T ia l calWednesday, October 23, 2013 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Donnelly to draw TV/NEW MEDIA COLUMN 'Wife' is better than good on feminist I New to d "(I h the pov the tru quickly succinc said Ne er ca: Liza D during 2011 TE "And that, can ge viewer not o intellec throug heart." Now sity's Series, about h artist, - all ti on whe and ske Cart an und as they, vehicle Beyond that su or the appears The Ne ognizes relevan "You happen York cartoonist looking at its cartoons," Don- nelly said. "It's fascinating to see iscuss her work, what the morals were and what the thoughts were of the public. experience It's a great way to study history, to look at the cartoons." By MAX RADWIN Cartoons are a strange medi- DailyFine Arts Editor um, though. They mix journal- ism with op-ed, but are, on the save an) appreciation for simplest of levels, art. In this wer of cartoons to get at way, Donnelly said cartoons ath, to get at the issues have a unique and powerful and effect on the audience. tly," Penny W. "I think good journalism and ew York- good opinion helps, people 'see rtoonist Stamps what might be going on," she Donnelly Lecture said, "But cartoons have a way of her Se .e Lza - because they're visual, they're ED Talk. not like a long article - they can not only Donnelly have an immediate impact, a vis- (but) it Thursday at ceral impact." t to the 5:10 P.M. Donnelly has published 15, through books throughout her career, nly the Michigan Theatre all of which showcase her car- t, but tooning and quick wit. Her next h the ' Free book, "Women on Men," is set to release this fall. , as part of the Univer- "All the cartoons in the book Penny Stamps Lecture are women poking fun at men Donnelly will speak lovingly," Donnelly said. "It's er time as a journalist, an about how women can use an author and a feminist humor ... to change their roles." tles a cartoonist can take The upcoming release will en she picks up a pencil feature new drawings, with a tchbook. few New Yorker cartoons as oons are perhaps as much well. Donnelly also said the text er-appreciated art form of each chapter will be writ- are an under-appreciated ten in her own handwriting, as for delivering the news. opposed to typescript. 1 the obscure references Donnelly's books often focus bscript a political panel, on relationships, the more recent weird little doodles that of which look heavily at those on the corner of pages in involving women. Her 2005 ew Yorker, Donnelly rec- book, "Funny , Ladies," about s the cartoon's cultural women cartoonists at The New ce and longevity. Yorker, is a marker of her focus can get an idea of what on the feminist perspective. ed in the country by "Since then, I just started ea thinking about how I could draw and make funny situations and make humor about femi- nism," she said, "but also about women's rights, like what stupid things we do as women and also things that are done to us in our culture that we can make light of. And, by making light.of them, then we can maybe see how they're wrong." Donnelly came into her own as an active, cartooning feminist this past year when she served as a cultural envoy on a trip to Israel and Palestine, where she spoke about the impact car- toons can have politically and on women. This effort also reflects Don- nelly's desire to connect with the international cartoon com- munity. Her website, World Ink, showcases the work of cartoon- ists from all over the world. Donnelly has worked with car- toonists from Europe, Australia, Africa, South America and the Middle East. "It's interesting to see every- body's perspective on the world," she said. "I wanted to have a place to showcase some of these people's works." Donnelly will come to Ann Arbor to speak about her expe- riences: from the internal and external factors that have morphed her view on the world and the direction of her cartoons to political activism and the cre- ative process. And maybe, if there's time, she'll tell the audience about her trouble with drawing cars, too. "I don't draw cars very well," she said, laughing. "... They look like boxes on wheels." To say "The Good Wife" is on a roll would be an egregious understate- ment. The legal procedural, created by husband- wife dream team Robert and Michelle King, is bar- reling through a narrative streak that, frankly, I can't KAYLA recall ever UPADHYAYA witnessing. I can think of a few dramas in recent years that have similarly pulled awe- inducing multi-episode streaks out of their hats - the Defiance arc on "Scandal," the second half of "Orphan Black,"'s first season, "Confessions" through "Ozyman- dias" on "Breaking Bad." But whereas these three "super stretches" happen well into their respective seasons, "The Good Wife" isn't a slow burn: It's com- ing outofthe gate at breakneck speed. Never before have I seen a show launch its fifth season with so much energy and so few mis- steps. In these first four episodes, "The Good Wife" brings us back into its richly drawn world, but does so without forsaking the cru- cial element of surprise that has kept us intrigued for nearly four years. Season five feels familiar and heart-racingly exciting all at once, and that's a balance most TV dramas struggle with while "Wife" dances around themwith ballet-like elegance. How do you keep viewers on the edges of their seats five sea- sons in when you're churning out 22 episodes a year and chained to the FCC's regulations?"The Good Wife" answers: easy peasy; cable schmable; watch and learn. So, let's back up a bit. The show's mastery didn'tcome out of nowhere. The creative forces behind "Wife" have been laying the groundwork to get here since day one. At its base, the show is still a legalprocedural, driven by its case-of-the-week format, with the occasionallonger arc woven in. But the show's world is defined first and foremost by its charac- ters. It's one thing to have a lineup of outstanding regulars, but "The Good Wife" takes it to the next level with the best roster of recur- ring and guest performers on television. Minor recurring char- acters don't just add color or fill space; they're part of the dynamic and detailed fabric that seduces viewersweek after week. Which is why itcomes as no surpris episode whicht fully co that pe mix-I beth T wild ca with m Prestor an old f a testar Award is to th tion too acters.: tough-i and Ga McVeig joust w friends F cre "Out a mast it epito ess at uI and ev narrati From t scrutin person and ho sect, in anothe with th of left f runner powere Dianet more s allowin showca In "Out and rel and res charac cant,pr it all tu ing -,o - persc profess "Bub versus- and the coming conflict The pie next ep ting the knockt Will pr off a de "Thi sonally the "Hi might b the em( e that the most recent make these characters more than e "Outside the Bubble" - just well-dressed, sharp-tongued throws several of the care- lawyers are, of course, extremely instructed non-regulars personal. Lockhart/Gardner pper the show back into the might run like a machine on the works so well. Seeing Els- surface, but it breathes and bleeds ascioni, the scatterbrained with the desires, dreams and feel- ird of a lawyer who's played ings of its lawyers. Super-charged anic perfection by Carrie relationship dynamicsblur the n, feels like reuniting with boundaries between professional friend, and that's as much and personal realms, making "The ment to Preston's Emmy Good Wife" as much a character -winning performance as it study as it is a powerfully gripping e writers' meticulous atten- exploration of politics, sex, moral- even the smallest of char- ity and the workplace. Rita Wilson also returns as The writers enrich these larger bitch lawyer Viola Walsh, themesby imbuing them with ry Cole's gunslinging Kurt topical, controversial conversa- gh shows up for a political tions pulled from the headlines. ith Diane's bleeding-heart That's "The Good Wife"'s third magical ingredient: its devilishly smart social commentary. These first four episodes of season five, lorrick and again, epitomize this strength, lor rik and incorporating stories about repro- w are on fire ductive justice, privacy rights *and the death penalty. And these aren't just plot devices; the writers engage relevant issues in a way tside the Bubble" isn't just that challenges assumptions. erclass in character work; With one of the most intelligent mizes the writers' prow- writers'rooms working right .pthrusting the stakes now, "The Good Wife" makesyou en threatening the show's think. In "Outside the Bubble," ve structures if need be. when Will signs an affidavit he very start, the showhas swearing he has never had sex ized the battle between with an underling in his office, al and professional lives Alicia quietly challenges him with w the two spheres inter- a perceptive cross-examination teract and complicate one of exclusionary definitions of r (the show's obsession sex. Questioning social construc- is theme doesn't come out tions of sex and sexuality? That's ield, considering its show- something we do in my women's s are married). Shifting studies classes. Seeingit happen dynamicsahave brought on my TV screen is nothingshort o the narrative forefront of remarkable. o than Will this season, In its promo, CBS touts "Hit- g Christine Baranski to ting the Fan" as the best "Good se her strongest work yet. Wife" installment of the year, and tside the Bubble," alliances I'm inclined to believe the claim. ationships are challenged I'll go so far as to say that if it only haped, and each and every lives up to half my expectations, ter is evolving in signifi- it'll still be one of the finest hours remise-altering ways' And of programming I watch this year, rns on this concept of keep- and I won't insult the series with r, rather, failing to keep any qualifiers like "on broadcast onal politics separate from television" or "for a procedural" ional lives. "The Good Wife"has more than bble" reignites the personal- proven its capacity to creatively professional confrontation, compete with any of its cable con- highly anticipated episode temporaries. to us Oct. 27 promises the With the stability of Lockhart/ t will reach a boiling point. Gardner teetering and the Flor- 'ces are all set up, and the rick/Agos masterplan in motion, isode, fittingly titled "Hit- there are a lot of moving parts in e Fan," is positioned to play this season. And I'm on board hem all down (or, at least, for each and every one of them. omises to throw them all My one complaint? Can we get sk in a storm of fury). some more Kalinda Sharma in s was never meant per- there again, please? USAS to fight for workers' rights By GIANCARLO BUONOMO For the Daily On April 24, the deadliest gar- ment factory disaster to date occurred in Savar, Bangladesh. The Rana Plaza building, which United housed mul- Students tiple garment factories, col- AgainSt lapsed, killing Sweatshops 1,129 people, many of them Vgil the primary Thursday breadwinners at 6p.m. for their fami- lies. The dead- The Diag lest garment Free factory disaster in U.S. history pales in comparison, with a still- tragic 146 deaths. To remember the victims of the Rana Plaza disaster and raise awareness about how future disasters can be averted, the campus chap- ter of United. Students Against Sweatshops (USAS) will be hold- ing an interfaith vigil Thursday on the Diag. Despite its name, USAS is not strictly limited to campaigning against sweatshop conditions. Past, present and future projects have ranged from organizing campus workers to a "Kick Wall Street Off Campus" initiative. "We think of the term 'sweat- shops' broadly, as including all fights for workers' justice," said LSA sophomore Arielle Wis- baum. However, USAS's main focus this year is on sweatshops in Bangladesh. "Right now, what we're doing is more important than ever because three of the largest gar- ment factory tragedies actually happened in the past year, and in the past eight years, 1,800 work- ers have died in Bangladesh," Wisbaum said. "And it's even more relevant, just because last week there was another more fi this is s This month Plaza chapter have di of acti activisr strongl} and she tion. "The ducing apparel times it because campus "To: burn, w ing the LSA f Dubois. Th to USAS that ma beyond maize-a snapbac duce p perman and wi] moneta To p the UN al trad the "Ba and BL defines for wor in garm brands, & Fitch to only factory fire where 10 the accord. USAS will lobby the actory workers died, so University to sever its contracts omething that's urgent." with any company that doesn't week will mark the six- sign this agreement. anniversary of the Rana "We should be able to use disaster, so all USAS the University to leverage our 's across the country power as students to change the eclared a national week way that these corporations do on. Even amid all the business," Dubois said. a on campus, USAS feels USAS has used this strat- y that its initiative can egy before. Last year, Adidas suld get students' atten- closed down one of its factories in Indonesia but didn't pay the se workers were. pro- workers $1.8 million of sever- University of Michigan ance. USAS lobbied the Uni- ," Wisbaum said. "Some- versity to cut its $16-million 's hard to imagine that, contract with Adidas, ad Adi- it's not directly on our das eventually gave the workers ." their severance package. stay silent while people USAS doesn't advocate elimi- 'e might as well be light- nating sweatshop labor, which match ourselves," said some argue is an unpleasant reshman Jean-Phillipe but wholly necessary means for poor countries to build their economies. However, USAS maintains that improvements rda vigl can and must be made for the sake of workers. remember "There's no reason for them to be unsafe," Wisbaum said. ViCtim S O "These corporations have money to make these buildings injustice. safe." In many ways, the work USAS is doing mirrors the work that was done 100 years ago, in S understands, however, the United States, to maintain aking an impact will go worker and building safety dur- students forgoing their ing the rise of industrialization. nd-blue T-shirts and When the Triangle Shirtwaist k hats. In order to pro- Factory burned down in. 1911, 'alpable and hopefully killing 146 workers, new com- ent results, USAS has missions and labor laws were 11 use the University as created to reform the unsafe ry leverage. conditions that led to the fire. revent other disasters, "We're helping them fight I and IndustriALL glob- the fight that we once fought," e unions have created Wisbaum said. ngladesh Accord on Fire This vigil could be one step uilding Safety," which for the entire University com- mandatory standards munity toward becoming more ker and building safety informed and responsible con- ent factories. Numerous sumers. including Abercrombie "People do care once they and Puma, have pledged know," Wisbaum said. use factories that follow Aliciainsiststo Will in itting the Fan" teaser. She relieve her own words, but otional underpinnings that Upadhyaya is counting down to 'Hitting the Fan.' To watch with her, e-mail kaylau@umich.edu. E V ENT P REV IE W Lusophone Film Festival to bring Portuguese cinema to the 'U' ByKATHLEEN DAVIS For the Daily As the sixth-most widely spo- ken language in the world, just three places behind English, Portuguese is surprisingly Lusophone underrepre- film Festival sented at the University. Screening of However, Passerby' things are starting to Thursday at change. 7:30 p.m. The Univer- sity has been Michigan Theatre sponsoring Free the first-ever Lusophone Film Festival, an ongoing event that shows Portuguese language films for free at both the Michi- gan Theatre and the University of Michigan Museum of Art's Helmut Stern Auditorium. The festival is spearheaded by Prof. Fernando Arenas, a recent addition to the University's fac- ulty and the creator of the newly added Portuguese minor. Arenas's background is based from the University of Minne- sota, where he taught for several years. During his time there, he developed a full-fledged Portu- guese program, which he hopes to bringto the University. "When I came to Michigan, one of the primary objectives was to< gram a: tuguese Part been th festival Ann Ar' The ongoing and wi films o weeks. indepen various countri includir and Gui As fo guage,I guideli "The duction films a: and spe and hist create a Portuguese pro- featured in prestigious film fes- s well as promoting Por- tivals such as the Toronto Inter- language," Arenas said. national Film Festival and the of the promoting has International Film Festival Rot- ie formation of the film terdam. , the first of its kind in Attendance for 'the festival bor. has been "excellent," as Arenas festival itself has been put it. g since mid-September "We've had 70-80 percent ll be showcasing seven of the venues full, both at the iver the course of 12 Michigan Theatre and at the The films come from UMMA Helmut Stern Audito- adent filmmakers in rium," Arenas said. Portuguese-speaking Each of the screenings fea- es all over the world, tures an introduction by a Uni- ng Brazil, Mozambique versity professor who is highly inea-Bissau. familiar with the topics present- r criteria beyond the Ian- ed in the film and a Q&A session Arenas had some specific that encourages active partici- nes: pation by the audience. y're all very recent pro- Year one of Lusophone is only s," Arenas said. "The the beginning. Arenas hopes the re also more alternative film festival will be the first of ak about social, political many events within the univer- torical issues." sity that promote Portuguese as a more mainstream language. In the future, Arenas hopes that 2 em rthe film festival can bring film 2embraces directors and Portuguese schol- 1ro k d ars to campus, and also expand the schedule to feature short culture. films and documentaries. "We're trying to create a presence of the Portuguese lan- guage and culture here in Ann content of the films var- Arbor and southeastern Michi- features a range of top- gan," Arenas said. "Also to bring kidnappings, to old age, attention to the vitality of the al classes. Many of the language and the vitality of its ave also previously been culture." A 0 WE DON'T BITE Follow @MichiganDaily The' ies and ics from to soci films hE