Pro-abortion movies are all the rage at this year's Sundance Film Festival, which is again being held virtually due to the Chinese coronavirus pandemic. The titles garnering buzz include two movies about the Jane Collective the radical feminist organization in Chicago that provided illegal abortions for women during the 60s and early 70s and the U.S. premiere of the award-winning French film "The Happening."
Pro-abortion movies are all the rage at this year's Sundance Film Festival, which is again being held virtually due to the Chinese coronavirus pandemic. The titles garnering buzz include two movies about the Jane Collective the radical feminist organization in Chicago that provided illegal abortions for women during the 60s and early 70s and the U.S. premiere of the award-winning French film "The Happening."
it s about the political power of working people amassing their donations and being able to fund the democratic opponents of charles and david koch. carl, you ve seen in a personal way now. do you really have any hope for campaign finance reform. can we turn back this tide? the important thing is that people educate themselves on the issue. most americans want some regulation of campaign contributions and campaign spending. and they re going against if tide. people need to get motivated and stand up and make their case. the film, citizen koch, opens in new york and select cities later this month. tia and carl, thanks very much for coming. that. thanks so much. after the break, what s old is new again. the biggest numbers behind today s job numbers. that s coming up next. i m randy and i quit smoking with chantix. for 33 years i chose to keep smoking.
american politics, following the supreme court s decision and united ruling. the title of their new film? citizen koch. a reference to billionaire brothers charles and david koch backing wisconsin governor, scott walker s fight against the unions. the main subject of the film. the film was then being funded by an independent production company called itvs and was expected to run on pbs. itvs executives were praise worthy of the documentary and everything was moving forward smoothly and then something happened. a very critical documentary featuring the koch brothers aired on pbs and david koch, who has donated $23 million to public television over the years, got upset. according to reporting done by the new yorker s jane mayer, all of a sudden the film s title was now, quote, exto in order fairly problematic. and a year later, they were told itvs was pulling the plug on the project. even public television, it