Category Archives: Human Behavior

Trailers of the Week: Capone, The Eddy, Solar Opposites, and More – Yahoo Music

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Brave New World

You are an essential part of a perfect social body, says an overhead voice. Everybody in their place. Everybody happy now. This perfect society is New London, where life is free of pain and there is no such thing as monogamy, privacy, money, or family. But just outside New Londons bounds are the Savage Lands, where no such restrictions exist. The teaser highlights an emotional moment between Demi Moores character and her son. Theres no pain there, John, she says. No fear. I want that for you. (2020)

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Capone

After a flash of violent black-and-white scenes from the gangsters past, the clip turns to a bright day in Florida as Tom Hardys Al Capone looks out over his estate with a cigar. However, his life in Florida isnt a paradise. The clip focuses on Capones struggle with full-blown dementia and a hidden fortune whose location is obscured by Capones deteriorating mind. Based on true events, the clip teases a dangerous blurring of the gangsters past and present in his final year. (May 12th)

Dangerous Lies

A down-on-their-luck couple suddenly inherits a fortune from the elderly man they were working for in a new Netflix thriller. While this unexpected gesture of kindness seems like a great relief, it quickly upends Katies life when she finds herself surrounded by deception. Katie (portrayed by Camila Mendes) is forced to question everything, even her own husband, as their new life turns into a trap. (April 30th)

The Eddy

The frantic sounds of jazz follow Elliott Udo (portrayed by Andr Holland) as he struggles to manage his house band and keep his Parisian jazz club The Eddy afloat. While those tasks already come with their share of strain, the situation becomes more fraught as Udo is roped into his partners shady dealings. Debt looms over both Udo and the club, but its not the only thing putting on the pressure. Udo has his own history tucked away in New York, and it comes back to him when his daughter unexpectedly turns up, pleading with him to return. (May 8th)

Solar Opposites

While figuring out how to fit in is a common problem for Earth dwellers, its even harder for this family of Shlorpian aliens. The new Hulu series brought to us by Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland promises plenty of laughs at the expense of our own human behavior. When the two alien kids are teased at school, they take revenge on their classmate by pouring soda over her brain. Wow, it really is making her dumber, says the Shlorpian daughter as the bullys speech dwindles. I cant believe humans drink this stuff! (May 8th)

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Trailers of the Week: Capone, The Eddy, Solar Opposites, and More - Yahoo Music

Wait, it’s Saturday? How to make the weekend shine in lockdown when days blur – USA TODAY

Experts don't know if coronavirus is transmitted through clothing, but it's good to keep these laundry tips in mind. USA TODAY

Hosting the historic, first ever livestreamed Saturday Night Live, Tom Hanks made a point in the opening monologue that many Americans have become acutely aware of.

Theres no such thing as Saturday anymore," Hankssaid, speaking from his kitchen. "Every day is just today.

He might have gone even further, pointing out that weekends havebecome endangeredin the locked-down-at-home coronavirus era, as the days blurs together to vaguely different variations in a country sheltering in place.

"It's this blurring of the delineation of Monday through Friday. People used to say 'Thank God it's Friday,' But wehave lost that sense of time," says life coach and human behavior expert Patrick Wanis.He maintains that it'simportant to take the extra effort to separate the weekend, or a specific timeof rest, duringthe temporary lifestyle change.

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The Miami-based Wanis himself declines to take on non-mandatory work projects into the weekend to make those days special.

Others have moved weekly happy hours from barsto video chat. People are cooking in place of Saturday night meals at restaurants and trying to recreate spa experiences at home.

"You've got to create time to be calm, to be relaxed, to rejuvenate, to rest," saysWanis.

Driveway parties andZoom happy hours mark the weekends now

Across the country, Americans have done their best to celebrate the weekend in unusual ways such as aEugene, Oregon socially distant weekend block party organized by Mary Lou Vignola and her husband, Frank, on March 21. The party featured tables and chairsset up on driveways as neighbors socialized from a socially appropriate distance.

Robin Cummings sets a table in her driveway as she joins her neighbors for a socially distant weekend block party in Eugene, Ore.(Photo: Chris Pietsch, The Register-Guard)

"Glee" actress Becca Tobin, one of three members of the lifestyleLadyGang podcast, works to maintain her Friday ritual of cleaning the house in the afternoon as if she were going to have her friends over. And she still gets ready to go 'out.' "I shower, actually wash and dry my hair, put on a little make-up, jewelry, a cute outfit, and even shoes," says Tobin. "I prepare a really yummy cocktail for myself and join my standing appointment with my closest friends for 'Fancy Friday' cocktails on Zoom."

Fellow LadyGang podcaster Keltie Knight has been improvising on keeping her weekend foot massage or spa treatment ritual going at home. "Ive been leaving my phone upstairs, putting a mask in my hair and having a glass of wine in the hot tub, and then getting out and slathering myself with delicious smelling lotion," says Knight. "Its almostthe same."

Keltie Knight, a member of the LadyGang podcast, gives herself a personal spa date.(Photo: courtesy of Keltie Knight/LadyGang)

Actress Jane Seymour has dedicated her weekends to starting a new painting, a centering activity and her longtime passion."It allows me to feel like Im doing a reset. Leaving the previous week behind and getting a fresh perspective."

The British-born Malibu, Calif. residentalso carvestime to cook a major meal on the weekend, which she shares with her fellow quarantine-r, her grown-son Johnny. During the time they think about family not able to attend."Its a good way to feel connected to family when were not all physically able to be together right now. And I know that Johnny appreciates all of the home cooking," she says.

Cookbook author and mother of twoManuelaMazzoccokeeps cooking at the center of her family-centered weekend routine, which she has worked to keep in place throughout California's stay-at-home orders.

"Cooking is most fun when done in company, while chatting and working together," says Mazzocco, who suggests small celebration enhancements such as popping open a bottle of something bubbly, playing music and setting the table with candles. "Tomake the weekend meal feel special and different,I start with a quick look at myself in the mirror and find what would make mefeel special. A cute dress and lipgloss are all I need and what works for me."

Kristina Kuzmic talked about divorce and life as single mother in her book "Hold On, But Don't Hold Still." Re-married, she's using her life lessons to get through life in a pandemic.(Photo: Karen Erekson)

Comic and authorKristinaKuzmic says she is using the lessons she learned as a divorced one-time single mother to get through the coronavirus pandemic. Remarried and living in a household with three children, she spends much of the week dealing with home-schooling due to closed schools and juggling her own work responsibilities, which includes V-logging her life for her 140K YouTube followers.

"Butweekends are just fun. All the school routines are set aside. We forget sometimes that ourkids are feeling stressed, too," says Kuzmic. "I'm a rule enforcer but I'm also a fun enforcer. And you have to create that in times like this."

Kuzmic says it's crucial to laugh and enjoy momentswith the family, even in the midst of a pandemic which is having a more dire impact on many around the globe.

"Its important to teach our kids thatenjoying your life is not disrespectful to the people who are suffering," says Kuzmic. "Theres a way to honor those people and wish the best for all of them. Dont teach your children thattheir life has to stop."

Ultimately, experts like Wanis believethat asilver lining could be that the current crisisbrings thoughtfullife changes that couldlead to healthy re-prioritizing an understanding that a weekend is something that has to be worked for and protected, which is something Americans were losing sight of.

"If you think back to your parents, your grandparents, there was a time when people actually did not work Saturday and Sunday. And then ask yourself:who was mentally healthier, your grandparents or you? Most likely it was your grandparents," says Wanis. "There was structure and routine, there was more balance. This is the time for us to rebalance by reevaluating our life."

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Wait, it's Saturday? How to make the weekend shine in lockdown when days blur - USA TODAY

New Movies to Watch This Week: Abe, Selah and the Spades, Sergio – Variety

This time last year, audiences were buying tickets to see Avengers: Endgame. Now, pretty much the biggest new release bypassing theaters and going straight to streaming, amid the turmoil caused by the coronavirusis a movie called Butt Boy.

But dont worry. Governmental leaders are starting to share plans about a reopening of movie theaters, and there are still lots of quality new releases making themselves available by streaming. So, while no new studio movies bowed this week, you can find treasures from festivals such as Sundance and Cannes, plus fresh fare for Amazon Prime and Netflix subscribers.

Here are all the new releases, with excerpts from reviews and links to where you can watch them.

Ingvar Sigurdsson smolders in Icelandic thriller A White, White DayCourtesy of New Europe Film Sales

A White, White Day (Hlynur Palmason) CRITICS PICKDistributor: Film MovementWhere to Find It: Choose a virtual cinema to supportA muscular study of toxic masculinity set in one of the worlds more remote locations, A White, White Day debuted in Critics Week at Cannes, where Ingvar Sigurdsson won the best actor prize. He delivers an astonishing performance here, a display of locomotive determination and exasperated futility transformed into dangerous, unpredictable anger. Im convinced that A White, White Day is the work of one of the most important voices of this emerging generation, arriving at a stage where we have yet to learn his language. Peter DebrugeRead the full review

Abe (Fernando Grostein Andrade)Distributor: Amazon StudiosWhere to Find It: Rent on Amazon or iTunesThe home life depicted in Abe, whose Big Apple-based 12-year-old title character (played by Stranger Things trouper Noah Schnapp) is the product of a Palestinian father and an Israeli mother, skews awfully far from the ordinary. Family dinners, which bring together grandparents from both sides to rehash the religious and political disputes of their respective faiths and countries, are never less than awkward. But Abe has an idea, and an obsession. Abe loves to cook. Hes like Julia Childs inner child, and has more spirit than Rocco DiSpirito. His dream is to use cooking to unite the two sides of the family, Jewish and Muslim (his parents consider themselves agnostic atheists, but their son wants to attend mosque and have a bar mitzvah, and he dreams of dishes that will combine the two sides of his heritage). Peter DebrugeRead the full review

Butt Boy (Tyler Cornack)Distributor: Epic PicturesWhere to Find It: Rent on Amazon, Google Play and other on-demand platformsNobody is going to watch a movie called Butt Boy in pursuit of sophisticated wit. That said, this feature spinoff from a prior sketch by the collaborative comedy-video team known as Tiny Cinema does manage to be just about the drollest execution possible of the most juvenile concept imaginable. Those inclined to be tickled by a one-joke bad-taste premise treated with an incongruous poker face will give this perversely well-crafted goof a leg-up toward immediate moderate cult status. Dennis HarveyRead the full review

Endings, Beginnings (Drake Doremus)Distributor: Samuel Goldwyn FilmsWhere to Find It: Rent on Amazon, iTunes or other on-demand platformsDaphne, who is played by Shailene Woodley in what is simultaneously her most realistic and least accessible performance yet, recently broke up with her boyfriend, moving back into her sisters pool house. That split had something to do with a drunken one-night stand. And now, though shes sworn herself to six months of sobriety and celibacy, Daphne cant deny her attraction to two totally different guys, played by Jamie Dornan and Sebastian Stan. This result is like the mumblecore version of The Philadelphia Story. Peter DebrugeRead the full review

The Quarry (Scott Teems)Distributor: Lionsgate, GrindstoneWhere to Find It: Rent on Amazon and other on-demand platformsThis Southern-set thriller from the director of That Evening Sun was set to premiere at the SXSW Film Festival, but pivoted to streaming instead.

The Sharks (Luca Garibaldi)Distributor: Quiver DisributionWhere to Find It: Rent on iTunes and other on-demand platformsIn its portrayal of a 14-year-old girls disturbing sexual awakening in a sleepy seaside town, Uruguayan writer-director Lucia Garibaldis debut feature suggests luridly violent dangers in tranquil waters both figuratively and, per its title, literally whilst sketching Rosina, its introverted heroine, in light, fragile strokes. The result is intermittently striking before settling into an overly familiar drift: The films icy-humid atmospherics trouble the memory for longer than its remote protagonist and stagnant storytelling, just enough to pique interest in Garibaldis future work. Guy LodgeRead the full review

Bad Therapy (Bill Teitler)Distributor: Gravitas VenturesWhere to Find It: Rent on Amazon and other on-demand platformsAlicia Silverstone and Rob Corddry play a married couple working with a counselor to repair their marriage in this straight-to-VOD relationship drama.

Sergio (Greg Barker)Where to Find It: NetflixThere is a Robert Frost poem called Escapist Never which provides a frequent refrain in Greg Barkers deeply admiring but drawn-out biopic of Brazilian diplomat and U.N. leading light Sergio Vieira de Mello. It is the future that creates his present, runs the penultimate line, and de Mello (played with persuasive charm by Wagner Moura) certainly does seem like a man whose present was shaped by the future. The mans impact on world affairs does render understandable Barkers rather starry-eyed approach, but in its unnecessary length and sentimental emphasis on the mans romantic life, Sergio more often, intentionally and otherwise, evokes the interminable chain of longing of the poems celebrated last line. Jessica KiangRead the full review

Rising High (Cneyt Kaya)Where to Find It: NetflixFact-based The Wolf of Wall Street won criticism from some quarters for seeming to revel in its protagonists sex, drugs and rock n roll lifestyle, while barely chiding him for the predatory, large-scale financial fraud that funded it. Cneyt Kayas new Rising High offers a similar disconnect in its fictive tale of bold chicanery in the realm of high-end real estate, treating its heroes climb to ill-gotten wealth as a vicarious thrill ride, with scant attention paid to the victims they presumably bankrupt. Dennis HarveyRead the full review

Selah and the Spades (Tayarisha Poe)Distributor: Amazon StudiosWhere to Find It: Amazon PrimeStudents from Haldwell prep school graduate prepared for any career, particularly the Mafia. This exclusive boarding prep school is controlled by five factions, and senior spirit captain Selah (Lovie Simone) commands the Spades, the most criminal of the clubs that distributes kush, acid, cocaine, Adderall and tequila around campus. Writer-director Tayarisha Poes cold and stylish debut, commands attention. More specifically, Simones Selah seizes it. The film has more style than plot, but that style is terrific. Amy NicholsonRead the full review

Javier Bardem explores Antarctica in SanctuaryCourtesy of NYFF

The Booksellers (D.W. Young)Distributor: Greenwich EntertainmentWhere to Find It: Choose a virtual cinema to supportThis lovely and wistful documentary invites us to dote on the tactile mystery of old books the elegance of the print, the pages that may be fragmenting, the colorful latticework bindings, the back-breaking size of certain old volumes. Young is a veteran film editor who leads us into grand and cozy old bookstores like the mysterious museums they are. The Booksellers is a documentary for anyone who can still look at a book and see a dream, a magic teleportation device, an object that contains the world. Owen GleibermanRead the full review

Beyond the Visible Hilma Af Klint (Halina Dyrschka)Distributor: Zeitgeist Films, in association with Kino LorberWhere to Find It: Choose a virtual cinema to supportRecently featured at the Guggenheim Museum, Klint was nearly forgotten by time. This documentary explores what was almost lost.

Bias (Robin Hauser)Distributor: 1091 MediaWhere to Find It: Rent it on Amazon, Google Play and other on-demand platformsA deep dive into the subject of implicit bias and how it impacts human behavior.

Earth (Nikolaus Geyrhalter)Distributor: KimStimWhere to Find It: Virtual screenings tied to Earth DayThe director of Our Daily Bread takes a satellite view of how homo sapiens are transforming their planet.

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New Movies to Watch This Week: Abe, Selah and the Spades, Sergio - Variety

PANDEMIC: Coronavirus is reducing CO2. Why that’s worrisome – E&E News

A growing number of prognosticators expect that global carbon dioxide emissions could fall 5% this year as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, amounting to the largest annual reduction on record. But climate researchers say there is little reason for celebration, for people or the planet.

CO2 is a long-lived gas. An annual drop in emissions, even one of historic proportions, is unlikely to dramatically change the concentrations of carbon dioxide swirling around Earth's atmosphere. Then there is the nature of the reductions. Few think draconian economic lockdowns, like those implemented to halt the virus's spread, represent a viable decarbonization strategy.

Mostly, the emissions projections show just how much work the world needs to do to green the economy. Holding global temperature rise below 1.5 degrees Celsius, for instance, would require annual emission reductions of 7.6%, according to the United Nations' projections.

"If this is all we get from shutting the entire world down, it illustrates the scope and scale of the climate challenge, which is fundamentally changing the way we make and use energy and products," said Costa Samaras, a professor who studies climate and energy systems at Carnegie Mellon University.

A host of forecasters have produced emission estimates in recent weeks as the world has rushed to understand the fallout from the pandemic. In late March, the Breakthrough Institute predicted global emissions would be down 0.5% to 2.2%. The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects energy-related emissions in America to decline by 7.5% this year, in large part driven by a drop in vehicle miles traveled and a decline in coal generation, which is pushed to the margins by falling electricity demand.

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At first glance, such projections are staggering. The United States has averaged emission reductions of 0.9% since 2005. In 2019, preliminary estimates suggest emissions were down 2.1% (Climatewire, Jan. 7).

Yet projections for 2020 already look conservative. Most emissions estimates are tied to economic growth. A few weeks ago, most prognosticators predicted the world economy would rebound in the second half of 2020, resulting in little to no growth for the entire year. The International Monetary Fund now expects the world economy to contract by 3%, with the U.S. economy shrinking by almost 6%.

That prediction comes amid a wave of increasingly grim economic statistics. The International Energy Agency said this week it expects global demand for oil could fall by 9.3 million barrels a day in 2020, the largest annual reduction ever. It expects demand could fall by a whopping 29 million barrels a day in April, reducing consumption to levels not seen since 1995.

In the United States, gasoline consumption has plunged to its lowest levels since 1991. The Federal Reserve's monthly industrial production report showed factory output dropping in March at rates not seen since the Great Depression.

Steel production for last week is down a third compared with the same time last year, according to industry figures. And demand for electricity is down, though that has been tempered by stable residential consumption (Energywire, April 6).

Such figures have prompted emission forecasters to raise the CO2 reductions projected for 2020. Carbon Brief yesterday revised its global emissions estimate from 4% to 5.5%.

Glen Peters, director of the Center for International Climate Research, said on Twitter that the IMF's economic projections would equate to a 5.7% drop in emissions this year.

"I think the amount of disruption people have had in their lives from lockdowns will lead to a disappointing drop in emissions," Peters wrote in an email, noting that big-ticket emitters like electricity generation, industry and agriculture are not covered by the clampdowns imposed by many governments.

Yet the scope of the emission reduction in 2020 is almost beside the point, said Taryn Fransen, a senior fellow at the World Resources Institute. Emissions are not falling because of a change in technology or because people have made a long-term change in behavior. They're falling because governments have ordered their citizens to stay home.

"When we're talking about cutting emissions, this is not how to do it," she said. "No one is arguing that we should suppress economic activity to reduce emissions."

The more important question, Fransen said, is whether the crisis prompts any long-term shifts in behavior. If people resume flying and driving as they did before the pandemic, the crisis will have a negligible impact on climate. But if it results in more remote work and less commuting, it might lead to a larger, more sustainable reduction in emissions.

Rob Jackson, a Stanford University professor who chairs the Global Carbon Project, pointed to recent data showing vastly improved air quality in cities around the world. He wondered whether the clear skies would result in a greater push toward cleaner technologies.

"We could have this every day if we had a proportion of the [electric vehicles] that Norway had, one-third of light vehicle traffic," he said.

The sentiment illustrates a wider point, analysts said. In recent years, much of the debate over climate policy has focused on individual actions like choosing whether to drive or fly. But even today, with millions of people around the world stuck at home, the world economy is consuming vast quantities of fossil fuel and emitting large amounts of CO2.

The dynamic highlights the limits of individual action and the need to transform how the economy is fueled, said Shahzeen Attari, a professor who studies human behavior and climate change at the University of Indiana.

"I think what we need is structural change, and that comes from transitioning our entire energy system, the type of vehicles we buy, electricity we consume, weatherizing our homes," Attari said. "Individuals can, in aggregate, push the system, but we need to figure out these pathways of pushing the system."

How the world answers that question will be the ultimate measure of emissions in future years.

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PANDEMIC: Coronavirus is reducing CO2. Why that's worrisome - E&E News

TECO Peoples Gas Named One of the Easiest Utilities to Do Business With – Business Wire

TAMPA, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--TECO Peoples Gas again was recognized as one of the easiest utilities in the nation with which to conduct business, based on first-quarter Customer Effort index scores from the 2020 Cogent Syndicated Utility Trusted Brand & Customer Engagement: Residential study conducted by Escalent. Peoples Gas ranked in the top three out of the 140 electric, natural gas and combination utilities included in the survey. The Customer Effort index score measures how easy it is for customers to interact with a utility across a variety of touchpoints, including obtaining service and finding information and offerings.

We always put our customers first, said T.J. Szelistowski, president of Peoples Gas. Especially in these trying times, Im pleased to see our customers recognizing our continued efforts and investments to make it easy to do business with us, even while many of our employees are working remotely and altering day-to-day operations for the safety of the more than 200 communities we serve.

Last year, Peoples Gas received the highest overall score in the nation for the fifth year in a row in the 2019 Utility Trusted Brand & Customer Engagement: Residential study. The Cogent Reports study by Market Strategies International provides a comprehensive view into utilities relationships with their residential customers. Peoples Gas also has been repeatedly designated a Customer Champion and an Environmental Champion by the same group.

Escalent is a human behavior and analytics firm that conducts the Cogent Syndicated studies. More than 62,000 residential utility customers responded to the survey.

Peoples Gas System, Floridas largest natural gas distribution utility, serves about 400,000 customers across Florida. Peoples Gas is a subsidiary of Emera Inc., a geographically diverse energy and services company headquartered in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

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TECO Peoples Gas Named One of the Easiest Utilities to Do Business With - Business Wire

Bernie Sanders’ campaign proved that organizing around class interests works – Salon

It never gets old. Every time the political establishmentsucceeds in suppressing a challenge to the status quo, liberal pundits rush to their desks to cluck their tongues. Once again, they proclaim, class struggle has been exposed as a delusion. Marxism, an outmoded 19th century doctrine, has been "refuted" once again.

In a recent, much-read Vox article titled "Why Bernie Sanders Failed," Zack Beauchamp joins this tired chorus. "The Sanders campaign and his supporters bet on a theory of class politics that turned out to be wrong," he says. Sanders failed because his strategy "rested in part on a Marx-inflected theory of how people think about politics," Beauchamp says. He continues:

A basic premise of Marxist political strategy is that people should behave according to their material self-interest as assessed by Marxists which is to say, their class interests. Proposing policies like Medicare-for-all, which would plausibly alleviate the suffering of the working class, should be effective at galvanizing working-class voters to turn out for left parties.

The problems with Beauchamp's argument are myriad. Perhaps most crucially, he seems to have no idea what Marxism is. Nor did his editors.

One can't blame Vox entirely. Throughout the history of capitalism, Marxism has been subjected to caricatures and distortions. But not only are the basic premises of Marxism quite different from what Beauchamp suggests, it turns out that the fortunes of the Bernie Sanders campaign confirm them quite definitively.

First and foremost, liberals are constantly worried about people "voting against their interests." When they talk about this, they're already invoking social class as a political problem. When Vox says "class conflict doesn't dominate the American political scene," this is totally at odds with the way we actually talk about American politics. According to a certain liberal common sense, working class voters are continually supporting Republicans, against "interests" which haven't yet been defined.

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This is why Marxism is relevant; it isn't a reduction of politics to "material interests," it's a critique of the whole category of "interests." Now, it's true that in the most famous excerpts of Marx there are various references to the antagonistic interests of the two social classes that Marx theorized: the bourgeoisie, who own the means of production, and the proletariat, who have to work for them. It's also true that these excerpts, leading up to "The Communist Manifesto," seem to depict an inevitable process. In this version, the forces of history lead inexorably to workers realizing their objective, economic interests and engaging in revolution to achieve them. These get unified into a kind of textbook interpretation, which has been promulgated by academics as well as by the official socialist movement, which says that workers will ultimately necessarily engage in class struggle when they inevitably realize their objective interests.

But this interpretation of Marx whether it's being advanced by critics of Marxism or Marxists themselves (what used to be called "vulgar Marxists") doesn't accurately convey the insights of Marx's analysis. Specifically, there are two problems.

First, it's one thing to say that the two classes of capitalist societies have antagonistic interests. This is just a description of a social fact: bosses and workers can't both get what they want. Bosses want to get richer, and workers want to live better lives; but as Marx described at length, the bosses only get richer by exploiting workers.

This is all pretty straightforward. But there's big leap from describing these antagonistic interests a relationship between classes to saying that people are fundamentally motivated by economic interests, and that this determines their political behavior. As it happens, that's not a Marxist argument; it's actually the argument of apologists for capitalism like Adam Smith, who were trying to argue that acting in one's self-interest wasn't immoral, but was actually the basis for greater prosperity.

The idea that human action is motivated by interests is a core aspect of capitalist ideology, and it's become such a powerful component of our common sense that sometimes Marxists try to cram their own perspective into it, by arguing that self-interest really has to include sympathy for others. But Smith already argued that sympathy was fundamental to human behavior in his "Theory of Moral Sentiments," which preceded the more famous "Wealth of Nations." The Marxist theory is totally different.

In fact, in some of his earliest writings, Marx had already totally rejected the idea that politics could be equated with individual self-interest even if these interests were seen as the basis for democratic rights, which were Marx's primary concern as a young radical struggling for democracy against the absolutist state in 19th-century Europe. From his vantage point, the problem was not that capitalism violated people's interests, but rather that it separated people from each other and from the community, and furthermore, separated them from their very own powers, which then towered over them in the form of the state.

Marx thought that real emancipation would mean reabsorbing these separated powers into the human community not realizing some abstract "interest." In fact, the reason Marx came to think that the working class would have to lead the revolution for real emancipation wasn't because it represented objective, "material" interests, but because it had no real "interests" within the existing society.

When the bourgeoisie waged a revolution against feudalism as in the American and French revolutions it had represented its own limited, partial class interests as the interests of the whole society. But the proletariat, because it was so totally excluded from the structure of society, could only have an "interest" in universal emancipation, in overcoming the domination of everyone. In other words, the program of the proletariat was the abolition of "interests."

Second, Marx quickly had to abandon the view that revolutions would happen automatically when workers became aware of their exploitation, because right after the appearance of "The Communist Manifesto," the revolutions of 1848 demonstrated that revolutions are extremely complicated processes. There are many different class "interests" at play the interests of aristocrats, landlords, financiers, industrialists, the middle classes, the working class, peasants, and so on. In revolutions, different fractions of society form alliances and make different kinds of demands that hold those alliances together. So these "interests" aren't just reflections of people's objective positions in society, but are constituted by political processes.

Ultimately people might "vote against their interests," the phenomenon which causes so much liberal handwringing today. Marx reflected on this in the aftermath of the revolutions of 1848, noting that there was no clear alignment of interests among the various class fractions. The counterrevolutionary stability of French society ended up being secured by a despotic buffoon this might sound familiar who relied on conservative ideology and the support of the peasantry for his election and subsequent coup.

This meant, for Marx, that he had to shift from just looking at the economic determination of historical events to thinking about the state. The capitalist state had the function of maintaining class rule; in a fundamentally unequal society, there has to be some way of pacifying conflict and ensuring stability. But the way it did this was often contradictory, with different factions in the state advancing different strategies for maintaining power.

The fact that the capitalist state is structured around maintaining the power of the ruling class and this can constantly be verified empirically when you look at the policies politicians advocate, their sources of funding, the social networks they're embedded in, and so on means that socialists trying to enter into the state have the deck stacked against them. They're trying to shift political power towards the working class within a structure that is specifically designed to exclude the working class from governance. The response from the Democratic Party to the unexpected (albeit short-lived) success of the Sanders campaign showed precisely how this works: politicians will form alliances and use the party apparatus against the opposition.

The easiest way to maintain ruling-class power is through violence, and capitalist states have not been shy about doing so in the past. But in democratic societies, this can't be the standard operating procedure. Violence is still used in the form of the police and the military, but the state has to gain popular consent, and the Marxist term for how this happens is "ideology."

Liberal pundits tend to talk about ideology in terms of opinions people hold, which are supposed to determine how they vote. This is quite distinct from the Marxist theory of ideology, which is not about consciously held opinions. It's clear that there's frequently a disconnect between people's opinions on policy issues and their voting behavior. Furthermore, people's opinions change all the time; I have personally changed my opinion on several matters over the past few weeks.

So ideology is better understood as the way we form our ideas as a result of everyday habits that we're trained in by our existing institutions. Voting is such a habit. If I spend my entire adult life choosing between two political parties which each represent the same position on certain fundamental questions about the nature of our society for example, whether healthcare is a human right that habit generates certain patterns of thought which I may not even consciously consider. Presented with the choice between a candidate who advocates policies that the whole political system says is impossible, and a candidate who is backed by the whole party apparatus, I may make a choice that is in my "interests" as a Democratic voter rather than as a worker.

Someone should tell Vox's editors that recognizing the role of ideology doesn't mean thinking that people are dupes. It means understanding why people consent to a system which systematically exploits them.

That's why the theory of ideology isn't the same as talking about "false consciousness" (a phrase Marx never used), which we could contrast to an authentic, transparent, "class consciousness." Our "consciousness" is determined by all kinds of different, frequently contradictory aspects of our environments and personal histories. If it's going to work, ideology has to be articulated in a way that speaks to our experiences, in languages that really represent the different facets of our lives. Emphasizing class doesn't mean ignoring those languages in fact, these "cultural" factors are part of the way we understand and experience class.

So a serious Marxist theory and strategy understands that changing people's opinions will mean actually engaging with the language and symbolism of ideology. To a significant extent, the Sanders campaign did do that. It won large support among immigrants not only by appealing to their "material" interests but also by emphasizing Bernie's immigrant background, doing extensive outreach in Spanish, demonstrating Bernie's alliances with young politicians who are also immigrants, and so on. These representational strategies are extremely important, and socialists today ignore them at their peril.

But there is no incompatibility between engaging in an "ideological struggle" and advocating for policies that concern people's material conditions. Or, better, there is only an incompatibility if socialists fail to put together a strategy that can unite them.

As the great Marxist theorist Stuart Hall wrote: "material interests, on their own, have no necessary class belongingness. They influence us. But they are not escalators which automatically deliver people to their appointed destinations, 'in place,' within the political ideological spectrum."

After all, our "material interests" can be pursued in many different ways. Vox says that "Identity, in all its complexities, appears to be far more powerful in shaping voters' behaviors than the material interests given pride of place in Marxist theory." But this just kicks the explanatory can down the road. A white male voter might think it is in his "interest" to preserve race and gender inequalities for the privileges that they confer. But a socialist organization which operates on the principles of solidarity can argue to this voter that it would better serve his interest to give up these privileges in favor of a unified movement against economic inequality. These interests are constituted politically, by organizations which can change the everyday habits that generate ideology. When we act differently and relate to each other in different ways, we can have new ideas. People don't "vote against their interests"; they vote according to what they understand their interests to be within the limitations that exist. If there are organized practices which can change these limitations, those interests can also change.

So Vox is right to say that people aren't ultimately motivated by economic interests. But this isn't an argument against Marxism. The most important and fundamental component of Marxism isn't the idea that people are motivated by economic interests which, as I've pointed out, is a residue of capitalist ideology that Marxism criticized. The core of Marxism is the idea of emancipation. Marxism became a powerful force in history because it aimed at universal emancipation, and this project was taken up by revolutionary movements around the world. People risked their lives for emancipation, and in many cases died for it. What this history shows us is that emancipation goes definitively beyond interests. Every time someone goes on strike or stands up to police violence, they are acting against their immediate interests they could be fired or killed. But when people do risk poverty and death for a political cause, they demonstrate that we human animals are capable of much more than pursuing our immediate interests. We can act in the name of the principle that whatever happens to us individually, no one should go hungry.

Today, every nurse who goes into a hospital to treat patients suffering from COVID-19, knowing that they put their own lives at risk, demonstrates that human beings are capable of acting in the name of solidarity rather than immediate self-interest. And they are challenging us to take that solidarity to its conclusion. In a moving reflection on being a nurse during the pandemic, Emily Pierskalla of the Minnesota Nurses Association writes that if she dies while caring for the sick, "I want you to politicize my death. I want you to use it as fuel to demand change in this industry, to demand protection, living wages, and safe working conditions for nurses and ALL workers."

Capitalist society is built to undermine this solidarity in the name of self-interest, and even if previous socialist strategies have failed, the task remains the same. That's the real lesson of Marxism, and it has never ceased to be relevant.

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Bernie Sanders' campaign proved that organizing around class interests works - Salon

Crushing coronavirus means ‘breaking the habits of a lifetime.’ Behavior scientists have some tips – Science Magazine

Researchers have been deeply involved in developing messages aimed at changing people's behavior to curb the coronavirus pandemic, and studying which ones work.

By Warren CornwallApr. 16, 2020 , 10:50 AM

Science's COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center.

With no vaccine or medication to cope with the novel coronavirus, people around the world have soughtor been ordered to seekprotection by changing the way they act in ways large and small, from their washing hands more frequently to avoiding almost all physical contact. Now, government and industry leaders are turning to behavioral scientists for advice on how to persuade their citizens and workers to abide by such dramatic changes.

To beat the pandemic, we need a more rapid change of behavior than I can think of in recent human history, says Robb Willer, a sociologist at Stanford University. He recently helped recruit more than 40 top behavioral scientists to summarize their fields research on how to steer people into certain actions and how it might aid the response to the pandemic.

Politicians and executives are on the hunt for such advice. Facebook and Twitter have consulted Willer about ways to improve communicating coronavirus-related information and avoid pitfalls. Jay Van Bavel, a psychologist at New York University who led the review with Willer, shared insights from the work with approximately 700 people at an early April teleconference about pandemic misinformation hosted by the World Health Organization. Governments ranging from the United Kingdom to Sierra Leone have reached out to other behavioral researchers.

Their advice is already proving consequential, though not always successful. The government of the United Kingdom initially avoided closing schools and businesses, citing advice from its vaunted Nudge Unit, which helps policymakers develop subtle ways to incentivize certain behaviors. The unit had reportedly warned that restricting movement too soon risked behavioral fatigue. But the government reversed course in late March after novel coronavirus infections surged.

In their search for practical guidance, behavioral scientists are plumbing previous research into disease outbreaks such as the flu and Ebola, as well as seemingly unrelated subjects including cigarette warning labels and political campaigns. Meanwhile, they are rushing ahead with new studies aimed at improving measures during the current crisis.

Many of their recommendations might seem like common sense and can be distilled to this: Have a unified set of fact-based messages, tailor them to different audiences, and choose your messengers wisely. A common message can help give people confidence to take action, particularly at a moment when fear motivates people, says Shana Gadarian, a political scientist at Syracuse University who has studied how anxieties influence political action in the United States.

Even robust messages can lose power, however, when leaders send contradictory signals, or when public health advice gets refracted through a political lens. In the UnitedStates, President Donald Trump has repeatedly contradicted recommendations from public health officials, notably saying he probably wouldnt wear a face mask on the day that both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and first lady Melania Trump urged people to do just that. Early in the pandemic, figures in conservative news outlets had derided calls for an aggressive response to the virus as a hoax or an attack on the Trump administration. "When you hear [health] experts saying one thing and the head of your [political] party saying another, thats a troubling kind of thing to decide, Gadarian says. In the United States, What we're seeing evidence of is that Republicans are basically going with what the president says.

In a survey of 3000 people in the United States in mid-March, Gadarian found that political leanings were the strongest predictor of whether someone was likely to follow public health recommendations. Democrats were more inclined than Republicans to wash hands, buy hand sanitizer, and distance themselves from others. As COVID-19 has spread to more parts of the country, that partisan divide has shrunk but not vanished, according to a poll in late March by the Kaiser Family Foundation. More than 90% of people across the political spectrum reported engaging in some kind of social distancing. But Democrats were more likely to have stayed home, canceled plans for a group gathering, or fully sheltered-in-place. A survey in early April by Stanford researchers still found a partisan gap.

That ideological split is stronger in the United States than in the United Kingdom, says Gordon Pennycook, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Regina in Saskatchewan, Canada. He and collaborators surveyed approximately 650 people in each country to see what influenced misperceptions about the pandemic, such as the coronavirus being no worse than the flu. The study, published as a preprint this week, found that in the United States, misperceptions were correlated with whether someone got their information from conservative news outlets such as Fox News. Although the United Kingdom has conservative newspapers, theres no comparable television broadcast station, Pennycook says. "Also, [Prime Minister] Boris Johnson is not treating [the pandemic] the same way that Trump is."

Whether people respond to public health messages depends partly on who delivers it. That was underscored in Liberia during the deadly Ebola outbreak of 2014 and 2015, which killed nearly 5000 people in the West African nation. There, efforts by government workers to get people to follow precautions such as social distancing were stymied by suspicions that the disease was a government ploy to win more aid money. But neighborhood volunteers recruited and trained by government officials experienced much more success, says Lily Tsai, a political behavioral scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who studied the Ebola response there. She concluded that residents found neighbors more credible partly because their connections to the community made them more accountable.

The identity of a trusted messenger depends on the situation. It could be local religious leaders or politicians, sports figures or celebrities, Gadarian says. Governors leading their states pandemic responses have enjoyed a surge in popularity. In a late March Instagram chat, basketball star Stephen Curry of Californias Golden State Warriors discussed the disease and how to avoid it with Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. The video has had nearly half a million views on YouTube.

Messages can come in more subtle ways as well. Proponents of nudges emphasize the ways that small visual cues, brief reminders or tiny changes in peoples surroundings can change their actions. In the case of the coronavirus, it can be as simple as painting lines on a walking path to show what a 2-meter separation looks like, says Susan Michie, a health psychologist at University College London and director of its Centre for Behaviour Change.

She is contemplating how to break people of the habit of touching their faces, because the virus infects people through the mucus membranes that line the nose and airways. She wonders whether software on a persons camera-enabled computer or smartphone could alert them of a face touch. Its about breaking the habits of a lifetime and setting up slightly different habits, she says.

It will take more than just messages to change behaviors on such a mammoth scale, says Ann Bostrom, who studies risk perception and communication at the University of Washington, Seattle. Often, compliance hinges on giving people the tools they need to easily follow new rules. The physical context in which you make these decisions is often more important than grand ideological views, Bostrom says. If theres a mask available from the dispenser at the front of the building, youre probably more likely to put it on. Ditto for easy availability of things like hand sanitizer, others say.

Making behavioral changes easy to maintain could become particularly important as lockdowns stretch on and strains build, Michie says. Past research has found compliance during an epidemic can decline over time. The U.K. government, she adds, might need to take measures to avoid backsliding and make a lockdown tolerable, including opening golf courses and private sports fields so that people can get outside without being crammed together. The government could even provide people with tablet computers and videos to help them pass the time at home.

Tsai, whose behavioral research focuses on people in the developing world, says that in poorer nations, persuading people to obey a lockdown could come down to something as simple as ensuring access to drinking water. Shes launching an ambitious project in the West African country of Sierra Leone that uses detailed behavioral data to figure out what tools can best promote social distancing and limited movement there. Shes working with the countrys public health ministry, for example, to combine cellphone movement data with surveys of almost 3000 people across this country of 6.6 million. The goal is to gauge what messages are most effective, and what incentives would encourage residents to stay homewhether its information, money, water, food, or a combination.

Eventually, Tsai plans to create a dynamic map, down to the neighborhood level, showing potential hotspots where cooperation could be difficult, and what kinds of actions are likely to help ease acceptance of physical distancing and other measures. She is also hoping to expand the project to some of the continents largest cities, Lagos, Nigeria, and Nairobi, Kenya, to help prepare them for when the virus gains a foothold there. When the disease arrives in these sprawling cities, she fears, its going to be awful.

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Crushing coronavirus means 'breaking the habits of a lifetime.' Behavior scientists have some tips - Science Magazine

What About This? By Wayne William Cipriano – Douglas County Herald

I was wrong.

In a previous article presented here, I did not take Covid-19 as seriously as I should have. I should have taken into my consideration how resoundingly stipid so many persons have proven themselves to be.

Who would go out as before into an environment that offered a very high transmission rate of a fairly serious respiratory illness? Even before we learned how high the mortality rate was, the mere possibility of catching a very debilitating flu, you would think, would encourage all of us to stay away from places and situations where we could catch it.

In that previous article I argued that hysteria seemed to be ruling our news sources. I now realize that hysteria may well be a rational response in the face of a population that doesnt seem to understand simple precautions delivered in English and must, it seems, be scared into proper defensive behavior.

I suggested that the overall rate of illness and death would not be as damaging to us as a population as our yearly sacrifice of limb and life to automobiles. I suspect that I was wrong about that it looks like the final totals of casualties due to Covid-19 may surpass that over our use of the highways. But whether that proves to be the case or not, Covid-19 has really hurt us.

I listed the same few behaviors we have all heard so often to protect ourselves from Covid-19: wash our hands; avoid anyone coughing or sneezing; stay away from crowds; stay home if we are sick from ANYTHING. The things we seem to find so difficult to do.

In my defense, I thought many of us would follow those suggestions and I continue to believe if we had Covid-19 would not have been so bad here. But I should have recalled that if we over-react (hyper-hysteria) and we do not get sick, perhaps we look silly; if we under-react (by not following protective guidelines as so many, unaccountably, have not) we get sick, maybe dead.

We have hear of persons, cities, states that refused to recognize the danger of carrying on as normal when normal behavior could subject one to a very serious virus.

We have seen youngsters, totally lacking even the most self-protective impulses, almost dare Covid-19 to attack them. We have even seen parents and other responsible adults allow and even finance gatherings of these youngsters that place them in serious jeopardy.

But, that behavior is not simply of the young, is it?

I was wrong to rely on what I had considered rational persons would do in the face of a serious but fairly easily avoided epidemic. Some other guy might have waited to pontificate upon the hysteria that I called out in the media until the actual numbers were in. But if we always reserve our remarks until after the fact, wait until we see how each and every chip has fallen, we are not responsible social commentators, we are simply historians.

I will try to look at the future with a greater appreciation for what I have learned, once again, about human behavior. But I remain adamant that if ALL OF US washed our hands frequently, stayed away from anyone coughing or sneezing, avoided all crowds, and stayed home if we experienced any feelings of illness at all, Covid-19 would not have done to us what it has.

Has it come to pass that the only way to get people to do the right thing in cases such as this is to terrify them by what may happen even if those scary stories are irrational? But if we do we throw in the towel and admit that most of us are fools. Maybe there is a reason, maybe a very good reason to lie and exaggerate for the ultimate good. But what does that do to our (my) expectation to be told the Truth about other stuff?

I do not think that trade off is acceptable, even when it is employed in what some may think is the ultimate good. But thats just me. You have a say in this, too. What seems better to you?

Nevertheless, in that previous article in this space I was presumptively inaccurate.

I was wrong.

Related

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What About This? By Wayne William Cipriano - Douglas County Herald

Does Age Correspond With Altruism? – The National Interest

Looking for something to binge-watch while youre hunkering down at home?

Consider checking out the popular TV show The Good Place. Over four recently concluded seasons, the series follows the adventures and mishaps of four utterly self-centered characters on their quest to become decent and selfless human beings.

The deeper question this philosophy-laced comedy raises is: Can people be truly selfless?

The technical term for this behavior is altruism the willingness to help others, even at a cost to your own well-being. And if the answer to that question is yes, then are those of us who are selfish able to transform ourselves into kind and selfless individuals?

Im a psychologist who uses brain science to understand how people make decisions. With my team at the University of Oregon, I am investigating why many of us behave altruistically, whether human beings become more altruistic with age and even whether its possible to learn how to be altruistic.

Stumped philosophers

Whether people do altruistic deeds because of their altruistic nature or out of ulterior motives is a question that has stumped philosophers, religious thinkers and social scientists for centuries, because selfishness can inspire seemingly altruistic acts.

For example, people may give away money to show off their wealth, to appear trustworthy or simply to feel good about themselves.

Even Pamela Hieronymi, a University of California, Los Angeles philosopher who informally served as a consultant for the hit TV show, has expressed serious skepticism about whether anyone can turn from selfish to selfless.

Brain patterns

How do scholars like me study what goes on in peoples brains?

My team had participants in a series of experiments lie in MRI scanners, looking at a screen that described different scenarios. Sometimes my colleagues and I told them that US$20 was being transferred to their bank accounts. At other times, the same amount would go to a charity, such as a local food pantry. Participants simply observed these $20 transfers, either to themselves or to the charity, without having any say in the matter.

All the while, we scanned what neuroscientists consider the brains reward centers, specifically the nucleus accumbens.

This region, which is a little bigger than a peanut, plays a role in everything from sexual gratification to drug addiction and related neural sites. It becomes active when something happens that makes you happy and that you would like to see repeated in the future.

The experience of money going to the charity boosted activity in those reward areas of the brain for many of our participants. And exactly this observation, we argue, is a manifestation of peoples true altruistic nature: They felt rewarded when someone in need becomes better off, even if they didnt directly do anything to make a difference.

We found that in about half of our study participants, activity in these reward areas was even stronger when the money went to the charity than when it landed in their own bank accounts. We determined that these people could be neurally defined as altruists.

Then, in a separate stage of the experiment, all of these same participants had the choice to either give some of their money away or to keep it for themselves. Here, the neural altruists were about twice as likely as the others to give their money away.

We believe that this finding indicates that purely altruistic motives can drive generous behavior and that brain imaging can detect those motives.

Aging and altruism

In a related study my colleagues and I conducted, there were 80 participants who were between 20 and 64 years old, but otherwise were comparable in terms of their backgrounds. We found that the proportion of altruists that is, those whose reward areas were more active when money went to the charity than to themselves steadily increased with age, going from less than 25% through age 35 to around 75% among individuals 55 and older.

Also, older participants tended to become more willing to give their money to charity or to volunteer in this experiment. And when assessing their personality characteristics through questionnaires, our group found that they exhibited traits such as agreeableness and empathy more strongly than younger participants.

These observations align with growing evidence of more altruistic acts in the elderly. For example, the share of their income that 60-year-olds give to charity is three times as much as for 25-year-olds. This is significant even though they tend to have more money in general, making it easier to part with some of it.

People who are 60 and up are about 50% more likely to volunteer. They are also nearly twice as likely to vote as those under 30.

However, our results are the first to clearly demonstrate that older adults do not just act like they are nicer people, which might easily be driven by selfish motives such as making it more likely that they will be remembered fondly once they are gone. Rather, the fact that their reward areas are so much more responsive to experiencing people in need being helped suggests that they are actually, on average, kinder and genuinely more interested in the welfare of others than everyone else.

The road ahead

These findings raise lots of additional, important questions that we cover in an article we published in Current Directions in Psychological Science, an academic journal. For example, additional research is needed in which people are followed across time to make sure that the age difference in generosity truly reflects personal growth, and not just generational differences. Also, we need to generalize our results to larger samples from more varied backgrounds.

Most importantly, we dont yet know why older adults appear to be more generous than younger folks. My colleagues and I are planning to look into whether realizing that you have fewer years to live makes you more concerned about the greater good.

For the lead characters in The Good Place, the journey toward selflessness is an arduous ordeal. In real life, it may simply be a natural part of growing older.

[You need to understand the coronavirus pandemic, and we can help. Read The Conversations newsletter.]

Ulrich Mayr, Lewis Professor and Department Head of Psychology, University of Oregon

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Image: Reuters.

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Does Age Correspond With Altruism? - The National Interest

Survivor: Winners at War Recap: In Love and War – Vulture

Survivor

Full Circle

Season 40 Episode 10

Editors Rating 3 stars ***

Photo: Robert Voets/CBS Entertainment

Last year,Survivorhost and executive producerJeff Probst sent out a tweetasking if fans would like to see more two-hour-long episodes. The response was almost a resounding yes. With the increasingly complex gameplay, the influx of advantages, and time-sucking twists such as the Edge of Extinction, it was becoming near impossible to craft a coherent narrative in a regular 60-minute episode (42 minutes without commercials). Unfortunately, as mighty and powerful as Jeff is in the world ofSurvivor, he has no jurisdiction over the CBS schedule, as he explained in aWinners At Warpreseason interview. A couple of double episodes per season were as much as CBS was willing to budge.

Its episodes like this, though, that demonstrate the need for a longer weekly runtime. In an effort to cram so much in, including 19 (yes, NINETEEN) family visits, it means that we bounce all over the place with no real sense of direction. This is particularly damaging in a game where the dynamics are continually shifting and new strategies are always forming. The less time we spend at camp, the harder it is to figure out just what exactly is going on. Alliances change at a moments notice for no real rhyme or reason. Relationships we thought were meaningful are thrown aside like an old pair of underwear. And the final vote leaves us in a puddle of perplexion, our brains melting out of our ears. I understand the element of surprise, but there is a difference between a good surprise and a bad surprise. Surprise! Weve bought you a new car!Unexpected and amazing!Surprise! Mom and Dad are getting a divorce!Wait, what? Why is this happening? What does it all mean?!This episode falls firmly in the latter category.

The reason the final 15 minutes is so slapdash is in large part due to the extended family visit that takes up almost 30 minutes of the episode. A staple ofSurvivor, the family visit continues to divide the fanbase. Some people love it, others hate it. Personally, while I think the family visit has provided some classic moments over the years (Jonny Fairplays infamous dead grandma lie being the number one), its not something I find especially entertaining. That doesnt mean Im an emotionless monster, I promise. There are times I get a little choked up, including this episode, which amped up the emotion by bringing the castaways children out to the island. My issue is more with how melodramatically these moments are handled by the show itself, down to Jeffs incessant exposition, as if hes an android trying to process human behavior. It all gets a little bit Lifetime movie special with its sentimental platitudes and histrionic soundtrack.

Dont get me wrong, there are some sweet scenes. Sarah joking that her son is playing with the enemy as all the different kids run around the beach together is funny. Seeing the return of Nadiya, Val, Rachel, and John all of whom have played this game themselves is exciting. And there is some unifying power in seeing families reunite in these uncertain times when many people are separated from their closest loved ones. But boy, does this episode milk the melodrama. Just when you think this feature-length lovefest is drawing to a close, no, the eliminated players on the Edge also get a surprise visit from their families. Again, its cute seeing Parvati cuddle her baby daughter and Rob and Amber showing their four girls where their love story started. But half an hour of hugging and crying begins to grate. Obviously, the excessiveness of this family visit has some contractual bargaining behind it. I imagine the promise of a visit from their kids was what got many of these past winners to agree to return. In fact, in a pregame interview, Tyson admits as much, claiming he put his foot down about having his daughter be part of the family visit. So, I get that, and I dont begrudge these players for making demands, especially after all theyve givenSurvivorover the years. But I didnt need to see so damn much of it.

An Immunity Challenge immediately follows, which leaves us with about ten minutes for the pre-Tribal strategizing. And theres a lot going on! Tony is the only person 100 percent safe, having won his first-ever Individual Immunity necklace, ironically in a challenge that required patience, a quality diametrically opposed to Tonys usual playstyle. Slow and steady is not what Im made of, he laughs. Im more fast and sloppy. Regardless of whatever the reading is on his speedometer, Tony is bulletproof tonight, and, therefore, powerful. Various players approach him with their plans. Jeremy wants to split up Sarah and Sophie, who he perceives as a growing threat to his game. Sarah, meanwhile, is interested in taking out Kim but gets into a comical quarrel with her Cops R Us partner over whether thats the right move or not. You see, Tony would much prefer removing Tyson over Kim. Talking to Tony is like talking to a rock, says a flustered Sarah. And this is going to end badly if we cant work it out.

Things only get wilder from here. Tony checks in with Ben and Nick and presents an alternative plan blindsiding Jeremy. At this point, Im wondering what happened to the big threats alliance between Tony, Jeremy, Ben, and Tyson? Clearly, there is no time to explain, as the Jeremy plan picks up momentum, particularly after Tony tells Sarah that Jeremy threw her name out. Then, Kim, realizing shes on the outs, convinces Jeremy and Tyson that they need to stick together. Now, these three are remnants of the once-feared Poker Alliance, but there is no mention of that in the episode. Theyre just suddenly together because reasons. And Denise and Michele are with them too. Although Michele was previously aligned with Nick, who is now voting with the other alliance? You see what I mean? Some significant pieces are missing from this story. And just when you think youve got it all in place, a sack full of grenades is emptied onto the table in the form of advantages.

Kim tells her alliance about her idol and how shes happy to play it for one of them. Im willing to go to the Edge making a move, she states. Across the beach, Jeremy informs Tyson of his Safety Without Power advantage, which allows him to leave Tribal before the votes are cast. Tyson warns him not to use it because they need his vote for the numbers. Meanwhile, Sophie suggests Sarah use her Vote Steal in order to avoid a potential rock draw. This is a war, Sophie says. And when the smoke clears, well see who is dead in the trenches. Thats a quote worthy of aSurvivorepic, and I wont lie, there is an electrifying energy before and during Tribal Council. The proceedings again rapidly descend into a hodgepodge of side conversations and not-so-covert whispering. You cant ever truly know what is going on, remarks Kim as she takes a brief respite from the chaos to answer Jeffs question. Hey, at least its not just me who is lost.

Tribal Council culminates in a cavalcade of advantages. Jeremy and Sarah face off in a hilarious game of chicken as they both go to play their secret powers at the same time. You go first, says Sarah. No, ladies first, Jeremy responds. Its a tense stalemate as both players try to keep their cards hidden, not wanting to tip off the other. Sarah stands her ground, though, forcing Jeremy to make the first move, revealing his Safety Without Power advantage and saying peace out to tonights Tribal. He left his squad, comments Wendell from the jury bench. Its hard to knock Jeremys decision, though, as he was clearly the intended target judging by the disorder that follows. Sophie firmly, and smartly, puts a stop to the scrambling by loudly suggesting the five in her alliance simply huddle together and decide who theyre voting for. This leaves the minority of Kim, Denise, Michele, and Tyson to work out where the vote is going to land so that Kim can correctly play her idol. In a brilliant bit of misdirection, Sarah uses her Steal A Vote on Denise, not only bagging herself an extra vote but making it appear that Denise is the target, causing Kim to misplay her idol. The real mark is Tyson, who is sent back to the Edge, hopefully where his jar of peanut butter is waiting for him.

Exciting? Sure. But satisfying? Thats debatable. The vote count wound up being five for Tyson, two for Denise, and two for Sophie, which, when you think about it for a second, doesnt make any sense. Why were there only two Sophie votes when Kim, Michele, and Tyson were supposedly voting together? Did one of them flip? They must have, but the episode didnt bother to show us the who or the why. Logic would dictate the flipper was Michele, but that requires us as viewers to fill in the gaps, which shouldnt be how this works. You dont get to the end of a book only to be told to write the final chapter yourself although, I wouldnt have minded that option forThe Girl on the Train. Maybe if we hadnt spent half the runtime watchingSurvivor Family Robinson,we could have had a more comprehensible and, ultimately, a more rewarding story. Either that or CBS givesSurvivorwhat it deserves, longer weekly episodes!

Its fitting that Tyson leaves in the episode he gets to see his wife and daughter, given his story has focused on how fatherhood has changed him.

Jeff randomly thanking Fiji Airways for flying all the family members out is a little jarring. But I get it, that must have been a noisy plane journey!

As tired as I was with the family stuff by the end, the post-credits sequence of the Edge inhabitants group hugging Jeff to thank him for bringing their loved ones out was sweet.

Im glad we didnt have to compete for our children. Dont speak too soon Ben, thats the next twist!

Keep up with all the drama of your favorite shows!

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Survivor: Winners at War Recap: In Love and War - Vulture