Connect with us

Published

on

The Watergate scandal is perfect fodder for both journalists and Hollywood studios.

Deception! Intrigue! A White House in crisis mode!

Its no wonder Hollywood created memorable films tied to the scandal over the years, notably All the Presidents Men, Frost/Nixon, Nixon, and even Forrest Gump. How could the industry resist?

Except Hollywood cant quit Watergate, even if audiences may be tiring of the subject. Last year, we saw a star-studded recreation of the GOP crisis, and well soon see another high-profile series based on Nixons downfall.

Its hardly a secret why Hollywood keeps cranking out Watergate-related stories. The industry adores taking shots at Republicans, be it President Donald J. Trump or a leader whose Beltway skills were no match for his political paranoia.

Watergate is too ripe a scandal to leave in the past.

Plus, the era reminds us of a time when journalists doggedly pursued the truth and held the powerful to account. That only happens, alas, when a Republican is in the Oval Office in the 21st Century.

And lets not forget how Hollywood liberals lionize reporters any chance they get.

Watergate refers both to the D.C. hotel where Nixons minions broke into the Democrat National Committees headquarters and the machinations behind it and the cover up.

The last few years have seen major films tied to President Richard M. Nixons undoing. Liam Neeson portrayed the man known as Deep Throat, in the 2017 drama Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House.

The film hit theaters in the heat of awards season, but got summarily ignored by voters across the Hollywood landscape. Neither critics nor crowds gave the film much respect.

That same year, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep teamed up for The Post. The film took a loving look at both The Washington Post and its reporters efforts to publish the Pentagon Papers. President Nixon anchors the films waning moments as The Post investigated a curious burglary at the Watergate hotel.

Documentarians also have had a field day with Watergate.

The 2022 film The Martha Mitchell Effect (40 minutes) recalled the wife of the U.S. attorney general who tried to warn the public about nefarious actions within the Nixon White House. Some within Nixons inner circle tried to dismiss the charges by alleging Martha Mitchell suffered from mental health woes, but the facts eventually proved her right.

Last year, CBS and Paramount+ teamed to bring us Watergate: High Crimes in the White House. The documentary, released 50 years after the initial burglary, looked at how a seemingly minor crime ballooned into a crisis that ended Nixons presidency.

CNN pounced on the anniversary, too, producing a docuseries called Watergate: Blueprint for a Scandal, narrated by former Nixon White House counsel John Dean.

Not all Watergate-themed projects draw a crowd, though. Mark Felt earned an embarrassing $768,946 at U.S. theaters, and the Starz series Gaslit got all but ignored by the pop culture zeitgeist.

That 2022 series boasted two Oscar winners Sean Penn and Julia Roberts plus stories that allegedly got less attention during the 1970s. The limited series included Martha Mitchell (Roberts) and her attempts to blow the whistle on White House malfeasance.

This year, Woody Harrelson and Justin Theroux team for HBOs White House Plumbers, Partly based on the book Integrity by Egil Bud Krogh and Matthew Krogh, Plumbers explore how Nixons saboteur dream team Harrelson as E. Howard Hunt and Theroux as G. Gordon Liddy ended up doing more damage to the cause than good.

The project, co-produced by liberal scribe Frank Rich, focuses both on the humorous aspects of the crisis as well as the nuts and bolts details of the initial burglary.

Why the drip-drip-drip of Hollywood projects based on Watergate? The industry understands the soft power that storytelling offers, and it relentlessly applies it across the creative board. Its why we see a similar onslaught of stories based on the 1950s blacklist era.

That historical chapter showed the GOPs cartoonish overreach, plus it paints Hollywood figures like screenwriter Dalton Trumbo in heroic fashion.

Hollywood isnt done with the Blacklist era, either.

This year, well see McCarthy, a feature-length biography of the hard-charging senator played by Michael Shannon.

Plus, these films and TV shows allow the artists to not only explore the past but use history as a modern-day cudgel against their ideological foes. The films director, Vclav Marhoul, made McCarthy to draw parallels between the senator and modern politicians.

These people are very dangerous. And I realized this when I watched the news in January and saw Donald Trump and his call for the Capitol attack. But its not just about Trump. Over the past decade in Europe and all over the world, there are so many Joe McCarthys. For instance in Brazil its Bolsonaro, in England, its Johnson. Its about populism, Marhoul said.

Journalists, who openly root for one party over another, will prod these stars to make statements like this without the benefit of balance or fact checks.

Nixon becomes Trump, or Ron DeSantis, or Ted Cruz. Whatever works for the artist in question, and that message gets spread far and wide.

That means we havent seen the last of Watergate on screens large and small.

Christian Toto is an award-winning journalist, movie critic and editor ofHollywoodInToto.com.He previously served as associate editor with Breitbart News Big Hollywood. Follow him at@HollywoodInToto.

The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The Daily Wire.

Continue Reading

Business

Surprise rise in inflation as summer travel pushes up air fares

Published

on

By

Surprise rise in inflation as summer travel pushes up air fares

Prices in the UK rose even faster than expected last month, reaching the highest level in 18 months, according to official figures.

Inflation hit 3.8% in July, data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed.

Not since January 2024 have prices risen as fast.

It’s up from 3.6% in June and is anticipated to reach 4% by the end of the year.

Economists polled by Reuters had only been expecting a 3.6% rise.

More unwelcome news is contained elsewhere in the ONS’s data.

Train tickets

More on Cost Of Living

Another metric of inflation used by government to set rail fare rises, the retail price index, came in at 4.8%.

It means train tickets could go up 5.8% next year, depending on how the government calculate the increase.

This year, the rise was one percentage point above the retail price index measure of inflation.

These regulated fares account for about half of rail journeys.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Inflation up by more than expected

Why?

Inflation rose so much due to higher transport costs, mostly from air fares due to the school holidays, as well as from fuel and food.

Petrol and diesel were more expensive in July this year compared to last, which made journeys pricier.

Read more:
Energy bills expected to rise from October – despite previous forecasts
Something odd is happening in the markets – with no compelling explanation

Coffee, orange juice, meat and chocolate were among the items with the highest price rises, the ONS said. It contributed to food inflation of 4.9%.

What does it mean for interest rates?

Another measure of inflation that’s closely watched by rate setters at the Bank of England rose above expectations.

Core inflation – which measures price rises without volatile food and energy costs – rose to 3.8%. It had been forecast to remain at 3.7%.

It’s not good news for interest rates and for anyone looking to refix their mortgage, as the Bank’s target for inflation is 2%.

Whether or not there’ll be another cut this year is hotly debated, but at present, traders expect no more this year, according to data from the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG).

Economists at Capital Economics anticipate a cut in November, while the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) expect one more by the end of the year.

Analysts at Pantheon Macroeconomics forecast no change in the base interest rate.

Political response

Responding to the news, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said:

“We have taken the decisions needed to stabilise the public finances, and we’re a long way from the double-digit inflation we saw under the previous government, but there’s more to do to ease the cost of living.”

Shadow chancellor and Conservative Mel Stride said, “Labour’s choices to tax jobs and ramp up borrowing are pushing up costs and stoking inflation. And the Chancellor is gearing up to do it all over again in the autumn.”

Continue Reading

Business

AI ‘immune system’ Phoebe lands backing from Google arm

Published

on

By

AI 'immune system' Phoebe lands backing from Google arm

An AI start-up which claims to act as an ‘immune system’ for software has landed $17m (£12.6m) in initial funding from backers including the ventures arm of Alphabet-owned Google.

Sky News has learnt that Phoebe, which uses AI agents to continuously monitor and respond to live system data in order to identify and fix software glitches, will announce this week one of the largest seed funding rounds for a UK-based company this year.

The funding is led by GV – formerly Google Ventures – and Cherry Ventures, and will be announced to coincide with the public launch of Phoebe’s platform.

It is expected to be announced publicly on Thursday.

Phoebe was founded by Matt Henderson and James Summerfield, the former chief executive and chief information officer of Stripe Europe, last year.

The duo sold their first start-up, Rangespan, to Google a decade earlier.

Their latest venture is motivated by data suggesting that the world’s roughly 40 million software developers spend up to 30% of their time reacting to bugs and errors.

More on Artificial Intelligence

Financial losses to companies from software outages are said to have reached $400bn globally last year, according to the company.

Phoebe’s swarms of AI agents sift through siloed data to identify errors in real time, which it says reduces the time it takes to resolve them by up to 90%.

“High-severity incidents can make or break big customer relationships, and numerous smaller problems drain engineering productivity,” Mr Henderson said.

“Software monitoring tools exist, but they aren’t very intelligent and require people to spend a lot of time working out what is wrong and what to do about it.”

The backing from blue-chip investors such as GV and Cherry Ventures underlines the level of interest in AI-powered software remediation businesses.

Roni Hiranand, an executive at GV, said: “AI has transformed how code is written, but software reliability has not kept pace.

“Phoebe is building a missing layer of contextual intelligence that can help both human and AI engineers avoid software failures.

“We love the boldness of the team’s vision for a software immune system that pre-emptively fixes problems.”

Phoebe has signed up customers including Trainline, the rail booking app.

Jay Davies, head of engineering for reliability and operations at Trainline, said Phoebe had “already had a real impact on how we investigate and remediate incidents”.

“Work that used to take us hours to piece together can now take minutes and that matters when you’re running critical services at our scale.”

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Paul Weller suing former accountants after they stopped working with him over Gaza statements

Published

on

By

Paul Weller suing former accountants after they stopped working with him over Gaza statements

Paul Weller is suing his former accountants after they stopped working with him after he alleged Israel was committing genocide in Gaza, according to a legal letter.

The former frontman of The Jam, 67, has filed a discrimination claim against Harris and Trotter after the firm ended their professional relationship.

Lawyers for Weller say the singer-songwriter was told in March that the accountants and tax advisers would no longer work with him or his companies.

According to the letter, which was seen by the PA news agency, a WhatsApp message from a partner at the firm said: “It’s well known what your political views are in relation to Israel, the Palestinians and Gaza, but we as a firm are offended at the assertions that Israel is committing any type of genocide.

“Everyone is entitled to their own views, but you are alleging such anti-Israel views that we as a firm with Jewish roots and many Jewish partners are not prepared to work with someone who holds these views.”

Israel has vehemently denied claims of genocide.

But lawyers for Weller claim by ending their services, the firm unlawfully discriminated against the singer’s protected philosophical beliefs, including that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and Palestine should be recognised as a nation state.

Weller said: “I’ve always spoken out against injustice, whether it’s apartheid, ethnic cleansing, or genocide. What’s happening to the Palestinian people in Gaza is a humanitarian catastrophe.

“I believe they have the right to self-determination, dignity, and protection under international law, and I believe Israel is committing genocide against them. That must be called out.

“Silencing those who speak this truth is not just censorship – it’s complicity.

“I’m taking legal action not just for myself, but to help ensure that others are not similarly punished for expressing their beliefs about the rights of the Palestinian people.”

Read more:
Tents abandoned as Palestinians flee Israeli advance

Gaza ceasefire proposal agreed by Hamas

The legal letter says Weller will donate any damages he receives to humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza.

Cormac McDonough, a lawyer at Hodge Jones and Allen, which is representing Weller, said his case “reflects a wider pattern of attempts to silence artists and public figures who speak out in support of Palestinian rights”.

Mr McDonough added: “Within the music industry especially, we are seeing increasing efforts to marginalise those who express solidarity with the people of Gaza.”

Sky News has contacted Harris and Trotter for comment.

Continue Reading

Trending