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Monthly Archives: November 2018

The Oscar-winning director on his new movie about the 1969 moon landing, that infamous best film mix-up, and finding time for a honeymoon

Damien Chazelle, 33, was born in Providence, Rhode Island, to a Canadian mother (a history teacher) and a French father (a computer science professor). He released his first feature film, the jazz musical Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench, aged 24, but it was Whiplash that yielded a career breakthrough in 2014. He capitalised on this with La La Land, which last year won six Oscars including best director for Chazelle though it was mistakenly announced as best picture before the award went to Moonlight. His latest film, First Man, follows Neil Armstrong (Ryan Gosling) through years of preparation for the moon landing in 1969.

This feels like a very different film to your last one whereLa La Land was flamboyant and emotional, First Man is reserved and claustrophobic. What persuaded you to take it on?
I liked doing something that felt like the polar opposite of La La Land, just as La La Land felt like the polar opposite of Whiplash, at least emotionally. But I was also just interested in exploring a different world this was my first time doing something that wasnt directly tied to my own life experience.

Were you interested in space travel as a kid?
Yeah, but no more so than your average kid. I would say I was more interested in movies about space travel than space travel itself. I always wanted to do art, whether it was music or movies or drawing or storytelling. Certainly I learned more about space travel by doing this movie than ever before. It took one trip to Houston early on to slap me in the face and go, oh shit, if I actually want to do this I have got to buckle up and learn.

How was this story personal for you?
I related to it as a movie about trying to turn dreams into reality, somewhat similar to La La Land and Whiplash [which was inspired by Chazelles own experience as an obsessively focused jazz drummer]. I also wanted to give a sense of the work involved in becoming an astronaut, which movies tend to obscure the sweaty hands, the vomit on the shirt, the dirty, gritty, cobbled-together aspect of it. When I first saw one of these capsules for real, it was so much less gilded than how I imagined it. I wouldnt get into one for 10 minutes, let alone the time it takes to fly to the moon. I wanted the audience to feel like theyre inside that capsule, screaming to get out.

Watch a trailer for First Man.

Republican senator Marco Rubio raised a stink about you not showing the US flag being planted on the moon. Were you anticipating that reaction?
No, not really. The whole point of the film was to tell the untold story, to look at things that we didnt know, that we didnt see. So it was purely an aesthetic choice there was nothing political in it at all.

Donald Trump joined in, saying: Its almost like theyre embarrassed at the achievement coming from America, I think its a terrible thing I wouldnt even want to watch the movie. Do you feel sad about losing that particular viewer?
I feel sad about losing any viewer. I hope he changes his mind. I think anyone who sees the film will see the patriotism that I think is fully a part of it.

This is your second film with Ryan Gosling. Whats unique about him as an actor?
He does a deep dive [into the character] and has some of Neil Armstrongs obsessiveness and determination to get things right. In between takes hed be huddled off with one of the astronauts we had on set, asking: Did that look OK? Was it this button or that button? For the next scene I have to pull the RCS switch do you pull them fast or slow? Hes just like a hawk for all those things.

Sorry to make you relive the best picture fiasco in 2017, but what was going through your head when the mix-up with Moonlight was revealed?
[laughs] I was so out of it and I didnt really hear what was going on for most of the time. After the Moonlight people started crowding on the stage, someone had to come and explain to me what was happening. What people watching the telecast maybe dont realise is that, when youre in an awards season, youre seeing people from the other films all the time and you become buddies. So that aspect of it was really nice. Who walks home with what prize is maybe a little less important, but I was certainly happy to see it go to them.

Youve spoken in the past about having an obsessive streak with your work. Hows your work-life balance now?
Maybe its better than it used to be. Its helpful to have people to force me to clock off. My wife [actor Olivia Hamilton] is very instrumental in that regard. I think I would be either crumpled up in a corner somewhere or just a lesser human being without her.

You got married recently.
We got married actually we eloped last December. It was our little secret city hall marriage. Weve been trying to find little pockets of time for a honeymoon, but Im afraid we havent managed it yet.

What do you do to relax?
I love reading. Watching films, obviously. Listening to music. Also, its really lovely to be in places like London or Paris and walk the city. Ive always liked that idea of the flneur, the street walker. Just wandering can be endlessly inspiring.

Whats next?
Talking about Paris, Ill be returning there next year to shoot the first two episodes of a Netflix series called The Eddy. Its about a jazz club run by an expat with a motley crew of locals and foreigners who all gather there. It follows their daily life in and out of the club a bit of an ensemble piece. Meanwhile, Im trying to write the next movie, but its too early to say what itll be about. So theres stuff in the pipeline, but Im [also] pretty excited to have a little bit of uncertainty.

First Man is released on 12 October

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/film/2018/oct/07/damien-chazelle-first-man-interview-flag-donald-trump-la-la-land

Stars paid tribute to the Queen of Soul Aretha Franklin at the American Music Awards — and it was so powerful to watch the emotions and live through all the performances!!

CeCe WinansMary MaryGladys Knight, and more legends in the music world gave it their all in paying tribute to the Queen of Soul!

Watch the highlights (below)!

[Image via ABC.]

Read more: https://perezhilton.com/2018-10-09-amas-aretha-franklin-tribute/

Back in May, as part of a settlement, Spotify agreed to pay more than $112 million to clean up some copyright problems. Even for a service with millions of users, that had to leave a mark. No one wants to be dragged into court all the time, not even bold, disruptive technology start-ups.

On October 11th, the President signed the Hatch-Goodlatte Music Modernization Act (the “Act”, or “MMA”). The MMA goes back, legislatively, to at least 2013, when Chairman Goodlatte (R-VA) announced that, as Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, he planned to conduct a “comprehensive” review of issues in US copyright law. Ranking Member Jerry Nadler (D-NY) was also deeply involved in this process, as were Senators Hatch (R-UT) Leahy (D-VT), and Wyden (D-OR). But this legislation didn’t fall from the sky; far from it.

After many hearings, several “roadshow” panels around the country, and a couple of elections, in early 2018 Goodlatte announced his intent to move forward on addressing several looming issues in music copyright before his planned retirement from Congress at the end of his current term (January 2019).  With that deadline in place, the push was on, and through the spring and summer, the House Judiciary Committee and their colleagues in the Senate worked to complete the text of the legislation and move it through to process. By late September, the House and Senate versions had been reconciled and the bill moved to the President’s desk.

What’s all this about streaming?

As enacted, the Act instantiates several changes to music copyright in the US, especially as regards streaming music services. What does “streaming” refer to in this context? Basically, it occurs when a provider makes music available to listeners, over the internet, without creating a downloadable or storable copy: “Streaming differs from downloads in that no copy of the music is saved to your hard drive.”

“It’s all about the Benjamins.”

One part, by far the largest change in terms of money, provides that a new royalty regime be created for digital streaming of musical works, e.g. by services like Spotify and Apple Music. Pre-1972 recordings — and the creators involved in making them (including, for the first time, for audio engineers, studio mixers and record producers) — are also brought under this royalty umbrella.

These are significant, generally beneficial results for a piece of legislation. But to make this revenue bounty fully effective, a to-be-created licensing entity will have to be set up with the ability to first collect, and then distribute, the money. Think “ASCAP/BMI for streaming.” This new non-profit will be the first such “collective licensing” copyright organization set up in the US in quite some time.

Collective Licensing: It’s not “Money for Nothing”, right?

What do we mean by “collective licensing” in this context, and how will this new organization be created and organized to engage in it? Collective licensing is primarily an economically efficient mechanism for (A) gathering up monies due for certain uses of works under copyright– in this case, digital streaming of musical recordings, and (B) distributing the royalty checks back to the rights-holding parties ( e.g. recording artists, their estates in some cases, and record labels).  Generally speaking, in collective licensing:

 “…rights holders collect money that would otherwise be in tiny little bits that they could not afford to collect, and in that way they are able to protect their copyright rights. On the flip side, substantial users of lots of other people’s copyrighted materials are prepared to pay for it, as long as the transaction costs are not extreme.”

—Fred Haber, VP and Corporate Counsel, Copyright Clearance Center

The Act envisions the new organization as setting up and implementing a new, extensive —and, publicly accessible —database of musical works and the rights attached to them. Nothing quite like this is currently available, although resources like SONY’s Gracenote suggest a good start along those lines. After it is set up and the initial database has a sufficient number of records, the new collective licensing agency will then get down to the business of offering licenses:

“…a blanket statutory license administered by a nonprofit mechanical licensing collective. This collective will collect and distribute royalties, work to identify songs and their owners for payment, and maintain a comprehensive, publicly accessible database for music ownership information.”

— Regan A. Smith, General Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights

(AP Photo) The Liverpool beat group The Beatles, with John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr, take it easy resting their feet on a table, during a break in rehearsals for the Royal variety show at the Prince of Wales Theater, London, England, November 4, 1963. (AP Photo)

You “Can’t Buy Me Love”, so who is all this going to benefit?

In theory, the listening public should be the primary beneficiary. More music available through digital streaming services means more exposure —and potentially more money —for recording artists. For students of music, the new database of recorded works and licenses will serve to clarify who is (or was) responsible for what. Another public benefit will be fewer actions on digital streaming issues clogging up the courts.

There’s an interesting wrinkle in the Act providing for the otherwise authorized use of “orphaned” musical works such that these can now be played in library or archival (i.e. non-profit) contexts. “Orphan works” are those which may still protected under copyright, but for which the legitimate rights holders are unknown, and, sometimes, undiscoverable. This is the first implementation of orphan works authorization in US copyright law.  Cultural services – like Open Culture – can look forward to being able to stream more musical works without incurring risk or hindrance (provided that the proper forms are filled out) and this implies that some great music is now more likely to find new audiences and thereby be preserved for posterity. Even the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), generally no great fan of new copyright legislation, finds something to like in the Act.

In the land of copyright wonks, and in another line of infringement suits, this resolution of the copyright status of musical recordings released before 1972 seems, in my opinion, fair and workable. In order to accomplish that, the Act also had to address the matter of the duration of these new copyright protections, which is always (post-1998) a touchy subject:

  • For recordings first published before 1923, the additional time period ends on December 31, 2021.
  • For recordings created between 1923-1946, the additional time period is 5 years after the general 95-year term.
  • For recordings created between 1947-1956, the additional time period is 15 years after the general 95-year term.
  • For works first published between 1957-February 15, 1972 the additional time period ends on February 15, 2067.

(Source: US Copyright Office)

 (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Live Nation)

Money (That’s What I Want – and lots and lots of listeners, too.)

For the digital music services themselves, this statutory or ‘blanket’ license arrangement should mean fewer infringement actions being brought; this might even help their prospects for investment and encourage  new and more innovative services to come into the mix.

“And, in The End…”

This new legislation, now the law of the land, extends the history of American copyright law in new and substantial ways. Its actual implementation is only now beginning. Although five years might seem like a lifetime in popular culture, in politics it amounts to several eons. And let’s not lose sight of the fact that the industry got over its perceived short-term self-interests enough, this time, to agree to support something that Congress could pass. That’s rare enough to take note of and applaud.

This law lacks perfection, as all laws do. The licensing regime it envisions will not satisfy everyone, but every constituent, every stakeholder, got something. From the perspective of right now, chances seem good that, a few years from now, the achievement of the Hatch-Goodlatte Music Modernization Act will be viewed as a net positive for creators of music, for the distributors of music, for scholars, fans of ‘open culture’, and for the listening public. In copyright, you can’t do better than that.

Read more: https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/03/a-long-and-winding-road-to-new-copyright-legislation/

(CNN)President Donald Trump said Saturday that the outcome of the deadly shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue would have been different had an armed guard been in place.

Eleven people were killed and six injured in Saturday morning’s shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania man Robert Bowers, 46, of suburban Baldwin, faces 29 charges in connection to the rampage.
Trump also said the nation should strengthen its laws surrounding the death penalty.
    “When people do this, they should get the death penalty,” he said. “Anybody that does a thing like this to innocent people that are in temple or in church … they should be suffering the ultimate price, they should pay the ultimate price.”
    When asked if the shooting indicated a need to revisit gun laws, Trump replied that the shooting “has little to do with it” and that an armed guard might have been able to stop the gunman “immediately.”
    Asked if he was advocating for armed guards inside of places of worship, Trump replied, “no, it’s certainly an option.”
    Michael Eisenberg, the immediate past president of Tree of Life Congregation Synagogue, told CNN affiliate WPXI that on the high holidays, there is a police presence. But not on this Saturday.
    “On a day like today, the door is open,” he said. “It’s a religious service, you could walk in and out.”
    Trump praised law enforcement officials for doing “an incredible job” and said he had spoken with Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf and Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto.
    Upon landing in Indianapolis to speak at an agriculture convention, Trump said the shooting appeared to have anti-Semitic motivations.
    “It looks definitely like it’s an anti-Semitic crime, and that is something you wouldn’t believe could still be going on,” Trump said.
    The FBI is the lead agency on the investigation and is treating the shooting as a hate crime, according to Pittsburgh Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich.
    Bowers is charged with 11 counts of using a firearm to commit murder. Additionally he faces multiple counts of two hate crimes: obstruction of exercise of religious beliefs resulting in death and obstruction of exercise of religious beliefs resulting in bodily injury to a public safety officer. He could face the death penalty if convicted.

    ‘Pure evil’

    During remarks at the Future Farmers of America convention in Indianapolis, Trump again called the act “anti-Semitic” and condemned it as “pure evil.”
    “This wicked act of mass murder is pure evil — hard to believe, and frankly something that is unimaginable,” he said.
    “This was an anti-Semitic act,” the President added. “You wouldn’t think this would be possible in this day and age, but we just don’t seem to learn from the past.”
    “There must be no tolerance for anti-Semitism in America or for any form of religious or racial hatred or prejudice,” Trump added.
    Trump said ahead of a political rally in Illinois later Saturday that he planned to visit Pittsburgh, although he did not say when the trip would occur.
    At the rally itself, Trump again denounced anti-Semitism and repeated his call for the use of the death penalty.
    “They have to pay the ultimate price,” Trump said. “They can’t do this.”
    He went on to deliver remarks largely characteristic of his rallies, talking in particular about the economy and immigration while attacking Democrats as he sought to motivate Republicans in the midterm elections.

    ‘Ultimate price’

    Vice President Mike Pence echoed Trump’s remarks on the shooting, telling rallygoers in Las Vegas, Nevada, that “anyone who does such a thing in a temple or a church should pay the ultimate price.”
    “As Las Vegas knows all too well, what happened in Pittsburgh today was not just criminal, it was evil,” Pence said, alluding to the October 2017 shooting at a Las Vegas country music festival, where 58 people were killed and hundreds more wounded.
    “There is no place in America for violence or anti-Semitism, and this evil must end,” he added, calling the shooting “an attack on innocent Americans and an assault on our freedom of religion.”
      Presidential adviser and first daughter Ivanka Trump, who along with her husband Jared Kushner is Jewish, said Saturday that “America is stronger than the acts of a depraved bigot and anti-semite.”
      “All good Americans stand with the Jewish people to oppose acts of terror & share the horror, disgust & outrage over the massacre in Pittsburgh,” she tweeted. “We must unite against hatred & evil. God bless those affected.”

      Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/27/politics/trump-jba-death-penalty-pittsburgh/index.html

      Opera singer dies in Barcelona after international career spanning half a century

      Montserrat Caball, the feted Spanish soprano who won a new generation of fans after singing Barcelona with Freddie Mercury, has died at the age of 85.

      A spokesman for Barcelonas St Pau hospital, Abraham del Moral, confirmed her death early on Saturday. The singer had a stroke in 2012 and had been admitted last month for a gall bladder problem, according to Spanish media reports.

      Caball was born into a working class family in Barcelona. Her musical talents became apparent early on she was singing Bach cantatas at the age of seven.

      The singer achieved international acclaim in 1965 when she stepped in for another performer in the notoriously difficult role of Lucrezia Borgia in Donizettis opera in New York. Her debut went down in opera history as one of the greatest overnight successes and she went on to tour the world in a career that spanned half a century, starring in 90 opera roles and giving almost 4,000 performances.

      The Guardians Martin Kettle once described Caball as the finest bel canto soprano of the post-[Maria] Callas age. For those who prize sheer beauty of sound and true legato singing, she has no peer since Rosa Ponselle in the 1920s.

      In 2004 she was placed sixth in a BBC Music Magazine list of the top 20 sopranos of the recorded era, as voted by opera critics, after Callas, Joan Sutherland, Victoria de los Angeles, Leontyne Price and Birgit Nilsson.

      The semi-operatic Barcelona was first released in 1987 and featured at the Olympic Games in 1992, the year after Mercury died. It initially reached no 8 on the UK singles chart, making it one of the Queen singers biggest solo hits, before peaking at no 2 on its re-release to coincide with the Olympics.

      In December 2015, Caball was given a six-month suspended jail term and fined more than 250,000 (180,000) for tax evasion.

      She was placed under investigation in 2014, accused of channelling earnings through a company in Andorra when she lived in Barcelona and thus defrauding tax authorities of 500,000, which she subsequently paid.

      Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2018/oct/06/spanish-soprano-montserrat-caballe-dies-aged-85

      Oh baby, baby it’s a wild world.

      It’s hard to get by just upon a smile, so we’re here to offer you something a bit more substantial: A photo of Cat Stevens and a cat celebrating National Cat Day.

      I believe this is what one might call the definition of purrrfection. (Sorry. Had to.)

      “Happy #NationalCatDay to all the cats and kittens,” the legendary musician and coolest cat around tweeted on Oct. 29, aka National Cat Day. 

      Stevens — known for timeless hits like “Wild World,” “Where Do The Children Play?” “First Cut Is The Deepest,” “Moonshadow,” “”Father and Son,” and more — decided he would also go by the name Yusuf Islam in 1978, but for today, he is just Cat.

      It appears celebrating cat-themed holidays is a tradition of the singer’s, as he’s tweeted relevant photos the past few years. Absolutely delightful.

      We know he’s a big fan of dogs, too. But oh boy, does Cat Stevens love cats.

      So this National Cat Day, be sure to celebrate your furry feline friend and listen to the best of Cat Stevens. A great day!

      Read more: https://mashable.com/article/cat-stevens-national-cat-day/

      It’s been a long, bumpy road for the Skully augmented reality motorcycle helmet brand. But under the leadership of Ivan Contreras, who acquired the assets of Skully in 2017, the helmet is finally shipping to its early backers.

      That means anyone who paid $1,800 as part of the original Skully crowdfunding campaign will finally receive their helmets. Skully says it has already started shipping helmets to those early backers, as well as new customers who have placed orders.

      This comes after TechCrunch got word last September that Skully would be making a comeback. At the time, Contreras wrote a letter to the Skully email list, saying “Although Skully Technologies has no formal obligation to the customers of the now defunct Skully Inc., we recognize that hundreds of Skully helmet enthusiasts around the world have contributed to this product and were understandably disappointed that they never received one. We are determined to make this right.”

      That’s exactly what Contreras says he has begun doing. After spending $3 million of his own money, Skully is finally ready to ship the product to consumers.

      It’s worth noting that Contreras isn’t just anyone. He’s made quite the name for himself in the motorcycle community, having led electric bike companies Torrot and GasGas. Skully FENIX AR helmet, unlike version one, is built with carbon fiber and features an anti-fog visor. It also comes with a heads-up display, turn-by-turn navigation, voice control, a rearview camera, smartphone connectivity via Bluetooth and hands-free music controls. Skully also has certification from the Department of Transportation, which sets minimum standards for all motorcycle helmets sold.

      Why Contreras is keeping the Skully name is beyond me, but he says it’s because a vast community has grown around the brand. Given all the drama around Skully, one would think Contreras would want to make a clear distinction between the old company and his new one.

      “We’ve found that people love the brand,” he told me. “It’s a lifestyle brand. People really don’t make an association with the older people that managed the bad Skully and the name.”

      Read more: https://techcrunch.com/2018/10/17/skully-ar-motorcycle-helmlet-returns-from-the-dead-under-new-ownership/

      (CNN)Pharrell Williams isn’t too happy with President Donald Trump.

      “On the day of the mass murder of 11 human beings at the hands of a deranged ‘nationalist,’ you played his song ‘Happy’ to a crowd at a political event in Indiana,” King wrote in the letter. “There was nothing ‘happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for this purpose.”
      King claims the use of “Happy” without consent constitutes both copyright and trademark infringement.
        “Pharrell has not, and will not, grant you permission to publicly perform or otherwise broadcast or disseminate any of his music,” King wrote.
        This is not the first time Trump has received flak from angry musicians after using their music without permission. The Rolling Stones, The O’Jays, Adele, Queen and several others have asked Trump to stop using their music as well.

        Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/30/entertainment/pharrell-letter-to-donald-trump/index.html

        Warning: Contains *huge* spoilers for the ending of A Star is Born.

        Anyone’s who seen A Star is Born will know that the final song in the movie is by far the most gut-wrenching and emotional moment. 

        Lady Gaga sings “I’ll Never Love Again” — a song written about her by her late husband Jackson Maine (Bradley Cooper) — in tribute to him. It’s a powerfully moving moment that reduces you — and everyone else in the cinema — to a sobbing wreck. 

        Lady Gaga has shared a personal story about the day that scene was filmed and the reason that scene was so important to her. Right before filming the scene, Gaga received a phone call that her best friend Sonja Durham was about to pass away from stage IV cancer. 

        “On that day my friend Sonja — who had been battling cancer for years — her friend called me and I could hear her moaning in the background and she said she’s not doing well,” Gaga told Zane Lowe. “And I thought she was dying so I left the set. 

        “I didn’t even stop to go see Bradley [Cooper], I just got in my car and started driving and I missed her by 10 minutes,” she continued. 

        “I didn’t even stop to go see Bradley, I just got in my car and started driving and I missed her by 10 minutes.”

        Gaga says she lay with her friend’s widower and her stepson for some time before saying to them that she didn’t know what to do. “He said ‘you’ve gotta do what Sonja would want you to do,'” Gaga said. “She gave me a tragic gift that day and I took it with me to set and I sang that song for Jackson and for her on that very same day within an hour.” 

        Gaga said that Cooper was very kind to her when she returned back to the studio to film the final song. 

        “Bradley was so beautiful with me that day, he was so loving. He was like, ‘You don’t have to do it too many times, it’s ok.’ And, I was like, ‘All I wanna do is sing, man.’

        “Life is hard man, but we’ve gotta stick together. What’s more important than any of this, the fame, the accolades? What’s important is the process of love and kindness,” said Gaga. “I think the star of this film is human courage, bravery.” 

        Read more: https://mashable.com/article/lady-gaga-a-star-is-born-ill-never-love-again/

        Friends and colleagues are puzzled by his unexpected conversion, and some speculate that hes angling for an administration post

        Facing a skeptical audience at a theatre in downtown Washington, Senator Lindsey Graham embraced the role of pantomime villain in the ongoing saga of Brett Kavanaughs nomination to the supreme court.

        Im the first person to say, I want to hear from Dr Ford, he said, referring to the woman who testified to the Senate about allegations that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her. I thought she was handled respectfully. I thought Kavanaugh was treated like crap.

        The packed auditorium at the Atlantic magazines annual festival filled with boos and heckles. Graham snapped back dismissively: Yeah, well, boo yourself.

        Some members of the audience walked out in disgust. But the South Carolina senator was reveling in being the centre of attention. He was also displaying his new, unexpected conversion from ardent critic of Donald Trump to one of the presidents most ferocious attack dogs.

        It is a role that has pushed Graham into new national prominence, putting him squarely in the middle of the national confrontation between the #MeToo movement and the populist backlash of male victimisation and righteous indignation.

        His battle cry: I know Im a single white man from South Carolina and Ive been told to shut up but I will not shut up.

        But friends, acquaintances and colleagues are puzzled. Michael Steele, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, said: I think a lot of people in this town who know Lindsey are scratching their heads and saying, Thats not the Lindsey Graham whos always been an honest broker. If Lindseys honest, he would not perform the way hes been performing on behalf of Trump.

        Graham, 63, has long been one of the most colorful characters in the Senate, long parodied by TV satirist Jon Stewart as a southern belle like Tennessee Williams Blanche DuBois. He served in the US air force in various capacities for more than three decades. In 2015, he acknowledged he had never sent an email.

        Sign up for the US morning briefing

        Graham launched his political career in the South Carolina legislature in 1992 before winning an open House seat in 1994. He emerged as a key figure in the attempt to impeach President Bill Clinton. He also became known for hawkish views on foreign policy andfor working across the aisle with Democrats.

        Graham ran for president in 2016 but was crushed in the Republican primary. During that campaign, he dismissed Trump as a jackass, a race-baiting bigot and the most flawed nominee in the history of the Republican party.

        So his performance at last weeks Senate judiciary committee hearing over Dr Christine Blasey Fords allegations of sexual assault against Kavanaugh, seemed wildly out of character. Just as Republicans resolve appeared to be faltering, Graham delivered a fire and brimstone blast If you vote no, youre legitimising the most despicable thing I have seen in my time in politics that thrilled the White House and conservative base and simultaneously destroyed any lingering hopes of bipartisan comity.

        Steele reflected: That sycophantic performance was all for Trump because there was really no basis for him to go off the way he did, to show the kind of immature behavior in a setting like that, given the seriousness of the conversation.

        The Atlantic editor, Jeffrey Goldberg, put this directly to Graham at Wednesdays event. I think youre cheapening me and thats fine, I dont really care, the senator replied defiantly. Youre suggesting that the reason I got mad was for some political play.

        Graham pointed out he had voted to confirm Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, both nominated to the supreme court by a Democratic president, and claimed a double standard. So heres the game here: when Im voting for two female nominees, nominated by the Democrat, Im the smartest frigging guy in town. Im the epitome of what a good Republican would be like. When I defend somebody Ive known for 20 years against complete character assassination, all the sudden its about Lindsey.

        Indeed, in recent days Graham has continued to be Kavanaughs stoutest champion, even suggesting that if he is voted down, Trump should simply renominate him. His efforts have not gone unnoticed. The president told reporters on Tuesday: Lindsey is a friend of mine at least for the last six months, as you know. And hes done, really, a great thing and a great service for our country.

        Only two years ago Graham was lambasting Trump. In 2017 he warned there would be holy hell to pay if the president fired the attorney general, Jeff Sessions. Yet by August this year and after several rounds of golf together – he had done a U-turn, suggesting Trump deserved an attorney general in whom he has confidence.

        What happened? Steele said: You only go from This guy is a danger to our nation and bad news to Oh my God hes the best thing since sliced bread, let me play golf with him, only if you want something or you expect something. I cant explain it. Only he can explain it.

        When
        When Lindsey Graham ran for president in 2016, he described Donald Trump as a jackass, a race-baiting bigot and the most flawed nominee in the history of the Republican party. Photograph: Brian Frank/Reuters

        Grahams full-throated embrace of Trumpism appears to have accelerated since the death in August of his great friend, Senator John McCain, an arch foe of the president both politically and personally. McCain continued to denounce Trump until the end but his death has left a void, and the anti-Trump resistance in the Republican party is shrinking fast. Senator Ted Cruz, who also clashed bitterly with Trump during the election, has also thrown in his lot with the president.

        Henry Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center thinktank in Washington, said: Lindsey Graham has probably looked around and seen Jeff Flake leaving the Senate, Bob Corker leaving the Senate and Ben Sasse under siege and thought theres not much mileage in being a Trump critic.

        Some observers speculate that Graham is worried about a populist challenger in the next South Carolina primary (in 2014, he won with 56%). Others suggest that he is eyeing a job in the Trump administration. Media reports have suggested that Sessions, much derided by Trump, and Jim Mattis, the defence secretary, might be gone with the next year. Graham could be a contender for either position.

        Olsen added: If there is a job in the administration hes angling for, its defence secretary. I have a pretty strong impression Jim Mattis is going to be asked to leave. Lindsey Graham would be happy to close out his career with that.

        Kurt Bardella, a political columnist who switched allegiance from the Republican to the Democratic party, disagreed. Lindsey Graham is auditioning to be the next attorney general of the United States, he said.

        Bill Galston, a former policy adviser to President Clinton, said he first became acquainted with Graham during the impeachment process. There are many Lindsey Grahams, he said. Ive been puzzled by his trajectory during the Trump administration. I have no explanation. In person hes decent, moderate and humorous, but these attributes were not on display last week.

        Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/oct/05/lindsey-graham-donald-trump-administration-us-senate