack the scoreboard, but it wasn’t without excitement.

Vols’ defensive back Deon Grant blocked a field goal attempt midway through the fourth, but Tennessee didn’t capitalize. Time was running out, and Arkansas looked like it was going to win this battle and keep its national championship hopes alive.

Arkansas was attempting to ice the game away with under three minutes to play, but the drive stalled and the Hogs were forced to punt from their won 41-yard line with 2:56 to play. The snap sailed over Hogs’ punter Chris Akin’s head, and Akin kicked the ball out of the end zone for a safety.

Clint Stoerner fumbles with under 2:00 to play / Photo Courtesy: Smokeys-Trail.com

Trailing 24-22, the Vols couldn’t move against Arkansas’ defense, and turned it over on downs with under two minutes to play. The Vols needed a miracle.

They got it.

Needing only one first down to put the game away, Arkansas quarterback Clint Stoerner stumbled after taking the snapped, dropped the ball on the turf, and Billy Ratliff recovered on the Hogs’ 43-yard line with 1:43 to play.

Tennessee running back Travis Henry ran five straight times, scoring the game-winning touchdown with 31 seconds left.

The 28-24 win kept Tennessee’s dream season alive, which culminated with a 23-16 win over Florida State in the Fiesta Bowl to claim the BCS National Championship.

__________

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USC QB #16 Mitch Mustain Highlights 2010

I remember thinking that Arkansas’ best victory in 2006 was over the ranked Tennessee Vols in Fayetteville. It was a very exciting game and Arkansas held on at the end and won. Mitch Mustain actually did not play in that game. That was the first game that he did not play in. He had been benched the game before.

Mustain: UA stay just ‘bad situation’

By: Jeremy Muck
Published: Tuesday, October 15, 2013

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Former Arkansas Razorbacks QB Mitch Mustain talks to the touchdown club October 14, 2013 at the Embassy Suites in Little Rock.

Photo by Melissa Sue Gerrits

Former Arkansas Razorbacks QB Mitch Mustain talks to the touchdown club October 14, 2013 at the Embassy Suites in Little Rock.

There’s no love lost between former Arkansas quarterback Mitch Mustain and former Razorbacks coach Houston Nutt.

When asked if he had talked to Nutt since transferring from Arkansas in January 2007, Mustain said he hadn’t.

“It was a bad situation from the beginning,” Mustain said. “There were a lot of promises made that shouldn’t have been made. A lot of expectations created that looking back now couldn’t have been fulfilled. It was the nature of it. You’re not going to be able to change somebody like that.”

Mustain, originally from Springdale, spoke tothe Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday afternoon at the Embassy Suites in Little Rock, in part to promote Matthew Wolfe’s documentary, The Identity Theft of Mitch Mustain, and received a standing ovation from the crowd of more than 150 people.

The film will be shown at 8 p.m. Friday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival.

Mustain, who was the Gatorade, Parade Magazine and USA Today Player of the Year in 2005 as a senior at Springdale High School under Coach Gus Malzahn, was the nation’s top quarterback prospect in 2006 and signed with Arkansas.

Mustain was part of the Springdale Five, college recruits on the Bulldogs state championship team that also included receivers Andrew Norman and Damian Williams, tight end Ben Cleveland and offensive lineman Bartley Webb. Mustain, Norman, Williams and Cleveland signed with Arkansas and Webb went to Notre Dame, which also recruited Mustain.

Mustain took over as the starting quarterback in his second game at Arkansas, which had hired Malzahn to be Nutt’s offensive coordinator. Mustain started the next eight games, and Arkansas won them all, though he played a minor role in the eighth victory, 26-20 at South Carolina.

Mustain was benched after throwing an interception on Arkansas’ first series against South Carolina in favor of Casey Dick, who quarterbacked Arkansas to two more victories – over Tennessee and Mississippi State – to clinch the SEC West title.

But Arkansas lost its final three games – to LSU (31-26) in the regular-season finale at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock, to Florida (38-28 in the SEC Championship Game) and to Wisconsin (17-14) in the Capital One Bowl to finish 10-4.

Mustain didn’t start another game for the Razorbacks after being pulled from the South Carolina game.

“It was destined from the beginning not to work, but that’s the way it worked out,” Mustain said. “They hired Gus and they persuaded all of us [to sign with Arkansas].”

Malzahn left Arkansas after one season to go to Tulsa to be the offensive coordinator. Mustain transferred to Southern California in 2007 and was mainly a backup behind Mark Sanchez and Matt Barkley in his careerwith the Trojans.

Mustain said he still has a close relationship with his former high school coach, Malzahn, who went from Tulsa to Auburn as offensive coordinator before taking over as head coach at Arkansas State last season.

Malzahn, now head coach at Auburn, offered Mustain a job on his staff with the Tigers, but Mustain turned it down.

That’s because Mustain, 25, is still playing football, now as a quarterback for the Arena Football League’s San Jose Sabercats. Mustain completed 50 of 93 passes for 632 yards, 11 touchdowns and 3 interceptions in 11 games for the Sabercats, who finished 13-5 this past season.

Playing indoor football, something he had not previously experienced, has been an adjustment, Mustain said.

“You have the same speed,” he said. “The guys have been there for a while. It’s a quarter of the area of a big field, so it moves very quick. You can’t do a lot of things you can do on a big field, but you can do some things a little different.”

Before getting back into football, Mustain pitched in the Chicago White Sox organization in 2012 before leaving baseball because of elbow pain.

“At my age, it was tough anyway,” he said. “I was a 24-year-old rookie free agent. It’s a tough sport. I told them I have a whole new respect for it. It was too much wear and tear.

“I needed to make a decision if I wanted to press on and risk having a career-ending injury or getting back into football, which is what I love and what I want to do.”

Mustain, who also works at a firefighting training facility in Mesa, Ariz., mentioned the Naval Academy as a place where he would have liked to have attended school. And he did express regret about going to Arkansas, to some degree.

“Part of me wonders sometimes, ‘Hey, I shouldn’t have taken it,’ ” Mustain said. “At the end of the day, you can’t second-guess yourself that way.

“I made the decision based on what was best for me at that time, what I wanted to do at that time. It didn’t work out. That’s just the way it goes.

“I’ve had good opportunities since that have come from that. I don’t complain too much about it.”

Sports, Pages 17 on 10/15/2013

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The Staple Singers Part 4

The Staple Singers Part 4

Staple Singers – Lets Do It Again

The Staple Singers Respect Yourself Live Filmed Performance 1972

Singing for Civil Rights

In 1963, with their celebrity rising thanks to a nationwide folk and blues revival, the Staple Singers delivered a concert in Montgomery, Alabama, that was attended by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., and they had the opportunity to speak with the civil rights leader after the show. The meeting had a profound effect on the group’s direction,

and for the next several years they wrote songs exclusively in support of the American civil rights movement.

“I really like this man’s message,” Pops Staples said of King. “And I think if he can preach it, we can sing it.” The Staple Singers’ civil rights songs included “March Up Freedom’s Highway,” about the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery marches, “Washington We’re Watching You,” “It’s a Long Walk to D.C.” and “Why Am I Treated So Bad,” in honor of the Little Rock Nine. “We sing about what’s happening in the world today, and whatever’s wrong we try to fix it through a song,” Staples recalled her father explaining. “We’re living in dark times, troubled times; we wanted to spread a ray of light on the world.”

Romantic Relationships

Around the same time, Mavis Staples carried on a romance with folk legend Bob Dylan. Dylan had long admired The Staple Singers, covering their song “Dying Man’s Prayer” in 1962, and the Staple Singers had in turn recorded several Dylan compositions. In the late 1960s, Dylan proposed marriage to Staples; although they had dated for seven years, she turned him down.

Although Staples has since come to regret her decision not to marry Dylan, she explained her reasoning at the time: “We had gotten with Dr. King and I was young and stupid, and I was thinking Dr. King wouldn’t want me to marry a white guy.” Dylan has referred to Staples ever since as “the love that I lost.”

Staples was briefly married to a mortician named A.R. Leak, Sr. in the early 1970s, but the pair divorced when Leak demanded that she give up her music career to stay home. “He wanted me to stop singing!” Staples recalled with incredulity. “And I told him I was singing before I met him. It was just a man thing, just want me at home. No way! I keep my songs and I continue to sing, and I let you go.”

Commercial Success

The Staple Sisters achieved their greatest success in the early 1970s as they moved away from traditional gospel and protest songs to record empowerment anthems such as “Respect Yourself” and “I’ll Take You There” and soulful R&B love songs like “Let’s Do It Again,” their only song to reach No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart.

Although their popularity waned somewhat in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Staple Singers continued to score modest R&B hits with songs like “I Honestly Love You,” “H-A-T-E (Don’t Live Here Anymore),” “Slippery People” and “Nobody Can Make It on Their Own.”

Solo Career

Beginning with her 1969 self-titled debut solo album, Mavis Staples also maintained a solo career simultaneously while she worked with the Staple Singers. And while she released eight solo albums during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, all of which received high praise from those critics who noticed, none of her solo material found much of an audience.

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Is South Carolina that good?

tch for South Carolina

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Is South Carolina that good? They beat my hogs 52-7 and I think we looked awful and they looked great. South Carolina plays Tennessee this week and they might get another win there. However, I think the Vols may upset them and that will prove my theory that South Carolina is good but not great. If they thump Tennessee then we will have to wait till they take on undefeated Missouri.

ESPN article below on 52-7 trouncing SC gave the hogs last Saturday:

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Even Steve Spurrier felt badly about ruining Arkansas’ homecoming fun — at least a little bit.

The South Carolina coach, however, wasn’t about to complain about a complete-game effort in a 52-7 win over the Razorbacks on Saturday.

Led by Connor Shaw‘s four touchdowns, the No. 14 Gamecocks (5-1, 3-2 Southeastern Conference) won their fourth straight game after a loss to Georgia on Sept. 7. They did so in convincing fashion, scoring the game’s final 52 points and ensuring they didn’t let a big lead slip away for a fourth straight week.

The margin of victory was South Carolina’s largest on the road under Spurrier, who earned his first win at Arkansas (3-4, 0-3) since 2005 — his first season with the Gamecocks.

“I do feel badly for Arkansas,” Spurrier said. “It’s no fun getting your butt beat like this, at home on homecoming and all that.”

All-American defensive end Jadeveon Clowney returned for South Carolina after missing last week’s game against Kentucky. He finished with just one tackle, though Shaw and running back Mike Davis more than picked up any slack.

Shaw was 19 of 28 for 219 yards and three touchdowns, running for another score as the Gamecocks outgained the Razorbacks 537-248.

Davis, the SEC’s leading rusher, added 128 yards on 19 carries.

The loss is the fourth straight for Arkansas, matching first-year coach Bret Bielema’s longest losing streak of his career. The former Wisconsin coach dropped four straight while with the Badgers in 2008, but none were worse than Saturday’s 45-point defeat.

The Razorbacks are 0-3 in the SEC for the first time since 2007.

“Today is a day that you have to put it in the memory bank and vow that you’ll never let it happen again as a head coach, as an assistant coach, a coordinator and a player,” Bielema said.

“Just unacceptable,” he added.

Arkansas’ Brandon Allen was just 4 of 12 for 30 yards, throwing a first-half interception that led to Davis’ touchdown run.

The lone highlight for the Razorbacks was a 6-yard touchdown run by Alex Collins on the game’s opening drive, putting them up 7-0. Little else went right after that — including a sequence late in the first half that crushed any hope Arkansas might have had.

After a fake punt by the Razorbacks failed, Shaw led South Carolina to a fourth-and-2 at the Arkansas 7-yard line with 25 seconds left. Rather than try the field goal while ahead 17-7, Spurrier elected to attempt to convert the fourth down.

Shaw did just that, running three yards. After a spike, the senior found Bruce Ellington from 4 yards out for his second touchdown catch of the game — putting South Carolina up 24-7 at halftime.

“We felt like another field goal there wouldn’t look as good as another touchdown,” Spurrier said. “If we don’t get it, I look stupid. I we make this, it makes me look smart.”

Ellington finished with six catches for 96 yards.

The Gamecocks stretched their lead to 31-7 on the opening drive of the second half when Shaw connected with Damiere Byrd for a 45-yard touchdown pass.

Shaw later added a 10-yard TD run for his fourth score of the game — a perfect opening to a three-game road trip that includes Tennessee next week and undefeated Missouri after that.

“We knew going into this stretch it was going to be a tough three weeks in the SEC, starting with Arkansas,” Shaw said. “We knew we had to have a tough mentality, playing on the road, and we really didn’t have that here two years ago. So we wanted to come in here and make a statement.”

After Arkansas opened the game with a seven-play, 64-yard touchdown drive, the Razorbacks had just one first down the rest of the half. They went three-and-out on their last four possessions, and their only other drive with a first down ended when Allen threw an interception to South Carolina’s Victor Hampton.

Davis scored one play later on a 6-yard touchdown run to give the Gamecocks a 10-3 lead, and that was just the start of the fun — at least for South Carolina.

Bielema’s previous worst loss was a 48-7 defeat to Penn State in 2008. Arkansas travels to No. 1 Alabama next week.

“It was very frustrating,” Allen said. “A lot of things didn’t go right. A lot of things weren’t clicking. Any time that happens, it’s frustrating as an offense, and as a whole team.”

 

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Mitch Mustain does a fine job at 10-14-13 Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

Notre Dame USC 2010 Football Highlights

Mitch said that he went to USC because he thought that they were great at developing NFL quarterbacks and he did not like the direction the hogs offensive was headed. He had been promised that the offensive would become more open but that did not happen and that is why he left for USC. He thought Kiffin did some good things and some not so good things. He brought several NFL coaches and put them on his staff but he was not good of running the program from the top.

Columnist

<:ARTICLE>

12:00 am – October 15, 2013

Nothing off limits for Mustain

By Harry King

Arkansas News Bureau

hking@arkansasnews.com

LITTLE ROCK — Impressed by Mitch Mustain’s humility and vocabulary, an astute observer to the right praised the young man on both counts only minutes into Mustain’s speech to the Little Rock Touchdown Club. After the former quarterback at the center of a controversy that rippled through the entire state had completed a Q and A, add frank, smart and stand-up guy to Mustain’s profile.

Caving to a perceived obligation to listen to the former High School Player of the Year from Springdale who played at Arkansas for a year before transferring to Southern Cal, the time was well spent. Mustain described himself as a “terribly boring person,” but he isn’t, and dismissed his long list of accomplishments by saying they can be found on the Internet.

He also came across as somebody who knew in his gut that Houston Nutt would never surrender the offense to Gus Malzahn, but signed with Arkansas anyway.

Mustain’s appearance before the Touchdown Club dovetails with the showing of “The Identity Theft of Mitch Mustain” on Friday night at a documentary film festival in Hot Springs. He talked a little about the film (“I think it answers a lot of questions”), about playing football in his front yard, about listening to Paul Eells do play-by-play of Razorback football, and about wanting to be a Razorback. Back then, he didn’t even know Southern Cal had a football team, he said.

Before climbing on a stool in front of almost 300, Mustain made it clear that nothing was off limits. Club president David Bazzel took advantage, asking about the role of Mustain’s divorced parents and the skills of Pete Carroll vs. Lane Kiffin, among other things.

Asked about Nutt early on, Mustain said it was “a lot easier to talk to the camera.” Both Nutt and Malzahn were offered opportunities to appear in the film, but both declined. Mustain said he thought Nutt might accept the offer, but that he knew Malzahn would not and included the sweeping indictment: “There were a lot of promises made that shouldn’t have been made.”

He also said that shortly after unsupervised workouts began in the summer of 2006, there were several clues that the Malzahn hurry-up offense was not going to replace Nutt’s run-first approach. He said he asked Malzahn for an explanation and Malzahn told him that the transition would take time. Nutt said something similar earlier this year.

“It was kind of destined not to work,” Mustain said.

He said he had no regrets about comments critical of Nutt after the Arkansas coach, reveling in a 2005 victory over Ole Miss, told Razorback announcer Chuck Barrett: “That was a called play Chuck and I called it Chuck.” Mustain said Monday that Nutt’s comments were “very unprofessional.”

Nutt learned about Mustain’s soon-to-be published comments shortly before Arkansas played at South Carolina in ‘06 and Mustain was benched after his first pass was intercepted.

Unhappy at Arkansas because “I didn’t buy into the philosophy of what they were doing,” he transferred to USC where Carroll was in charge. Carroll could handle any situation, knew the name of every player, and what made them tick. For instance, Mustain did not respond to yelling so Carroll talked to him. “I can’t remember what he said, but I felt six inches tall and like I had let the whole world down,” he said.

Asked what he would do differently, he said, only half-joking, “I would have gone to the Naval Academy.”

Mustain, who has a degree from USC, works at a high-tech firefighting training center in Arizona, and still plays Arena League Football, said fans still wish him luck “even if they don’t understand.”

Before taking questions, he spent a couple of minutes talking about Eells and how the Little Rock television sportscaster who was killed in a car crash in the summer before Mustain’s freshman year had given him a T-shirt with a handwritten, “Can’t wait to call your games.”

“It’s probably better that he wasn’t here for that mess,” Mustain said.

———-

Harry King is sports columnist for Stephens Media’s Arkansas News Bureau. His e-mail address is

Mitch Mustain does a fine job at 10-14-13 Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

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Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 14 (UPDATED)

Figuring out Lorde’s Christian Roots Part 14

UPDATED (David Bruce commented “She didn’t say she was a big Jesus believer. She said she was a big Yeezus believer. Which is a Kanye West album. Which incidentally is a blasphemous, hateful piece of garbage from what I’ve heard of it.” This sets me straight concerning what Lorde said in the video that I saw. She did not say that she was a “big Jesus believer.” )


It is hard to figure out this New Zealand newcomer and her Christian roots but I am going to attempt to in this series of posts. Here is an interview where she describes herself as a “big Jesus believer.

One way to get a better idea about a person is to take a closer look at their lyrics. Here is a discussion about one of Lorde’s songs that I really like, but I don’t understand why she has to curse in this song. It was not necessary!!!

STILL SANE

Today is my birthday
And I’m riding high
Hair is dripping,
Hiding that I’m terrified
But this is summer,
Playing dumber than in fall
Everything I say falls right back
Into everything I’m not
In the swing of things
But what I really mean is
Not in the swing of things yet

Riding around on the bikes,
We’re still sane
I won’t be her,
Tripping over onstage
Hey, it’s all cool
I still like hotels
But I think that’ll change
Still like hotels
And my newfound fame
Hey, promise I can stay good

Everything feels right
Chase paper, get by

I’m little
But I’m coming for the crown
I’m little
But I’m coming for you
I’m little
But I’m coming for the title
Geld by everyone who’s up

All work and no play
Never made me lose it
All business all day
Keeps me up a level
All work and no play
Keeps me on the new s#%$
Yeah

All work and no play,
Lemme count the bruises
All business all day
Keeps me up a level
All work and no play
Lonely on that new s#@$
Yeah

Only bad people live to see
Their likeness set in stone
What does that make me

I’m not in the swing of things
But what I really mean is
Not in the swing of things yet (x2)

All work and no play
Never made me lose it
All business all day
Keeps me up a level
All work and no play
Keeps me on the new s#@%
Yeah

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By Everette Hatcher III | Posted in Current Events | Edit | Comments (0)

________________

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Mitch Mustain does a fine job at 10-14-13 Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

Mitch Mustain – Fighting Back From a Fumble

I was very pleased with Mitch Mustain’s talk at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on 10-14-13.  There was a time for questions and someone asked the question that I wanted answered: “What do you think of Lane Kiffin?” Mitch said that some coaches are excellent at knowing how to handle players and some just don’t do a good job of it. He gave Pete Carroll credit for recognizing that you don’t yell at all the players but you can get through to some players better by just taking them aside and talking to them. Mitch said yelling has never got through to him. Mitch said Lane was very young and had a great offensive mind but he did not know how to run the whole show like Carroll did.

Mitch did give Kiffin credit for recognizing that there were 5 or 6 players that needed to leave and Kiffin did run the team ragged until these 5 or 6 left the team.

Many things that Mitch covered at the lunch are covered more in the new film coming out about Mitch. Here is an article on that.

Ch 11 in Little Rock had this on their website:

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (KTHV) – The Identity Theft of Mitch Mustain will show at the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival this weekend.

According to theHot Springs Documentary Film Festival website, the film focuses on Mitch Mustain, who was the most decorated football player in America in 2005, and his present struggle to find joy in the sport and find balance between his present and who he wants to become.

Mustain played freshman football at University of Arkansas in 2006. The producer and director of the film, Matthew Wolfe, is from Fayetteville.

The film shows Friday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.

For more details, you can visit the film’s dedicated Facebook page: http://on.kthv.com/1931mOI

__________________

Mitch Mustain does a fine job at 10-14-13 Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

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