118 - "Selma" episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 18, 2024 · 11 MIN

118 - "Selma"

from Morning Reel · host Ray Salazar

Ava DuVernay directed "Selma" that deals with the marches of Selma in 1965 led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This actually happened that led to an official to pass signed by President Lyndon B Johnson. A dramatized film of course but it's straightforward, it's gets to the point and the performances from the talent really give this film the attention it deserves. We get to see a MLK Jr. very human, almost too human, seeing him deal with all kinds of aspects in life epsecially with things that have nothing to do with him. People look up to this man because he is a leader and for the greatest cause any man can put themselves in because it'll literally set course to what's to come in America. The scenes of the bridge crossings are brutal and DuVernay does not relent, she shoves it to us because that is what happened. Injustice all the way to the physical level and thankfully during that time, people all over the world were able to see it and it's messed up. I'm sure in reality, it was far more brutal, you have to give it to DuVernary for showing us just a fraction of those events played out. It's hard to watch innocent woman just get beat for walking. FOR WALKING. Then again, it was George Wallace's Alabama and he didn't give a f. Tim Roth knocked the Wallace role right out of the park as he usually does. Although I feel that the film itself was a bit too scripted, like I feel the other cast were kind of robotic in a sense. The main characters, you can tell they had a lot of range to play around with and used it to their advantage. Overall, "Selma" is solid, effective and entertaining. It does get real and it makes you mad as how politics work. You ask yourself, does the president really care? Does the government really care? Regardless, when you want something you real bad, you're gonna do what you can to achieve it. MLK Jr. is the greatest example of that and he led millions.Three and a half out of four tokes.#selma #avaduvernay #injustice

Ava DuVernay directed "Selma" that deals with the marches of Selma in 1965 led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This actually happened that led to an official to pass signed by President Lyndon B Johnson. A dramatized film of course but it's straightforward, it's gets to the point and the performances from the talent really give this film the attention it deserves. We get to see a MLK Jr. very human, almost too human, seeing him deal with all kinds of aspects in life epsecially with things that have nothing to do with him. People look up to this man because he is a leader and for the greatest cause any man can put themselves in because it'll literally set course to what's to come in America. The scenes of the bridge crossings are brutal and DuVernay does not relent, she shoves it to us because that is what happened. Injustice all the way to the physical level and thankfully during that time, people all over the world were able to see it and it's messed up. I'm sure in reality, it was far more brutal, you have to give it to DuVernary for showing us just a fraction of those events played out. It's hard to watch innocent woman just get beat for walking. FOR WALKING. Then again, it was George Wallace's Alabama and he didn't give a f. Tim Roth knocked the Wallace role right out of the park as he usually does. Although I feel that the film itself was a bit too scripted, like I feel the other cast were kind of robotic in a sense. The main characters, you can tell they had a lot of range to play around with and used it to their advantage. Overall, "Selma" is solid, effective and entertaining. It does get real and it makes you mad as how politics work. You ask yourself, does the president really care? Does the government really care? Regardless, when you want something you real bad, you're gonna do what you can to achieve it. MLK Jr. is the greatest example of that and he led millions.Three and a half out of four tokes.#selma #avaduvernay #injustice

NOW PLAYING

118 - "Selma"

0:00 11:40

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Billy Gene Is Marketing Offends The Internet Billy Gene Is Marketing Offensive. Racist. Sexist. Trending. Inappropriate. Brutally honest business advice delivered to you every morning. So, basically the exact opposite of every single business podcast on the planet. Explicit Ustreme - The Show That Never Ends Reel Radio Join Jim Davidson talking about everything and Ustreme.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/ustreme-the-show-that-never-ends--5954507/support. Explicit The Comedy Club Reel Radio Audio on this site is copyrighted by the respective author and presented here for evaluation and entertainment purposes only. No profits are made on this site from their use. Please support these artists and purchase their audio or video. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work on this site is distributed under fair use without profit or payment to those who have expressed an interest in receiving for non-profit research and educational or review purposes only. Explicit 🅣🅗🅔 🅟🅤🅛🅢🅔 🅣🅗🅔 🅟🅤🅛🅢🅔 - In Anderson and Nenana Currently Streaming 2 Shows: (Variety Show & Headline News) Updated news, special guest, and some ”Out Of The Box” content. Open forum with live shows weekly! Call in’s are welcome and encouraged during live broadcast! Scheduled Live Show’s on Wednesday @ 6:30pm Alaska time, with weekday ”Headline News Morning Shows”, some impromptu show’s in between. Music Use On This Show Is Licensed Under ASCAP License #400009488 and BMI License #61039779 4 Tiers of Patrons Welcome: Platinum, Gold, Silver, and Bronze @ patreon.com/user?u=87583303 Contact us: [email protected] Hosted by: Denali Borough Brett & Tucson Scot Explicit

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Morning Reel?

This episode is 11 minutes long.

When was this Morning Reel episode published?

This episode was published on January 18, 2024.

What is this episode about?

Ava DuVernay directed "Selma" that deals with the marches of Selma in 1965 led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This actually happened that led to an official to pass signed by President Lyndon B Johnson. A dramatized film of course but it's...

Is there a transcript available for this episode?

Yes, a full transcript is available for this episode. You can read the complete transcript on the episode page.

Can I download this Morning Reel episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!