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Rating | Title/Year | Author | Quote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 3/5 | Men in Black: International (2019) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | |
2 | 2/5 | Shaft (2019) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | The banter between cool-cat father and nerdy, uptight son is somewhat funny, but lazy writing and wrongheaded stereotyping quickly send this sequel down the shaft. EDIT Posted Jun 17, 2019 |
3 | 4/5 | Changeland (2019) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | |
4 | 4/5 | The Lavender Scare (2017) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | Josh Howard's brief, simple documentary covers some ground that will be familiar to many, but, when it gets to the heart of things, its stories are undeniably enraging, moving, and inspiring. EDIT Posted Jun 12, 2019 |
5 | 5/5 | American Woman (2018) | Tara McNamara | |
6 | 3/5 | Elisa & Marcela (2019) | Barbara Shulgasser | Woman poses as man to marry her love; nudity, violence. EDIT Posted Jun 11, 2019 |
7 | 3/5 | Life in the Doghouse (2018) | Barbara Shulgasser | |
8 | 1/5 | Backdraft 2 (2019) | Barbara Shulgasser | Unnecessary, nonsensical sequel has violence, language. EDIT Posted Jun 11, 2019 |
9 | 4/5 | Shaft (1971) | Brian Costello | |
10 | 3/5 | Chopsticks (2018) | Brian Costello | Some profanity, peril in entertaining Indian dramedy. EDIT Posted Jun 11, 2019 |
11 | 3/5 | () | Brian Costello | |
12 | 2/5 | Oh, Ramona! (2019) | Barbara Shulgasser | Nerd grows up to be a player with women; sex, language. EDIT Posted Jun 11, 2019 |
13 | 3/5 | I Am Mother (2019) | Jennifer Green | |
14 | 3/5 | Free Trip to Egypt (2018) | Sandie Angulo Chen | Docu about cross-cultural connection promotes empathy. EDIT Posted Jun 7, 2019 |
15 | 4/5 | Late Night (2019) | Betsy Bozdech | |
16 | 4/5 | Pavarotti (2019) | Tara McNamara | Docu traces opera icon's rise; some swearing, war images. EDIT Posted Jun 6, 2019 |
17 | 3/5 | Dark Phoenix (2019) | Sandie Angulo Chen | |
18 | 4/5 | () | Andrea Beach | Chasing Happiness offers a substantial, mature look at the brothers and their story that can even be enjoyed by people who aren't fans of their music. EDIT Posted Jun 6, 2019 |
19 | 3/5 | Funan (2019) | Joyce Slaton | |
20 | 5/5 | The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019) | Joyce Slaton | Painful portrait of gentrification in extraordinary indie. EDIT Posted Jun 5, 2019 |
21 | 3/5 | The Secret Life of Pets 2 (2019) | Tara McNamara | |
22 | 5/5 | Deadwood: The Movie (2019) | Jenny Nixon | Beloved profanity-laced Western gets a fab final sendoff. EDIT Posted Jun 4, 2019 |
23 | 4/5 | Wonders of the Sea (2017) | Renee Schonfeld | |
24 | 2/5 | Norm of the North: King Sized Adventure (2019) | Tara McNamara | Potty humor and peril in so-so animated sequel. EDIT Posted Jun 4, 2019 |
25 | 2/5 | The Kings of Appletown (2009) | Barbara Shulgasser | |
26 | 3/5 | The Test and the Art of Thinking (2018) | Andrea Beach | Standardized test docu shows problems, offers no solutions. EDIT Posted Jun 4, 2019 |
27 | 3/5 | Always Be My Maybe (2019) | Renee Schonfeld | |
28 | 2/5 | Joy (2018) | Barbara Shulgasser | Intense drama about sex trafficking has lots of violence. EDIT Posted Jun 4, 2019 |
29 | 4/5 | Behind the Curve (2018) | Brian Costello | |
30 | 3/5 | The Perfection (2018) | Betsy Bozdech | Violent, gory horror-thriller; language, sex, nudity. EDIT Posted Jun 4, 2019 |
31 | 3/5 | Domino (2019) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | |
32 | 2/5 | Rim of the World (2019) | Barbara Shulgasser | Kids save the world from bloody aliens; language, violence. EDIT Posted May 29, 2019 |
33 | 2/5 | Malibu Rescue (2019) | Renee Schonfeld | |
34 | 3/5 | Long Time Coming: A 1955 Baseball Story (2017) | Barbara Shulgasser | Docu about integrated baseball game in segregated South. EDIT Posted May 29, 2019 |
35 | 4/5 | A Time to Kill (1996) | Lynnette Nicholas | |
36 | 2/5 | Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019) | Joyce Slaton | Monster movie sequel is muddled, violent, overly long. EDIT Posted May 29, 2019 |
37 | 5/5 | Pulp Fiction (1994) | Marjorie Kase | |
38 | 3/5 | We Have Always Lived in the Castle (2018) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | Based on Shirley Jackson's great gothic novel, Stacie Passon's movie is perhaps a bit on the light side, but she nonetheless creates a strong, vivid atmosphere in which the characters can flourish. EDIT Posted May 24, 2019 |
39 | 2/5 | Brightburn (2019) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | |
40 | 4/5 | Booksmart (2019) | Jeffrey M. Anderson | This wise, funny, compassionate high school comedy succeeds wildly on almost all counts, thanks to its strong, lovable characters and fresh, bracing approach. EDIT Posted May 24, 2019 |
41 | 4/5 | Rocketman (2019) | Joyce Slaton | |
42 | 3/5 | See You Yesterday (2019) | Barbara Shulgasser | Teens travel back in time; violence, language. EDIT Posted May 23, 2019 |
43 | 3/5 | Aladdin (2019) | Sandie Angulo Chen | |
44 | 3/5 | The Wandering Earth (2019) | Brian Costello | Bombastic blockbuster Chinese sci-fi has cursing, violence. EDIT Posted May 23, 2019 |
45 | 2/5 | Dry Martina (2018) | Barbara Shulgasser | |
46 | 4/5 | The Sign of Zorro (1960) | Jennifer Green | Fun, swashbuckling classic based on series; some violence. EDIT Posted May 23, 2019 |
47 | 3/5 | The Tomorrow Man (2019) | Tara McNamara | |
48 | 3/5 | A Dog's Journey (2019) | Sandie Angulo Chen | Sequel is as sentimental and emotional as the first film. EDIT Posted May 22, 2019 |
49 | 3/5 | The Sun Is Also a Star (2019) | Sandie Angulo Chen | |
50 | 2/5 | The Meanest Man in Texas (2017) | Tara McNamara | Violent faith film flounders in telling true salvation tale. EDIT Posted May 22, 2019 |
Born | James Pearson Steyer 1956 (age 62–63) |
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Occupation | Child advocate, civil rights attorney, professor and author |
Years active | 1988–present |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Butler Steyer |
Children | four |
Family | Tom Steyer (brother) |
James Pearson Steyer (born 1956) is an American child advocate, civil rights attorney, professor and author. He is most known for founding Common Sense Media, an organization dedicated to improving media and entertainment lives for children and families.[1]
Steyer was born in New York City in 1956. His mother, Marnie (née Fahr), was a teacher of remedial reading at the Brooklyn House of Detention, and his father, Roy Henry Steyer, was a partner in the New York law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell.[2][3] His father was Jewish[4] and his mother Episcopalian.[5][6] He has two brothers: Hume Steyer and Tom Steyer.[5] Steyer was highly influenced by his mother, who would sometimes bring him to class as her teaching assistant. In an article in the Los Angeles Times, Steyer’s college friend, Mike Tollin, said '[Jim’s] whole focus on kids comes from his close relationship with his mother…She was the kind of woman who would sit you down, ask you how things were, and you felt like you needed to tell her the truth.'[7]
Steyer graduated early from Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire and worked with his mother teaching remedial reading at a public school in Harlem.[8] Steyer later graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Stanford University where he was awarded the Lindsey Peters Award for Outstanding Work in American Government.[9] After two years of community development work in Asia, he attended Stanford Law School and graduated in 1983. During law school, Steyer founded the East Palo Alto Community Law Project, a non-profit legal services center for low-income families in East Palo Alto, California.[10] After Stanford, he became a law clerk for Justice Allen Broussard of the California Supreme Court. He then served as a civil rights attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. There, he helped spearhead the Poverty and Justice Program, focused on developing national legal and legislative strategies on behalf of disadvantaged African Americans.[11]
Steyer has been teaching courses as a professor at Stanford University in political science, education, civil rights and civil liberties for 28 years.[12][13] He also authored two books: The Other Parent: The Inside Story of the Media’s Effect on our Children, which focuses on the effects certain media and government regulators have on children, and Talking Back to Facebook: The Common Sense Guide to Raising Kids in the Digital Age.[14] His former students include New Jersey Senator Cory Booker, former National Security Adviser Susan Rice, and Chelsea Clinton, who he raved was such a “star student” that he hired her as a teaching assistant and research aide.[15]
Steyer founded his first child advocacy venture, Children Now, in 1988. Children Now was one of the main lobbying groups that fought for the three-hour-a-week educational children's programming quota which eventually became law. The group also became well known for publishing a “report card” on California’s children. This report card helped to shed light on important statistics. One of the red flags the report card raised was that one-fifth of California children lacked health insurance and only half were immunized.[16]
Shortly after starting Children Now, Steyer noticed a serious need for high-quality educational TV programs for kids. In response he started JP Kids in 1996, a for-profit company that produced such shows as 'The Famous Jett Jackson', which aired on the Disney Channel. Steyer served as the company’s Chairman and CEO.[7] Under Steyer’s guidance, the company used various platforms to broadcast more educational and entertaining content. JP Kids also provided an online outlet for teens to share opinions, explore alternative points of views and discuss political and environmental topics.[17][9]
Steyer was awarded Stanford's highest teaching honor, the Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching, which is awarded annually to three Stanford professors, in 2010. Stanford students also voted for him to be Class Day speaker during Stanford’s graduation exercises.[18] In 2011, the New York Times reported that Steyer was helping build the Center for the Next Generation, a nonprofit that aims to influence public policy debates focused on national children’s and energy issues.[9]
When Google announced in January 2012 that it would be compiling data about users from across its many sites, Steyer was quoted as saying that 'Even if the company believes that tracking users across all platforms improves their services, consumers should still have the option to opt out — especially the kids and teens who are avid users of YouTube, Gmail and Google Search.[19] In 2012, the Department of Education and the F.C.C. recruited Steyer as the chairman of the Leading Education by Advancing Digital (LEAD) Commission, which enhances digital devices and curriculums in schools.[13][20] Steyer is also a partner with Hillary Clinton on the Too Small to Fail initiative.[21]
In June 2016, Steyer was included on Tech & Learning's 2016 List of the Most Influential People in Edtech.[22] That same year, Steyer launched the Common Sense Kids campaign through Common Sense Media creating 'a mass army for kids' by focusing on children's issues in the political field.[23][13]
Steyer’s nonprofit organization, Common Sense Media, founded in 2003 with Liz Perle,[13][24] focuses on the effects that media and technology have on young users. Steyer describes the group as “nutritional labeling of media.' The leading national media advocacy group is financed by donations from foundations and individuals and fees from media partners. Common Sense Media distributes its content to more than 90 million US homes via partnerships with Comcast, Time Warner Cable, DIRECTV, NBC Universal, Netflix, Best Buy, Google, Yahoo!, AOL, Huffington Post, Fandango, Trend Micro, Verizon Foundation, Nickelodeon, and more.[25]
Steyer’s advocacy has reached tens of millions of parents a month in articles, reviews and advice columns. Common Sense Media helps parents and their children to identify content that could be harmful to a younger audience.[26] There are more than 1,000,000 members participating in the discussions and community, and their education programs for students and parents are in use in more than 75,000 schools across the U.S.[9] Common Sense Media played a major role in the passage of the 2005 California law restricting the sale of violent video games,[9] but was struck down by the Supreme Court.
In March 2012 the feature length documentary Bully was released into AMC Theatres with a 'Pause 13+' rating designated by Common Sense Media. The film had previously been rated R by the MPAA. Under the new rating, AMC theaters allowed entrance to viewers under 17 provided they had a signed permission slip.[27]
In 2014, Steyer supported California's 'Eraser Bill,' which requires social media websites must allow California children under age 18 to remove their own postings.[28] The same year, Steyer called the passing of California Senate Bill 1177 'a big win for kids'.[29] The bill prohibits the sale and disclosure of schools' online student data. The bill also forbids targeted ads based on school information and the creation of student profiles when not used for education purposes.[30]
In 2016, Steyer led Common Sense to launch Common Sense Legislative Ratings in an effort to publicize legislative bills that would help children and expose bills that could harm them.[31] Common Sense Media supported the U.S. Department of Commerce's creation of an 'online privacy policy', which would include a 'Privacy Bill of Rights' and would make clear which types of personal information companies are allowed to keep on clients.[32]
Steyer has also called for updates to the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), calling the time of the act's creation 'the stone age of digital media' and pointing out the lack of platforms such as Google, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter at the time.[33]
In 2018 Steyer wrote in favor of sweeping privacy legislation, similar to the European Union's GDPR (2018), writing in the San Francisco Chronicle: 'California families also deserve the right to informed consent when it comes to their personal information.'[34]
Common Sense and Steyer sponsored the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 which guarantees new data privacy rights for the state's consumers, with extra protections for kids under 16. The legislation, AB 375, takes effect in 2020.[35]
Also in 2018 Steyer joined with former Google employee Tristan Harris, and Facebook investor Roger McNamee on the 'Truth About Tech' campaign.[36]
In 2018, Steyer was included in an article by The Wall Street Journal called 'The New Tech Avengers', 'an unlikely triumvirate of Silicon Valley insiders [...] holding the tech industry accountable on privacy and addiction.'[37]
Steyer is the author of The Other Parent: The Inside Story of the Media’s Effect on our Children. According to Stanford Magazine, the book “paints a frightening picture of greedy media companies, indifferent government regulators and parents too overwhelmed to pay attention.”[18] He has served on numerous non-profit boards including Children Now, the National Parenting Association[38] and the San Francisco Free Clinic.[39]
In 2012, Steyer released Talking Back to Facebook, a book that deals with the presence of digital media in the lives of children.[40][41] The book, with a foreword written by Chelsea Clinton, advocates for larger parental involvement in children's technological activities. Talking Back to Facebook outlines strategies for safeguarding against a potentially dangerous digital world. During a May 2012 segment of NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross, Steyer noted that, 'In a world where everything's photographed, where kids are constantly snapping photos on their cellphones and where youthful indiscretion is exactly the same as it's always been, the consequences can be much greater'.[42]
Steyer lives in the Bay Area with his wife, Elizabeth (née Butler), and their four children; Lily, Kirk, Carly and Jesse.[43] His wife was Acting Executive Director for Legal Services for Children in San Francisco, the first not-for-profit law firm in the United States dedicated to providing 'comprehensive direct legal advocacy for children' utilizing attorneys and social workers in a combined effort.[44] She now serves as Acting Executive Director of the Athletic Scholars Advancement Program, an independent, nonprofit organization that works to cultivate a college-bound culture by providing access to summer school programs, one-on-one mentoring, individualized academic guidance and college counseling services at public high schools in San Francisco.[45]