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Monthly Archives: August 2021
Halle Berry partners with HAPPYBOND on functional Elixir line – Pet Food Processing
Posted: August 28, 2021 at 11:45 am
LOS ANGELES Earlier this year, HAPPYBOND partnered with rspin, a health and wellness platform founded by Halle Berry, to launch a line of functional elixir supplements for pets.
HAPPYBOND is a pet nutrition brand offering collagen supplements, treats and soon-to-be-announced complete-and-balanced pet food formulas. The new elixirs add to the companys functional pet offerings.
Elixirs are available in three formulas, each made in the United States with natural ingredients. The Shine On formula includes high concentrations of vitamin E and fatty acids to support skin and coat health, according to the company. The Tum Tamer formula targets gut health and digestive issues, and the Be Well Elixir is designed to support immune system strength.
Ingredients in these Elixirs include turmeric, vitamin C, zinc, flaxseed oil and papaya juice. All ingredients are active, and formulas do not contain any fillers.
Halle Berry (left) and Anja Skodda, partners on the HAPPYBOND x rspin Elixirs line. (Source: HAPPYBOND)
We are excited to have the opportunity to work with Halle, said Anja Skodda, chief executive officer of HAPPYBOND. HAPPYBOND and rspin align in so many ways. Halle is all about a healthy lifestyle and feeds her dogs with only the best ingredients. We both believe in preventative health for our pets and therefore created the series of elixirs together with the goal to extend those special bonding moments and keep our pets healthy and happy.
HAPPYBOND x rspin Elixirs can be added to a complete-and-balanced diet as a meal topper.
I couldnt be happier about our collaboration with Anja and HAPPYBOND, Berry said. I wanted to create rspin with the notion that modern wellness means tending to mind, body, and spirit. This also includes our pets. My dogs are so much more than beloved pets; they are family. HAPPYBOND takes this evolved notion of wellness and applies it to the well-being, health, and happiness of our furry children. When it comes to nourishing your pets, they couldnt be in better hands than with HAPPYBOND.
The Elixir line will be sold on happybond.com and re-spin.shop.com.
Read more aboutnew pet food and treat products.
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Halle Berry partners with HAPPYBOND on functional Elixir line - Pet Food Processing
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Celebrating 20 Years In The Food Delivery Industry, Vital Choice Wild Seafood & Organics Looks Back On How It All Began – PRNewswire
Posted: at 11:45 am
With 20 years in business Vital Choice Wild Seafood & Organics explores how it began with a request from a salmon lover.
After one such show, "This very insistent woman named Helen, comes up and says, 'How can I get this when you guys are gone?'" It was a lightbulb moment. If Helen wanted this salmon shipped, then maybe other people wanted seafood shipped to them as well.
"I said, 'I'll send you some," Hartnell says, "Though I had no idea how to send frozen salmon to Kalamazoo or anywhere else. I figured it out and sent it."
After building a business plan and a website, Vital Choice was born in August of 2001.
The early product line was "pretty thin," recalls Dave Hamburg, Vital Choice president and a fellow Alaska fisherman.
"We had some sockeye, some halibut, some smoked salmon and lox. That was about it." Eventually, Vital Choice became what it is today, nationally recognized by leading doctors and nutritionists, a certified B-Corporation (since 2014), and a thriving business with over 200 unique sustainably sourced products.
Because it was started by fishermen, Vital Choice retains its unique understanding of where its products originate, and the importance of sourcing with care and giving back to the environment.
"We're not just a retailer. We're also an active advocate for protecting wild fish resources and the livelihood of the responsible fishers," says Hamburg. "We feel it personally because that's the world we come from."
And what about the next 20 years?
"Health and sustainability are two megatrends that I believe will only grow," said Hartnell. "Wild salmon is among the most nutrient dense foods on the planet. Demand will continue to grow. There is competition in the space now that wasn't there 20 years ago, but I think our intense focus on quality and responsibility will serve us well to 2041 and beyond."
About Vital Choice Wild Seafood & OrganicsBefore founding Vital Choice in 2001, Northwest Washington nativeRandy Hartnell spent more than 20 years as a commercial fishermanin Alaska. Today, Vital Choice is the trusted source for fast home delivery of the world's finest wild Alaskan seafood, whole-food supplements, and organic fare.
Vital Choice foods are the purest available, always sustainably harvested from healthy, well-managed wild fisheries and organic farms. The company's products are recognized for their superior taste and health benefits andendorsed by leading health and wellness experts.
For more about Vital Choice Wild Seafood & Organics, please visit http://www.vitalchoice.comor follow @vitalchoice in social media.
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Chile is Passing a Neuro-Rights Law to Protect Mental Privacy. It’s Time for Other Nations to Do the Same. PIA VPN Blog – Privacy News Online
Posted: at 11:44 am
Two years ago, this blog wrote about the privacy implications of the exciting new field of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). The approach discussed there involved implanting tiny threads directly into the brain. Such an invasive and medically risky procedure is unlikely to be adopted by the general public. But a new paper underlines the major advances in non-invasive BCIs, for example using electroencephalography BCIs (eBCIs) that measure electrical activity on the external surface of the scalp.
Most of the paper is devoted to a detailed review of over a dozen such eBCI headsets and their potential applications as mass market devices.. But the paper rightly concludes by considering the main ethical issues raised by these eBCI systems, which concern privacy and agency. It points out that neural information acquired using eBCIs could give important insights into how their users think, feel and behave. Neural data could be used to infer different aspects related to user intention, emotional response, and decision making, as well as conscious and unconscious interest. That, in its turn, means that eBCIs will be appealing tools for the large-scale collection of consumer biometric data for companies.
Its easy to imagine incentives being offered to users of eBCIs to allow their neural information to be shared with third parties, just as much personal data is shared as they move around the Internet. Indeed, one of the deeply troubling aspects of the routine and large-scale harvesting of highly personal data from people when they visit sites or use online services is that it normalizes this invasion of privacy. Once that happens, many people might think that since they have already given up so much about themselves, they may as well agree to upload their neural data too.
The other major ethical issue raised by the new generation of two-way eBCIs concerns agency. This refers to the subjective awareness of control over our own actions and, by extension, over events in the external world. Here, there is a subtle but serious problem thanks to the brains lack of proprioception, sometimes referred to as the sixth sense:
the human brain is unable to acknowledge the influence of an external device on itself, which could potentially compromise autonomy and self-agency. Because of this, users may be liable to mistakenly perceive ownership over behavioral outputs that are generated by the BCI, as well as incorrectly attribute causation to it. For instance, brain stimulation techniques have been shown to trigger changes in demeanor and character traits, which often leads to changes in personal identity.
In other words, the brains paradoxical lack of awareness about itself as a physical organ, and its inability to distinguish different kinds of external inputs, could make it easier to implant thoughts and desires using BCIs without the subject being aware of that fact.
The evident seriousness of these challenges has prompted ethicists and researchers to explore ways to combat the use of BCIs to undermine privacy and agency. An increasingly popular suggestion is to update the Universal Declaration of Human Rights for the age of neurotechnology. Recently, one group of scientists and lawyers suggested enshrining and protecting five basic neuro-rights:
(1) the right to identity, or the ability to control both ones physical and mental integrity; (2) the right to agency, or the freedom of thought and free will to choose ones own actions; (3) the right to mental privacy, or the ability to keep thoughts protected against disclosure; (4) the right to fair access to mental augmentation, or the ability to ensure that the benefits of improvements to sensory and mental capacity through neurotechnology are distributed justly in the population; and (5) the right to protection from algorithmic bias, or the ability to ensure that technologies do not insert prejudices.
Back in 2019, when Privacy News Online first looked at this area, such proposals were purely theoretical, and seemed unlikely to form part of a legal framework with any real-world impact. But things have moved on since then. For example, Spain aims to bring in a Charter of Digital Rights, whose aim is to preserve offline rights in the online world. Section XXIV concerns digital rights in the use of neurotechnologies. Remarkably, new mental privacy laws in Chile are even further along. As an article on the Rest of the World site explains, a constitutional bill awaiting approval by Chiles Chamber of Deputies, and a bill explicitly about neuro-protection, will establish rights to free will, mental privacy, equal access to cognitive enhancement technologies, and protection against algorithmic bias essentially those listed above. The Rest of the World article points out the radically new approach taken by the Chilean neuro-protection bill:
Rather than describing it in broad-brush terms, it proposes to treat neural data as a special kind of information that is intimately related to who we are and that partly defines our identity. The bill therefore states that neural data must be legally considered as organic tissue.
By treating neuro-data as an organ, the law prohibits Chileans from being compelled to give up brain data and, crucially, its collection will require explicit opt-in authorization. Another implication of this legal analogy is that brain data cannot be sold; it can only be donated for altruistic purposes. The buying and selling of brain data is prohibited, regardless of consent.
It is noteworthy how fast the world of neuro-rights is progressing. It is also striking that the country in the vanguard of addressing the novel and profound ethical questions that BCIs raise is Chile. This is a sure sign that protecting mental privacy will not just be a problem for a few rich Western nations, but for the entire world. Other countries need to learn from the Chilean moves, and start working on their own legislation enshrining key neuro-rights.
Featured image by Baburov.
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Explainer: Brain-machine interfacing could change the way we interact with the world and with ourselves – capitalcurrent.ca
Posted: at 11:44 am
Breakthroughs in neuroscience and artificial intelligence are bound to change the way we interact with people and the world around us, though many remain unaware of this emerging field of technology.
Brain-machine interfacing is a direct means of communication between a human brain and a machine. Communication is achieved through devices like electroencephalograph machines (EEGs) and implants which monitor neural signals by a head-worn device or more invasively by a device inserted into or onto the brain itself.
Although this may sound straight out of a sci-fi movie, brain-machine interface (BMI) technology has already arrived and is being tested in humans and animals.
While BMI tech is still in its early days, conversations about what constitutes an ethical cognitive-augmentation of humans are worth starting now. It may not be long before this technology is commercially available and widely adopted.
Many different approaches to BMI are being taken by corporations and research institutes. Some have their sights set on the medical treatments made possible by this technology. Others are focused on the long term consumer applications for these tools.
We can expect BMIs such Neuralink, Elon Musks latest technological venture, to return certain motor functions to impaired individuals. Using a neural implant, called the Link, the activity of specific neurons can be detected and decoded to better understand what different areas of the brain do.
The initial goal of our technology will be to help people with paralysis to regain independence through the control of computers and mobile devices.
Neuralink, launched in 2016, aspires to help people with spinal cord injuries by giving them the ability to control computers and other digital tools with their minds. Users would initially learn to control a virtual mouse, but could eventually control multiple virtual devices, like keyboards or game controllers.
While Neuralink is focused on developing tools to give people the ability to communicate more easily by text and speech, new possibilities are appearing quickly in this field of research.
In movement-related areas of the brain, neurons represent intended movements. There are neurons in the brain that can carry information about everything we see, feel, touch, or think, Neuralink explains on their website.
As users think about moving their arms or hands, we would decode those intentions, which would be sent over Bluetooth to the users computer.
Earlier this year, Neuralink released a video of a macaque monkey named Pager, playing simple computer games, receiving doses of banana milkshake as a performance reward. Initially trained to use a joystick to move a cursor to a highlighted area of a digital grid, Neuralink was able to decode the intent behind Pagers neural activity to give him control of the cursor using only his mind once the joystick was unplugged.
The experiment was taken one step further when Neuralink demonstrated Pagers ability to play a classic game of Pong purely by thought.
On the other end of the spectrum for BMI applications, is widely adopted consumer usage. Although we cannot expect implants like Neuralink to become publicly available any time soon, non-invasive BMIs are being used to augment tools you likely already use, like headphones.
Neurable, a tech start-up, aims to develop neurotechnology for everyday life. Enten is a pair of smart headphones that uses EEG to detect the difference between high-attention and low-attention brain states, without having to put a chip in your brain.
Enten headphones are paired with your phone to offer you helpful suggestions throughout the day that optimize personal productivity.
Users may be prompted to take breaks at certain points in the day when low-attention brain activity is detected, or instead might have notifications automatically muted during peak cognitive performance. Playlist recommendations are even algorithmically curated for your individual enhancement.
At Neurable, were translating brain activity into simple actionable insights you can use in your everyday life. After all, your brain knows you best.
There is a lot of middle ground to be covered in innovation between Neuralinks medically focused implant and Neurables consumer-focused headphones. But as BIM technology improves, we can anticipate the development of tools that strike a healthy balance between restorative function and cognitive augmentation.
It is worth noting that Neuralink has expressed plans to offer its tools to healthy patients in the future.
Access to emerging technology always brings about a new set of ethical questions, especially when personal data is involved, let alone neural information depicting human intention.
We expect that as our devices continue to scale, and as we learn to communicate with more areas of the brain, we will discover new, non-medical applications for our BMIs. Neuralinks long-term vision is to create BMIs that are sufficiently safe and powerful that healthy individuals would want to have them.
Dr. Amedeo DAngiulli from Carleton Universitys Cognitive and Emotion Research (NICER) Lab says, this technology will become state of the art, and the kind of standard. For medical applications, we will be in this situation where we will have the technology, and people will clearly benefit from it. I dont think theres anyone that can actually doubt that
On the other end, we will also have the issue that when we get to augmenting, there will be the usual fuzzy gray area where we dont know if the application of that technology is necessary.
Currently, the conversation surrounding invasive and non-invasive approaches to brain-machine interfacing is concerned with how close to the brain a data-reading device is. DAngiulli says we should be more concerned with how invasive or protective corporations are about our neural data, as they gain access to it in the coming decades.
I see the invasive versus non-invasive distinction as very blurred and very artificial because in any case where you have individual data interfacing with a third-party machine, the repercussions can also be dire.
We dont want a situation where these technologies are launched and then for private interests, there are caveats that cannot be fixed, he says.
As BMIs become more mature, we ought to develop stronger measures for the protection of user data. Eventually, the primary application of these tools will shift from medical to augmentative, and many more ethical standards and protocols will become necessary.
I dont think that the major applications will be rehabilitation or medical. I think the major applications will be individual; everybody will have a personal AI exactly as we have a personal computer Maybe we wont type on the computer anymore, but the computer will be part of us, DAngiulli says.
The future will look very weird and different from now.
As innovation in neuroscience and artificial intelligence continues to bring humans closer to the nature of their own minds, now is the time to consider how much meddling is ethically permissible.
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Hong Kong to amend law to step up film censorship – SHOOT Online
Posted: at 11:43 am
Hong Kong authorities on Tuesday said they plan to amend a film censorship law to forbid screenings of movies deemed contrary to national security.
The proposed changes to Hong Kong's Film Censorship Ordinance would step up censorship of movies in the semi-autonomous city, expanding an ongoing crackdown on political dissent that has led to the closure of various pro-democracy organizations and the arrests of dozens of activists.
The amendments would require a censor to determine whether a film contains elements that endanger national security. Older movies that were previously allowed to be screened could also have their approvals revoked on national security grounds.
"We need this provision to cater for circumstances where a film which was created or approved before but given the new law enacted and the new guidelines issued there might be chances that we need to reconsider such cases," Edward Yau, secretary for commerce and economic development, said at a news conference Tuesday.
The changes would apply to films made in Hong Kong as well as those produced elsewhere. Hong Kong's film industry is widely known for directors such as Wong Kar-wai, Tsui Hark, John Woo and Stanley Kwan and actors including Jackie Chan, Chow Yun-fat, Jet Li, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Maggie Cheung.
Those who violate the ordinance and screen banned movies could face up to three years in jail and a fine of 1 million Hong Kong dollars ($128,400).
The changes to the law, if passed, take the city a step closer to censorship levels in mainland China, where authorities have the power to block movies, TV shows and content deemed politically sensitive or contrary to the values of the Chinese Communist Party.
Britain handed Hong Kong over to mainland China in 1997 under a "one country, two systems" framework that allowed it freedoms not found on the mainland for 50 years, including free speech, freedom of the press and freedom of expression.
But critics say Hong Kong is fast losing those freedoms after Beijing's imposition of a tough national security law on the city in June last year following months of political strife and anti-government protests in 2019.
The law which outlaws secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign collusion to intervene in the city's affairs has been used to arrest over 100 pro-democracy figures.
Multiple pro-democracy organizations, such as rally organizer Civil Human Rights Front and the pro-democracy Professional Teachers' Union, have disbanded amid allegations they violated the security legislation.
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An Illustrated Guide to Post-Orwellian Censorship – The MIT Press Reader
Posted: at 11:43 am
Modern authoritarian regimes dont attempt total, absolute control. Their censorship is more selective and calibrated and thus more resilient.
By: Cherian George and Sonny Liew
The political cartoon is the art form of our deeply troubled world; a chimera of journalism, art, and satire that is elemental to political speech. Cartoons dont tell secrets or move markets, yet as Cherian George and Sonny Liew show in Red Lines: Political Cartoons and the Struggle against Censorship, cartoonists have been harassed, sued, fired, jailed, attacked, and assassinated for their work.
As drawn commentary on current events, the existence and proliferation of political cartoons provides a useful indicator of a societys state of democratic freedom: It shows that the system requires powerful individuals and institutions to tolerate dissent from the weak; and that the public is used to freewheeling, provocative debate. But that is not the norm. In most countries, political cartoonists the guerrillas of the media are vulnerable to multiple and varied threats. In the excerpt that follows, George and Liew examine China and Turkey to illustrate that while totalitarianism may be out of style, what remains is no less insidious.
Censorship is the power to make 2 + 2 equal 5. Or 3. Or whatever people in power say it is.
You still think there are four. You must try Harder! So said George Orwell in his classic, 1984, which he wrote in the 1940s. Horrified by Stalins Soviet Union and Hitlers Germany, Orwell spun a tale that continues to color how we picture state censorship in controlled societies. Zero tolerance for dissent. Erasure of inconvenient data. Even the wrong thoughts are against law Thoughtcrime.
But this may not be how we should think about 21st-century despots. At least, not the clever ones. As Antonio Gramsci understood, rules achieve hegemonic domination when they are able to cloak their coercion with the consent of the ruled.
Hannah Arendt, a close observer of totalitarian regimes, realized that power needs legitimacy, which is destroyed when violence is overused.
In the 1980s, Mikls Haraszti in communist Hungary observed that arts censorship in a mature one-party state was quite different from the terror of Stalinism. Stalinism was paranoid, hard, and military-like. It required complete consensus, and loud loyalty Neutrality is treason; ambiguity is betrayal. Art was forced into a propaganda role.
Post-Stalinist regimes were more confident, and therefore softer. They expanded the boundaries of the permissible. Make no mistake modern authoritarians havent undergone a philosophical conversion to liberal values. They still use brutal methods. But paradoxically, if we overestimate their use of fear and force, we underestimate their power and resilience.
China the worlds longest-running communist state has swung between hard and soft censorship. Mao Zedongs cultural revolution (19661976) was a period of extreme, uncompromising mind control. The partys insistence on ideological purity impoverished China, even as other low-income countries were courting investors and improving living standards. After Maos death in 1976, his successors changed course dramatically.
The party blamed the excesses of the cultural revolution on a small faction, led by the so-called Gang of Four (including Maos widow Jiang Qing). Suddenly, caricatures of the Gang of Four, which had to be sketched in secret under Mao, were being celebrated in exhibitions and the press.
In 1979, Peoples Daily, the partys official daily newspaper, even launched a twice-monthly supplement, Satire and Humor, to provide an outlet for artists pent-up desire to lampoon the Gang of Four.
But how deep were these reforms?
In his first public work in 20 years, artist Liao Bingxiong portrayed himself frozen with caution when suddenly freed of the strictures of the cultural revolution. It expressed how traumatized many Chinese felt. He was probably right to be skeptical. The party was still exploiting art for propaganda purposes. It still set political limits on artistic expression.
Nevertheless, the 1980s did see the opportunities for cartoonists expand dramatically. Under Dent Xiaoping, communist ideology took a back seat to modernization and the market. The pendulum swung back after 2012, when Xi Jinping took over the party. He brought in a renewed emphasis on ideological purity, hints of a personality cult, and more repression of dissent.
The comparison to Mao is inevitable.
In his painting, Garden of Plenty, Shanghai-based artist Liu Dahong depicts Xi Jinping as a prodigal son in Maos embrace. Xi couldnt revert fully to cultural mode even if he wanted today. Todays Chinese are already too well-educated, exposed, and materially well-off to allow it.
The country is too vast and populous. The media are too plentiful, and authority is too decentralized to allow Mao-style total control.
By necessity and design, Chinas censorship efforts are porous, regularly bypassed without punishment, says political scientist Margaret Roberts. Modern Chinese censorship uses a blend of fear, friction, and flooding, she writes.
Fear of punishment works on most bosses of news media outlets and internet platforms. If they slip up and allow the wrong content to reach the public, they may not be sent off to do hard labor in a detention camp, but they could be demoted and their day docked a big setback in a highly competitive and unequal society where most people are desperate to get ahead.
Opinion leaders like journalists and artists are also subject to fear-inducing threats. The first tool is not terror, but tea. It is less publicly visible than an arrest. Wang Liming (known as Rebel Pepper) got an invitation to tea after he drew a cartoon supporting independent candidates for local peoples congresses, challenging the partys tight supervision of these elections. A private conversation over tea can intimidate without backfiring the way public punishment does. But it didnt work on Wang.
The next meeting was at a police station. (Tea was also served.) It still didnt work. When face-to-face intimidation fails to silence, the state ratchets up the pressure on critics, with character assassination and online harassment.
Wang received this treatment in 2014, when he visited Japan on a business trip and bogged about his positive impressions. He questioned the Chinese governments vilification of its neighbors. The authorities seized the opening to play the nationalism card.
People.cn, a widely read news portal owned by the party organ, Peoples Daily, ran an article calling him a Japanese-worshipping traitor. He knew he could not return to China. He now lives in the United States, working as a cartoonist for Voice of America.
Friction is about making it harder and less convenient to access unapproved material. The Chinese internet is a walled garden. Out: Foreign social media platforms, search engines, news media, human rights sites.
An army of human censors as well as automated programs trawl the internet for material that crosses the red lines, following directives from the party. Chinas gateway to the global internet is maintained by nine state-run operators. Chinese netizens can use circumvention tools like virtual private networks (VPNs) to access banned sites, but this is getting harder.
In 2009, censors played a long cat-and-mouse game with the grass mud horse, a meme created by Chinese netizens to protest internet controls. Its name in Chinese sounds like fuck your mother. Another pun that censors didnt appreciate was river crab, which sounds like harmony a government euphemism for control.
Although the Chinese internet is walled off, it cant be totally controlled.
Flooding is about filling the internet and other media with stuff that dilutes and distracts from the prohibited content.
Flooding plays to the governments strengths. The communist party of China cant always match the wit of a clever cartoonist. But it can overwhelm him with sheer numbers. The Chinese authorities are able to create and post around 1.2 million social media comments a day, thanks to an army of human trolls amplified by human-impersonating robots or bots.
This could include government propaganda or even faked, low-quality dissent as well as totally irrelevant posts to simply change the subject, all of which makes it harder to keep track of the debate and find authentic material. The strategy works because peoples attention is in shorter supply than information.
The shifting red lines of Chinese censorship are reflected in the career of Kuang Biao, one of Chinas most famous political cartoonists. Kuang is a native of Guangdong Province, whose coastal cities were among the first to benefit from Dengs economic reforms.
The Guangdong model was associated with more freedom for civil society, trade unions, and media. Kuangs career as a newspaper cartoonist began at the commercially-oriented New Express, which he joined in 1999. In 2007, he was recruited by another commercial paper, Southern Metropolis Daily.
Though party-owned, Southern Metropolis Daily and Southern Weekend were not obliged to parrot the party line. Although of lower official rank than the party organ, their profitability and popularity gave them prestige and clout. They were among the most independent newspapers in China. They were able to publish groundbreaking investigative reports and critical commentaries.
And they gave Kuang the chance to publish cartoons that would not have appeared in a party newspaper. He also took advantage of social media, opening a Weibo account in 2009. This allowed him to publish cartoons that his newspaper would not.
Online, he was free of his editors restraints. But, ironically, being free to post his work publicly also exposed him to more personal risk. Thus, in 2010, his employer fined and demoted him after he posted a cartoon protesting the blacklisting of Chang Ping, one of Chinas most outspoken journalists.
Chang had been a senior editor at Southern Weekend but was progressively sidelined. The Propaganda Department later ordered media to stop carrying the writers articles. Kuang insisted on testing the limits, making him a regular target for censorship. Many of his online cartoons were short-lived. Social media platforms would remove each one as soon as they realized that they crossed a line.
After Xi Jinping came to power in 2012, things began to change at the Southern Media Group and in Chinese journalism generally. Xi wasnt the only factor that spelled the end of what, in hindsight at least, appears like a golden age for political cartooning and independent journalism.
Commercially-oriented media started suffering financially, as advertising rapidly moved online. Faced with stagnating salaries, many of the best journalists moved to other occupations. Commercial newspapers disappearing profits meant that the balance of power in media groups shifted back to the party outlets.
Party bosses were no longer tolerant of their commercial newspapers feisty journalism. By 2013, Kuang Biaos editors were routinely refusing to publish his cartoons. After 14 years with the partys commercial newspapers, he quit.
He refused to do commissioned work. In communist China, creating art for clients, whether state or corporate, can only compromise his independence, he says. Have the security officials met him for tea?
In two hours, not once does he mention the name Xi Jinping. Similarly, the political cartoons he posts online nowadays are subtle and abstract. The dragon must hide his tail.
Unlike China, Turkey is not a one-party state; it has plenty of privately owned media, and a rich, uninterrupted history of satirical cartooning. But, like China, its a showcase for modern authoritarian censorship.
Recep Tayyip Erdoans AKP government came to power in 2002. In its first term, it introduced some liberalizing reforms, but after 2007 it backslid dramatically.
There was a big increase in internet censorship, with tens of thousands of sites blocked. After a military faction attempted a coup in 2016 the government launched a massive crackdown on perceived opponents. In the following months, more than 150 media outlets were closed. Since the failed coup, Turkey has been among the worlds top jailers of journalists.
Jailed journalists include Musa Kart, cartoonist and board member of Turkeys oldest independent newspaper, Cumhuriyet. Musa Kart and his colleagues were imprisoned for allegedly using Cumhuriyet to support terrorist organizations, including the Glenist Movement (FET) behind the 2016 coup. One piece of evidence the state produced against him was that he had called a travel agency suspected of having FET links.
The charges were filed in the run-up to the April 2017 referendum to turn the country from a parliamentary to a presidential republic, which would greatly enhance Erdoans powers. The timing was no coincidence, Kart told interviewers.
In 2014, Kart had drawn fire for a cartoon about a major corruption scandal. It shows a hologram of Erdoan looking the other way while a robber says, No rush, our watchman is a hologram. The cartoon was inspired by Erdoans use of this technology to make a virtual appearance at a campaign rally a few days earlier.
The government tried to imprison Kart for this cartoon, but the court dismissed the charges. The 2016 coup attempt gave Erdoan carte blanche to jail critics like Kart.
The spectacle of overt repression serves as a warning to others. Equally powerful, though, are economic carrots and sticks that have been used to discipline the media.
Turkey is a textbook case of what has been called Media Capture. Although the country has never enjoyed high levels of press freedom, there were always newspapers highly critical of the government of the day. The AKP has been more successful than previous Turkish governments in taming the press.
Paradoxically, it has been helped by its privatization program. Big projects in infrastructure, energy, and other sectors were opened up for tender. Publishers joined the feeding frenzy, becoming diversified conglomerates. Just like in China, such pro-market reforms strengthened the media at first; but eventually the profit orientation became a liability for journalistic independence.
Media owners interests in sectors such as mining, energy, construction, and tourism made them reliant on government licensing, contracts, and subsidies, thus exposing them to political blackmail.
Take, for example, the influential newspapers Milliyet and Hrriyet, which were owned by the Dogan Group. Instead of attacking them head-on, the government targeted another Dogan company, the fuel retailer Petrol Ofisi. Petrol Ofisi was slapped with a $2.5 billion fine for alleged tax offenses. Dogan gave up, selling first Milliyet (in 2009) and then Hrriyet and other media assets (in 2011) to Demiroren Holdings, a pro-AKP conglomerate.
Another major paper thats been pulled into AKPs orbit is Sabah. Its former cartoonist, Salih Memecan, describes the change:
In the past, even when we disagreed sith our editors, they valued us as cartoonists and columnists. They knew people bought the newspaper for our voices. But, with the emergence of digital media, newspapers started losing sales revenues. So they aimed at getting government contracts, rather than readers. I felt I didnt fit, so I quit.
Through such market censorship as well as repression, AKP has built a bloc of loyalist media.
On the margins, there are still some independent media, including the satirical cartoon magazine, Leman. Turkey has a long tradition of cartoon-heavy magazines. The appetite for satire dates back at least to Ottoman times, when shadow puppet theater (Karagoz) satirized current events, targeting officials and sometimes even the Sultan.
Not even Erdoan has been able to crush this culture totally. In 2004, Musa Kart made fun of Erdoans difficulties enacting a new law, by drawing him as a cat caught in a ball of wool. The prime minister tried (unsuccessfully) to sue the cartoonist.
Observing Erdoans wrap at being drawn with a cats body, the cartoon magazine Penguen turned him into other animals. Leman decided to go with vegetables. After a 15-year run, the loss-making Penguen closed in 2017. Leman survives.
Tuncay Akgn, a former Girgir cartoonist, established Leman as an independent magazine in 1991. It was a reincarnation of Limon, which died when its parent newspaper went bankrupt.
Leman continues to test the red lines every week. But its getting harder. Facing the threat of lawsuits and imprisonment is nothing new to Akgun. But things were more predictable in the past, even under military rule (198082).
The big new factor is the mob. Erdogan has a large base of followers who can be counted on to go after anyone whos named as an enemy. Real supporters are augmented by paid troll armies and bots, which swarm critics and intimidate them.
Following the attempted coup, Lemans cover depicted the coups nervous soldiers as well as the mobs who defended the regime as pawns in a larger game.
As soon as a preview of the cover went out on social media, pro-government writers launched a smear campaign accusing Leman of being pro-coup. A mob showed up outside the magazines offices.
The government got a court order to ban the issue. Police went to the press to halt the printing and copies were retrieved from newsstands. Its the kind of orchestrated, intolerant populism that modern authoritarians have mastered and that at last one novelist predicted many years ago.
Big Brother seemed to tower up, an invincible, fearless protector full of power and mysterious calm, and so vast that it almost filled up the screen. Nobody heard what Big Brother was saying.
It was merely a few words of encouragement, the sort of words that are uttered in the din of battle, not distinguishable individually but restoring confidence by the fact of being spoken.
George Orwell, 1984
Cherian George is Professor of Media Studies at Hong Kong Baptist Universitys School of Communication. A former journalist, he is the author of Hate Spin: The Manufacture of Religious Offense and Its Threat to Democracy.
Sonny Liew is a celebrated cartoonist and illustrator and the author of The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye, a New York Times bestseller, which received three Eisner Awards and the Singapore Literature Prize.
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Post-Brexit privacy moves away from GDPR. Havana tightens online censorship. Beijing’s cyber contractors and their APT side-hustles. – The CyberWire
Posted: at 11:43 am
At a glance.
The UK hopes to walk a tightrope of easing GDPR requirements that stifle innovation and offend common sense without falling afoul of the existing EU-UK data transfer agreement, the Wall Street Journal reports. If successful, the changes are expected to benefit British business, science, and technology. If the European Commission decides the revisions stray too far from EU standards, however, London will need to muddle through developing another data agreement, and organizations may face more complex compliance burdens. The UK is simultaneously hammering out data-transfer arrangements with Washington, Canberra, and eight other nations.
The Guardian spotlights users impatience with hallmark GDPR irritating cookie popups. England will present a test case, the piece says, for how much wiggle room the framework allows, and what diverse shapes data protection can take. Now that we have left the EU Im determined to seize the opportunity by developing a world-leading data policy, commented Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden.
The Record details the effects of Havanas new cybersecurity laws. In addition to establishing an Institute of Information and Social Communication, the legislation requires network providers to deploy gear that can monitor traffic, stop and report cybersecurity incidents, and block the transmission of false information. Cybersecurity incidents are defined to include criticisms of the regime. The laws also bind independent networks and ban unauthorized network equipment. The Record sees more Internet shutdowns along with a national firewall in Cubas future.
The New York Times traces the contours of Beijings trend towards Moscow-style hacking operations. As weve seen, the CCPs pivot to Ministry of State Security (MSS) sponsored cyber operations has correlated with increases in both sophistication and brashness. MSS recruits from universities, the private sector, and cyber tournaments, and looks the other way when the talent mingles crime and espionage. The current setup can be sloppy, with readily traceable online tracks, but onlookers fear Chinas cyber game will only improve in coming years.
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Post-Brexit privacy moves away from GDPR. Havana tightens online censorship. Beijing's cyber contractors and their APT side-hustles. - The CyberWire
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Which Is Worse, the Tech Giant Censors or the Stuff You Want Censored? – PRESSENZA International News Agency
Posted: at 11:43 am
The communications system we live in is highly complex, mostly driven by greed and profit, in part semi-public, full of filth I know wed be better off without, and increasingly openly censored and monitored by defenders of accepted good thinking.
Fascist nutcases are spreading dangerous nonsense, while billionaire monopolists are virtually disappearing critics and protesters. Its easy to get confused about what ought to be done. Its difficult to find any recommendation that isnt confused. Different people want different outrages censored and censored by different entities; what they all have in common is a failure to think through the threats they are creating to the things they dont want censored.
A 1975 Canadian government commission recommended censoring libel, obscenity, breach of the Official Secrets Act, matters affecting the defense of Canada, treason, sedition, or promulgating information that leads to incitement of crime or violence. This is a typical muddle. Half of those things were almost certainly already banned, as suggested by their identification through legal terminology. A few of those things probably should be banned, such as incitement of violence (though not promulgating information that leads to incitement of any crime or violence). Of course I would include as incitement of violence a speech by the Prime Minister advocating the shipping of Canadian Peace Keepers to Africa, but the Prime Minister (who would have more say than I) would no doubt have just identified me as commenting on a matter affecting the defense of Canada plus, if he or she were in the mood, Ive probably just promulgated something that will lead to inciting some crime or other, even if its just the crime of more people speaking on matters affecting the defense of Canada. (And it shouldnt matter that Im not Canadian, since Julian Assange is not from the United States.)
Well, whats the solution? A simplistic and surprisingly popular one is to blame philosophers. Those idiot postmodernists said there was no such thing as truth, which allowed that great student of philosophy Donald Trump to declare news about him fake which he never could have thought of doing without a bunch of leftist academics inspiring him; and the endless blatant lies about wars and economies and environmental collapse and straight-faced reporting of campaign promises cant have anything at all to do with the ease people have in distrusting news reporting. So, now we need to swing the pendulum back in the direction of tattooing the Ten Commandments on our foreheads before morality perishes at the hands of the monster relativism. We cant do that without censoring the numbskulls, regrettably of course.
This line of thinking is dependent on failing to appreciate the point of postmodern criticism. That the greater level of consensus that exists on chemistry or physics as opposed to on what should be banned as obscenity is a matter of degree, not of essential or metaphysical substance, is an interesting point for philosophy students, and a correct one, but not a guide to life for politicians or school teachers. That there is no possible basis for declaring some law of physics permanent and incapable of being replaced by a better one is not a reason for treating a law of physics as a matter of opinion or susceptible to alteration via fairy dust. If Isaac Newton not being God, and God also not being God, disturbs you and youre mad at philosophers for saying it, you should notice what follows from it: the need for everyone to support your right to try to persuade them of their error. And what does not follow from it: the elimination of chemistry or physics because some nitwit claims he can fly or kill a hurricane with his gun. If that idiot has 100,000 followers on social media, your concern is not with philosophy but with stupidity.
The tech-giant censors concern is in part also with stupidity, but its not clear they have the tools to address it. For one thing, they just cannot help themselves. They have other concerns too. They are concerned with their profits. They are concerned with any challenges to power their power and the power of those who empower them. They are concerned, therefore, with the demands and national bigotry of national governments. They are concerned whether they know it or not with creative thinking. Every time they censor an idea they believe crazy, they risk censoring one of those ideas that proves superior to existing ones. Their combination of interests appears to be self-defeating. Rather than persuade people of the benefits of their censorship, they persuade more and more people of the rightness of what was censored and of the arbitrary power-interests of those doing the censoring.
Our problem is not too many voices on the internet. It is too much concentration of wealth and power in too few media outlets that are too narrowly restricted to too few voices, relegating other voices to marginal and ghettoized corners of the internet. Nobody gets to find out theyre mistaken through respectful discourse. Nobody gets to show someone else theyre right. We need to prioritize that sort of exchange, before a flood of misguided good intentions drowns us all.
The promulgating information that leads to incitement of crime or violence bit of that proposed law seems to have had a surprisingly good intention, namely benevolent parental concern with all the action-filled (violence-filled) childrens entertainment on television, the violence-normalizing enter/info-tainment programming for all ages that studies and commonsense suggest increase violence. But can we ban all that garbage, or do we have to empower people who actually give a damn to produce and select programming, and empower families to turn it all off, and schools to be more engaging than cartoons?
The difficulty of censoring such content should be clear from the fact that discussions of it tend to stray into numerous unrelated topics, including the supposed need to censor wars for the protection of, not children, but weapons dealers. Once you allow a corporation to censor damaging news poof! there go all negative reports on its products. Once you tell it to put warning labels over recommendations to drink bleach as medicine, it starts putting warning labels on anything related to climate collapse or originating outside the United States of Goddamn Righteousness. You can imagine whether that ends up helping or hurting the supposed target, stupidity.
Censoring news, and labeling news as factual, seems to me a cheap fix that doesnt fix. Its a bit like legalizing bribery and gerrymandering and limited ballot access and corporate airwaves domination and then declaring that youll institute term limits so that every rotten candidate has to be quickly replaced by an even more rotten one. Its a lovely sounding solution until you try it. Look at the fact-checker sections of corporate media outlets. Theyre as wrong and inconsistent as any other sections; theyre just labeled differently.
The solutions that will work are not easy, and Im no expert on them, but theyre not new or mysterious either. We should democratize and legitimize government. We should use government to break up media monopolies. We should publicly and privately facilitate and support numerous independent media outlets. We should invest in publicly funded but independent media dedicated to allowing a wide range of people to discuss issues without the overarching control of the profit interest or the immediate interests of the government.
We should not be simplistic about banning or allowing censorship, but highly wary of opening up any new types of censorship and imagining they wont be abused. We should stick to what is already illegal outside of communications (such as violence) and censor communications only when it is actually directly a part of those crimes (such as instigating particular violence). We should be open to some limits on the forces empowered by our choice through our public dollars to shape our communications; Id be happy to ban militaries from having any role in producing movies and video games (if theyre going to bomb children in the name of democracy, well, then, thats my vote for the use of my dollars).
At the same time, we need through schools and outside of them radically better education that includes education in the skills of media consumption, BS-spotting, propaganda deciphering, fact-verification, respect, civility, decency, and honesty. I hardly think its entirely the fault of youtube that kids get less of their education from their classrooms part of the fault lies with the classrooms. But I hardly think the eternal project of learning, and of learning how to learn, can be restricted to classrooms.
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Which Is Worse, the Tech Giant Censors or the Stuff You Want Censored? - PRESSENZA International News Agency
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Stop Censoring CBD – Above the Law
Posted: at 11:43 am
Companies selling hemp-derived products, including cannabidiol-infused products, have been faced with significant marketing challenges. For the past 18 months, the industry has been hit with a wave of suspensions, deletions, and warnings for advertising hemp-derived cannabidiol (CBD) products. Yet, depending on the platform, the reasons for such actions vary.
Facebook, for example, does not offer public terms and conditions or policies that expressly prohibit CBD advertisements on that platform. Instead, the company justifies its ban by stating on its website: Ads must not promote the sale or use of illicit or recreational drugs, or other unsafe substances, products or supplements, as determined by Facebooks in its sole discretion. Interestingly, the list of problematic products and substances Facebook provides does not include CBD.
Other social media companies, such as Twitter, offer CBD-specific policies that are overly restrictive. In the U.S., Twitter permits approved CBD topical advertisers provided they meet the following requirements:
These are extremely restrictive and paternalistic regulations. Ironically, Twitters advertising policy places more constraints on CBD advertisers than many states do on CBD companies. These terms are so broad it is likely that most companies advertising CBD on Twitter are in clear violation of those requirements, and therefore, are at risk of seeing their accounts suspended or deleted.
This level of risk is hugely problematic, especially for small CBD companies. Any small business owner knows that getting social media followers takes time and money. With the risk of seeing an account shut down and losing all the good will associated with that account, social media advertising can be a serious gamble for CBD businesses. There is no clear right of appeal for these denials, and the idea of taking a social media giant to court (or forced arbitration) is just unfathomable for most CBD companies.
Regrettably, social media companies are not the only group creating marketing obstacles for the CBD industry. The Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association (CTIA), a nonprofit that monitors SHAFT (Sex, Hate, Alcohol, Firearms, and Tobacco) content and reports violations to the FCC, recently added CBD to its list of illicit substances and prohibited content. CTIA deems that while a growing number of states have legalized medical or recreational cannabis, including CBD use, Federal law still prohibits cannabis use, and thus, companies cannot send text messages with cannabis- or CBD-related content. This means that carriers will suspect any short code that sends CBD-related content, despite the legal distinction between hemp-derived CBD, which is lawful, and marijuana-derived CBD, which remains a Schedule 1 controlled substance under the Federal Controlled Substances Act.
Notwithstanding the fact that the FDA has publicly acknowledged that there may be a regulatory pathway to marketing certain products containing hemp-derived CBD, such as cosmetics, many social media companies and organizations like CTIA have apparently taken it upon themselves to step into the shoes of regulators and ban all hemp-derived CBD products. To add insult to injury, many social media companies have yet to publish formal guidance on this issue and are choosing to arbitrarily censor CBD.
These overly restrictive and widely disparate regulations against hemp-derived CBD products reflect the confusing legal landscape of these products. As I have previously explained, the lack of federal regulations, combined with the patchwork of state-by-state regulations, has created a great deal of confusion regarding the legality of these products but also contributed to the misinformation surrounding the legal status of hemp-derived CBD, resulting in more confusion in the consumers minds.
In response to these discriminatory marketing policies targeting CBD, a coalition of hemp-derived CBD brands, including Prima, a leading B-Corp, have organized a Stop Censoring CBD #freeCBD initiative to help bring awareness to this pervasive issue. The coalitions main objectives are to encourage lawmakers to pass the Hemp Access and Consumer Safety Act (S. 1698), which proposes to establish legal and regulatory pathways for the sale of hemp-derived products; and to pressure the FDA to recognize the legal distinction between hemp-derived and marijuana-derived CBD and to develop a regulatory framework for the manufacture, sale, and marketing of those products.
This initiative shows, once again, that the industry is determined to legitimize its lawful commercial activities by advocating for federal standards and regulations that will provide consumers access to safer CBD products. For now, one thing is clear, social media companies and nonprofits like CTIA should step out of the shoes of the government and let CBD companies advertise products that are lawful or ban content of their choosing but provide clear and legitimate guidelines for such policies that align with existing CBD regulations.
Nathaliepractices out of Harris Brickens Portland office andfocuses on the regulatory framework of hemp-derived CBD (hemp CBD) products. She is an authority on FDA enforcement, Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act and other laws and regulations surrounding hemp and hemp CBD products. She also advises domestic and international clients on the sale, distribution, marketing, labeling, importation and exportation of these products. Nathalie frequently speaks on these issues and has made national media appearances, including on NPRs Marketplace. For two consecutive years, Nathalie has been selected as a Rising Star by Super Lawyers Magazine, an honor bestowedon only 2.5% of eligible Oregon attorneys.Nathalie is also a regular contributor to her firms Canna Law Blog.
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‘The Last Matinee,’ ‘Censor,’ and the power of retro horror done right – SYFY WIRE
Posted: at 11:43 am
Nostalgia is not a new phenomenon in the horror world, and it's not going away anytime soon. Whether we're talking about the genre's ongoing love affair with '80s throwbacks or the increasing number offilms influenced by the '90s, it's easy to see why the appeal of going retro with scary stories has such a grip on us, and I'm not just talking about using the past to erase the plot inconvenience of cell phones. For the right audience, that little warm ache that comes with nostalgia calls to mind a time in our lives when we were perhaps more innocent, more vulnerable, even easier to scare. Put us in that frame of mind, then hit us with the horror, and you've got a recipe for midnight movies that are both spooky and warm and fuzzy.
But there's more to nostalgia in horror than just using the right needle drops and wardrobe choices to pull us back into another time and place. When it's properly wielded, it's not just a charming piece of the background or a way to riff on a classic plot. In the right hands, nostalgia becomes a powerful tool for examination, picking apart not just the horror storytelling of the era in which the story is set, but our own preconceptions about that era. A good nostalgic horror film reminds us of what came before and makes us question it, while also questioning where we are now, as horror fans and as moviegoers.
We're living in a golden age of good nostalgia horror at the moment, whether we're talking about the genre mash-ups of the Fear Street trilogy or the meta deep dive of The Final Girls, but if you're looking for films that scratch that nostalgia itch while also sending a particularly icy chill down your spine, I've got a new double feature for you. It begins in the 1980s with Censor, then leaps into the 1990s with The Last Matinee, both films arriving in front of American audiences this year, and both films that pack serious style, stakes, and narrative smarts into their respective brands of retro horror.
So, what makes them effective? For one thing, both films have their own very specific perspective on the horror viewing experience. Directed by Prano Bailey-Bond, Censor takes place in the United Kingdom amid the video nasty panic (when censors were cutting apart and banning gory horror films left and right) of the 1980s, and follows a particular effective film censor (played with icy fire by Niamh Algar) as she begins to unravel after an unsettling recent viewing experience rekindles past traumas. The Last Matinee, directed by Maxi Contenti, moves its action from censor screening rooms and dingy video stores to a fading movie palace in Uruguay in the early 1990s, and follows a small group of characters as they watch (or talk through, as the case may be) a horror film even as they're living out one of their own, thanks to a hooded killer in their midst.
It might seem a small thing, but the attention to detail pulsing through both Bailey-Bond and Contenti's films means that by setting their respective stories in settings directly tied to the act of watching a horror movie, they've invited us to interrogate our own past horror experiences. For me, Censor called to mind not just what it was like to comb my local video store as a teenager, searching for the most gruesome slasher film on the shelves, but what it was like to take that movie home and slide it past disapproving parents. The Last Matinee took me not just to the cool darkness of movie theaters, but to very specific theatrical experiences in rundown auditoriums where the audience was either glued to the screen or completely disinterested in the film itself. If you've ever watched a movie in a theater with only a half dozen other people and felt like you could sense the conflicting energies of every single one of them, then you know the kind of atmosphere this film evokes.
But of course, these are just the setups, the laying of the table for the meal to come, and in both Censor and The Last Matinee, the meal comes with style to spare. Like its title character, Censor spends much of its runtime in reserved, patient contemplation, slowly sliding pieces into place with the practiced, deft hands of a horror scholar building out a thesis not just on the rise of splatter films in '80s horror, but on the prudish response to it. It's a restraint so delicate that you know it can only hold on for so long before it unleashes, and when Censor finally lets it all go, it's devastating. The Last Matinee, on the other hand, goes full-tilt operatic almost right away. There's a reason you can see Dario Argento posters in background shots. This is an homage not just to the most stylish slashers of the 1980s, but to the most brutal giallo films of the 1970s. There are gore shots in this film, which I wouldn't dare spoil here, beautiful enough to make Argento himself weep.
There's a third key ingredient to each of these films, though, that pushes them out beyond stories that simply evoke an effective rush of nostalgia, and that's a thematic resonance that makes the retro appeal linger beyond the style and setting.
Censor is about the ways in which one woman begins to come undone after her job gets under her skin, yes, but it's also about our relationship to screen violence, both individually and in a broader, cultural sense. It's an exploration not just of the video nasty panic's skewed sense of morality and reason, but of our own existential fears about what effective art might do to us, that voice lurking in the back of our minds going "What if our parents were right and this really will mess us up?"
The Last Matinee's own thematic concerns are perhaps a bit more ambiguous, though that feels more like a product of deliberate filmmaking than a missed opportunity. It's hard to dig too deep into what that means without spoiling the whole film for you, but by its very nature making a horror movie about someone who murders people while they watch a horror movie opens up some very interesting doors in terms of our relationship to scary stories and the voyeuristic aspect of violence on a screen.
Censor and The Last Matinee are, in many ways, very different films, beholden to different kinds of nostalgic aesthetics and concerns, but in the end, they both had the same effect on me because they are both, in some form, about the transgressive nature of the horror genre. Each reminded me what it felt like to be a young horror fan, searching for the limits of my local video store, whispering to my friends about how far these films might take me into realms that the adults in my life might not want me to go. With a couple of decades of scary movies under my belt now, that's a hard feeling to recapture, but the part of me that still relishes the idea of existing in an outsider fandom still chases it, and these films gave it back to me, each in their own way.
Censor is now available on VOD. The Last Matinee arrives on VOD on Aug. 24.
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'The Last Matinee,' 'Censor,' and the power of retro horror done right - SYFY WIRE
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