Calling BS on the security skills shortage – VentureBeat

Much has been made of the security skills shortage over the last few years. In headlines, at conferences, and in survey after survey, warnings are popping up, all with the same dire predictions: There are more and more ways for hackers to breach digital gates and not enough gatekeepers out there to stop them.

Theres no disputing we have more open security positions than we have available applicants to fill them. And, at first glance, the statistics are staggering: 3.5 million cybersecurity jobs will be available yet unfilled by 2021, despite ransomware attacks growing 350% year-over-year. Thats certainly cause for concern especially as attackers become more sophisticated, creating new techniques and approaches to overcome barriers intended to block them. But placing blame squarely on a security skills shortage overlooks the real issue at hand.

What we have in this industry isnt a skills shortage. Its a creativity problem in hiring. To close the existing talent gap and attract more candidates to the field, we need to do more to uncover potential applicants from varied backgrounds and skill sets, instead of searching for nonexistent unicorn candidates people with slews of certifications (like CISSP, CompTIAPenTest+, CySA+, CASP+, CEH, CISSP and CISM), long tenures in the industry (10+ or, in some cases, 20+ years of experience longer than most relevant technology has been around), and specialized skills in not one, but several, tech stacks and disciplines (from cloud security to app sec and compliance).

But how? By dropping the secret-handshake-society mindset that enables a lack of diversity in the workforce, deters new entrants to the field, and, ultimately, undermines our ability to stay secure in the long run.

Hiring a security team that thinks the same, is educated the same, and looks and talks the same leads to blind spots. Yet cybersecurity is wrapped up in an air of mystique, from the words we use (malware, ransomware, cryptojacking, encryption) to the image we present (shadowy figures in hoodies). And that reputation, as an exclusive, elite club has allowed hiring across the board to become homogeneous. According to a recent global study, 89% of the cybersecurity industry is male, with less than a third from underrepresented groups. And, only 7% of cybersecurity pros are under the age of 29.

Part of the problem is a lack of awareness about cybersecurity as a viable career path for candidates inside and outside of tech, largely due to our longstanding cloak and dagger approach to what we do. If you asked most folks outside of the industry what the work of a cybersecurity professional entails, Id imagine very few would be able to tell you. That needs to change. Expanding our recruiting pool and increasing the size of our talent pipeline starts with dropping our dark arts attitude and making security more accessible and easily understood whether its through increased visibility at job fairs and career days at a range of institutions, building a pipeline of mentorship programs, or hosting inter-departmental workshops and information sessions.

To reel in more candidates, we need to be verbose about the day-to-day responsibilities of the job, articulate a path for career growth, and dispel the lone wolf stereotype that permeates this line of work. The more we step out of the shadows and make cybersecurity more approachable, the easier it is for people to understand what a career in cybersecurity actually entails which, in turn, enables them to see themselves working in our industry.

Of course, a large part of the puzzle is expanding our hiring funnel by recruiting outside of our narrow channel of established candidates. Security wins when its multi-disciplinary and when we hire people from varied backgrounds. Yet we, as an industry, over-index on pedigree and certifications all the time, even though some of the greatest minds in our field dont have certifications, or for that matter, college degrees. Ive seen it happen firsthand a hiring committee more willing to hire candidates with a degree from an elite university and a splashy tech internship under their belt than a career changer from a separate, yet related, field. Ive even experienced it in my own career, with a startup manager once telling me to my face that I didnt look like security despite a resume and a computer engineering degree that said otherwise.

Cybersecurity isnt sorcery. Security-specific skills can be taught. We need to do away with narrow criteria for who will be a good fit for many security roles and shift the way we evaluate resumes so that we look critically at what a candidate is capable or doing instead of looking solely at what theyve already done. Too often, we look externally for certain skill sets to be filled before a candidate gets to us, either via degrees, certifications, or completed coursework. But the pool of talent that already has those skills is too small. To create the talent supply to fill demand, we need to reach talent that has the aptitude and ability to learn and apply the necessary skills for the job. That means organizations need to get creative and develop their own learning and development initiatives for skill-building, whether its a large-scale training initiative aimed at career changers, or something as simple as hosting workshops, meetups, lunch-and-learns, or informational office hours.

De-emphasizing degrees and certifications in job postings levels the playing field and creates more opportunities for diamond-in-the-rough candidates to stand out to hiring managers. Case in point: One of the best and brightest security professionals I ever mentored started her career as a front desk receptionist. She didnt have the credentials that other cybersecurity professionals had starting out, but she was used to understanding the nuances of human behavior and picking up on anomalies, a critical skill for cybersecurity experts. With guidance and mentoring, she has gone on to become a senior technical program manager in information security.

Rethinking the way we evaluate resumes also means a shift in how we write job posts and how we evaluate candidates once they walk in the door. That means incorporating a first-principles problem-solving approach to recruiting. Oftentimes we ask, What do we think this job opening should be, and has a candidate done that job elsewhere before? Instead, we should ask, What is this person going to do? What is their job going to be? And how should we test for that job?

Inclusive language has been shown, across the board, to increase the quality and depth of talent, with Deloitte indicating companies that harness inclusive talent and recruiting strategies have 30% higher revenue per employee than those that dont. Cybersecurity shouldnt be any different. When it comes to job postings, the language we use should be aimed at drawing people in, instead of blocking people out. That starts with incorporating inclusive and easily-understood language (eg: Develop easy-to-use tools and light-weight processes that will help our engineers seamlessly write secure code.), instead of implicit messages that dissuade candidates from applying (eg: leading with years of experience requirements, or a laundry list of security-specific buzzwords that are indecipherable to most of the outside world).

But adding inclusive language to job posts only goes so far. Once candidates arrive on-site, replacing traditional, academic skills tests with interactive exercises and values and motivations assessments can go a long way in enabling hiring managers to explore and evaluate a candidates ability to find real-world solutions, both on their own and alongside the teams theyd be working with. That way, we assess candidates for true security mindset and problem-solving skills, beyond their ability to manage security tools.

Cybersecurity doesnt have a skills shortage. We have a culture problem that manifests in the ways we source and recruit talent. By removing barriers to entry, prioritizing potential over pedigree, and re-engineering the way we recruit and interview candidates, we can welcome more cybersecurity professionals into the herd instead of continuing the ongoing unicorn hunt that will get us nowhere.

Fredrick Flee Lee is CISO of Gusto.

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Calling BS on the security skills shortage - VentureBeat

Being angry? That’s being human – The Riverdale Press

To the editor:

(re: Anger is just not the way to go, Dec. 19)

Anger is one of the basic human emotions, as elemental as happiness, sadness, anxiety or disgust.

These emotions are tied to basic survival, and were honed over the course of human history. Anger is related to the fight, flight or freeze response of the sympathetic nervous system. It prepares humans to fight. But fighting doesnt necessarily mean throwing punches. It might motivate communities to combat injustice by changing laws or enforcing new behavioral norms.

Of course, anger too easily or frequently mobilized can undermine relationships, and it can be deleterious to bodies in the long term. Prolonged release of the stress hormone that accompanies anger can destroy neurons in areas of the brain associated with judgment and short-term memory, and weaken the immune system.

Everyone knows the feeling. Its that rage that rises when a driver is cut off on the highway, and just wants to floor it and flip the bird. Anger doesnt dissipate just because it is unleashed. In fact, that can reinforce and deepen it.

Like all emotions, anger should be monitored via self-awareness, lest it cause self-harm or erupt into hostile, aggressive or even violent behavior toward others. Support groups for anger management are available in many cities.

In group or individual settings, cognitive restructuring may be helpful as it coaches patients on re-framing unhealthy, inflammatory thoughts.

Howard Cohn

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Being angry? That's being human - The Riverdale Press

Why is there so much confusion with the signs of the Zodiac? Yours may not be the one you think – Sportsfinding

Everyone knows that according to the date on which a person was born, a Zodiac sign is assigned. Each of them influences a person's personality and way of acting, but not everyone believes that this is possible. Even so, each person knows what their zodiac symbol is, and yet the thing can change after a fact that we have long passed.

In ancient times, realizing that around the sun the same constellations crossed the sky and believe that their position affected human behavior, experts determined that according to the date on which a person was born would have one sign or another. As a consequence, 12 signs of the Zodiac were determined, the same number of signs that there are at present, but that are not the same as at that time.

Among the original signs of the Zodiac was Ophiuchus. The problem that this sign is currently unknown is due to the desire of a famous historical figure. Julio Csar wanted to have his own sign and from there Libra was born. However, to include it the number of signs amounted to 13 and from that time that number was bad luck. To solve it, they removed Ophiuchus to return to his initial number of 12.

To this fact it must be added that, when determining the dates that mark a sign of the Zodiac, the equinoxes must be taken into account and how the appearance of constellations varies over time. So as a consequence, the signs of the Zodiac are not what we really think. Each sign belongs to the following dates:

Aries: From April 19 to May 14

Taurus: From May 14 to June 21

Gemini: From June 21 to July 21

Cancer: From July 21 to August 11

Leo: From August 11 to September 16

Virgo: From September 16 to October 31

Pound: From October 31 to November 23

Scorpio: From November 23 to November 29

Ophiuchus: From November 29 to December 18

Sagittarius: From December 18 to January 19

Capricorn: From January 19 to February 16

Aquarium: From February 16 to March 12

Pisces: From March 12 to April 19

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Why is there so much confusion with the signs of the Zodiac? Yours may not be the one you think - Sportsfinding

Are you an economist or psychologist? Valve wants to work with you newsdio – NewsDio

If you've always wanted to work for a game developer but you don't have the talent or technical skills to become a designer, I have good news: Valve is looking to fill a range of new positions, and not all of them require a Design Portfolio.

As reported by The Loadout, Valve is announcing a series of vacancies, which include a handful of positions that cannot be expected, including an internal economist, a psychologist and a statistician.

Detailed ads and personal specifications offer a rare view of Valve and its current priorities, not only in game design, but also in other aspects of its business, from human resources to data analysis.

"To create exceptional products that people will use and appreciate, we need to know about human behavior and the underlying motivations and influences on how and why people do what they do," says a job announcement that seeks to recruit a psychologist. "We believe that all game designers are, in a sense, experimental psychologists. That is why we are looking for an experimental psychologist with superior research skills to apply knowledge and methodologies from psychology to game design and all aspects of Valve operations ".

"We want to take advantage of your experience with experimental design, research methods, statistics and human behavior to help create even more compelling gaming experiences for future Valve titles. We also hope you investigate and evaluate each and every one of the issues which are relevant to improve the experiences of our customers, partners and employees, "he adds.

"One thing we have in Valve is the data. Lots and lots of data," added another looking for an economist. "We are looking for an experienced economist to help us take advantage of all that information to improve our clients' experiences and make better decisions."

You think you have what it takes? Go to the Valve mini racing site and submit your request. Good luck!

In other news from Valve, when the developer officially unveiled Half-Life: Alyx at the end of last year, perhaps there was a little skepticism that the game would meet its expected release date for March 2020, perfectly understandable given Waiting for twelve years between series installments However, Valve has confirmed that he is "sure" that Alyx will launch on time.

That reassuring information comes from courtesy of a new AMA (short for Ask Me Anything, if not familiar) in Reddit, in which Robin Walker de Valve, Jamaal Bradley, David Feise, Greg Coomer, Corey Peters, Erik Wolpaw, Tristan Reidford, Chris Remo, Jake Rodkin and Kaci Aitchison Boyle answered community questions about the game.

"With the exception of some adjustments in the absolute final scene," Valve explained, "the game is made. Many of us in Valve, as well as the test players, have played the entire game several times."

(embed) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5HZh8JUf7y8 (/ embed)

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What is 4-H? and other questions – Havelock News

Even though it has been around for over 100 years, many people are new to 4-H and do not realize what it is, what it has to offer, or how to become involved.

Randolph County 4-H reached over 21,000 youth in 2019. 4-H provides youth with a wealth of opportunities, hands on experiences and learning how to be a well-rounded citizen. With the start of a new year, now is the perfect time to get involved with 4-H!

Q: What is 4-H?

A: 4-H is the youth development program of Cooperative Extension for youth ages 5 to 18 that helps develop leadership, citizenship, and life skills. It aims to assist youth in becoming competent, contributing citizens.

Q: I dont live on a farm, how can I join 4-H?

A: All 4-H programs are open to any youth, regardless of membership in the 4-H program. Joining 4-H is as simple as enrolling in 4-H online by completing the online form. 4-H has deep roots in agriculture, as it began with corn and tomato clubs in the early 1900s. Today in addition to agriculture, 4-H involves Science/STEM, public speaking/communication, life skills, sewing, community service projects and much more.

Q: Isnt 4-H just about cows and cooking?

A: While 4-H addresses these programs, the entire program is more diverse. Nationally, 4-H has three mission mandates: citizenship (civic engagement, service, civic education, and leadership); healthy living (nutrition, fitness, and social-emotional health); and science (animal science and agriculture, consumer science, engineering, environmental science and natural resources, life science, and technology).

Q: What is the cost to join 4-H?

A: There is no fee to join 4-H. Some workshops and activities will have fees associated with them to help cover the cost of materials. 4-H is also a United Way Agency which helps allow us an opportunity to provide scholarships.

Q: When does 4-H meet?

A: 4-H is active year round. Typically, 4-H clubs have monthly meetings. In addition, there are county, district, and state level 4-H events, activities and competitions throughout the year.

Q: What is a 4-H club?

A: A 4-H club is an organized group of youth, supported by screened, adult volunteers. Randolph County 4-H has many different clubs that cover everything from livestock (chickens, beef cattle, goats, and dairy cattle), horses, sewing, community service, Cloverbuds (ages 5-7), shooting sports and more.

Q: What age can my child join 4-H?

A: Youth can join 4-H at age 5. A youths age for 4-H is determined by his or her age on Jan. 1 of the current year. You may continue to be a member of 4-H through age 18. Youth, ages 5 to 7 years old, are referred to as Cloverbuds, are non-competitive and receive participation ribbons in any activity they participate in.

Q: What does 4-H stand for?

A: Head, Heart, Hands, and Health. Originally, there were only three Hs Head, Heart, and Hands. A fourth H, Hustle, was added in 1908. Hustle was changed to Health in 1911.

Q: What are the 4-H delivery modes?

A: 4-H has four main delivery modes: Community Clubs, School Enrichment, Summer Programs and Special Interest Programs. We currently have nine active 4-H Clubs. School Enrichment programs can be done in any grade level. Our curriculum comes from university-based research that has been piloted and tested thoroughly and aligns with the NC Standard Course of Study.

Some examples of our school enrichment program offerings are embryology, farm to table, Junior Master Gardener, anti-bullying, bike safety, robotics, character education, public speaking and communication, and presentations.

Randolph County 4-H also offers a summer program called Randolph County 4-H Agriventures and More. The summer program is offered for ages 5-7 and then 8 and Up. The 5-7 year old program meets at our office while the 8 and up program includes trips to farms, local businesses and other outings.

The summer program offerings are released in May and registration is online or by stopping in our office. The last delivery mode is special interest projects which might be a Quiz Bowl or Judging team for a 4-H competition.

Q: As an adult, how can I become involved with 4-H?

A: 4-H is always looking for adult volunteers! Depending on the amount of time you would like to donate you can volunteer at a single event or teach a workshop. If you want a deeper level of involvement, you can become a 4-H club leader, which is a one year, renewable commitment.

Allison Walker is the 4-H Youth Development Extension Agent. Contact her at 336-467-2927 or allison_walker@ncsu.edu. For more information about 4-H or NC Cooperative Extension, contact the Randolph County Extension Office at 336-318-6000 or visit http://randolph.ces.ncsu.edu.

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What is 4-H? and other questions - Havelock News

Spontaneous Abortions and Moral Theology | voxnovablog – Patheos

Vox Nova is pleased to welcome a guest post from long time reader Joseph Georges.

More than half of all human fertilizations end in spontaneous abortions at one stage or another in miscarriages if pregnancy ends before the 20th week or in stillbirths, as pregnancy losses after the 20th week are generally called. According to a paper by evolutionary geneticist, William Rice, of the University of California, Santa Barbara, abortion is nearly as common as live-birth for conceptions that occur in a womans early-twenties, but after the mid-twenties, abortions are the norm rather than the exception. Rices paper, The high abortion cost of human reproduction, is based upon data gathered from diverse sources. It focuses on pregnancies mainly in economically developed countries and is available at a preprint site while it undergoes peer review. Rice was also able to develop an estimate for the age-specific abortion rate ina natural fertility population in the county of Bangladesh. Not surprisingly, given the likely differences in socio-economic circumstances, including access to medical care, the Bangladeshi rate was substantially higher.

Until now it has been common to find estimates that 10-20% of known pregnancies in the United States end in miscarriages, though the estimates have sometimes been accompanied by cautions like the one from the Mayo Clinic that the actual number is likely higher because many miscarriages occur so early in pregnancy that a woman doesnt realize shes pregnant. Such cautions apparently have had little impact upon public opinion in the US. In one study of 1,000 American men and women, more than half thought that a miscarriage was a rare event occurring in fewer than 5 percent of pregnancies.

There are earlier studies that found relatively high rates of miscarriage. But William Rices 2018 meta-analysis of years of data attempts with as much statistical rigor as possible to incorporate estimates of occult abortions. Occult in this context refers to abortions that are unperceived. Rice believes that most spontaneous abortions are occult and go completely unnoticed by women. The most common reason for such pregnancy losses is genetic chromosomal abnormalities and these tend to increase with the age of the mother and the aging of her ova. In the end, Rice concludes, miscarriage is the predominant outcome of fertilization and a natural and inevitable part of human reproduction at all ages.

If Rices analysis and earlier studies with similar results are accurate, then Catholic theology has an issue that has received too little attention. The Church teaches that abortion is the killing of an innocent human being. The science of embryology states that from the moment of conception, a human being is formed, the website of the Archdiocese of Baltimore proclaims.No matter how one looks at it, abortion is murder.

Very well. This suggests that every conceptus has an immortal soul and is thus truly human or hominized, to use a term that has appeared in recent theological discussions. After all, the Catechism of the Catholic Church states plainly that The human body shares in the dignity of the image of God: it is a human body precisely because it is animated by a spiritual soul. (364)

But what if 50% or 60% or 70% of conceptuses spontaneously abort? Does God ensoul all fertilized ova even though most will never develop and be born?

Some theologians have recognized the problem. The late and illustrious German theologian, Karl Rahner, once asked:

For a few centuries Catholic moral theology has been convinced that individual hominization occurs at the moment of the fusion of the gametes. Will the moral theologian still have today the courage to maintain this presupposition of many of his moral theological statements, when he is suddenly told that from the start, 50% of the fecundated female ova never reach nidification [implantation] in the uterus? Will he be able to admit that 50% of the human beings real human beings with an immortal soul and an eternal destiny do not, from the very start, get beyond the first stage of human existence? (Karl Rahner, Schriften zur Theologie, 287)

At least one theologian has responded to Rahner. The late Benedict Ashley (1915-2013) was a Dominican priest and a noted scholar. A philosopher and a theologian, Ashley was particularly interested in the junction of philosophy and science. The best known of his more than twenty books is probably Health Care Ethics: A Catholic Theological Analysis, that went through five editions. For his service to the Church he was awarded the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal by Pope John Paul II.

Ashley rejects the delayed hominization theories championed by certain theologians and, most famously, by Aquinas, himself. Aquinas did not believe that ensoulment coincides with conception. Rather, following the ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle, he thought that embryos are at first alive with a vegetative life. After at least 40 days of development, embryos are ready to receive a rational human soul from God. Consequently, Ashley observes, for Aquinas induced abortion before 40 days is a serious sin against nature, because it destroys an organism whose natural purpose is to be transformed into a human being, but such abortion is not, strictly speaking, homicide. This last point has been used by some Catholic political figures to suggest that if an embryo is not a person until well into pregnancy, then a pro-choice stand is at least somewhat defensible.

Father Ashley sets out to develop a Thomistic understanding of ensoulment that is compatible with modern embryology and that demonstrates that delayed ensoulment theories are incorrect. He makes a persuasive case. Aquinas reasoned that since the human soul and its body are made for each other and are correlative causes of each other as form and matter, the matter of the human body has to be in a condition of proximate preparation proportionate to the soul that God creates for it. Otherwise, we would be multiplying miracles, which good Catholic theologians are always reluctant to do.

This is a sound principle, Ashley believes, and proceeds to show that freed from medieval biology, Thomism would agree that from the moment of fertilization, the conceptus is in a condition of proximate preparation for ensoulment. The zygote has all the genetic information it needs, as well as the developmental ability, to construct a human being.

But instant ensoulment at conception doesnt necessarily mean universal hominization. To his credit, Ashley responds to the questions from Karl Rahner cited earlier. He acknowledges that fertilization is a process that often achieves only partial success. There is good evidence that in most of those cases where the fertilized ovum fails to develop into a viable fetus, this process was never normally and perfectly completed.

And then Ashley makes an admission that even couched in careful language, as it is, has a startling implication. Since I am arguing that hominization takes place at the completion of fertilization, it need not be concluded that God creates souls for all these hapless abnormal zygotes.

So, many zygotes develop for a time in the womb, but have no souls and are therefore, from a Catholic perspective, less than human? Yes, if you consistently apply the Thomistic principle that Ashley articulates: The matter of the human body must be in a condition of proximate preparation proportionate to the soul that God creates for it. If a zygote lacks chromosomes required for normal development in the womb, then it is not prepared for ensoulment.

Certainly, the Lord knows which zygotes have the chromosomes required for regular fetal development and which ones do not, which fetuses will reach the point of live birth and which ones will not. It seems plausible that the Creator would not endow with immortal souls conceptuses fated to perish in the first or fourth or tenth week of gestation.

And so is induced abortion a case of homicide in a moral sense? Perhaps. Perhaps not. There is no way of knowing in each instance whether a conceptus at one stage of development or another is ensouled. You might think that genetic testing of the pre-born would provide at least the start of an answer. Possibly it could, though chromosomal defects detectable before birth are not necessarily fatal before birth.

But is abortion gravely immoral? I believe so, in great part precisely because there is no way to be certain whether a zygote targeted for abortion is a human being or not.

Some will disagree with my assessment. They may wish to argue that God gives each fertilized ovum a soul, and that saying so is not taking a mechanistic view of ensoulment. But then what of the large number of spontaneous abortions that theologians like Karl Rahner and Benedict Ashley have seen as a challenge? Were not speaking about 5 percent of pregnancies, but instead perhaps 55% or 65% of pregnancies. This would be a difference so large that it would virtually define a new normal mode of human life. If God gives every fertilized ovum a soul, then can theology give us at least a plausible account of why so many real human beings with an immortal soul and an eternal destiny do not, from the very start, get beyond the first stage of human existence?

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Spontaneous Abortions and Moral Theology | voxnovablog - Patheos

The anatomy of the state police overtime scandal – Boston Herald

Based on internal audits begun in 2017, state police referred 46 current and former troopers out of the departments 2,122 sworn personnel to the Massachusetts Attorney Generals Office and the U.S. Attorneys Office in connection with the departments investigation into overtime abuse at the now-defunct Troop E, the unit previously assigned to the Mass Pike. Of those 46:

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The anatomy of the state police overtime scandal - Boston Herald

‘The Irishman’ | Anatomy of a Scene – The New York Times

Im Martin Scorsese. And I made the movie, The Irishman. It is an honor for me to be here tonight to present this award to my dear friend, Mr. Frank Sheeran. Were talking about a sequence that takes place in the Latin Casino. You have this wonderful reception for Frank Sheeran, who, really, its a highlight of his life. All the representatives of the power structure of that part of the country are there to celebrate him, supposedly. And it really is obviously its for the union, its for Hoffa, and its to support Hoffa over Tony Provenzano. And its to show his support for Jimmy, and Jimmys support for Frank. [APPLAUSE] The highlight of my life. Thank you very very, very much. And this man, James Riddle Hoffa, is the guy that gets the job done. Underlying all that, you have the darker elements, which are the men who are in real control of the situation. Any case, from the deepest part of my heart, I thank you all. Because I dont really deserve all this. But I have bursitis, and I dont deserve that, either. The structure of the scene is all about the looks. The dialogue doesnt matter until you have this extraordinary moment, I think, between Russell and Frank, where Russell gives Frank this special ring that only three people have. And so for me, the playing of the scene had to be weaving all the sense of a celebration, so to speak, or family gathering, weaving all that around these beats, all strung together by the music: Jerry Vale. (SINGING) Please It has a very melodramatic tragedy to it. You know, a sweetness and a sadness at the same time. (SINGING) Say you and your Spanish eyes Its like you go to an event, and there are factions. There are factions. And one faction may be polite, but theyre not going to be smiling too much. But theyre there. During that time, certain things are said. Looks are given, which are harder than words. But the main looks Anna Paquin. A whole sequence revolves around Annas Peggy, that is picking up of the subtext of whats going on. There is trouble happening. There are problems. And she knows I mean, particularly even Anna Paquin said, when she did the dancing shot, and she looks over, and shes says, I never saw looks like that from people. She said it chilled her as a person. Only three people in the world have one of these, and only one of them is Irish. I have one, Angelo has one, and now you have one. So really its about the balancing and the editing of the frames, which encompass medium shots hardly any close-ups. Usually medium to medium close-up, like right below the shoulders up. That entails seeing a little more of the body language rather than giant close-ups. The reason for that is the atmosphere and the environment around them has to be present in the frame, because that affects them. And there you see them in that environment and that atmosphere. If its too close, I think you objectify it in a way. You push the audience away. But one of the hardest things to do was to get them in the frame in the wide shot, looking down, as Jerry Vale is singing in the background. Theyre like the gods overlooking this world that they created in a way. Theres one shot from their point of view, with a long lens of Jimmy walking around and suddenly saying hello to Angelo Russo, played by Harvey Keitel. The reason is a personal reason. And that was that Harvey Keitel and Al Pacino were never in the same frame together in any movie. Things have gotten that with our friend again. And some people are having serious problems with him. And its at a point where youre going to have to talk to him and tell him its what it is. Once I settled on the size of the frame and the size of the people in the frame, I know that, then, it was really myself and my editor, Thelma, in the editing room, playing with the dialogue and playing with the looks and the pauses the pauses and the silences. These are the higher-ups. Well, hes a higher-up, too. I mean, theres no one Not like this. You know that. Oh, come on, Frank. If they can whack a president, they can whack a president of the union. You know it, and I know it.

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'The Irishman' | Anatomy of a Scene - The New York Times

Anatomy of a smear: How John Bolton became a target of the pro-Trump Internet – Hot Air

The sensational headline mischaracterized the evidence presented in the post, which drew on a Washington Post story about how Bolton had earned speaking fees from Deutsche Bank, the British bank HSBC and a foundation operated by a Ukrainian steel magnate. All nuance was lost, however, when the blog post gained sudden traction on Monday, posted to about two dozen Facebook groups with a collective membership of more than 300,000. One of them was a group called Fox News Sean Hannity, described as a forum for all Sean Hannity fans. The blog post primed Fox viewers in the group which has no official links to the network or the popular Trump-friendly host for what they would hear when they tuned in that night.

Craddick bluntly assessed the motivations behind the renewed interest in his post, but he had little sympathy for Boltons boosters, either.

Now the Republicans dont like Bolton, so theyll take an article that makes him look bad and push it, he said. But if the Democrats werent getting something useful out of him, they wouldnt be fans either.

washingtonpost.com/politics/anatomy-of-a-smear-how-john-bolton-became-a-target-of-the-pro-trump-internet/2020/01/28/b0d162fc-4150-11ea-b5fc-eefa848cde99_story.html

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Anatomy of a smear: How John Bolton became a target of the pro-Trump Internet - Hot Air