11:45 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Cuba|Education|Politics|society · 1 Comment
25 Jul 2007
In what may be Fidel Castro‘s best PR moment of the year, and, coincidentally, excellent promo for Michael Moore‘s new film Sicko, 8 American students have graduated from medical school — in Cuba. Reports the International Herald Tribune:
Four New Yorkers, three Californians and a Minnesota native, all from minority backgrounds, have studied in Havana since April 2001.The six women and two men made up the first class of Americans to graduate from the Latin American School of Medicine since Castro offered free medical training to U.S. students after meeting with a delegation from the Congressional Black Caucus seven years ago.
“I’ve learned that medicine is not a business,” said Toussaint Reynolds, a graduate from Massapequa, New York. “I will be a better doctor in the United States for it.”
11:11 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia|Health|Movies|Politics · Comments Off
15 Jun 2007
Things are getting more complicated for director Michael Moore. Earlier this week we told you that Moore feared that the U.S. government was out to get his new movie about the American health care system, Sicko, in an apparent attempt to stop the movie from being seen. Well, neither the government’s nor Moore’s own efforts seem to have worked, as the movie is already beeing shared on peer-to-peer internet sites, reports AdAge today:
If the breach is as wide as it appears — and this reporter downloaded a copy and watched it late Thursday night with ease — Moore, and his distributor, The Weinstein Company, have a every film maker’s worst marketing nightmare on their hands — how to persuade people to go to the theater to see a show that’s available free on the Internet. (Officials at the Weinstein Company were unavailable for comment late Thursday evening.)
Sicko is slated to open in the U.S. on June 29th, and was expected to pull in a lot of moviegoers for its premiere. What remains to be seen is whether the appearance of this pirated copy will impact ticket sales.
In a related story, Sicko marketers and nurses’ associations have banded together and plan to have nurses at every theatre for the premiere as a way to engage audiences in the ongoing conversation about health care in the U.S.
Via / AdAge
7:44 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Cuba|Movies|Politics · 1 Comment
11 Jun 2007
Michael Moore is spooked. After receiving a friendly letter from the U.S. Department of Treasury in response to his trip to Cuba to film his latest doxposé, Sicko, Moore thinks the government might attempt to confiscate his film, so he’s left a copy in Canada:
“We brought back 15 minutes of the movie and we’re concerned about any possible confiscation efforts,” Moore told a news conference in New York.
3:47 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Cuba|Movies|Politics · Comments Off
16 Apr 2007
Michael Moore of Fahrenheit 9/11 fame (or infamy) is at it again. His latest film brought him and some 9-11-01 emergency workers to Cuba, but not to play where’s Fidel. Moore took those workers to get medical treatment in Cuba. But it’s all not big heartedness on Moore’s part. It’s all part of his soon to be released documentary Sicko.
The film is an attack on US drug companies and private health insurance firms, which Moore hopes to show at Cannes Film Festival next month.
Two years in the making, the flick also takes aim at the shortfall in medical care being provided to people who worked on the toxic World Trade Centre debris pile.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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