Overload: Will any shows from the Golden Age of TV endure?
Sonny Bunch · March 16, 2018 It's been a while since we talked; have you caught up yet? The second season of Jessica Jones was bonkers; did you manage to make it through The Punisher and The Defenders? What about the new season of Black Mirror—that one episode where they warned against the dangers of technology outpacing our…
It’s Stan Lee’s Universe. We Just Live in It.
Sonny Bunch · October 31, 2017 Marvel-ous Creator
It’s Stan Lee’s Universe. We Just Live in It.
Sonny Bunch · October 31, 2017 Marvel-ous Creator
Stubble Trouble
Sonny Bunch · February 12, 2016 After Paul Ryan accepted the position of speaker of the House he did a curious thing, one almost unheard of by modern American politicians: He grew a beard. The reactions generally varied from “rowr, sexy" to "gross, beardo," which was to be expected. But there was another reaction, one even…
Screen Tests
Sonny Bunch · July 6, 2015 Richard Schickel—the Time critic who has been writing about movies for a living since 1965—estimates in the opening chapter of Keepers that he has seen roughly “22,590 films, or about 294 of them a year. Which means that two out of every three days, for a long time now, I have been at the movies.”…
Here Comes Trouble
Sonny Bunch · April 6, 2015 After two years of reading and writing about those who live the politicized life—those who suffuse every aspect of their personas with politics and allow ideological considerations to trump all others—I’d finally found what I was looking for: I’d discovered the worst person in the world.
A Stellar Eclipse
Sonny Bunch · September 15, 2014 The multiplex in the age of brands—an era of sequels and prequels, of movies derived from comic books and board games, of repackaged and repurposed “intellectual property” that comes with “high pre-awareness” and appeals to “all four quadrants”—isn’t the friendliest place for movie stars.
Presidents at Leisure
Sonny Bunch · October 21, 2013 Philosophers, war heroes, a movie star: A wide variety of men with an even wider variety of cultural tastes have inhabited the White House over the centuries. And evolving standards and technologies have combined with evolving political realities to create a culture the White House’s original…
Free Use and Abuse
Sonny Bunch · March 4, 2013 Following the Republican shellacking in the recent election, David Brooks highlighted some voices shaping center-right conversation on the Internet. One of his more surprising choices was that of a Republican Study Committee staffer who had penned a (quickly withdrawn) memo for the caucus of…
Hide and Go Seek
Sonny Bunch · September 17, 2012 Throughout Privacy, Garret Keizer’s extended essay on the topic in an increasingly public world, the author confuses and conflates voluntary sharing with forced governmental action. “Does anything say so much about the times we live in as the fact that the word sharing has almost everything to do…
Screen Test
Sonny Bunch · June 18, 2012
Evil on Parade
Sonny Bunch · March 26, 2012 The common counterfactual as it relates to Hitler is somewhat fantastical: If you could go back in time and kill the Austrian madman before he ascended to Germany’s chancellorship, would you do so? Nay, would you be morally obligated to do so? More interesting, perhaps, is the question that arises…
Never Enough
Sonny Bunch · October 3, 2011 The pseudonymous author of this memoir, Winston Smith, chose the moniker because of the maddening bureaucracy within which he worked. His blog, “Winston Smith—Working With the Underclass,” won an Orwell Prize for chronicling the labyrinthine, dysfunctional horror show that had become the British…
Bright Lights, Bad Schoolhouses
Sonny Bunch · July 26, 2010 Facing thousands of worried members at the annual convention of the National Education Association on July 3, the head of the nation’s largest teachers’ union sounded a little whiny.
Actor at Work
Sonny Bunch · April 5, 2010 Aim for the Heart
Alice in Wonderland
Sonny Bunch · March 5, 2010
The IRS Bomber and Terrorism
Sonny Bunch · February 26, 2010 In certain corners of the blogosphere--as well as the mainstream media--there has been some consternation over how to designate the IRS suicide pilot, Joseph Stack. Is he a terrorist or just a criminal? Are there degrees of “terrorism”?
The Crazies
Sonny Bunch · February 26, 2010
Roman Polanski's "Pure Entertainment"
Sonny Bunch · February 24, 2010
Slate's Blacklist of Black Conservatives
Sonny Bunch · February 23, 2010 Slate's The Root -- the portion of the website where they cordon off their African-American content -- has compiled a list of "Black folks we'd like to remove from black history." Some of the choices are funny (Dennis Rodman) some are head-scratching (the doctor who prescribed Michael Jackson his…
Postracial?
Sonny Bunch · February 22, 2010 Via Roger Clegg, it appears that the Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization Act is back on the Congress’s docket; the bill would create a separate government for native Hawaiians along the lines of tribal governance that American-Indian nations now enjoy. THE WEEKLY STANDARD examined why the…
The White Ribbon
Sonny Bunch · February 19, 2010
Teachers Unions Really Are the Worst
Sonny Bunch · February 17, 2010 It's kind of shocking how awful teachers unions are and how self-defeating they tend to be. Consider one story about Rhode Island teachers who bit off more than they could chew when they refused to work an extra half hour a day: The entire union was canned from their $70,000 per year jobs for…
Nukes News is Good News
Sonny Bunch · February 16, 2010 For the first time in 30 years, it looks as if the United States will see an increase in its nuclear power output:
How Many People Die Because They Lack Health Insurance?
Sonny Bunch · February 12, 2010 How many people die from lack of insurance? That's the question that The Atlantic's Megan McArdle tackled in her column this month. It's a more difficult question to answer than you might think: Though the left is fond of claiming that hundreds of thousands of people will be left to die like dogs…
The Wolfman Cometh
Sonny Bunch · February 12, 2010
Defending Michelle Obama
Sonny Bunch · February 9, 2010 Michelle Obama recently kicked up a mild fuss by discussing her children while talking about childhood obesity. Per ABC News, Obama said at an event kicking off her childhood obesity awareness campaign: "I didn't see the changes. And that's also part of the problem, or part of the challenge. It's…
A (Brief) People's History of the United States
Sonny Bunch · February 8, 2010 The only thing more analyzed than quarterback play after the Super Bowl is the commercials: Were they funny, offensive, pointless? Money well spent, or 30 seconds of confusion? How does the MTV set view the last 25 years of politics?
Syncopated Eye
Sonny Bunch · February 8, 2010 Farber on Film
From Paris With Love
Sonny Bunch · February 5, 2010 Last year director Pierre Morel unleashed Taken, one of the year’s biggest surprises and box office hits, on unsuspecting audiences. Starring a father wreaking havoc in France’s beloved capital in a mad cap search for his beloved daughter before she’s sold into white slavery, the film delighted…
The Holy Grain
Sonny Bunch · January 29, 2010 It’s likely that those of you lucky enough to receive a high definition television or Blu-ray player for Christmas – or happened to pick one up in the after-Christmas sales – have spent much of your time viewing modern releases in all their glory. Don’t get me wrong, the Blu-ray versions of Star…
Extraordinary Measures
Sonny Bunch · January 22, 2010 The most striking aspect of Extraordinary Measures is its total lack of an aesthetic: There’s not as much as a spark of visual ingenuity or camera trickery. The average scene consists of a camera focused on two people talking, broken up by the occasional shot-reverse shot. Combined with the…
PopThink
Sonny Bunch · January 18, 2010
The Book of Eli
Sonny Bunch · January 15, 2010 It’s often said that January is a cinematic wasteland, and for good reason: The awards season art house releases were pumped out the month prior in order to gain eligibility for the Oscars; kids are headed back to school after a holiday break, limiting box office potential and dampening studio…
A Tale of Two Films
Sonny Bunch · January 8, 2010 Viewers of cable television have been inundated with advertisements for the new Michael Cera picture, Youth in Revolt, to the point that my girlfriend literally cries out in disgust when she sees them now. The distributors have gone all out to get promos of this comedy – starring Mr. Cera as a nice…
A Master's Stroke
Sonny Bunch · November 2, 2009 The Moment of Psycho
Teenage Wasteland
Sonny Bunch · August 1, 2008 THE NEW DOCUMENTARY, American Teen, has been sold to audiences as a real life version of The Breakfast Club. In that John Hughes classic, five high school students gather for Saturday detention. Locked together in a library, the teenagers represent the archetypes seen in every high school hallway:…
Brotherly Laughter
Sonny Bunch · July 25, 2008 THE APATOW COMEDY Factory's special this week is 'Step Brothers,' a delightful, saucy R-rated comedy starring Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly as 40-year-old man-children. Steeped in a spicy complementary role are Mary Steenburgen and Richard Jenkins, adding a dash of straight-man to the onscreen…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 21, 2008 The kids gloves were snugly on the Sunday morning talk shows this morning, as Democratic luminaries Barack Obama and Al Gore popped up on Face the Nation and Meet the Press, respectively. Obama was "questioned" on the situation in Afghanistan, leading to this exchange: Sen. OBAMA: Well, mission…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 14, 2008 For the second time in a month, a lion of the Washington press corps has died. On Saturday, Tony Snow succumbed to the cancer he had battled for the last three years. Fox News Sunday's Chris Wallace spent the entire hour eulogizing the founder of the show he now hosts, and we learned many tidbits…
Boyz n the Hell
Sonny Bunch · July 11, 2008 WHEN IT FIRST HIT theaters in 2004, Hellboy was something of a puzzle for audiences: No one quite knew what to make of the blood-red superhero with the devilish horns. Though not a massive flop, the film failed to equal its modest budget at the domestic box office. Yet here we are, four years…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 7, 2008 Barack Obama's policy adjustments (read: flip flops) were the main topics of discussion on Sunday morning's talk shows. On This Week, Joe Lieberman said that "what's significant about what's happened in the last week, frankly in the last month since Sen. Obama clinched the nomination, is how many…
Smith's Rules
Sonny Bunch · July 2, 2008 JUDGING BY BOX office hauls alone, Will Smith is the last movie star on the planet. By movie star, I don't mean "able to generate headlines" or "most-recognized," simply that Smith can open any genre of movie and look good doing it. His last seven films have all grossed over $100 million, and have…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · June 30, 2008 Joseph Lieberman was on Face the Nation, and the one-time Democrat explained just why he is so disillusioned with his former party and their presidential nominee. "My problem is with the party overall, for sure. In other words, this is a separation that has occurred mostly on matters of foreign and…
Future 'Futuramas'
Sonny Bunch · June 27, 2008 ABOUT A DECADE ago, Matt Groening--the genius behind The Simpsons--pitched a second animated series to the honchos at Fox. It was a no-brainer for the suits--"Another animated show from the guy who basically created this network?"--who quickly got behind the program.
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · June 23, 2008 First up on This Week was the issue most pressing for the average American: the skyrocketing price of energy. After some idiotic comments from Massachusetts Rep. Ed Markey about Republicans' attempts to stymie energy production, Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson explained just why gas costs $4 a…
Blue Collar Banter
Sonny Bunch · June 20, 2008 A STRING OF BLUE COLLAR comedies have hit the big screen in recent years.
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · June 16, 2008 The overarching theme of this week's Sunday morning talk shows was the untimely death of Tim Russert. Each program's host had kind words, and Meet the Press dedicated the entire show to their show's fallen leader. If you have five minutes or so, check out this video celebration of the man's life,…
Stuff Happens
Sonny Bunch · June 13, 2008 THE RISE AND FALL of M. Night Shyamalan has been almost Wellesian.
Sunday Show Wrap Up
Sonny Bunch · June 9, 2008 The general election is (finally) upon us! Tim Pawlenty was on Fox News Sunday, making the case for John McCain as a leader for change. "Look at Senator McCain's record on the big issues of our time: changing of the war; being for climate change; cracking down on pork barrel spending; being against…
Straining Credibility
Sonny Bunch · June 6, 2008 A COUPLE OF MONTHS ago Ross Douthat, the Atlantic senior editor and occasional WEEKLY STANDARD contributor, wrote an intriguing essay called "The Return of the Paranoid Style," in which he argued that the spate of anti-war, anti-Republican films flooding the multiplexes were a liberal reaction to…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · June 2, 2008 Byron York was on Fox News Sunday's roundtable, and he summed up the hopeless naiveté of former White House spokesman Scott McClellan. "What distinguishes McClellan is that he was amazingly naïve in his belief that George W. Bush could kind of bring us all together, which is why he comes to…
Strangers in the House
Sonny Bunch · May 30, 2008 TWO YEARS AGO I wrote a piece in New Atlantis on Japanese horror films, their remakes in America, and the anxieties in the Japanese and American psyches they reflected. The J-Horror genre, I thought, was a critique of technology and tech-connected life, turning everyday devices like televisions and…
Deus Ex Liona
Sonny Bunch · May 23, 2008 THE SECOND INSTALLMENT IN the Chronicles of Narnia series has a problem. Unlike the first film, Prince Caspian is, at heart, in the action-adventure genre. It's stacked with stunning set-pieces: the evil Telmarines on one side, the noble centaurs, fauns, and dwarves on the other. But this is not…
Speeding Towards Failure
Sonny Bunch · May 16, 2008 HOT ON THE HEELS of the first blockbuster of the Summer season (Iron Man) we have its first bomb: Speed Racer, the $120 million Wachowski Brothers production, grossed only $18.5 million in its first weekend. Reviewers were no kinder than the audience: It rates only 36 percent "fresh" on the…
Honor, Duty, Jiu-Jitsu
Sonny Bunch · May 9, 2008 THE THREE-ACT STRUCTURE of the first film in a superhero franchise varies little. The first two acts introduce us to our hero, with excruciating detail about how he got his powers and what sort of trauma inspired him to use them for good. In the last act--which is typically rushed, unenjoyable, and…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · May 5, 2008 Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton showed up on Meet the Press and This Week, respectively, to talk about the Indiana and North Carolina primaries. More interesting than the normal campaign platitudes, however, were the views espoused by the candidates on Iran. Clinton came off as slightly…
The Enforcer
Sonny Bunch · May 5, 2008 Hollywood's Censor
Iron Man 1, Terrorists 0
Sonny Bunch · May 2, 2008 SUMMER IS FINALLY here, arriving with a bang in the guise of Iron Man. The latest hero from Marvel comics to get the big screen treatment, Iron Man is brought to life with vigor by the newly rehabbed Robert Downey Jr.
Casting Our Sins Onto Others
Sonny Bunch · April 30, 2008 David Denby, the lesser half of the New Yorker's critical duo, made a revealing couple of comments in his review of Iron Man. First, he takes issue with the character's origin, deriding the fact that Tony Stark was "captured and enslaved by Wong-Chu--a chubby Commie tyrant. One might blush at this…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · April 28, 2008 As my colleagues noted earlier, Barack Obama made his long-awaited sojourn to Fox News Sunday. Barnett and Goldfarb hit on a couple of important topics, but the boss may have had the most succinct evaluation: An "elegant and attractive performance, but somewhat substance free." About the only thing…
See More Hoffman
Sonny Bunch · April 25, 2008 HOW CAN YOU TELL THAT Philip Seymour Hoffman is the best known and most-beloved character actor working today? Well, for starters, people actually know his name. Character actors typically get stuck with the "that guy" appellation. They're recognizable and do a solid job, but not good enough to…
Mugged by Reality...
Sonny Bunch · April 22, 2008 The New York Times featured an intriguing profile of Robert Downey Jr. this Sunday. Star of the upcoming Iron Man, Downey is best known as the most-wasted talent of his generation (both literally and figuratively). His drug problems became so bad that he even spent some time in the clink; since his…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · April 21, 2008 Closing in on the Pennsylvania primary, it's no surprise that the principle topic of conversation on the talk shows this weekend was Hillary vs. Barack. Their surrogates were all over the place, and Ed Rendell made an intriguing point on Face the Nation about Obama's spending. Earlier in the race,…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · April 14, 2008 The most striking news to come out of the Sunday morning talk shows was Stephen Hadley's dismissive response when asked whether or not the United States should boycott the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics. On Fox News Sunday, Hadley said the following: "I think this issue is, in some…
The Measure of a Movie
Sonny Bunch · April 11, 2008 THERE ARE ANY NUMBER of ways to classify films. You can label them by genre--what's the best noir, or comedy, or science fiction movie? You can break them down by era--were the pre-Hays code gangster movies better than the watered down (but far cleverer) films that followed? You can identify them…
Charlton Heston, 1924-2008
Sonny Bunch · April 6, 2008 After a long battle with Alzheimer's Disease, Charlton Heston passed away this weekend at the age of 84. His roles are too numerous to catalog in their entirety here, but highlights include Moses, Thomas Jefferson, and our very own Cardinal Richelieu. Heston's most important work was fighting for…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · April 6, 2008 John McCain appeared on Fox News Sunday this morning to discuss the presidential campaign with Chris Wallace. The Arizona senator called for more honesty from the Obama campaign and its surrogates when they claim that he called for our military to stay in Iraq for a century. "This, quote, ‘100…
Turn Off the Lights
Sonny Bunch · April 4, 2008 MARTIN SCORSESE'S Shine a Light opens with Scorsese and the Rolling Stones negotiating over just how to shoot the film. Scorsese wants a set list well in advance so he can figure out how to position his fleet of cameras and choreograph their movements; the Stones want to ensure that the camerawork…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 30, 2008 The Democratic primary drags on, and the debate rages within the commentariat as to what Hillary Clinton should do in the face of overwhelming odds against her success. David Brooks showed up on Meet the Press and described just what Clinton's continued campaign is doing to her party. "Is this what…
Run Away
Sonny Bunch · March 28, 2008 WILLING SUSPENSION OF disbelief is an odd phenomenon. It's one thing to put aside common sense for a movie like Transformers--shape-shifting robots have traveled half the universe to duke it out on Earth? Sure, why not. But the key to a great sports movie is the ability to sit in a theater and…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 24, 2008 Ed Rendell and Bill Richardson showed up on Fox News Sunday yesterday to shill for Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama respectively. The Pennsylvania governor struck at what he sees as the heart of the Obama campaign's hypocrisy. "The Obama campaign tries to have it both ways," he said. "They say the…
Weird Science:The Next Generation
Sonny Bunch · March 21, 2008 IF YOU PAY ATTENTION TO the opening credits of Drillbit Taylor, you might notice something interesting. The film is the latest comedy produced by Judd Apatow and is cowritten by frequent contributor Seth Rogen (along with Kristofor Brown, one of the writers on Apatow's cult television hit…
Sunday Show Wrap Up
Sonny Bunch · March 17, 2008 It was a rough week for Barack Obama thanks to some of his reverend's more hateful comments coming to light. Brit Hume got to the heart of the problem on Fox News Sunday. "It's worth noting also, I think, certainly Obama knew what sort of church this is," Hume said. "Now I have no doubt that the…
A Film Snob's Dream
Sonny Bunch · March 14, 2008 No Country for Old Men is a film that lends itself to over-analysis and pretentious film snobbery. This is not necessarily a bad thing--it's simply a fact. Consider, for example, Jim Emerson's (excellent) take on the movie's opening scene, which begins thusly: "The land is black, swallowed in the…
The Gang's All Here
Sonny Bunch · March 10, 2008 When the Oscar nominations were announced back in January, few were surprised that There Will Be Blood and No Country for Old Men led the way with eight nods. Searing visions of life in the American West, both struck a chord with critics from coast to coast. Each picture also marked a powerful…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 9, 2008 Howard Dean made the rounds this weekend to discuss the increasing likelihood of the nasty fight inside his party continuing all the way up until the convention. "There's two things they can do," he said on Face the Nation. "One is to have this kind of an alternative process, which we're talking…
The Bank Job
Sonny Bunch · March 7, 2008 EVERYONE LOVES A good heist movie. There's something about a gang of villains coming together and crafting a brilliant plan--which, if pulled off, promises riches beyond their wildest dreams--that really gets the juices flowing. Examples in the last decade alone abound: there's the Ocean's series,…
Another French 9/11 Conspiracy Theorist
Sonny Bunch · March 3, 2008 ss-080224-oscarawards-08.widec.jpg Crackpot.
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 2, 2008 On Fox News Sunday, Karl Rove explained why John McCain had to distance himself from the conservative radio host who tried to use Barack Obama's name against him. "Using his middle name helps Obama, it doesn't hurt him," he noted, adding "I think people look at it and say ‘hey look, that's one…
The Tenenbaum Limited
Sonny Bunch · February 29, 2008 BY HAPPENSTANCE, I bought a paperback copy of Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point the day before picking up the DVD of Wes Anderson's latest film, The Darjeeling Limited. The idea behind Gladwell's book is that cultural phenomena--books that turn into bestsellers, fashions that sweep across the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · February 24, 2008 The biggest news of the week was undoubtedly John McCain's smearing by the New York Times. While the senator may have gotten the best of it so far--even the Times's public editor, Clark Hoyt, felt the newspaper shouldn't have published the piece's most scintillating passages--E.J. Dionne pointed…
Once Again, With Feeling
Sonny Bunch · February 22, 2008 A SENSE OF JOY infects Michel Gondry's work. Getting his start in the spiritual abattoir that is the music video industry, Gondry elevated the medium, joining Spike Jonze as one of the few auteurs on MTV. His videos for the White Stripes (the Lego-themed "Fell in Love with a Girl") and the Foo…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up: Superdelegates
Sonny Bunch · February 18, 2008 Hillary Clinton's continued troubles, and what she might do to right the ship, dominated the Sunday morning talk shows. George Will pointed out that Wisconsin could be rough sailing for the New York senator on This Week: "The way you stop losing is you start winning. And she has to start in…
Diary of the Dumb
Sonny Bunch · February 15, 2008 CRITICS WHO REFER to George Romero's zombie films as great social commentary are like first year college students with a semester of Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn under their belts. Having found someone who is willing to stick a finger in the eye of the establishment--however nonsensical the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · February 11, 2008 Yesterday President Bush sat down for an exclusive interview with Fox News Sunday's Chris Wallace, talking about everything from the war on terror to his legacy. His philosophy on the 2008 election: "What really matters in a campaign is, what are the basic beliefs? What does one view as the role of…
Two Days in Belgium
Sonny Bunch · February 8, 2008 In Bruges
The RevolutionWill Be Animated
Sonny Bunch · February 1, 2008 AFTER SEEING Persepolis in November at the Virginia Film Festival, I described the film as "the highlight of the festival" and wrote that "if there is justice in the world, Persepolis should have a decent shot at an Oscar either for animated feature or foreign language film. With any luck, both."…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 28, 2008 Barack Obama's shellacking of Hillary Clinton was obviously the big news of the weekend, and Obama showed up on This Week to discuss his victory, and Bill Clinton's race baiting. In one of the Clinton campaign's most naked references to Obama's race, the former president tried to downplay an Obama…
O Lucky Viewers!
Sonny Bunch · January 25, 2008 CASUAL MOVIE FANS will be forgiven for not remembering the name Lindsay Anderson. His body of work has largely been forgotten in the four and a half decades since he first burst onto the scene, and he was never terribly prolific anyway, leaving only six features to his name. Overshadowed by his…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 20, 2008 Republicans obviously have a vested interest in the Democratic presidential primaries, and nothing warms their hearts more than the brewing identity politics battle on that side of the aisle. As David Brooks pointed out last week, the first viable female candidate for president and the first viable…
Does the Monster Matter?
Sonny Bunch · January 18, 2008 IN HIS REVIEW of 1998's Godzilla, the New Yorker's Anthony Lane mocked the media blitz preceding the film's premiere: "The marketing machine has been chugging away for months, its strategy being to seduce us with details--the wink of an eye, a cheeky tremor of foot. The true, overwhelming…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 14, 2008 I've been arguing with friends for the last couple of weeks that Clinton's campaign is cooked once John Edwards drops out of the race and stops splitting the "change" vote with Barack Obama. Jay Carney made a point on This Week that is worth considering, however, noting of Edwards's supporters that…
Little More Sunshine
Sonny Bunch · January 11, 2008 Sunshine
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 7, 2008 The primaries are (finally) underway, and the Sunday talk shows were chock full of interviews, analysis, and inter-campaign squabbles. Mitt Romney showed up on Fox News Sunday, making a last-minute pitch to the voters of New Hampshire as to why he should be nominee instead of John McCain: "He's…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · December 17, 2007 Mitt Romney showed up on Meet the Press for the full hour, and the blogosphere focused on the former Massachusetts governor's mistaken claim that he was endorsed by the NRA in 2002. What was more interesting to me, however, was the fact that the following quote contains the entirety of the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · December 10, 2007 The Sunday morning talk shows were dominated by two intelligence-based stories this weekend: the CIA tapes and their destruction, and the NIE's take on Iran's nuclear capabilities. On Fox News Sunday, Bill Kristol gave one theory of the CIA's reasoning for destroying the tapes, and the mainstream…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · December 3, 2007 Mike Huckabee found out what it's like to lose the goodwill of the media this weekend. Up to this point, the Arkansas governor has enjoyed the image of the wily underdog, surmounting overwhelming odds and a lack of cash to mount an insurgent presidential campaign. But now polling reveals he's the…
Talk About Movies
Sonny Bunch · November 26, 2007 Charlottesville, Virginia
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · November 19, 2007 The presidential contenders were making the rounds on the Sunday morning talk shows this week. John Edwards popped up on Face the Nation, repeating his ridiculous threat to take away Congress's health care if the body doesn't pass universal health care coverage in the opening days of his…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · November 12, 2007 The big story in the world this weekend remained the crisis in Pakistan. Responding to reports that Musharraf is making a number of concessions in the face of international pressure, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was on This Week to discuss what remained to be done. "President Musharraf still…
Bunch: The Truthers Are Out There
Sonny Bunch · November 6, 2007 While reporting on the emergence of conspiracy theories related to 9/11, I've noticed that there is a ton of support for Ron Paul within the 9/11 Truth Movement. To be fair to Rep. Paul, he has disavowed any association with the Truthers and, unlike his former colleague Cynthia McKinney, does not…
Bunch: The Truthers Are Out There
Sonny Bunch · November 6, 2007 While reporting on the emergence of conspiracy theories related to 9/11, I've noticed that there is a ton of support for Ron Paul within the 9/11 Truth Movement. To be fair to Rep. Paul, he has disavowed any association with the Truthers and, unlike his former colleague Cynthia McKinney, does not…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · November 5, 2007 Fred Thompson showed upon Meet the Press this Sunday, sharing, among other things, his thoughts on the problem posed by Iran: "Well, sometimes you're faced with two very bad decisions, and those are two very bad decisions. But what happens if, if a country like this, who talks in terms of the 12th…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · October 29, 2007 Iran was the topic of the day on the Sunday Morning talk shows. Republican presidential hopeful John McCain laid out the basic problem to George Stephanopoulos on This Week, saying "This is the most unstable part of the world right now. The Iranians have dedicated themselves to a certain…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · October 15, 2007 John McCain made an appearance on Face the Nation this Sunday, laying out just how he would deal with Iran's nuclear ambitions: I would say that the Iranians can't have a nuclear weapon, in my view. But I also believe that we've got a lot of things to do--that we could do, including getting other…
The Right Stuff
Sonny Bunch · October 15, 2007 It's hard to know exactly what to expect from a film festival that caters to conservatives. Will the program consist of films made by conservative filmmakers? What even makes a movie conservative?
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · October 1, 2007 The demise of Newt Gingrich's campaign before it even began was probably the biggest story of the week, and the former speaker of the House took to This Week to explain his reasoning: "The McCain-Feingold Act criminalizes politics. … well, we learned yesterday morning, this was the decisive…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · September 24, 2007 Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton made the rounds this weekend, appearing on several of the Sunday morning talk shows from her home in Chappaqua, New York. Sporting a brown blazer on top of a green shirt, Senator Clinton was bubbly and boisterous, and at times confusing. Clinton made one…
The Truthers Are Out There
Sonny Bunch · September 24, 2007 New York City
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · September 17, 2007 On Meet the Press this weekend, Chuck Todd used this analogy to describe the "complicated" relationship between MoveOn.org and the Democratic party: MoveOn is sort of like this old friend of the Democratic Party. It's as if it's, you know, your, your teen - your - a friend of yours from high…
(Updated) Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · August 27, 2007 Over at Meet the Press, Michael Gordon talked about the progress that has been made since the beginning of the surge. The Cobra II author was somewhat optimistic about conditions as they stand now, telling Tim Russert MR. GORDON: Well, I spent most of the summer in Iraq in Diyala province and then…
Lights, Camera, Reaction
Sonny Bunch · August 13, 2007 During the fourth season of HBO's hit comedy series Curb Your Enthusiasm, one of the subplots centered on the bumbling attempts of the show's star, Larry David, to take advantage of a rather unusual anniversary gift given to him by his wife: He can have an affair with any woman he wants, as long as…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · August 6, 2007 This Sunday ABC's This Week featured the first debate in Iowa among all of the Republican candidates. As with every other similar event so far in the presidential campaign, this was less a debate than parallel press conferences; very few moments of interaction occurred between the candidates, and…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 30, 2007 The main talking point for Democrats this week was that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales needs to go. After admitting he doesn't care what David Petraeus has to say about Iraq this September ,Wisconsin senator Russ Feingold had this to say on Fox News Sunday about Gonzales: "If the attorney…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 23, 2007 Between Meet the Press and Face the Nation, viewers of the Sunday morning talk shows were given a glimpse of the deep divisions in the Senate's Democratic caucus. On Meet the Press, Sen. Russ Feingold announced he "will be shortly introducing a censure resolution of the president and the…
One Last Quorum Call
Sonny Bunch · July 18, 2007 As senators shuffle in for the final quorum call at a little after 5 in the morning, a thought occurs to me: Isn't this entire operation an exercise in child abuse? Every time the Senate reassembles, pages are forced to man the doors, get glasses of water, and do other pagely duties. These minors…
The 3 A.M. Watch
Sonny Bunch · July 18, 2007 Stuck in the Capitol at this ungodly hour, I can't help but feel pity for the staffers who drew the short straw and got stuck with the late shift. From the police officers trying to figure out why the metal detectors continue to pick up my belt to the ushers forced to rouse slumbering members of…
Reid to Antiwar Protesters: "Be Quiet!"
Sonny Bunch · July 18, 2007 Grim Reaper.JPG Protesting the Dems?
Vets for Freedom Speak Up
Sonny Bunch · July 17, 2007 capt.d3c0e8cf802d423abd85abe108a289fb.senate_iraq_dcsw109.jpg McCain and Martinez listen as Pete Hegseth spoke today on Capitol Hill.
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 16, 2007 Iraq was once again the main topic on the Sunday shows. Over at Fox News Sunday, WEEKLY STANDARD contributor Frederick Kagan took on Democratic notions that no political progress is being made in the troubled country.
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 9, 2007 On Face the Nation two senators argued over the commutation of Scooter Libby's sentence (among other topics). Utah's Orrin Hatch laid out the Republican case for the president's intervention, arguing that George W. Bush's actions were not nearly as egregious as Bill Clinton's pardons. "I think both…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · July 2, 2007 There was an interesting debate on Fox News Sunday over the fairness doctrine (the FCC regulation that required broadcasters to give equal time to opposing views and that met its demise 20 years ago). Mike Gallagher, a conservative radio talk show host, offered one possible explanation for renewed…
The Times on Indoctrinate U
Sonny Bunch · June 28, 2007 The good folks over at the New York Times finally got around to taking a look at Indoctrinate U in the education section yesterday. As we might have expected, the Times's take on the film was less than flattering--indeed, the author seems to use Evan Coyne Maloney's film as little more than an…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up: Lieberman Warns Iran
Sonny Bunch · June 10, 2007 The big news on the Sunday circuit this week was Joe Lieberman's declaration on Face the Nation that "we've got to be prepared to take aggressive military action against the Iranians to stop them from killing Americans in Iraq.'' You can watch the video here, and here's an excerpt of Lieberman's…
Mr. Bush Goes to Prague
Sonny Bunch · June 5, 2007 SPEAKING TO NATAN SHARANSKY last month about the Conference on Democracy and Security currently wrapping up in Prague, one could almost hear the desperation in his voice. With progress in Iraq stalling and the American public turning against the war, Sharansky felt he had to show the world just…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · June 3, 2007 This Week featured interviews with Iraqi president Jalal Talabani and Democratic congressman Jack Murtha. The two offered strikingly different views of America's role in world affairs. First, Talabani: We are thankful to the great and glorious American people who liberated us. We think that…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · May 28, 2007 Fox News Sunday and This Week both took a long look at second tier Republican candidates claiming to be the only choice for real conservatives this primary season. Mike Huckabee, taking a break from celebrating his wedding anniversary, talked to Chris Wallace about his plan to eliminate the IRS, a…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · May 20, 2007 The immigration compromise was the top issue on the Sunday morning show this week. On This Week, Fareed Zakaria gave his interpretation of the events: Both sides have compromised significantly on principles, so it is what legislation in a large, diverse country should be. When people hearken back…
Academic Thuggery
Sonny Bunch · May 18, 2007 IRONICALLY ENOUGH, aspiring conservative documentarian Evan Coyne Maloney received his inspiration from Michael Moore, the left-wing firebrand responsible for the anti-gun polemic Bowling for Columbine and the anti-Bush screed Fahrenheit 9/11. This isn't to say that Moore inspired him figuratively:…
Zombie Politics
Sonny Bunch · May 16, 2007 28_070510043542787_wideweb__300x375.jpg Rose Byrne and Jeremy Renner in 28 Weeks Later.
Dissidents Unite!
Sonny Bunch · May 14, 2007 Natan Sharansky first came to the world's attention as a renowned Soviet dissident. The day he was released from prison in 1986, he was put on a plane to East Berlin; then he emigrated to Israel, where he entered politics and spent a tumultuous decade in the Knesset. Now, he has left government and…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · May 13, 2007 Chris Wallace spent 30 minutes with Rudy Giuliani this morning on Fox News Sunday, leading off the interview with the issue that will present "America's Mayor" with his biggest challenge in the Republican primary: abortion. I oppose it, that's a principle I've held for forever and I'll hold it…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · May 6, 2007 Meet the Press featured a hour long interview with former CIA director George Tenet. He continued to perform CYA/damage control on Russert's program, but he also defended the president and his advisers from critics who claimed the executive branch was ginning up intelligence out of thin air to…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · April 29, 2007 Fox News Sunday: John McCain was the featured guest on Fox News Sunday, and the Arizona senator laid out his vision for a McCain presidency in one quick sentence: "Reform government, fight this Islamic extremist element that challenges the world, and restore integrity to government." While the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · April 29, 2007 Author's Note: After a brief hiatus, the Sunday Show Wrap-Up returns for one last appearance on THE DAILY STANDARD. In the future, look for this feature to appear exclusively on THE WORLDWIDE STANDARD in the new, slightly truncated form debuting this week. If you see something interesting, click on…
Spartan Sacrifice
Sonny Bunch · April 23, 2007 Thermopylae
Frank Gaffney vs. PBS
Sonny Bunch · April 17, 2007 WHEN IT WAS REVEALED last week that Frank Gaffney Jr.'s contribution to PBS's "America at a Crossroads" series was not going to be aired, conservatives around the country knowingly shook their heads and clucked their tongues. Gaffney, a hawkish conservative who founded the Center for Security…
These Blue Dogs Won't Hunt
Sonny Bunch · April 2, 2007 Running for Congress last fall in North Carolina, Heath Shuler staked out ground as a conservative Democrat. In a district held comfortably by Republican Charles Taylor since 1990, the former all-American quarterback distanced himself from Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi. The day after…
Outmaneuvered
Sonny Bunch · March 27, 2007 LAST WEEK the House of Representatives seemed to be on the verge of granting the District of Columbia a full vote in the chamber. Currently, Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District's delegate, has a vote in committee but no power on the floor; she cannot influence final passage of legislation. For the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 25, 2007 Face the Nation had the best show of the weekend, managing to squeeze into one tight half hour interviews with one of the fired assistant United States attorneys, two of the senators leading the investigation into the Justice Department, the New York Times's best columnist, and the head of the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 25, 2007 Face the Nation had the best show of the weekend, managing to squeeze into one tight half hour interviews with one of the fired assistant United States attorneys, two of the senators leading the investigation into the Justice Department, the New York Times's best columnist, and the head of the…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 18, 2007 The firing of several United States Attorneys was the big story of the week. Meet the Press featured an interview with Sen. Chuck Schumer, who laid out the Democrats' case, and took a guess on Alberto Gonzales's prospects. "I think it's highly unlikely he survives," Schumer said, adding "I wouldn't…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 18, 2007 The firing of several United States Attorneys was the big story of the week. Meet the Press featured an interview with Sen. Chuck Schumer, who laid out the Democrats' case, and took a guess on Alberto Gonzales's prospects. "I think it's highly unlikely he survives," Schumer said, adding "I wouldn't…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 12, 2007 Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace got the week started by interviewing former Tennessee senator, and current film and television actor, Fred Thompson about his intentions with regard to the 2008 presidential race. He came off as a true conservative, positioning himself against gay marriage,…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 11, 2007 Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace got the week started by interviewing former Tennessee senator, and current film and television actor, Fred Thompson about his intentions with regard to the 2008 presidential race. He came off as a true conservative, positioning himself against gay marriage,…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · March 4, 2007 THE BIG NEWS of the weekend was the condition of Walter Reed Army Medical Center's outpatient facilities, and the care that wounded veterans were receiving there. Face the Nation featured interviews with Senators Carl Levin and Joe Lieberman, as well as one of the coauthors of the Washington Post…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · February 26, 2007 This Week featured an interview with former President Jimmy Carter. First, the good: Carter talked about his foundation's efforts to eradicate the Guinea Worm from villages in Africa. Carter said that with proper care (and enough money), the parasite could be wiped out in three years. For more…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · February 18, 2007 IT WAS A PRETTY slow week on the Sunday talks show circuit. Meet the Press featured an interview with Tony Snow--the White House press secretary set about defending the president's proposals as best he could. Trying to combat the notion that the troops would be best served by a hasty withdrawal,…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · February 11, 2007 Fox News Sunday featured an interview with former Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith, who has taken a beating in the press recently for the way intelligence was handled in the lead up to the Iraq war. He stressed to Chris Wallace that intelligence is very rarely a slam dunk, noting "there was…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · February 4, 2007 Fox News Sunday featured interviews with two senators who should be considered strong contenders for the vice presidential nomination (if not this cycle, then certainly the next). Democrat Jim Webb was interviewed by Chris Wallace first, and he spoke of the need to involve the nations surrounding…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 29, 2007 Meet the Press featured an interview with Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee. As a southern governor, Huckabee deserves special attention. Though not terribly well known at this point, Huckabee scored a prime spot: leading off Meet the Press and getting a half hour of face time with the public.
Make No Whine
Sonny Bunch · January 22, 2007 What Ever Happened to Orson Welles?
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 21, 2007 IT WAS KIND of a slow news week for the Sunday morning talk shows. The biggest news was also the least surprising announcement of all time: Hillary Clinton is running for president in 2008. The biggest impact of this announcement so far is that it forced a number of Democratic senators (some of…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 15, 2007 Fox News Sunday scored the big interview of the weekend: Chris Wallace spent a half hour with Vice President Dick Cheney. Cheney used his time to remind the American people of exactly what's at stake in Iraq, and that this is not solely a sectarian civil war we are now involved in: "Remember what…
The Rise ofRome
Sonny Bunch · January 12, 2007 The second season of HBO's sword-and-sandal series Rome picks up right where the first season left off: drenched in blood, Julius Caesar lays dead on the floor of the Senate. With the death of the tyrant, the Republic teeters on the edge of chaos. Marc Antony and Octavian, the newly adopted heir of…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · January 8, 2007 NANCY PELOSI WAS the featured guest on Face the Nation; all 30 minutes of the show were dedicated to the new speaker of the House. As might be expected, there were some real gems from the California Democrat. She said that President Bush will no longer have a blank check in Iraq, but offered…
BCS Reform
Sonny Bunch · December 29, 2006 COLLEGE FOOTBALL is inherently flawed and inferior to its professional relative. Any sport where the national champion is decided by the votes of coaches and journalists isn't a real sport. It's no better than figure skating, rhythmic gymnastics, or any other activity where "style points" are…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · December 17, 2006 WHILE THE MAIN focus of the Sunday morning talk shows was, of course, Iraq, a variety of other issues were discussed as well. This Week featured an interview with incoming Senate majority leader Harry Reid. He passed on good news about Senator Tim Johnson; the South Dakota Democrat is recovering…
Brutally Honest
Sonny Bunch · December 15, 2006 MEL GIBSON'S Apocalypto is one of the few films that can rightly be described as a journey. The viewer is snatched from the confines (and comforts) of a Hollywood movie and thrown deep into the jungles of Central America. The film itself is a visual masterpiece; shot entirely in a Mayan dialect,…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · December 11, 2006 IRAQ STUDY GROUP co-chairmen Lee Hamilton and James Baker were the weekend's most popular guests, but we're going to start with the one show on which they did not appear. This Week featured an interview with British Prime Minister Tony Blair. On Iraq, and the consequences of a premature withdrawal,…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · December 3, 2006 NATIONAL SECURITY adviser Stephen Hadley was all over your television set this weekend, with appearances on Meet the Press, Face the Nation, and This Week. (What, too busy to swing by and check in with the guys at Fox?)
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · November 27, 2006 ON A SLOW post-Thanksgiving Sunday, Rep. Charles Rangel wins the award for stupidest comment of the day while appearing on Fox News Sunday. Expounding on his drive to reinstate the draft, Rangel said that "no young, bright individual wants to fight just because of a bonus and just because of…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · November 19, 2006 This Week scored the big interviews of the week--the first Sunday interview with John McCain since he announced his bid for the presidency, and the first Sunday interview with Steny Hoyer since his selection as the new House majority leader. McCain led off the show, and faced a series of questions…
Sunday Show Wrap-Up
Sonny Bunch · November 13, 2006 THE ELECTIONS ARE OVER, but the analysis has just begun. In case you didn't get your fill last week, the Sunday morning talk shows were full of folks filling us in on why the elections turned out the way they did, and what the next two years have in store.
Defeat in Maryland
Sonny Bunch · November 8, 2006 Bowie, Maryland
Voting with Michael Steele
Sonny Bunch · November 7, 2006 Upper Marlboro, Maryland
Showdown in Albuquerque
Sonny Bunch · November 2, 2006 IF DEMOCRATS HOPE to retake the House of Representatives next week, they're going to have to win seats like New Mexico's 1st district. With an increasingly Hispanic population, and mounting woes for the national Republican party, the Albuquerque district is a prime pickup opportunity for the…
The Suburbs from Hell
Sonny Bunch · October 30, 2006 Bucks County, Pennsylvania
Filling in the Gaps
Sonny Bunch · September 22, 2006 AMERICAN TROOPS in Iraq and Afghanistan face any number of difficulties every day. From dodging IEDs to rebuilding war-torn nations, our GIs are bombarded from sunup to sundown with problems we civilians can only dimly conceive. Imagine, on top of that, losing your house or having your family…
Debunking 9/11
Sonny Bunch · September 11, 2006 Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can't Stand Up to the Facts
Barbed "Wire"
Sonny Bunch · September 8, 2006 AFTER A ONE YEAR HIATUS, HBO's other gripping crime drama, The Wire, finally returns for a new season. While The Sopranos gets all the accolades and takes home all the trophies, The Wire has evolved into the network's most interesting show. Uncompromising and hard hitting, the series is the…
Spike's Storm
Sonny Bunch · August 21, 2006 "When the Levees Broke"
Compromising Positions
Sonny Bunch · August 11, 2006 V for Vendetta was a disappointment upon its initial theatrical release. Having had five months to reconsider that diagnosis, viewing the film again on DVD has led me to realize that it's not just disappointing: It's downright terrible.
McKinney-Johnson:One Night Stand
Sonny Bunch · August 1, 2006 WHILE HANK JOHNSON and Cynthia McKinney's joust last night was no replay of the Lincoln-Douglas debates, it was certainly entertaining in its own right. Neither candidate delivered a knockout blow, so it's down to the scorecards. Here's a round-by-round analysis.
Re-Defeat McKinney
Sonny Bunch · July 27, 2006 In 2002, Rep. Cynthia McKinney looked untouchable; the Georgia Democrat had held her seat in Congress for a decade and her majority-minority district had shown no desire to kick the liberal, female, African-American out of office. While she was long known for being outspoken (McKinney accused Al…
Be a Man!
Sonny Bunch · July 7, 2006 There's a scene early in The Godfather when Don Corleone meets with popular singer Johnny Fontaine. The young man is in something of a bind--he desperately needs to land a part in a movie to further his career, but a stubborn producer refuses to give him the role. Overcome with frustration,…
The Horror, The Horror
Sonny Bunch · June 9, 2006 THE NEW REMAKE of The Omen serves no discernible purpose. It is not a "re-imagining," a la Tim Burton's awful (but, at least, original) remake of Planet of the Apes. It is not an homage, as Gus Van Sant's shot-for-shot remake of Psycho purported to be. It's not even the studio's intent to bring a…
Mr. Jefferson's Wage Slaves?
Sonny Bunch · May 8, 2006 Charlottesville
Basic Survival
Sonny Bunch · April 7, 2006 AUTHOR'S NOTE: This review makes frequent use of The Film Snob*s Dictionary. The footnotes below are just a small sample of definitions taken from this deliciously mean book. Buy it today and you'll wonder how you ever watched a Sharon Stone movie without it. -SB
Play VORP!
Sonny Bunch · April 3, 2006 ON SATURDAY, the day before the first games of the 2006 season--and somehow two days before Opening Day--the Baltimore Orioles hosted the Washington Nationals for an exhibition game at Camden Yards. Sitting seven rows off the field, midway between home plate and the visiting team's dugout, I…
Do the Spike Thing
Sonny Bunch · March 24, 2006 IF I WERE TO MENTION the new movie, Inside Man, what would you think of first? Its impressive list of stars, which includes Denzel Washington, Jodie Foster, and Clive Owen? Its powerhouse producer, Brian Grazer? Some vague notion that it's yet another slick heist movie being foisted upon the public?
Gung-Ho
Sonny Bunch · March 14, 2006 THE WASHINGTON POST EXPRESS began its review of CBS's new drama, The Unit, with the following: "Just when you thought that mindless flag-waving, fear-mongering and Arab-stereotyping were starting to fade, here comes 'The Unit' . . . which ignores the realities of the 'war on terror' mire while…
Munich Syndrome
Sonny Bunch · January 6, 2006 AT THE 1972 OLYMPICS, 11 Israeli athletes were murdered in cold blood by Palestinian terrorists. As the rest of the world continued playing their games, Israel mourned. In the coming years Israel would set out to kill those responsible for the attacks and individuals who would plan, supply, and…
Tramps Like UsHave Never Sounded Better
Sonny Bunch · November 25, 2005 THIRTY YEARS AGO--before the arena rock of Born in the USA, before the look at a recession-torn America in The River--Bruce Springsteen released what would be his greatest work, Born to Run. The album' release was splashed simultaneously across the covers of both Time and Newsweek and it remains…
Pardon theQuite Frankly
Sonny Bunch · November 11, 2005 HAVE YOU NOTICED how terrible the columns in the sports section of your local paper have gotten? It's not that the quality sports writing in general is falling. As Glenn Stout, the editor of the Best American Sports Writing series says, the great sports writing of today is at least as good, if not…
March of the Conspiracy Theorists
Sonny Bunch · September 26, 2005 THE TERMS "BRAIN TRUST" and "Cynthia McKinney" do not roll off the tongue like "peanut butter and jelly." But that's how the press release advertised a series of "Brain Trust" panels moderated by Rep. McKinney this past weekend at the Congressional Black Caucus's annual legislative conference. The…
Rep. Morella, R-Barely
Sonny Bunch · September 9, 2002 REP. CONNIE MORELLA of Maryland is the least typical Republican in the House of Representatives. She's pro-choice, pro-gun control, pro-campaign finance reform, anti-missile defense, and that's just for starters. She voted against seven of the ten planks of Newt Gingrich's Contract With America.…