February 18, 2021
“Rush to Judgment” is an important and timely documentary about leftist ideology on social media and the mob who pounces inexhaustibly. In 2019, they famously pounced on Nick Sandmann, an innocent teen wearing a MAGA hat. This is that story.
In July 2020, filmmakers Steve Oldfield and Ryan Anderson were set to premiere their documentary “Rush to Judgment” at the Anthem Film Festival. But due to COVID-19 restrictions, the libertarian-leaning showcase was canceled. “Rush to Judgement” would have premiered in the same prime-time slot as Adam Carolla and Dennis Prager’s “No Safe Spaces” in 2018.
Nonetheless, Oldfield told me that he is working with several colleges across the country to begin a tour, including a premiere and lecture-seminar format. The filmmakers are also working on replacing the documentary at a festival.
New York Times Shows Need for ‘Reality Czar’
Commentary
When I first heard that someone was calling for the Biden administration to establish a “reality czar” to weed out “misinformation,” I thought it must have appeared in our paper of record.
I mean, of course, The Babylon Bee, the place where satire meets and then overtakes reality.
I looked, but it wasn’t there.
It appeared, wouldn’t you know it, in our former paper of record, The New York Times. “Experts,” you see, are worried about “conspiracy theories” and “disinformation” about such things as the 2020 presidential election and the best way to deal with the coronavirus pandemic.
14 Feb 2021
Actor Kevin Sorbo blasted Hollywood’s treatment of Gina Carano Saturday, highlighting a producer who has worked with Disney and received no rebuke from the company when he fantasized about “MAGA kids” going “into the woodchipper.”
“Just so we’re all clear, he still has his job at Disney,” Sorbo wrote on social media, sharing a screenshot of the infamous post from film producer Jack Morrissey.
Just so we’re all clear, he still has his job at Disney pic.twitter.com/TTdeAmpROF
Morrissey whose producer credits include Disney’s live-action remake of
Beauty and the Beast had tweeted, “#MAGAkids go screaming, hats first, into the woodchipper,” alongside a violent image in reaction to the Covington Catholic High School incident in January 2019.
Film producer Jack Morrissey apologized Monday for a tweet envisioning the Covington Catholic High School students who were involved in a media firestorm over the weekend going into a woodchipper.
Facing a quarter of a billion dollar lawsuit in the case of Nick Sandmann, a Covington Catholic Schoolboy, The Washington Post has issued a correction and deleted their original tweet. They say that Nathan Phillips is not a Vietnam vet, and defended themselves lamely.
They acknowledge it was erroneous but then they downplay it and put it behind a paywall on a Friday night. Their reporting was layered with false and defamatory information as Mollie Hemingway says, but they are shielding themselves. They do disavow the original reporting, and that should help Nick Sandmann.
They did NOT offer an apology for their egregious fake reporting and lack of journalistic ethics. They are defending their bad behavior and their racist activism in lieu of even the most minimal investigation.