Category Archives: Current Events

SDG Reviews ‘Greater’ (4699) Catholic actor Neal McDonough costars in a Rudy-like faith-based inspirational sports biopic that dares to explore doubt as well as belief. by STEVEN D. GREYDANUS 08/26/2016

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ESPN NFL Analyst Bill Polian on The Brandon Burlsworth Story – 8/26/16

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SDG Reviews ‘Greater’ (4699)

Catholic actor Neal McDonough costars in a Rudy-like faith-based inspirational sports biopic that dares to explore doubt as well as belief.

08/26/2016 Comments (5)

Greater is playing in limited release (find theaters).

Greater has three surprises, which is three more than most faith-based films, particularly of the inspirational sports-movie variety.

First, while the film’s hero is the celebrated Arkansas Razorbacks offensive guard Brandon Burlsworth (Christopher Severio) — possibly the greatest walk-on player in college football history — the protagonist is not Brandon, but his brother Marty, played by Neal McDonough of Arrow.

Second, while Brandon’s own faith never wavers, the film cross-examines Christian pieties and even faith itself to a greater degree than any other faith-based film I can think of. In a movie like God’s Not Dead, disbelief is a straw-man villain that exists solely to be vanquished and humiliated by the righteous hero. Here it’s a nagging voice in a grieving believer’s heart asking a question that admits no simple, final answer: Why do bad things happen to good people?

Third, it’s beautifully and atmospherically shot by director David Hunt and cinematographer Gabe Mayan. Dramatic backlighting and silhouettes create a sense of foreboding and uncertainty, resonating with the themes of tragedy and doubt. Creative camerawork is another asset; consider a moment of rapprochement lit by car headlights and filmed through swishing windshield-wiper blades on a night of pouring rain. (Now we see through a glass darkly …)

The story unfolds in two strands. One, told in flashback, is a familiar, uplifting Rudy-like arc of an unpromising underdog who makes good despite enormous obstacles. Greater may not be in Rudy’s league cinematically, but Burlsworth was a far more gifted player than Daniel “Rudy” Ruettiger. Named an All-American in 1998, he was drafted in 1999 by the Indianapolis Colts in the third round — 11 days before being killed in a vehicular accident.

Brandon doesn’t start out with all that promise. We first meet him as an overweight young couch potato (Ethan Waller) with apparent delusions of grandeur: He’s convinced he’s going to attend the University of Arkansas and play for the Razorbacks.

His brother Marty, 17 years his senior, berates him — “Cheesecake,” he calls him — for his indolence as well as their mother Barbara (Leslie Easterbrook) for her indulgence.

It’s clear, though, that Marty’s harshness is meant as the tough love of an older brother obliged to assume a father-figure role in the absence of their alcoholic bum of a father (Michael Parks of the Kill Bill movies in a small but affecting role). The brothers’ age difference is the basis for one of the movie’s running gags, Marty’s discomfort at being mistaken for Brandon’s father.

Obese, unathletic and clumsy, Brandon confronts his shortcomings as sports-underdog movie heroes have ever done: through determination, hard work and a limitless capacity to absorb punishment, both physical and social.

Lacking the football scholarship he absurdly hoped for, Brandon turns down full rides elsewhere to attend Arkansas. When Marty asks Barbara how she justifies going deep into debt for Brandon’s quixotic dream, she says simply, “My son knows I have faith.” This could mean faith in God, but I took it to mean that money was no object if it meant Brandon knew his mother believed in him.

It goes without saying that Brandon, making the team as a walk-on (a player who is not recruited or offered an athletic scholarship), is harassed and abused by his teammates. Even when the coach is impressed with Brandon’s dedication, he isn’t exactly nurturing: I can’t think of another movie in which someone compares the hero to horse manure and it’s meant to be encouraging.

Brandon isn’t a very interesting character, but he’s a likable one. Unassuming, devout and a little dense, he never drinks, never swears and never takes anything personally. He’s always taking a knee, and he crosses himself (a curious gesture, since from his funeral his family is clearly not Catholic).

He shows up at the stadium for practice long before anyone else is there — and when one of the coaches finds him, he’s idly picking up litter in the parking lot. Asked what he’s doing, Brandon says, “Nothing,” because he really hadn’t given it a second thought.

All this plays out in flashback, with all the usual sports-movie clichés, training sequences, montages, comic relief and so forth. This has all been done, and sometimes done better, but the formula is sturdy, and Severio, in his first role, delivers well enough.

The present-day strand follows preparations for Brandon’s funeral and Marty’s internal struggle with doubt and nihilism, a struggle movingly realized by McDonough. (The devoutly Catholic McDonough, who also executive produced, has called Marty Burlsworth his favorite role.)

Marty’s struggle is not entirely internal. Nick Searcy plays an unnamed character who chats with Marty about the apparent absurdity of existence, and their discussion is a bold and unusual move, even a genre-bending move. As they chat, Searcy whittles a face on a block of wood, a symbolic quirk with a meaning made nearly explicit in a startling line.  

I’m sure Josh Wheaton, the young apologist in God’s Not Dead, would know all the right things to say to Searcy’s character, but then Searcy wouldn’t be permitted to make his case so eloquently in a movie like God’s Not Dead, if he were allowed to appear at all.

Greater uses Marty to critique misguided or deficient forms of faith prior to Brandon’s death. Not as devout as his brother, Marty turns desperately to faith in a moment of crisis when he wants a miracle.

Surely, he reasons, God will be merciful; Marty would be, and he can’t be more merciful than God. Surely God will hear Brandon’s prayer, if not his own; the prayer of a righteous man avails much, and if anyone is righteous, it’s Brandon. This one painful scene is wiser than all the movies the Fireproof / Courageous people have made (including their football movie, Facing the Giants).

Why does God allow bad things to happen to good people? The movie’s response to this question comes in the form of a metaphor. At one point on the gridiron, Brandon argues with a teammate that their perspective on the field is limited; the coach has information from a higher perspective, from a skybox where the whole field can be seen, and they need to trust him.

During Marty’s conversation with Searcy this metaphor is further developed; a pattern emerges that Marty can’t appreciate without a higher perspective. Greater’s response to the problem of evil, to disbelief and nihilism, is not an argument, but an action: a choice to trust. It’s a simple but effective response, nicely underscored by the gospel anthem I’ll Fly Away running through the film.

A coda sums up the impact of Brandon’s life: the programs, scholarships and so forth established in his name. Even in earthly terms it can be argued that Brandon’s life and achievements were not a waste. Greater, though, looks to something more than this: something greater than any loss or tragedy.

Steven D. Greydanus is the Register’s film critic and creator of Decent Films.
He is a permanent deacon in the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey.

Follow him on Twitter.

Caveat Spectator: Football roughness; some language; some thematic elements including alcoholism and religious questioning. Teens and up.

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

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Brian Bosworth did a great job at our LITTLE ROCK TOUCHDOWN CLUB!!!

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The Little Rock Touchdown Club Presents Special Guest Brian Bosworth

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Bosworth: ’87 Orange Bowl act ‘selfish’

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By Jeremy Muck

This article was published September 27, 2016 at 2:08 a.m.

Almost 30 years later, Brian Bosworth regrets his actions after his NCAA suspension from the 1987 Orange Bowl.

Bosworth, a two-time All-American linebacker and Butkus Award winner at Oklahoma, was ruled ineligible for the Orange Bowl in Miami against Arkansas after testing positive for steroids.

At the game, in which Oklahoma routed Arkansas 42-8, Bosworth wore a T-shirt that mocked the NCAA, referring to the organization as “National Communists Against Athletes” and had a phrase “Welcome to Russia” on it as well.

Bosworth, now 51, spoke to the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday at the Embassy Suites and told the crowd the suspension was all about him, referring to his “Boz” persona in the 1980s.

“It took away immediately everything good that had happened building my relationship with Oklahoma — the school, the coaches, my teammates, the fans — because of a selfish decision,” an emotional Bosworth said. “Sometimes you don’t understand the impact of your decision. You think it’s funny at the time. It’s not that big of a deal, but it was. That one came out across the United States.

“It breaks my heart that I burned that bridge at that time so unnecessarily. It didn’t matter. That game would have come and gone and we would have moved on. It would have been forgotten. But I had to make a big deal out of it because it was about me.”

Bosworth was then dismissed from Oklahoma and declared himself eligible for the NFL supplemental draft and was selected by the Seattle Seahawks in 1987.

One of Bosworth’s career highlights was the Sooners beating Texas in 1985 en route to winning the national championship. It came one year after Oklahoma had tied Texas 15-15, so beating the Longhorns was a big deal for Bosworth, who recalled an interview he had after the 1984 game.

“We got robbed. I was mad,” Bosworth said. “I was dumb in those days. I didn’t know I had to be politically correct. So the guy asked me if I was a Texas boy. I said, ‘No, I’m an Oklahoma boy.’ I don’t like Texas. That burnt orange makes me want to puke. I can’t stand it.”

Bosworth became a born-again Christian in 2013 and said when the Boz became bigger than himself, he had to make a change in his life.

“Everybody’s journey is different, but it’s very unique in the fact that it all ends the same,” Bosworth said. “It all ends with us asking for Jesus Christ to come into our hearts and save us and guide us, to give us the instructions that we need for us to stop fighting ourselves and be better people.”

Bosworth’s NFL career was cut short in 1989 after two seasons because of a shoulder injury. He’s known for one of the most talked-about plays in NFL history when he was run over by Los Angeles Raiders running back Bo Jackson for a touchdown during a Monday night game at Seattle in 1987.

Both Jackson and Bosworth were recently featured in a Kia commercial together depicting the play. Bosworth has come to terms with the play and calls Jackson a friend today.

“He’s a great guy,” Bosworth said. “That’s the thing about the brotherhood of being football players. We can agree to disagree for 60 minutes and hate each other for 60 minutes. Then we can come back afterwards and be great friends because we know the sacrifices that we’re making. We’re pounding our bodies against each other. We’re doing it because of the pride, the loyalty we have to our schools, the colors we’re wearing and the number we have on our chest.”

Sports on 09/27/2016

Print Headline: Bosworth: ’87 Orange Bowl act ‘selfish’

ESPN 30 For 30 Brian and the Boz

 

Brian Bosworth Finds Redemption While Losing ‘The Boz’

Brian Bosworth is arguably college football’s greatest middle linebacker and one of its most talked about players. He thrived as both a hero and a villain while playing at Oklahoma. Brian says, “It was the internal fight between choosing the selfish road instead of the selfless road. I don’t ever want to go back. There was nothing about that place that was good.”

A place that energized an icon, when 20-year old Brian emerged as The Boz – a brash, flamboyant personality with a disposition and defiance that charged his on-field success.

Brian explains, “To me, “The Boz” is the monster on the field. That’s how I identify with him. He is the alter ego of Brian. “The Boz” was my outlet where I could scream as loud as I wanted to, and needed to.”

What fueled the on-field intensity? Brian remembers, “I was out of control inside. I was a cyclone. I took all of my aggressiveness and my loneliness out on that field because I just had it all pent up and I just wanted to let it explode on anybody that was around me.”

Physicality became his trademark. By his junior year, Brian was the face of Sooner Football and winner of the first two Butkus Awards as the nation’s top college linebacker. He remains the only player ever to have won the accolade more than once. Brian recalls,  “Coach Switzer came and screamed in my ear, ‘Brian Bosworth is the best college linebacker in the country.’ Thee defining moment for me! My coaching idol, to respect me on that level was something that I had worked for and dreamed about from the time I was 6 years old.”

Brian grew up spending childhood summers with his grandparents on an Oklahoma farm, in the town of Meeker, Oklahoma — an ironic name – given “The Boz’s” brazen persona.  Brian says, “In Meeker, Oklahoma, are some of the most cherished moments to me, calmness, stability and supportive love. My grandfather was very vital in my work ethic and the character that you must have.”

It gave Brian confidence to confront challenge and instilled a necessary reminder that his refugee was never far away saying, “The world was so big, the farm was so big, the cows were so big, the chores were so enormous. But yet, at the end of the day, they were done. That base was already solid inside me. I just had to rediscover it.”

He’d need to! When summers ended, Brian returned to his parent’s house in Texas, a sharp contrast from what he left behind! Brian describes the difference saying, “I wasn’t getting the same signals. I got chaos. I had, [emotional pause] my father just didn’t have the tools. His toolbox was empty. I didn’t get what a son needs so he knows how to grow up. Instead of a conversation, I get beating, you know, and punishment. But no love, no ‘I’m sorry’. I never got that from him.”

Turmoil followed to the field. When the Sooners won the 1985 national championship, Brian the player and Boz the caricature blurred into an inseparable pair. As the hype grew, Brian was banned by the N-C-Double-A for the 1987 Orange Bowl after failing a steroids test. He carried his feud to the sideline, wearing a T-Shirt with a derogatory phrase on national TV. Brian was dismissed from the team. His college career was finished. Brian acknowledges, “It was the biggest regret. It ruined everything that I had built — all the pride that I brought to Coach Switzer. And I stole their moment so that I could scream at somebody or an institution for what I felt was an injustice. And it was just the wrong place to do it. It was the wrong format. It was the wrong message to send. What I thought was the most important window of my life, which was college football, in Oklahoma — and I ruined my own party.”

Brian earned his degree and was selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the supplemental draft, signing the largest rookie contract at the time. He started in all 24 games he played before a shoulder injury forced him into early retirement.  Brian says, “I wanted to run and die. I went some place and hid and spent the entire decade of the 90’s in just severe pain and I was depressed. I didn’t have any way of looking forward to tomorrow. So I just felt like I have nothing left and there’s no reason to live.”

Desperate, Brian had time to ponder, searching for the source of his rage. There were issues underneath the Boz that fans and spectators saw on the field. How deep did that anger go? Brian explains, “When I’d go on that field I’d just want praise. But at the end of the game I’d never get that – ‘what a great game’, ‘ I’m so proud of you’, you know, this moment is a precious moment. And that’s the thing that really drove me as I got further into my career, its like I’m never going to have a precious moment with my father. I think that’s what I craved and that’s why I lashed out and I think that’s why I rebelled.”

The death of his father was a catalyst in his search for purpose that had roots in a family member’s belief. Brian says, “I had my grandmother who was very faithful to the relationship with Jesus Christ. You know, when you’re a little kid you don’t understand the impact of how that’s going to resonate for the rest of your life. All of my choices were keeping me from human love and from my father’s love. And the only way I’m going to fix that is if I decide to break the chains and get on my knees and finally say ‘I can’t do this by myself and I can’t do it with out you.”

Brian emerged from seclusion as an actor, appearing in several films. He took a role in the faith-based film ‘Revelation Road’ and later in ‘Do You Believe?’, after solidifying his own faith. What does grace and redemption mean to Brian Bosworth?” He says, “Feeling like a failure as a son, as a football player and a failure to the fans. That wasn’t something that I had any ownership of anymore because I gave that to Jesus and He took all that away. This newfound freedom of peace is the gift of being forgiven.”

The linebacker great has uncovered a past to better navigate what’s ahead in this rare odyssey – that’s His! Brian believes, “Once you put yourself in the moral compass of your heart, you create chaos. Jesus Christ is the moral compass of my heart. So every decision I make – give me the instructions that You want me to follow. God, what do you got for me today? What do we get to do today, you know, because it leads me to the One light I want to go home to.”

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Movie review of movie GREATER about the life of Brandon Burlsworth

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Greater

MPAA Rating: PG for thematic elements, some language and smoking.
not reviewed
Add to your list?
View your list
Moviemaking Quality:
Primary Audience:
Adults Teens Family
Genre:
Christian Sports Biography Family
Length:
2 hr. 10 min.
Year of Release:
2016
USA Release:
August 26, 2016 (wide)
Featuring: Christopher Severio … Brandon Burlsworth
Neal McDonough … Marty Burlsworth
Leslie Easterbrook … Barbara
Michael Parks … Leo
Nick Searcy … The Farmer
Quinton Aaron … Coach Aaron
Connor Antico … Clint Stoerner
Eric Arnold … Razorbacks fan
Tammy Barr … Ashley
Texas Battle … Anthony Lucas
more »
Director: David Hunt
Producer: Greater Productions
Brian Reindl
David Eric Chapman
Neal McDonough
Tim Duff
Distributor: Hammond Entertainment

“The incredible true story of the greatest walk-on in the history of college football”

Copyrighted, Hammond Entertainment

Here’s what the distributor says about their film: “Brandon Burlsworth is perhaps the greatest walk-on in the history of college football. Brandon dreamed of playing for the Arkansas Razorbacks, but was told he wasn’t good enough to play Division I ball. Undeterred, Brandon took a risk and walked on in 1994. Written off by fellow teammates and coaches, Brandon displayed dogged determination in the face of staggering odds. The awkward kid who once was an embarrassment to his teammates and an annoyance to his coaches, ended up becoming the most respected player in the history of the program, changing the lives of all he touched.

Brandon Burlsworth never cursed, drank or smoked, and he returned home every weekend of his college career to see his mother and attend church with his family. This was a guy who did everything ‘right.’

On April 28, 1999, on a lonely Arkansas highway, a wreck claimed the life of a young man who was bound for glory in the NFL. Brandon Burlsworth, widely considered the greatest walk-on in the history of college football, was a man of hard work, integrity, and commitment, who took no short cuts in life. He was a shining example of a fleeting life lived well. Burlsworth’s astonishing physical, mental, and spiritual gifts made him the kind of player that opponents are afraid to line up against. An almost unreal blend of power and speed, Brandon wanted to be the best.

He was.

Brandon was not born with the athletic gifts that are normally required to reach the elite levels of football. Though he desperately wanted to fulfill his dream of playing Division 1 ball, nobody would give him a chance and he failed to receive any D-1 scholarship offers. Risking everything to walk-on at the University of Arkansas, Burlsworth worked harder than anybody else, on or off the field. He would eventually become the first Razorback to earn a master’s degree while playing football, achieved first-team All-American honors, and in 1999 was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and expected to be a first-year starter and anchor the Colts’ line for the next dozen years.

Brandon’s trademark black glasses has inspired children for over 15 years to live by Brandon’s motto, ‘Do things the right way.’ Since his passing, the University of Arkansas has honored the Burls’ Kids, a non profit charity, at an Arkansas Razorback home football game.”

Related book: Through the Eyes of a Champion – The Brandon Burlsworth Story by Jeff Kinley (New Leaf Press: 1 September 2001)

 

Brandon Burlsworth

 

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

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RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus

______ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus [This essay first appeared in Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Mar./Apr. 2001): 18-21] What shaped the life of the man who today is the symbol of evil and brutality, but who […]

TAKING ON PETER SINGER WITH WILLIAM CRAIG’S 4 PROPOSITIONS: 1. If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist 2. However, evil exists 3. Therefore objective moral values exist – namely, some things are evil 4. Therefore God exists

Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.” Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION Published on Jan 10, 2015 Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Abortion […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 54 Dr. Raymond Tallis of Manchester is an atheist because rejects a God who is “omniscient, omnipotent and good and yet so constrained as to be unable or unwilling to create a world without evil!”

On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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Review from LA Times by Noel Murray, August 24, 2016 Football drama ‘Greater’ is an appealing underdog saga

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Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

Review from LA Times by  Noel Murray, August 24, 2016

Football drama ‘Greater’ is an appealing underdog saga

Noel Murray

The true story of the late Arkansas Razorbacks football hero Brandon Burlsworth is an underdog saga to rival “Rudy,” and while the modest Burlsworth biopic “Greater” doesn’t have that film’s inspirational spark, the indie drama is just sweet enough and slick enough to appeal to pigskin fans and Christian family audiences.

A fine cast helps. Neal McDonough (who also co-produced) plays Brandon’s older brother Marty, who raises him in lieu of their absentee alcoholic father (the always-excellent Michael Parks). Nick Searcy plays a mysterious figure Marty talks to about God during Brandon’s funeral, as the film’s framing device.

See the most-read stories in Entertainment this hour »

Star Christopher Severio gives a solid performance, if not up to the level of his more accomplished cast mates. The bigger problem though is that writer Brian Reindl and director David Hunt hit all the predictable beats too hard as Brandon overcomes his many doubters to become an All-American.

Still, Hunt and his crew also give “Greater” a polished look. And Burlsworth’s story is undeniably touching — and even a little unusual, since it’s not about some phenom, but instead salutes a hefty lineman who studied hard, followed his faith and became a role model to future Razorbacks.

The movie’s length is excessive and its arc over-familiar, but for those who don’t mind a little sap — or a lot — “Greater” is effective. Even Texas Longhorns might leave shouting, “Woo Pig Sooie.”

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‘Greater’

MPAA rating: PG, for thematic elements, some language and smoking.

Running time: 2 hours, 10 minutes.

Playing: In general release

 

 

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________________

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

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Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.” Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION Published on Jan 10, 2015 Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Abortion […]

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On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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By the playbook: Film about former Razorback Burlsworth scores with authenticity By Philip Martin This article was published August 26, 2016 at 5:45 a.m.

______________

Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

By the playbook: Film about former Razorback Burlsworth scores with authenticity

4

Greater

86 Cast: Christopher Severio, Neal McDonough, Michael Parks, Leslie Easterbrook, Nick Searcy, Fredric Lehne, M.C. Gainey, Ed Lowry, David Bazzel

Director: David Hunt

Rating: PG, for thematic elements, some language and smoking

Running time: 130 minutes

By Philip Martin

This article was published August 26, 2016 at 5:45 a.m.

actor-christopher-severio-portrays-brandon-burlsworth-in-greater-which-opens-friday-nationwide

Actor Christopher Severio portrays Brandon Burlsworth in “Greater,” which opens Friday nationwide.

Greater tells the story of University of Arkansas standout Brandon Burlsworth, who is touted in the film’s promotional materials as “the greatest walk-on in college football history.” He may well have been.

After redshirting his first year, he not only won a scholarship but became the Razorbacks’ starting right guard, and in his senior year, an All-American. He was drafted in the third round by the Indianapolis Colts. And had he lived, there’s no reason to believe he wouldn’t have started for the Colts his rookie year. He probably would have enjoyed a relatively long and lucrative career in the National Football League.

By all accounts, Burlsworth was an unfailingly polite, possibly obsessive-compulsive young man possessed of remarkable character and dignity. He was a hard worker, the antithesis of the stereotype of the entitled star athlete. He was the first Razorback player to earn a master’s degree (in business administration) before playing in his final game for the university. He had a deep and abiding Christian faith.

But in what would seem like a heavy-handed plot twist had it appeared in a young adult novel, Burlsworth died before he could play a single professional football game. Just 11 days after being drafted by the Colts, on April 28, 1999, a Wednesday afternoon, Burlsworth was returning to his hometown of Harrison after working out in the Razorbacks’ facility in Fayetteville. Near Alpena, on a relatively flat stretch of U.S. 412, his car clipped an oncoming 18-wheeler, then swerved and crashed head-on into a second truck. He was on his way to take his mother to church.

If you live in Arkansas, you probably know all this. If you don’t, you might be skeptical that anyone could be quite as earnest and decent as Burlsworth was. Maybe the unlikeliest thing about the film is how little truth it seems to change for dramatic purposes. While there is some compression of events and a brother (Grady Burlsworth) largely elided from the story, some of what seems Hollywooded up actually happened. Brandon’s mother, Barbara (Leslie Easterbrook), really was in the habit of telling her son to watch out for “big ol’ trucks” whenever he embarked on a journey. Brandon’s teammates really did drive him crazy by messing with the pens he’d laid out just so on his desk.

What’s most admirable about Greater is that, although it belongs to that class of films that is marketed (and sometimes dismissed) as “faith-based,” is that it insists on a certain humanity for the lineman. As in life, this Burlsworth isn’t perfect. We first meet him as a preteen (played by Ethan Waller), a junk-food loving football fan with no perceptible athletic talent — a slow, soft fat kid. (In real life, Burlsworth was a late bloomer. He didn’t develop into a star until his junior year at Harrison High. At the NFL combine in February 1999 he’d run 40 yards in 4.88 seconds, best among offensive linemen, and bench-pressed 225 pounds 28 times. And though he weighed 308 pounds and was just shy of 6 feet, 4 inches, he could dunk a basketball with two hands from a standing start. He wasn’t without God-given talent.)

As a film, Greater shares with its subject a certain straight-down-the-middle conventionality. Fayetteville-based producer Brian Reindl, a first-time filmmaker who worked 11 years on this project, seemed determined not to make a mistake. Director David Hunt similarly plays it safe, and even cinematographer Gabe Mayhan — who has demonstrated an extraordinary eye on other projects (including Josh Miller and Miles Miller’s All the Birds Have Flown South) — seems content to default to Hallmark Hall of Fame tastefulness. The football action scenes are especially well done. Lots of local faces pop up in small roles. The result is a fine, old-fashioned movie that hits all the expected beats and will no doubt be well received by people familiar with Burlsworth’s story.

But it’s not an adventurous film, and one might have hoped for a bit more nuance in the Brandon character (played as a young man with a certain appropriate stolidity by Louisiana actor Christopher Severio). Brandon’s good and humble and perhaps a little too naive — the only scene in the movie that feels false is his reaction to a few sips of alcohol his mischievous teammates slip him — but not particularly interesting. He believes what his mama, his coaches and his pastor tell him. He doesn’t need to see the big picture.

The filmmakers have enough sense to provide us with an alternate to this limited carrier of our empathy by framing the story through the eyes of Marty Burlsworth, Brandon’s much older brother. Marty, played by veteran character actor Neal McDonough (probably best known for his portrayal of super-villain Damien Darhkin the DC Comics-derived series Arrow, Flash and Legends of Tomorrow, though he also had a memorable arc as a bad guy on the 2012 season of Justified), is a fairly complex figure who undergoes an understandable crisis of faith after the death of his younger brother. Forcing the events of the film through the prism of Marty gives the movie whatever dramatic tension it achieves. (While McDonough seems too old to play a character who, in the movie’s earliest set scenes, is in his mid-to late-20s, he does some subtle work in what is by design not a terribly nuanced picture.)

In the film’s biggest departure from verisimilitudinous story-telling, a tempter figure, The Farmer (played by Justified veteran Nick Searcy), is introduced to call Marty’s attention to the random cruelty present in the universe. While it’s not the most original trope, it’s a lot of fun to watch these actors act.

In the end, Greater is not a movie for people who look to movies for something more than uplift or assurance, but that’s all right. It does no disservice to the memory of a young man who died before he should have, and it’s unlikely anyone will argue that it presents a false picture of Brandon Burlsworth. If it inspires people, especially young people, to do right and work hard, then it has accomplished more than a lot of more artfully conceived and daring movies.

MovieStyle on 08/26/2016

Print Headline: By the playbook; Film about former Razorback Burlsworth scores with authenticity

________________

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

Related posts:

Death toll to 125 in Joplin, How can a good God allow evil and suffering?

First Person video of Joplin MO tornado 5/22/11 The video i took while at Fastrip on east 20th street. We huddled in the back of the store until the glass got sucked out , then ran into the walk in storage fridge. Sorry for the lack of visuals but the audio is pretty telling of […]

FRANCIS SCHAEFFER ANALYZES ART AND CULTURE PART 121 Elie Wiesel, (Answering the problem of evil in the world!!!) Part C (Featured artists are Christo and Jeanne-Claude )

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RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Louise Antony is UMass, Phil Dept, “Atheists if they commit themselves to justice, peace and the relief of suffering can only be doing so out of love for the good. Atheist have the opportunity to practice perfect piety”

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 60 Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus

______ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus [This essay first appeared in Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Mar./Apr. 2001): 18-21] What shaped the life of the man who today is the symbol of evil and brutality, but who […]

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On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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Movie review by PLUGGED IN on the Brandon Burlsworth movie GREATER

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FIRST LOOK – “Greater” movie review

 

Movie Review from “Plugged In”

“Character is what you do when nobody is looking.”

So says Arkansas Razorbacks coach Houston Nutt when he finds starting lineman Brandon Burlsworth working out alone in the team gym.

Brandon disagrees: “There’s always Someone looking, Coach.”

That line of dialogue expresses the essence of Brandon’s heart in Greater, a movie based on the true story of this remarkable young man whom we hear a sports reporter call “quite possibly the greatest walk-on story in the history of college football.”

Brandon’s story is a triumphant, satisfying tale of overcoming long odds. But it’s also a tragic story of an amazing life cut short even as it began to flourish, and how those closest to him—especially his devoted brother, Marty—seek to make sense of his seemingly senseless death.

Positive Elements

Greater is about life and faith, death and faith. And before anyone howls too loudly that I’ve just spoiled this story, well, the opening scene takes place at the monument company where Brandon’s tombstone has just arrived, with one worker there saying, “Of all people, how’s this make any sense?” A sign hanging across Main Street in sleepy Harrison, Ark., reads, “Harrison Will Always Love Brandon Burlsworth.”

The movie, then, is as much about how those who loved Brandon are coping with his loss as it is the many ways Brandon’s character, faith, integrity and perseverance enabled him to do what everyone said was impossible: start for his beloved Arkansas Razorbacks as an unheralded walk-on.

Brandon’s life isn’t an easy one. His father, Leo, is an alcoholic who until recently had zero contact with his family for a decade. His mother, Barbara, valiantly struggles to make ends meet, even as she dotes on her youngest charge. Meanwhile, Brandon’s much older brother, Marty, tries to get the overweight boy with a sweet tooth off the couch and out in the yard to play ball.

Brandon longs to play big-time college football for the Razorbacks. But he’s overweight. He’s slow. He has no real natural talent. He’s a magnet for bullies. In other words, nothing about Brandon marks him as a gifted athlete destined for glory.

Brandon’s kindhearted high school coach, however, encourages him to give his best effort. He challenges Brandon to be the first one to arrive at practice and the last to leave. Brandon takes that advice to heart—for the rest of his football career. No one is ever at practice before Brandon or stays longer. It’s just the first of many moments in the movie where the young man pairs a quietly indomitable work ethic with a teachable spirit as he takes a coach’s words to heart.

No one believes Brandon can achieve his dream, save perhaps his mother. Marty encourages him, but tries to coach him on being realistic, as do his coaches. When he meets Coach Bender at Arkansas, for instance, the man bluntly tells him that he’ll never be anything more than practice fodder for the scholarship players.

But thanks to his willingness to work, to learn, to submit and to practice the skills his coaches teach him, Brandon proves them all wrong in route to becoming a starter, an All-American and even getting drafted by the Indianapolis Colts. He goes from being a much-mocked outcast and proverbial punching bag among his peers to someone they respect and, eventually, follow as the team’s undisputed heart-and-soul leader.

Coaches deliver important life lessons throughout Brandon’s playing career. His high school coach tells the team, “You can’t control who your mom and dad is. But you can control how hard you work.” He then delivers this well-known truism: “Sow a thought, reap an action. Sow an action, you reap a habit. You sow a habit, you reap a character. you sow a character, you reap a destiny.”

Though the outcome of Brandon Burlsworth’s life was, from an earthly point of view, tragically cut short, his legacy of diligent, dignified hard work continues to influence the Arkansas Razorbacks (the film shows us in the credits) nearly 20 years after his untimely death. We even see Brandon’s father, who’s deathly ill, wishing he could have been more like his son and made the kind of wise choices that Brandon made.

Spiritual Content

There’s a great deal of Christian content in this film. It can perhaps best be summarized by saying that Brandon’s unwavering faith deeply informs everything he does, while his brother’s faltering faith after Brandon’s death is something he grapples with mightily.

Brandon has deep trust in God. At every step along his journey, when naysayers rise up to tell him that he’s being unrealistic, Brandon keeps moving forward in faith. Marty is more pragmatic, asking his brother things like, “You think God would give you D I [Division 1] dreams and a D III (Division III) body?” To Marty, the answer to that rhetorical, spiritual question is self-evident. Brandon, however, soldiers on, refusing to give up. “Have faith, Marty,” he says elsewhere. “This is my road.”

For his part, Marty struggles to cling to his faith in the wake of his brother’s death. That internal battle is depicted in a dramatic way through ongoing dialogue with a doubter named the Farmer. Marty’s trying to summon the courage to go into Brandon’s memorial service at Harrison High School. And the Farmer, depicted very nearly as a Satan-like tempter, repeatedly delivers soliloquies about the utter foolishness of faith. In one scene, the man (who’s whittling a portrait of Marty into a block of wood, almost as if he’s creating a voodoo doll) says, “Brandon did have faith. He believed if he worked hard and did everything he was supposed to do, God would make everything turn out for the best. Did everything turn out for the best, Marty?”

Elsewhere, the Farmer taunts, “There is no loving God, Marty. That’s ridiculous. There’s just a howling void. And a real man, an honest man, doesn’t get down on his knees to pray to it for his mercy. He stands up to it, and he looks it right in his face and he howls right back.”

But Marty also talks with his godly mother about how to process the randomness of Brandon’s death. She tells him that it’s only random when looked at from an earthly perspective. “If you assume this is all there is, you’d have a point, Marty. But that’s not true. This life is a drop in the ocean. One tick of eternity’s clock, and we’ll all be together again, Marty. And every trouble we had here will recede away like a dream.”

Elsewhere, we hear hymns and passages of Scripture, see folks praying, see how Brandon’s witness influences others on the team to embrace faith themselves and watch many football players begin attending a Bible study.

Sexual Content

A waitress at a restaurant wears a top revealing both shoulders. Football players are shown shirtless and in towels in the locker room. (One player jokingly calls another in a towel “sexy.”) A couple of scenes also show players in their underwear. Someone advises Brandon to “stay away from fast women” as he’s preparing to go to college. When Brandon gets some huge glasses to correct a vision problem, one of his teammates jokes, “Did you order no-sex specs?”

Violent Content

Football scenes picture some tough hits. One line of dialogue hints Brandon’s father may have physically abused him when he was younger. (“No one’s going to hurt you,” Marty tells the scared boy at one point, apparently referencing their dad.)

We hear that Brandon has been killed in an accident involving an 18-wheeler, prompting wailing grief from his bereaved mother. We see portions of funeral scenes for two characters.

Crude or Profane Language

When Coach Bender tells Brandon a story that includes the uncensored phrase “pile of s—,” Brandon corrects his profanity and calls it a “pile of manure” instead.

Brandon’s meanly labeled a “fat a–” three times. God’s name is taken in vain once. We also hear “heck,” “oh my gosh” and “jeez” once each. “Butt,” “turd” and “suck” are used two or three times each.

Drug and Alcohol Content

Brandon and Marty’s father, Leo, is an alcoholic and a smoker. He insists he’s tried to clean up his act when he reappears after a 10-year-absence from his sons’ lives while Brandon’s still in high school. Barb and Marty agree to let Brandon spend a night with his dad, who’s trying to reengage. But Marty lays down the law regarding his drinking around the boy: “Not one drop.” Leo fails that night, and Brandon finds the man drunk and clutching a mostly empty liquor bottle the next morning. Marty confronts Leo about this lapse and his supposed desire for sobriety, asking, “Do you really want help? I’ll be there for you. Until then, you stay out of our lives.”

Several of Brandon’s fellow Arkansas Razorbacks football players play a prank on him, tricking him into drinking two tall strawberry daiquiris that, unbeknownst to teetotaling Brandon, are laced with alcohol. He’s crushed when he finds out, and angrily leaves the restaurant to go run off the alcohol in the middle of the night in a driving rain storm.

Football players talk about alcohol being a part of college life. We see people drinking bottles of beer.

Other Negative Elements

Marty is deeply invested in Brandon’s life. But sometimes his frustrations boil over in negative ways. His nickname for Brandon is “Cheesecake,” a reference to Brandon’s love of junk food. Sometimes it’s a nickname that’s lobbed with affection. Other times, however, Marty uses that nickname in a shaming way.

Brandon’s teammates initially mock both his weight and his regimented, disciplined lifestyle. One says that he’s an “OCD poster child,” while another disparages, “He’s like if Rain Man and C-3PO had a love child.”

We hear Brandon vomiting (off camera) during an intense football practice. Coach Bender relates a fable of sorts about digging through a pile of manure to find a horse presumably buried somewhere beneath.

Conclusion

Just when you think all the great football stories have been told, up pops another one. And unless you live in Arkansas or are a big-time college football fan, the amazing true story of Brandon Burlsworth is likely going to be new to you as it was to me.

There are familiar elements here, of course. The training sequences, the narrative that invites you to root for the underdog. But Brandon scales that metaphorical mountain, proving that hard work, discipline, faith and quiet integrity can pay enormous dividends.

If that were as far as the story went, it would be a redemptive one. But this movie also spends as much time grappling with that familiar narrative’s vexing converse: why someone who does everything right for the right reasons would suffer the seemingly cruel fate that Brandon does.

In this, Greater treads off the beaten sports-movie path into deeper philosophical and spiritual questions. It refuses to give a pat answer to why bad things happen to good people. Instead, we watch as those who survive Brandon try to come to grips with this tragedy. (And, occasionally, players and coaches use the kind of salty language we’d likely hear in a real locker room.)

Marty struggles. His mother trusts. A town mourns. But they’re all eventually able to celebrate the goodness of Brandon Burlsworth’s faith-filled life. They recognize that his legacy is one of giving your all, no matter what the outcome might be, and trusting that God will redeem it all in the end—even if the fullness of that redemption won’t be completely unfurled until the next life.

Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

________________

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

Related posts:

Death toll to 125 in Joplin, How can a good God allow evil and suffering?

First Person video of Joplin MO tornado 5/22/11 The video i took while at Fastrip on east 20th street. We huddled in the back of the store until the glass got sucked out , then ran into the walk in storage fridge. Sorry for the lack of visuals but the audio is pretty telling of […]

FRANCIS SCHAEFFER ANALYZES ART AND CULTURE PART 121 Elie Wiesel, (Answering the problem of evil in the world!!!) Part C (Featured artists are Christo and Jeanne-Claude )

  God On Trial Uploaded on Jan 8, 2012 God on Trial is a 2008 BBC/WGBH Boston television play written by Frank Cottrell Boyce, starring Antony Sher, Rupert Graves and Jack Shepherd. The play takes place in Auschwitz during World War II. The Jewish prisoners put God on trial in absentia for abandoning the Jewish […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Louise Antony is UMass, Phil Dept, “Atheists if they commit themselves to justice, peace and the relief of suffering can only be doing so out of love for the good. Atheist have the opportunity to practice perfect piety”

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 60 Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus

______ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus [This essay first appeared in Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Mar./Apr. 2001): 18-21] What shaped the life of the man who today is the symbol of evil and brutality, but who […]

TAKING ON PETER SINGER WITH WILLIAM CRAIG’S 4 PROPOSITIONS: 1. If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist 2. However, evil exists 3. Therefore objective moral values exist – namely, some things are evil 4. Therefore God exists

Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.” Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION Published on Jan 10, 2015 Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Abortion […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 54 Dr. Raymond Tallis of Manchester is an atheist because rejects a God who is “omniscient, omnipotent and good and yet so constrained as to be unable or unwilling to create a world without evil!”

On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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MUSIC MONDAY Brumley Music Plays Pivotal Role in the movie GREATER Bob Brumley Sings “I’ll Fly Away” and film also features “Victory in Jesus”

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Quinton Aaron of “The Blindside” talks “Greater” and the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth

Published on Oct 28, 2015

Quinton Aaron, star of “The Blindside”, discusses why he is so proud to be a part of “Greater”, and talks about the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth, the greatest walk-on in college football history. “Greater” is Brandon’s story.

BRUMLEY MUSIC PLAYS PIVOTAL ROLE IN “GREATER” – FILM RELEASES JANUARY 29TH

NEWS

Bob Brumley Sings “I’ll Fly Away” and film also features “Victory in Jesus”

Family football drama chronicles the remarkable and inspiring life
of the late Razorback All-American, Brandon Burlsworth, stars Neal McDonough,
Nick Searcy and newcomer Christopher Severio  

New York, New York – (January 18, 2016)Brumley Music, the legendary music and publishing company rich in tradition and heritage of Gospel, Country, Americana and Bluegrass music and founded by Albert E. Brumley, plays a pivotal role in a new theatrical release GREATERwhich is set to hit the big screens on January 29, 2016.

GREATER is a film about the true story of the unlikely career of Brandon Burlsworth (played by newcomer Christopher Severio), regarded as the greatest walk-on (i.e., non-scholarship player) story in the history of college football. Known for hisgreaterdistinctive black horn-rimmed glasses, the small-town Burlsworth always dreamed of playing for the Arkansas Razorbacks, but wasn’t considered good enough to play Division I football.

Undeterred, Brandon — with the support of his older brother, Marty (Neal McDonough), and their struggling single Mom, Barbara (Leslie Easterbrook), takes a huge risk by walking on to the team in 1994. He succeeds in the face of staggering odds, and by the end of his college career, Burlsworth was not only a star player in the SEC, but he was also a 1st Team All-American. He was then taken as an early pick in the 1999 NFL Draft by the Indianapolis Colts.

Eleven days after being drafted into the NFL and before he was able to sign the contract that would have changed the financial status of his family forever, Brandon died in a car accident on his way home. His death stunned the state. His loss was particularly hard on the character Marty, who struggles in the film to hang on to his own faith in the aftermath of Brandon’s death – confronted at his brother’s funeral by a mysterious farmer (Nick Searcy) who tries to convince him that a truly loving God would not let such a bad thing happen to someone who was so good.

The most recorded song of all time, “I’ll Fly Away” by Albert E. Brumley is performed by Bob Brumley in a scene where Burlsworth is driving the car and singing along. Fans can hear Bob’s rendition on the radio as Burlsworth (played by Christopher Sevario) is driving the car. A clip of that pivotal scene which changes the course of the story can be seen here: http://bit.ly/flyaway_40sec

Another song from the Brumley Music Group, “Victory in Jesus” is also featured in the film. “Victory in Jesus” was written by Albert E. Brumley’s mentor, EM Bartlett and further proves that Gospel music is a vital part of establishing the importance of faith, family and conviction in this remarkable story about a remarkable athlete.

Movie trailer for GREATER is here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/ye6blzkaqi5cbfu/01_GRTR_TRLR_Online.mov?dl=0

“GREATER is a truly inspirational story about perseverance and a remarkable man named Brandon Burlsworth whose story is very inspiring,” said Bob Brumley, CEO of Brumley Music Company. “I am very proud of having played a role in the film and that my father’s music sets the tone for one of the most important scenes in the movie.”

The film will open nationwide on over 400 screens on January 29, 2016. Initial reviews praise the adaptation and storytelling. Albert E. Brumley’s music has been featured in numerous television series and films and recorded by a multitude of award-winning musicians in every genre. Brumley Music has been featured prominently in the movie “O’ Brother Where Art Thou” which starred George Clooney and the seven-time Platinum selling soundtrack. Brumley Music also provided music for “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” “The Apostle” and “Daddy’s Dyin Who’s Got the Will.” Television series such as the legendary hit television series “The Waltons” and Spike Lee’s documentary “When the Levees Broke” also feature Brumley Music among others.

Hammond Entertainment presents a Greater Productions, LLC production. GREATER is produced by Brian Reindl and directed by David Hunt from a script written by Brian Reindl and David Hunt. Neal McDonough and Brian Reindl serve as Executive Producers. The film stars Chris Severio, Neal McDonough (ARROW, BAND OF BROTHERS) Leslie Easterbrook (the POLICE ACADEMY franchise), Michael Parks (ARGO) and Nick Searcy (JUSTIFIED).

 

ABOUT BRUMLEY MUSIC COMPANY: Brumley Music Company, located in Powell, Missouri, is a music publishing and production company founded in the early 1940s by Albert E. Brumley. It also operates The Hartford Music Group which is part of the Brumley Music Company. President and CEO, Bob Brumley operates the company whose mission is to uphold Albert E. Brumley’s legacy while producing and providing inspirational music built on a rich tradition and heritage. Brumley’s hit Gospel song “I’ll Fly Away” remains the most recorded song ever and serves as the namesake as the company’s foundation “The I’ll Fly Away Foundation.” The company produces songbooks, the popular annual “Gospel Sing” four-day musical event, oversees the wide catalog of Brumley original music, publishing and licensing. Find out more at www.facebook.com/thebrumleysing or http://www.twitter.com/BrumleyMusic. Brumley Music can also be reached by calling 1-800-435-3725. For ticket information to the 47th Annual Gospel Sing go to www.brumleymusic.com.

FIRST LOOK – “Greater” movie review

Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

________________

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

Related posts:

Death toll to 125 in Joplin, How can a good God allow evil and suffering?

First Person video of Joplin MO tornado 5/22/11 The video i took while at Fastrip on east 20th street. We huddled in the back of the store until the glass got sucked out , then ran into the walk in storage fridge. Sorry for the lack of visuals but the audio is pretty telling of […]

FRANCIS SCHAEFFER ANALYZES ART AND CULTURE PART 121 Elie Wiesel, (Answering the problem of evil in the world!!!) Part C (Featured artists are Christo and Jeanne-Claude )

  God On Trial Uploaded on Jan 8, 2012 God on Trial is a 2008 BBC/WGBH Boston television play written by Frank Cottrell Boyce, starring Antony Sher, Rupert Graves and Jack Shepherd. The play takes place in Auschwitz during World War II. The Jewish prisoners put God on trial in absentia for abandoning the Jewish […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Louise Antony is UMass, Phil Dept, “Atheists if they commit themselves to justice, peace and the relief of suffering can only be doing so out of love for the good. Atheist have the opportunity to practice perfect piety”

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 60 Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus

______ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus [This essay first appeared in Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Mar./Apr. 2001): 18-21] What shaped the life of the man who today is the symbol of evil and brutality, but who […]

TAKING ON PETER SINGER WITH WILLIAM CRAIG’S 4 PROPOSITIONS: 1. If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist 2. However, evil exists 3. Therefore objective moral values exist – namely, some things are evil 4. Therefore God exists

Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.” Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION Published on Jan 10, 2015 Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Abortion […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 54 Dr. Raymond Tallis of Manchester is an atheist because rejects a God who is “omniscient, omnipotent and good and yet so constrained as to be unable or unwilling to create a world without evil!”

On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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Trailers and the incredible cast of the movie GREATER about the life of Brandon Burlsworth!!

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Football camp

Uploaded on Jun 4, 2006

Brandon Burlsworth Football camp

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Trailers and the incredible cast of the movie GREATER about the life of Brandon Burlsworth!!

Greater

Neal McDonough

Neal McDonough
(Marty Burlsworth)

Neal McDonough was born on February 13, 1966 in Dorchester, Massachusetts, to Catherine (Bushe) and Frank McDonough, motel owners who were born in Ireland. He grew up in Barnstable, Massachusetts, graduated from Barnstable High School, and attended Syracuse University. He was a member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity and graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts in 1988. McDonough frequently appeared as Captain Laser, inspiring young students to bring their studies to completion. Fron there, he trained for a short time at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. McDonough has made many television and film appearances since 1991, including Star Trek: First Contact, Minority Report, Timeline, Walking Tall, The Guardian and Flags of Our Fathers. His most recent television appearances include Band of Brothers, Boomtown, Desperate Housewives,Medical Investigation, Tin Man and Justified.

Chris Severio

Chris Severio
(Brandon Burlsworth)

Born in Louisiana, Christopher Severio was immersed in acting and performing at a very young age. He appeared alongside his brother in several of his fathers, Tony Severio, short films. Having a severe case of the acting bug, Christopher enhanced his craft with extensive training with some of New Orleans best acting coaches. After several small part and film appearances including stunt work, Chris appeared in his father film, Rugaru, as the supporting character Blake. The film stars Randall Oliver and Joe Estevez.

Next came a supporting role as the Beer Knight in Fox Digital Studio’s series, Suit Up, directed by Christopher Leone and starring Marc Evan Jackson and Barry Corbin. The series was a success and Fox launched another season bringing Christopher back in the now popular character, the Beer Knight.

Nick Searcy

Nick Searcy
(The Farmer)

In the summer of 1996, Searcy produced, directed and acted in his first independent feature, Carolina Low. Searcy’s other film credits include the blockbustersNell, The Fugitive, Cast Away, Head of State,Runaway Jury, and The Ugly Truth. He broke onto the scene as the villain Frank Bennett in Universal’sFried Green Tomatoes. Searcy is a veteran of several television series. He had a recurring role on ABC’sThunder Alley was a series regular on CBS’ American Gothic UPN’s “7 Days” (1998-2001) and ABC’sRodney (2004-2006) and has guest starred on Boston Legal, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, and The West Wing, among others. He has also starred in several movies-of-the-week, including In the Best of Families: Marriage, Pride & Madness, Stolen Innocence all for CBS. Searcy was a series regular on HBO’s From the Earth to the Moon. Searcy’s theatre credits include several Off-Broadway plays and regional/stock productions of “Guys and Dolls,” “Cabaret” and “Jesus Christ Superstar.” Searcy is married to the actress Leslie Riley and has 2 lovely children, one in college and one in the third grade.

Leslie Easterbrook

Leslie Easterbrook
(Barbara)

Leslie Easterbrook is known for her roles in The Devil’s Rejects (2005), Police Academy (1984) andHalloween (2007). She serves on the board of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, and supports a number of children’s charities including Girls, Inc., The Sunshine Kids and Variety Children’s Charities. She is married to Dan Wilcox.

Quinton Aaron

Quinton Aaron
(Coach Aaron) – Cameo

Quinton Aaron was born in the Bronx, New York City. He was raised in Augusta, Georgia, by his mother, the late Laura Aaron, who wrote the book “Leave Me Alone” under the name L. A. Aaron. From an early age, Quinton has been singing. When he was nine years old, he was baptized and joined the church choir where he was a mute singer. His acting debut began with the Christmas Play. Quinton’s film debut started with Michel Gondry’s ‘Be Kind Rewind’ starring Jack Black and Mos Def. Other appearances such as ‘Fighting’ with Channing Tatum and co-starred in a NYU short film called Mr. Brooklyn. Actor best known for his work starring in Oscar nominated film The Blind Side, since then has done numerous guest star roles in shows like Law&Order SVU, One Tree Hill, Harry’s Law etc… Now Aaron is producing his first feature that he’ll also star in as well called Touch and Go which is a drama suspense story. Quinton is also co-writing a love story which he will also be starring in.

Quinton Aaron of “The Blindside” talks “Greater” and the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth

Published on Oct 28, 2015

Quinton Aaron, star of “The Blindside”, discusses why he is so proud to be a part of “Greater”, and talks about the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth, the greatest walk-on in college football history. “Greater” is Brandon’s story.

FIRST LOOK – “Greater” movie review

Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

________________

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

Related posts:

Death toll to 125 in Joplin, How can a good God allow evil and suffering?

First Person video of Joplin MO tornado 5/22/11 The video i took while at Fastrip on east 20th street. We huddled in the back of the store until the glass got sucked out , then ran into the walk in storage fridge. Sorry for the lack of visuals but the audio is pretty telling of […]

FRANCIS SCHAEFFER ANALYZES ART AND CULTURE PART 121 Elie Wiesel, (Answering the problem of evil in the world!!!) Part C (Featured artists are Christo and Jeanne-Claude )

  God On Trial Uploaded on Jan 8, 2012 God on Trial is a 2008 BBC/WGBH Boston television play written by Frank Cottrell Boyce, starring Antony Sher, Rupert Graves and Jack Shepherd. The play takes place in Auschwitz during World War II. The Jewish prisoners put God on trial in absentia for abandoning the Jewish […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Louise Antony is UMass, Phil Dept, “Atheists if they commit themselves to justice, peace and the relief of suffering can only be doing so out of love for the good. Atheist have the opportunity to practice perfect piety”

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 60 Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus

______ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus [This essay first appeared in Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Mar./Apr. 2001): 18-21] What shaped the life of the man who today is the symbol of evil and brutality, but who […]

TAKING ON PETER SINGER WITH WILLIAM CRAIG’S 4 PROPOSITIONS: 1. If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist 2. However, evil exists 3. Therefore objective moral values exist – namely, some things are evil 4. Therefore God exists

Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.” Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION Published on Jan 10, 2015 Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Abortion […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 54 Dr. Raymond Tallis of Manchester is an atheist because rejects a God who is “omniscient, omnipotent and good and yet so constrained as to be unable or unwilling to create a world without evil!”

On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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WATCH THE TRAILER FOR ‘GREATER’, FILM ABOUT FORMER ARKANSAS WALK-ON BRANDON BURLSWORTH ANDREW DOUGHTY 06 JANUARY 2016

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726 Harrison 04-27-2011 Part 3

Football camp

Uploaded on Jun 4, 2006

Brandon Burlsworth Football camp

______________

Quinton Aaron of “The Blindside” talks “Greater” and the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth

Published on Oct 28, 2015

Quinton Aaron, star of “The Blindside”, discusses why he is so proud to be a part of “Greater”, and talks about the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth, the greatest walk-on in college football history. “Greater” is Brandon’s story.

WATCH THE TRAILER FOR ‘GREATER’, FILM ABOUT FORMER ARKANSAS WALK-ON BRANDON BURLSWORTH

BY ANDREW DOUGHTY

06 JANUARY 2016

Two decades ago, Brandon Burlsworth, an offensive lineman from the small town of Harrison in northern Arkansas, began his journey as the most remarkable walk-on player in college football history. After redshirting as a freshman in 1994, he earned a scholarship the following season and starting spot before developing into one of the best lineman in the nation. Burlsworth was a First-Team All-American in 1998, the Razorbacks’ first such player in nine years.

He was tragically killed in a car accident the following year, shortly after being selected in the third round of the 1999 NFL Draft by the Indianapolis Colts, ending a life of happiness, perseverance and integrity.

Since his death, the Brandon Burlsworth Foundation has created dozens of programs, scholarships and events to support “the physical and spiritual needs of children, in particular those children who have limited opportunities.”

He has also been the subject of numerous newspaper and magazine articles, television segments and a 2001 book, Through the Eyes of a Champion: The Brandon Burlsworth Story, by Jeff Kinley. Burlsworth’s story will now hit the big screen with a feature film.

Greater stars Christopher Severio (Burlsworth), Neal McDonough and Nick Searcy and is set to hit theaters on Jan. 29. Here’s a look at the trailer:

FIRST LOOK – “Greater” movie review

Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

________________

Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

Related posts:

Death toll to 125 in Joplin, How can a good God allow evil and suffering?

First Person video of Joplin MO tornado 5/22/11 The video i took while at Fastrip on east 20th street. We huddled in the back of the store until the glass got sucked out , then ran into the walk in storage fridge. Sorry for the lack of visuals but the audio is pretty telling of […]

FRANCIS SCHAEFFER ANALYZES ART AND CULTURE PART 121 Elie Wiesel, (Answering the problem of evil in the world!!!) Part C (Featured artists are Christo and Jeanne-Claude )

  God On Trial Uploaded on Jan 8, 2012 God on Trial is a 2008 BBC/WGBH Boston television play written by Frank Cottrell Boyce, starring Antony Sher, Rupert Graves and Jack Shepherd. The play takes place in Auschwitz during World War II. The Jewish prisoners put God on trial in absentia for abandoning the Jewish […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Louise Antony is UMass, Phil Dept, “Atheists if they commit themselves to justice, peace and the relief of suffering can only be doing so out of love for the good. Atheist have the opportunity to practice perfect piety”

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 60 Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Dr. Peter Millican of Oxford on the PROBLEM OF EVIL

  On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of Dr. Harry Kroto: ____________ Debate […]

The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus

______ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR The Roots of Hitler’s Evil by Richard Weikart Professor of History California State Univ., Stanislaus [This essay first appeared in Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Mar./Apr. 2001): 18-21] What shaped the life of the man who today is the symbol of evil and brutality, but who […]

TAKING ON PETER SINGER WITH WILLIAM CRAIG’S 4 PROPOSITIONS: 1. If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist 2. However, evil exists 3. Therefore objective moral values exist – namely, some things are evil 4. Therefore God exists

Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.” Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION Published on Jan 10, 2015 Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Abortion […]

RESPONDING TO HARRY KROTO’S BRILLIANT RENOWNED ACADEMICS!! Part 54 Dr. Raymond Tallis of Manchester is an atheist because rejects a God who is “omniscient, omnipotent and good and yet so constrained as to be unable or unwilling to create a world without evil!”

On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]

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‘Greater’: Neal McDonough Gets to Be a Good Man of Faith (Not Just in Real Life) August 25, 2016 by Kate O’Hare

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Sports Dungeon 05-17-2011 Part 2

Uploaded on May 18, 2011

Host Loren Tepper talks with Marty Burlsworth, Executive Director of the Brandon Burlsworth Foundation, about the Football Camp coming to FS Garrison Stadium in Harrison on June 10th and 11th. For information and to register go to http://www.brandonburlsworth.org.

726 Harrison 04-27-2011 Part 3

Football camp

Uploaded on Jun 4, 2006

Brandon Burlsworth Football camp

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‘Greater’: Neal McDonough Gets to Be a Good Man of Faith (Not Just in Real Life)

Greater-Neal-McDonoughAs an entertainment journalist, I’ve spoken to actor Neal McDonough for different projects since the 1990s. He hit big playing the heroic Buck Compton in HBO’s “Band of Brothers” in 2001 — and became Compton’s friend, seeing him the last time shortly before his death in 2012 — and since then, he’s been mostly known for playing villains.

With his bleached-blond hair (first acquired to play Compton) and ice-blue eyes, McDonough makes an intimidating presence on screen — including a recent memorable turn as the drug kingpin/psycho-killer Quarles in FX’s “Justified” — but in person, it’s a different story.

He’s a family man, married with five children, a devout Catholic and a political conservative. All those things should ensure that he never works in Hollywood, but the opposite is true. McDonough recently relocated his family to Vancouver, Canada, and is hard at work on “Arrow,” “The Flash” and other comic-book dramas from executive producer Greg Berlanti.

But those five kids probably couldn’t watch very much of what their father has done — until now.

On Friday, Aug. 26, “Greater” is released in theaters across America. It’s based on the real-life story of Brandon Burlsworth, a “walk on” (meaning no athletic scholarship) who landed on the UniversityNeal-McDonough of Arkansas Razorbacks football team. Deemed too short and out of shape for the NFL, Burlsworth, bolstered by his Christian faith and a fierce work ethic, distinguished himself on the field and was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts.

But, 11 days after being drafted, and before he signed his contract, Burlsworth (played by Christopher Severio) was killed in a car accident. This brought on a crisis of faith for his older brother, Marty (McDonough), who essentially raised him.

The state of Arkansas was also shaken, trying to understand how such misfortune could strike someone who appeared to be a devoted Christian and all-around good guy.

Also starring is conservative actor Nick Searcy (“Justified”), who directed the upcoming “Gosnell” feature film.

Calling “Greater” a “one-note sermon,” Variety unfortunately wasn’t impressed with the movie, saying:

Given Burlsworth’s piousness, Hunt and co-writer David Reindl use his untimely passing as a means of addressing a core spiritual conundrum: If God exists, how can He allow decent “Pilgrim’s Progress”-reading people like Burlsworth to perish so young? They tackle that query via Burlsworth’s much-older brother Marty (Neal McDonough), who, on the cusp of his sibling’s funeral, struggles to understand why awful things happen to the innocent and righteous. As with the religious comments strewn throughout “Greater,” this framing device is handled with maximum exposition and minimal grace. Its ham-fistedness is compounded by Marty’s prolonged conversation with a wood-whittling stranger (Nick Searcy) whose declarations about the universe’s “pitiless indifference” and the “howling abyss” that awaits those after death speaks to his oh-so-obvious Satanic nature.

Burlsworth’s straight-and-narrow course to gridiron glory is recounted in flashbacks that unfailingly cast him as a flawless servant of the Lord, an indefatigable and selfless worker, and an aw-shucks good guy. As embodied by newcomer Chris Severio, Burlsworth is a friendly giant with enormous black-rimmed glasses (think Drew Carey by way of Clark Kent) who ignores insults and never gets discouraged, to the point that even his drunken lout of a father (Michael Parks) can’t shake his confidence.

The Los Angeles Times was kinder, saying:

The true story of the late Arkansas Razorbacks football hero Brandon Burlsworth is an underdog saga to rival “Rudy,” and while the modest Burlsworth biopic “Greater” doesn’t have that film’s inspirational spark, the indie drama is just sweet enough and slick enough to appeal to pigskin fans and Christian family audiences.

A fine cast helps. Neal McDonough (who also co-produced) plays Brandon’s older brother Marty, who raises him in lieu of their absentee alcoholic father (the always-excellent Michael Parks). Nick Searcy plays a mysterious figure Marty talks to about God during Brandon’s funeral, as the film’s framing device.

But, McDonough liked it. As he told me, calling in during a family outing to a Vancouver mall:

It really came down to a letter that was sent to me by the writers and the producers. They said, ‘We really want you go be this guy, because if anyone could pull off the Jimmy Stewart/”It’s a Wonderful Life”-type of character for this piece, it’s Neal McDonough. I’m like, “OK, well, why do you say that?” They said, “Well, we saw you in ‘Justified.’” I’m like, “How does ‘Justified’ get to Jimmy Stewart in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’? He goes, “Well, I saw all the different levels of your performance, and I thought you were the perfect guy for this movie.” I said, “All right.”

[My wife] Ruve and I read the script. I said, “I want to be an executive producer on this, so I can really bring it home and get the right people attached, bring in some friends and make this something special.”

“I’ve been in so many films and so many TV shows, this one, for some reason, right when I read it at the beginning, was near and dear to my heart. Me being the ultimate Catholic boy, I finally got to do something about faith. You never get to do something about faith. In general, I’m playing the bad guy in so many things.”

When you get to do a piece where it questions faith and what life is really all about — I’ve wanted to do that for a while, and this came long. I was like, “Oh, boy, this is such a great piece for me and my family,” that I jumped right in. We kicked some serious butt on this one.

To make this thing come home true and strong and really show how amazing Brandon was, and how amazing his life was, and Marty’s life also, what Marty did, it was really a great time of my life. I’m so proud of this movie.

If you wondered why I wasn’t coy about revealing that Brandon dies, it’s because “Greater” begins there. Said McDonough:

The reason I loved the piece so much, everyone through Arkansas, and everyone who’s seen the movie, knows that Brandon dies right at the very beginning. I love that it wasn’t, “Here’s his life; and then he died.” It was, “He’s dead, and how do you deal with it?,” when everyone says, “He’s in a better place.”

Marty certainly didn’t have Brandon’s faith. He had faith, but no one had faith as strong as Brandon Burlsworth. The kid was incredible. For everyone to say, “Hey, he’s in a better place, don’t worry about it,” Marty is like, “What the heck are you talking about? The greatest thing in my life is gone.”

He really was his son, when you think about it. … That’s what the whole movie was about, for me, as Marty: “How do you deal with the death of someone that, to you, is so perfect”?

With my five kids, and my beautiful wife, Ruve, I’m think, “Oh gosh, what would that be like?” For some reason, Marty Burlsworth not only became stronger because of it, he became better. … If there’s a heroic, John Wayne guy on this planet, it’s Marty Burlsworth. I’m not kidding. That guy is unbelievable, and I got to play him.”

 

Quinton Aaron of “The Blindside” talks “Greater” and the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth

Published on Oct 28, 2015

Quinton Aaron, star of “The Blindside”, discusses why he is so proud to be a part of “Greater”, and talks about the faith and character of Brandon Burlsworth, the greatest walk-on in college football history. “Greater” is Brandon’s story.

FIRST LOOK – “Greater” movie review

Razorbacks Remember Legend With Award

Uploaded on Aug 23, 2010

The Brandon Burlsworth Award will honor the former hog’s memory and help walk on hogs succeed.

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Greater: Official Trailer – Old #2

 

Images: Courtesy Hammond Entertainment/Greater Productions

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Brandon Burlsworth

Uploaded on Aug 31, 2011

Brandon was a walk on turned All American at the University of Arkansas. He was drafted by the Indianapolis Colts and 11 days later was tragically killed in a car accident. The Brandon Burlsworth Foundation was founded in his name and has several programs: The Burls Kids program takes underprivileged children to all Arkansas Razorback and Indianapolis Colts home games. The BBF in partnership with Walmart provides eye care to 14,000 pre-K thru 12th grade students whose working families are trying, but still cannot afford extras like eye care and do not qualify for state funded programs. We hold football camps each year in Harrison and Little Rock and we have several football scholarship and awards including the Burlsworth Trophy, a national award given out to the most outstanding Division One college football player who began his career as a walk-on.

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