All the Way tonight on HBO....Anthony Mackie as MLK...

slam

aka * My Name Is Not $lam *
Super Moderator






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All The Way offers a riveting behind-the scenes look at President Lyndon B. Johnson’s tumultuous first year in office after the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Staking his presidency on what would be an historic unprecedented Civil Rights Act, Johnson finds himself caught between the moral imperative of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the expectations of the southern Democratic Party leaders who brought Johnson to power. As King battles to press Johnson while controlling more radical elements of the Civil Rights Movement, Johnson navigates the bill through Congress, winning a landslide victory against Barry Goldwater, but causing the South to defect from the Democratic Party


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https://www.allthewayhbo.com/

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How dare they cast this semi only when it's convenient for me to coon ass nigga as brother Martin.

That's like having that cross eyed nigga who be on cnn(Christie or sum) playing Malcom x
 
Courtney B. Vance, most recently seen in NBC’s State of Affairs, played King in the television miniseries Parting the Waters in 2000.



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The 1982 miniseries Freedom to Speak, which featured a wide range of historical figures including

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Sojourner Truth
and Daniel Webster, saw James Earl Jones portray both Martin Luther King Jr.

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In the 2001 TV movie Boycott, Jeffrey Wright and Carmen Ejogo portrayed Dr. King and wife Coretta Scott King



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Paul Winfield was the first to star as the civil rights leader, in NBC’s 1978 television miniseries King.

The three-part series garnered a total of eight Emmy nominations (including an outstanding lead actor nod for Winfield) and one win for music composition.



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Alongside film lead Will Smith, LeVar Burton starred as King in 2001's Ali.

The film, set mainly during the presidency of
Lyndon B. Johnson, told the story of pro boxer Muhammad Ali.


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Then best known for his role in the Golden Globe-nominated series Benson,

Robert Guillaume
portrayed the leader in the 1985 film Prince Jack, which chronicled the presidency of John F. Kennedy.

man i`m gonna have to try & find some of these movies...


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Clifton Powell portrayed the activist in ABC’s TV movie Selma, Lord, Selma. Set in 1960s Alabama,

the 1999 drama centered on a young girl’s bold decision to join the civil rights movement upon being stirred by one of King’s speeches.



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True Blood’s Nelsan Ellis brought King to the screen in Lee Daniels’ The Butler.


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In his Broadway debut, Samuel L. Jackson portrayed King in the stage production The Mountaintop.

The play was set in Room 306 of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis and depicted the leader’s final moments before his assassination.



wouldnt mind seeing this one...


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Dexter Scott King, the second son of King and wife Coretta, starred as his own father

in 2002’s
The Rosa Parks Story, a TV movie based on the life of civil rights activist Rosa Parks.


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Jaleel White: Our Friend, Martin, 1999

White was the voice behind 15-year-old Martin in the animated children’s film Our Friend, Martin.


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Kenan Thompson: Saturday Night Live, 2013

Leave it to SNL to bring out the funny in King. In this skit, the ghost of MLK comes to visit President Barack Obama in the White House.

Obama expects him to ask about civil rights and justice, but King is more concerned about a few other things.


snl-spoof.jpg
 
Paul Winfield was the first to star as the civil rights leader, in NBC’s 1978 television miniseries King.

The three-part series garnered a total of eight Emmy nominations (including an outstanding lead actor nod for Winfield) and one win for music composition.



KING_STILL.jpg

At first I was going to say James Earl Jones, but I forgot about this one... Paul Winfield killed this one.
 
I can't see Mackie pulling off MLK, he doesn't have the acting chops for that role:smh:
I agree there are different classes of actor not to besmirch either one it's just based on the personal capabilities. To use an NFL metaphor, there is Haywood Jeffires, Herman Moore, Michael Irvin, and Jerry Rice.

Haywood Jeffires was a low level good player. Given a limited particular lane he could Thrive and be decent

Herman Moore is a step above that. He performed at a high level for multiple years. He's not a Hall of Fame talent, but his range of Competency is higher than that of Heywood Jeffires.

Michael Irvin was that try hard fire. He maximized the talent he was given and exceeded the expectations of mini. He is a Hall of Famer without a doubt with very few limitations. But still not the greatest of all time. Really Goddamn good, but not the G.O.A.T.

Jerry Rice the unquestioned greatest of all time. No one saw his greatness coming out. His first two years in the league in dropped passes like the footballs were slicked with olive oil. But extreme hard work let him to Greatness even Beyond his own expectation. He succeeded in lanes that you didn't expect him to succeed in. He was just the epitome of unquestioned greatness

I believe Anthony Mackie to be somewhere between Herman Moore and Haywood Jeffires, and nowhere near on par with either Michael Irvin or Jerry Rice
 
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Mackie must know some powerful people. I just remember him playing a bunch of lil hood roles back in the day. Glad to see a brother not letting go and still keeping at it. Cuz those Marvel roles along should have him sitting back with his feet up chillin... He is on his grind. From Poppa Dock to Martin Luther King.
 
I can't see Mackie pulling off MLK, he doesn't have the acting chops for that role:smh:
This.
How dare they cast this semi only when it's convenient for me to coon ass nigga as brother Martin.

That's like having that cross eyed nigga who be on cnn(Christie or sum) playing Malcom x
This.
Kenan Thompson: Saturday Night Live, 2013

Leave it to SNL to bring out the funny in King. In this skit, the ghost of MLK comes to visit President Barack Obama in the White House.

Obama expects him to ask about civil rights and justice, but King is more concerned about a few other things.


snl-spoof.jpg
Ban this nigga.
 
so whats the verdict...how did he do....

anybody watch it...?


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so whats the verdict...how did he do....

anybody watch it...?


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Yes.
The movie is very good.
Mackie did a wonderful job portraying MLK Jr.
Melissa Leo did a fabulous job portraying Lady Bird Johnson.

And Bryan Cranston..?
Bryan Cranston DESERVES an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Lyndon B. Johnson.
:bravo:

If I didn't know it was Cranston under all those prosthetics, I'd have actually believe they raised LBJ back from the grave!!! :eek2:
 
Yes.
The movie is very good.
Mackie did a wonderful job portraying MLK Jr.
Melissa Leo did a fabulous job portraying Lady Bird Johnson.

And Bryan Cranston..?
Bryan Cranston DESERVES an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Lyndon B. Johnson.
:bravo:

If I didn't know it was Cranston under all those prosthetics, I'd have actually believe they raised LBJ back from the grave!!! :eek2:
Agree with all this. Good movie
 
I downloaded it...I'll give it a shot eventually

and Paul Winfield or David O...Planet of he Apes dude

damn they even had Pinky aka punk ass Chauncy playing Dr King
 
Now, I'll admit I'm quick to throw MLK running bitches joke and jab into a conversation, but when I see HBO just focus on King running hoes, like LBJ didn't have side hoes and kids; I have to call bullshit. Granted; they did have LBJ say who doesn't have a side bitch, but it wasn't enough. I've noticed that for the last 25+ years, damn near every time King is mentioned, so are his side bitches. Even Spike's Malcolm X mentioned King's discretions.

Not defending King, dude was a hypocrite preacher. But come on, he wasn't the only one running hoes. All the "leaders", ours and theirs, from the 60s seemed to have side work. Except for Brother Malcolm, of course. That brother was a stand-up guy.
 
With a haircut and the mustache, Donald Glover would be a good MLK. He's from The A too, he grew up around King's legacy. He could probably pull off the accent really well.

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Another possible candidate could be Sean Nelson. Granted, his last forray with a Southern accent wasn't spectacular, but I think he might be able to pull it off. :dunno:

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Now, I'll admit I'm quick to throw MLK running bitches joke and jab into a conversation, but when I see HBO just focus on King running hoes, like LBJ didn't have side hoes and kids; I have to call bullshit. Granted; they did have LBJ say who doesn't have a side bitch, but it wasn't enough. I've noticed that for the last 25+ years, damn near every time King is mentioned, so are his side bitches. Even Spike's Malcolm X mentioned King's discretions.

Not defending King, dude was a hypocrite preacher. But come on, he wasn't the only one running hoes. All the "leaders", ours and theirs, from the 60s seemed to have side work. Except for Brother Malcolm, of course. That brother was a stand-up guy.

You can't ignore King's marital indiscretions because the FBI repeatedly used those tapes to discredit King, harass his wife, and even tried to get King to commit suicide.

What an Uncensored Letter to M.L.K. Reveals


By BEVERLY GAGE

Hoover and the Feds seem to have been genuinely shocked by King’s behavior. Here was a minister, the leader of a moral movement, acting like “a tom cat with obsessive degenerate sexual urges,” Hoover wrote on one memo. In response, F.B.I. officials began to peddle information about King’s hotel-room activities to friendly members of the press, hoping to discredit the civil rights leader. To their astonishment, the story went nowhere. If anything, as the F.B.I. learned more about his sexual adventures, King only seemed to be gaining in public stature. In 1964, the Civil Rights Act passed Congress, and just a few months later King became the youngest man ever to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

At this point Hoover decided to escalate his campaign. On Nov. 18, 1964 — 50 years ago this week — Hoover denounced King at a Washington news conference, labeling him the “the most notorious liar in the country.” A few days later, one of Hoover’s deputies, William Sullivan, apparently took it upon himself to write the anonymous letter and sent an agent to Miami, to mail the package to Atlanta.

Even now, looking at a full copy of the letter, it’s tough to puzzle out just what the bureau wanted King to do. The largest unredacted section focuses on King’s sex life, recounting in graphic language what the bureau believed it knew. Another uncovered portion of the note praises “older leaders” like the N.A.A.C.P. executive director Roy Wilkins, urging King to step aside and let other men lead the civil rights movement. And some maintain that they simply meant to push King out, not induce suicide.

Whatever it was the F.B.I. hoped King would do, they probably preferred it to happen before the Nobel ceremony, scheduled for mid-December. But King did not even see the package until after his trip to Oslo. According to his biographer David Garrow, it was King’s wife, Coretta, who first opened it, expecting to find a recording of one of her husband’s speeches. She turned the contents over to King, who assembled a group of confidants to sort out a response. As King’s closest friends and associates recalled, everyone immediately agreed the letter could only be the work of one institution: Hoover’s F.B.I.

Today it is almost impossible to imagine the press refusing a juicy story. To a scandal-hungry media, the bedroom practices of our public officials and moral leaders are usually fair game. And a sex scandal is often — though not always — a cheap one-way ticket out of public life. Faced with today’s political environment, perhaps King would have made different decisions in his personal affairs. Perhaps, though, he never would have had the chance to emerge as the public leader he ultimately became.

Luckily, in 1964 the media were far more cautious. One oddity of Hoover’s campaign against King is that it mostly flopped, and the F.B.I. never succeeded in seriously damaging King’s public image. Half a century later, we look upon King as a model of moral courage and human dignity. Hoover, by contrast, has become almost universally reviled. In this context, perhaps the most surprising aspect of their story is not what the F.B.I. attempted, but what it failed to do.

The current F.B.I. director, James Comey, keeps a copy of the King wiretap request on his desk as a reminder of the bureau’s capacity to do wrong. But elsewhere in Washington, the debate over how much the government should know about our private lives has never been more heated: Should intelligence agencies be able to sweep our email, read our texts, track our phone calls, locate us by GPS? Much of the conversation swirls around the possibility that agencies like the N.S.A. or the F.B.I. will use such information not to serve national security but to carry out personal and political vendettas. King’s experience reminds us that these are far from idle fears, conjured in the fevered minds of civil libertarians. They are based in the hard facts of history.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/16/magazine/what-an-uncensored-letter-to-mlk-reveals.html?_r=0
 
You can't ignore King's marital indiscretions because the FBI repeatedly used those tapes to discredit King, harass his wife, and even tried to get King to commit suicide.

What an Uncensored Letter to M.L.K. Reveals


By BEVERLY GAGE

Hoover and the Feds seem to have been genuinely shocked by King’s behavior. Here was a minister, the leader of a moral movement, acting like “a tom cat with obsessive degenerate sexual urges,” Hoover wrote on one memo. In response, F.B.I. officials began to peddle information about King’s hotel-room activities to friendly members of the press, hoping to discredit the civil rights leader. To their astonishment, the story went nowhere. If anything, as the F.B.I. learned more about his sexual adventures, King only seemed to be gaining in public stature. In 1964, the Civil Rights Act passed Congress, and just a few months later King became the youngest man ever to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

At this point Hoover decided to escalate his campaign. On Nov. 18, 1964 — 50 years ago this week — Hoover denounced King at a Washington news conference, labeling him the “the most notorious liar in the country.” A few days later, one of Hoover’s deputies, William Sullivan, apparently took it upon himself to write the anonymous letter and sent an agent to Miami, to mail the package to Atlanta.

Even now, looking at a full copy of the letter, it’s tough to puzzle out just what the bureau wanted King to do. The largest unredacted section focuses on King’s sex life, recounting in graphic language what the bureau believed it knew. Another uncovered portion of the note praises “older leaders” like the N.A.A.C.P. executive director Roy Wilkins, urging King to step aside and let other men lead the civil rights movement. And some maintain that they simply meant to push King out, not induce suicide.

Whatever it was the F.B.I. hoped King would do, they probably preferred it to happen before the Nobel ceremony, scheduled for mid-December. But King did not even see the package until after his trip to Oslo. According to his biographer David Garrow, it was King’s wife, Coretta, who first opened it, expecting to find a recording of one of her husband’s speeches. She turned the contents over to King, who assembled a group of confidants to sort out a response. As King’s closest friends and associates recalled, everyone immediately agreed the letter could only be the work of one institution: Hoover’s F.B.I.

Today it is almost impossible to imagine the press refusing a juicy story. To a scandal-hungry media, the bedroom practices of our public officials and moral leaders are usually fair game. And a sex scandal is often — though not always — a cheap one-way ticket out of public life. Faced with today’s political environment, perhaps King would have made different decisions in his personal affairs. Perhaps, though, he never would have had the chance to emerge as the public leader he ultimately became.

Luckily, in 1964 the media were far more cautious. One oddity of Hoover’s campaign against King is that it mostly flopped, and the F.B.I. never succeeded in seriously damaging King’s public image. Half a century later, we look upon King as a model of moral courage and human dignity. Hoover, by contrast, has become almost universally reviled. In this context, perhaps the most surprising aspect of their story is not what the F.B.I. attempted, but what it failed to do.

The current F.B.I. director, James Comey, keeps a copy of the King wiretap request on his desk as a reminder of the bureau’s capacity to do wrong. But elsewhere in Washington, the debate over how much the government should know about our private lives has never been more heated: Should intelligence agencies be able to sweep our email, read our texts, track our phone calls, locate us by GPS? Much of the conversation swirls around the possibility that agencies like the N.S.A. or the F.B.I. will use such information not to serve national security but to carry out personal and political vendettas. King’s experience reminds us that these are far from idle fears, conjured in the fevered minds of civil libertarians. They are based in the hard facts of history.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/16/magazine/what-an-uncensored-letter-to-mlk-reveals.html?_r=0

Oh no, playah, I don't want to ignore it. I want to expose the others. It just wasn't King, there were others on both sides of the color line.
 
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