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Punk saved Sasha LaPointe’s life. Her memoir on her Native roots helped her heal

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Punk saved Sasha LaPointe’s life. Her memoir on her Native roots helped her heal

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Pink Paint: The Ancestral Autobiography of a Coast Salish Punk

By Sasha LaPointe
Counterpoint: 240 pages, $25

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Sasha LaPointe is a Coast Salish lady who grew up on a reservation north of Seattle. As a tween, she found punk; the emotions expressed by highly effective punk teams like Bikini Kill resonated together with her personal. As a youngster, she ran away often and located her personal group among the many artists of Seattle. However one thing was nonetheless lacking; her new memoir helped her discover it.

“Pink Paint” weaves collectively the story of LaPointe coming of age and coming aside with that of her ancestors, particularly the ladies. One in every of them, Comptia, was the only real survivor of her household after smallpox was launched by white settlers.

Retracing Comptia’s steps leads LaPointe, now 38, to harrowing discoveries about her household — and herself. Her legacy as a Coast Salish grew to become a instrument on her approach to restoration; she was sexually assaulted as a baby by a trusted grownup after which later by a companion. She gestures towards these recollections with lyricism, avoiding re-creating the trauma. In grad college, she writes, “I had excavated the bones of those recollections, unaware that they’d reanimate, that they’d chase me into my goals.” She was recognized then with PTSD.

LaPointe has been the lead singer of the punk band Medusa Stare and is at present headlining a brand new challenge, Fleur du Louve. Additionally a poet and an essayist, she spoke with The Instances through Zoom, in a dialog that has been edited for readability and size.

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What’s it about punk that traces up with who you’re?

I felt very remoted. I keep in mind trying by way of magazines like Rolling Stone and Sassy, seeing all this cool stuff that appears nothing like my expertise out in the midst of the woods. We had a bit of growth field and I might take it into the lavatory and be the moody little tween listening to the faculty radio station. I’ve this very, very vivid reminiscence of listening to a Bikini Kill music for the primary time. I had by no means heard a music about sexual assault earlier than that was so offended and highly effective and charged. And it actually impacted me. Impulsively, I felt not alone.

I very a lot wished that. I keep in mind going to Bellingham [Wash.] and Seattle and seeing these DIY bands and spoken phrase and efficiency artwork, and that form of opened the gateway for me. That began manner again after I was 13.

Regardless that western Washington is your ancestral residence, your e-book conveys the sense of discombobulation that I typically see immigrants describing.

As a Coast Salish particular person, these locations are my ancestral residence. However it’s like present within the aftermath of settler colonial trauma. I’m deeply related to those locations, however there may be this sense of loss. Rising up on Swinomish — it’s really breathtaking. It’s lovely. I give it some thought after I look again on my childhood, and it was like a paradise to me, however then I feel that it’s additionally unusual figuring out that I come from a lineage that was actually taken.

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Do you discover that you’ve got in any manner recovered that sense of connection?

I feel it’s in course of, however it’s getting higher. I’ve this residence in Tacoma and I’m across the nook from my dad and mom, which is superb, as a result of I hadn’t lived in shut proximity to my dad and mom in a really very long time. My mother and I stroll our canine collectively, and in these moments, I’ve this large gratitude [for] strolling with my mother within the woods as she’s actually harvesting drugs [from plants]. In these moments, that connection is there, that security is there.

There’s been plenty of dialogue in recent times about trauma narratives. To inform the reality within the e-book, it’s important to recount a few of the traumas, however there’s at all times the concern that it’s some sort of bizarre leisure for the reader.

It’s one thing I really feel actually strongly about. Early on, even when the writing was in child phases, I wrote about trauma in my physique [in a way] that’s very lyrical and dreamlike. I had a professor who saved saying, “You’ll want to present us what occurs.” That felt gratuitous and exploitative. Due to my background, it’s exhausting for me to face up and say, “I’m not going to do this.”

I’m going to jot down this in on my phrases. I’m not a Lifetime collection. I’m not going to point out trauma as leisure. And that is the artwork that I’m wrestling onto the web page.

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White folks typically appear to deal with Native tradition as if it weren’t a lot of completely different tribes and nations. And the appropriation can really feel kitschy: turquoise and dream catchers and Pendleton blankets. This isn’t your duty to determine, however do you may have any inkling of the place this impulse comes from?

That’s a layered and loaded query. Once I see the Coachella women with their massive dream catcher tattoo or their Indian princess tattoo, I feel it comes from the concept we, as Native folks, are gone. We’re like an vintage you could find on the classic store and assume, “That’s cute.”

They need the Hollywood buckskin Native. It’s like we’re frozen in time as Native folks as a result of we misplaced. I feel that’s slowly altering. I’ve pals who work on [the TV series] “Reservation Canines,” and these representations of latest Natives will ultimately shift that. That’s why I like to see these narratives which can be saying, “Hello. We’re nonetheless right here.”

One of many moments the place I knew I wished to inform my story was whereas I used to be on tour with Medusa Stare. We had been in Chicago enjoying a punk venue. Exterior the present, my bandmates had been within the van, and there have been these two white girls smoking and speaking, up in arms as a result of there was this lady [me] strolling round with “struggle paint” on her face. They mentioned they had been going to inform the membership proprietor our band shouldn’t play as a result of I used to be being culturally inappropriate. My bandmate burst out of the van and informed this lady it was a Native lady she was speaking about, and if you wish to know why she’s carrying paint, you could possibly ask her, though it’s none of what you are promoting. They didn’t even know what a Coast Salish lady appears like.

This e-book is for these girls.

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You write, “Name me a woman who loves Nick Cave, and evening swimming, and ramen, and outdated Bikini Kill information … Name me something aside from survivor.” What do you imply by that?

Individuals inform you you’re so courageous, so resilient, however they count on you to be damaged. I take into consideration different individuals who don’t come from generational trauma and the way they by no means have to fret about being courageous. I keep in mind having this second, standing in entrance of Comptia’s home [in Ilwaco, Wash.]. I used to be weeping, and I acquired actually offended in any respect those that say I’m so courageous for telling my story. It was this longing to be something aside from courageous.

In your music, what a part of you’re you expressing? The weak half? The offended half?

I feel that’s a tremendous query as a result of we simply performed a present a couple of nights in the past. We had this new music I used to be actually enthusiastic about known as “Tulips.” It’s about rising up on the Swinomish reservation and the way offended we acquired due to the Tulip Competition. When the settlers confirmed up, they made dikes and adjusted the waterways the place ancestors gathered shellfish. There was this wealthy abundance there, after which settlers confirmed up they usually had been like, “We’re altering this. And yearly we’re going to throw it in your face and do that massive tulip pageant.”

We ended our set with “Tulips,” and I used to be leaping round and simply yelling. I wasn’t frightened about how I used to be sounding. It was simply anger, however in an excellent manner, a very wholesome manner. In my writing, there are tender moments the place it’s very weak and uncooked and sincere. And there’s a spot for that. However in my music, I get to have fun my rage as an indigenous particular person.

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Berry writes for a lot of publications and tweets @BerryFLW.

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Movie Reviews

Film Review: Harold and the Purple Crayon – SM Mirror

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Film Review: Harold and the Purple Crayon – SM Mirror

By Dolores Quintana

I will admit that my expectations weren’t high for Harold and the Purple Crayon, but I was pleasantly surprised by the film. It was charming and sincere, not just a kid’s movie but a film that explores disappointed dreams of adults and the role of art and imagination in life. It has a storyline that can appeal to kids and adults. It’s playful and emotional. I really loved the cast, especially Lil Rel Howery, Tanya Reynolds, Benjamin Bottani, Ravi Patel, and, especially, Jemaine Clement and Alfred Molina as the narrator. Watching Tanya Reynolds behave as a real life porcupine was adorable. The comedy in the film really came to life with the work of the supporting cast. 

The film’s synopsis says, “Inside of his book, adventurous Harold (Zachary Levi) can make anything come to life simply by drawing it. After he grows up and draws himself off the book’s pages and into the physical world, Harold finds he has a lot to learn about real life—and that his trusty purple crayon may set off more hilarious hijinks than he thought possible. When the power of unlimited imagination falls into the wrong hands, it will take all of Harold and his friends’ creativity to save both the real world and his own. Harold and the Purple Crayon is the first film adaptation of the beloved children’s classic that has captivated young readers for decades.”

Zooey Deschanel and Zachary Levi pulled their weight, and Deschanel, in particular, was given more to do than she normally gets, and it showed in her work. However, Zachary Levi was not the MVP of the cast and he should have been since he has the titular role as Harold. His work can be described as workmanlike and adequate except when he starts to show more as the film progresses. Sadly, it’s not enough to save his performance fully, but it’s more than I have seen him show ever. 

It is a problem that I have had with the three leads of three recent family family films. The lead character, who by all rights should be the star of the show, isn’t and gives what can only be called a passable performance. In many of these cases, the slack was pulled up by the supporting cast, but that makes me wonder why one of them wasn’t the lead and what might have been.  

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Harold and the Purple Crayon had lots of undercurrents that posed questions in my mind, like the disappointment of artists who don’t get to fulfill themselves in their chosen crafts, the torture of working a retail job, and how people cause chaos in the world by doing whatever they want without considering the consequences of their actions, especially in movies where wonderous things happen. 

That one came to the forefront with the actions of Harold juxtaposed with the actions of Gary Natwick. Even though Harold didn’t intend to cause chaos, he frequently does. In most family films, the consequences are rarely shown. In this film, they are, and that is refreshing. 

Gary, as a villain, is awful, but you still see the sadness and disappointment that leads him to make bad choices. No one is painted as totally bad; there are levels to the characters’ motivations and actions. There’s a lot more about the characters and what makes them tick than there is in most family films. Gary’s storyline and Jemaine Clement’s performance have pathos and are really funny in a way that will keep adults entertained during the film.

I find that makes the film much more interesting and relatable. The director, Carlos Saldanha, who is a Brazilian animator who co-directed Ice Age, did an excellent job and has a light touch with the heavier concepts in the story. The writers David Guion and Michael Handelman built a strong story and characterizations. Props for setting the film in Providence, Rhode Island. It’s also nice to see a film set somewhere outside of the main population centers and the live action with the inclusion of animation works quite well. 

Harold and the Purple Crayon is a joyous celebration of art and love that is kept from being sublime only by the performance of its lead actor. The supporting cast does wonderful and amusing work that would have been better served by a stronger lead. But still, it is a thoughtful, emotional, and entertaining film with a light touch on some serious subjects that still retains childhood magic. Director Carlos Saldanha deserves praise for his good work in adapting a beloved childhood book.

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Justice Department sues TikTok for allegedly violating child privacy laws

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Justice Department sues TikTok for allegedly violating child privacy laws

The legal pressure on TikTok just got more intense.

The U.S. Department of Justice on Friday sued TikTok and its Chinese parent ByteDance for allegedly breaking child privacy laws, accusing the companies of collecting personal information on children under the age of 13 without their parents’ consent.

The lawsuit comes after TikTok settled a previous legal dispute with the Federal Trade Commission in 2019 after the agency accused the social video app of violating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act. TikTok paid a civil penalty of $5.7 million. Since then, the Department of Justice said, TikTok has been under a court order to remain compliant with the act.

“The Department is deeply concerned that TikTok has continued to collect and retain children’s personal information despite a court order barring such conduct,” said Acting Associate Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer in a statement. “With this action, the Department seeks to ensure that TikTok honors its obligation to protect children’s privacy rights and parents’ efforts to protect their children.”

TikTok in a statement said that it disputes the allegations, adding that many of the government’s complaints relate to past events or practices that have been addressed.

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“We are proud of our efforts to protect children, and we will continue to update and improve the platform,” said TikTok spokesperson Alex Haurek in a statement. “To that end, we offer age-appropriate experiences with stringent safeguards, proactively remove suspected underage users, and have voluntarily launched features such as default screentime limits, Family Pairing, and additional privacy protections for minors.”

The popular app, like other tech platforms, has options for children and adults.

Young people can join with a kids’ mode that limits what they can see. TikTok asks new users for their age when creating an account.

But the DOJ alleges in its lawsuit that children have been able to easily circumvent TikTok’s guardrails and establish adult accounts and that TikTok has made it unnecessarily difficult for parents to delete their children’s accounts. The government also says in its lawsuit that TikTok retained the email addresses of children reporting tech issues to the app longer than necessary and in violation of the law.

“Defendants’ insufficient policies and practices thus allowed children to create a non-Kids Mode TikTok account, gaining access to adult content and features of the general TikTok platform without providing age information,” according to the lawsuit. “Without parental notice or consent, Defendants then collected and maintained vast amounts of personal information from the children who created and used these regular TikTok accounts.”

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TikTok remains a major social media force, with more than 170 million users in the U.S., but its future remains uncertain in the nation. U.S. government leaders have raised security concerns over TikTok ‘s ties to China. In April, President Biden signed a law that would effectively ban the service in the U.S. if ByteDance does not sell TikTok’s U.S. operations.

TikTok sued the U.S. government in May, alleging the law violates 1st Amendment rights to free speech.

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Movie Reviews

‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’ movie review: Vijay Antony headlines a watered-down mishmash of Hollywood films

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‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’ movie review: Vijay Antony headlines a watered-down mishmash of Hollywood films

A still from ‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Director Vijay Milton is back after six years, and the first few minutes of the Vijay Antony-starrer, Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan, gave the impression that it’s a worthy comeback for both the Vijays. The film starts with a pleasant surprise that it’s a sequel to Vijay Antony’s Salim (2014), which itself was a sequel to his 2012 film Naan. The quick-paced cuts connect the dots swiftly and bring a sense of familiarity to the protagonist of Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan from the get-go; but little did we know that they will also happen to be arguably the most fascinating part of the film.

Karthik (Vijay Antony), who had stolen Salim’s identity in Naan and became a doctor in Salim, has become a covert agency agent who lost his friends and his lady love in an ambush on a rainy day. Now, as a man who lost everything in the rain, and bogged down by survivor’s guilt, Karthik attempts to start afresh. With the help of his Chief (Sarathkumar), he reaches the shores of Andaman and finds refuge at an eatery managed by a mother-son duo. But little does our hero know that despite touching land, he is still in troubled waters when he crosses paths with a local loan shark, Daali (Dhananjay).

A man with a past wanting a fresh start away from the horrors of his past, only to be pulled back into it, is a trope that’s anything but new to Indian cinema. The idea of a double life is something even Vijay Antony himself gave a shot with Pichaikkaran,which turned out to be one of his biggest hits. Be it the drastic change in the protagonist’s life — that comes with the heft of getting accustomed to a new place, new people and new responsibilities — or the mass transformation where he reveals who he really is and what he could possibly do, Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan faulters everywhere Pichaikkaran triumphed.

Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan (Tamil)

Director: Vijay Milton

Cast: Vijay Antony, R Sarathkumar, Sathyaraj, Megha Akash, Dhananjaya, Pruthvi Ambaar

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Runtime: 133 minutes

Storyline: A man with a bloody past tries to start afresh with a new identity only for trouble to knock on his door once again

Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan feels like a hodgepodge of several action films featuring such a protagonist. The core idea seems to be cut from the same cloth as The Equalizer films while a yesteryear killer seeking vengeance for his puppy would remind you of a particular film series starring Keanu Reeves. Inspirations are justifiable when used as crutches to support an otherwise interesting tale, not when turned into stretchers expected to carry an insipid plot.

A still from ‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’

A still from ‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Past the predictable story, it is the shoddily penned characters and scenes that water down this film. We have the damsel in distress in the form of Sowmiya (Megha Akash); a gabby Burma (Pruthvi Ambaar), who gets thrashed often making us feel that the treatment meted out to him is totally worth it; his mother (Saranya Ponvanan), who says the most unrelatable lines in an attempt to sound profound; and of course, the ever-threatening villain (Dhananjaya), whose idea of terror is serving poison flavoured coffee. Even dependable seniors like Sarathkumar and Saranya, and a cameo by Sathyaraj, fail to save the film from the shallow waters of mediocre writing.

The streaks of potential you see now and then, sadden you further. In a scene, Daali’s ego is bruised after an encounter with a dubious cop (Murali Sharma) but that sub-plot leads nowhere. The triangular love story between the three primary characters doesn’t feel organic. A bit more information on the agency headed by Captain (Sathyaraj) would have added more value to the backstory; instead, the film settles on putting him in expensive clothes, placing him in an embellished underground lair and making him say something along the lines of the actor’s iconic ‘Thagudu, thagudu’ lines.

The film’s title tells you of the poetic feel the makers have gone for, and it’s quite dramatic to place a character with an aversion towards rain on an island surrounded by water, but Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan fails to capitalise on these tropes. What we are left with is a painfully formulaic plot riddled with uninteresting characters and unsurprising happenings that are sure to rain on your parade.

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Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan is currently running in theatres

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