Stalwart Philadelphia Journalist Linn Washington writes about the  cancelation 
of our film on Mumia's life by the Cityplex12 in Newark. A  Press Conference & 
Picket will be held in front of the theater this Friday  to protest this act of 
corporate censorship. Speaking at the press  conference will be Director 
Stephen 
Vittoria, members of Newark's  People's Organization for Progress, and renowned 
Newark native, Poet  Amiri Barka. Spread the word, let your voice be heard. The 
people of  Newark have been denied.
From: http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/node/1698
Shaq Attack on Mumia::
NBA Star Censors Film on Famous Radical Inmate
Tue, 04/23/2013 - 09:00
by:
Linn Washington Jr.
Was it simply a “cold business decision” or a callous act of censorship?
This is the question swirling around legendary pro-basketball player  Shaquille 
O’Neal who put a power move on Stephen Vittoria blocking this  respected 
filmmaker’s showing of his latest documentary at the movie  complex O’Neal 
co-owns in downtown Newark, NJ, the city where both of  these men were born.
Representatives of O’Neal’s movie complex have claimed in private  
conversations 
with Newark activists that they cancelled Vittoria’s film  solely because it is 
inconsistent with their screening practice,  countering claims their 
cancellation sought to squelch the film because  of its content.
Vittoria planned to show his latest documentary “Mumia: Long Distance 
Revolutionary” at the CityPlex-12 on April 26.
But as the final publicity/ticket sales push for the scheduled  screening was 
about to go into high gear, Vittoria discovered on April  11 that CityPlex-12 
management had cancelled the booking and halted all  marketing efforts. Theater 
officials reportedly even fired a staff  member who had worked with Vittoria.
Censored  in Newark: 'Long Distance Revolutionary,' a new film about jailed  
journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal (click on image to play the trailer)
“No official reason was given or has been given for the  cancellation,” 
Vittoria 
said. “We found out through a source at the  theater that shortly after a 
meeting between theater owners Boraie  Development and Shaquille O’Neal the 
film 
was cancelled.”
The suddenness of the cancellation, accompanied by initial silence on  the 
reason why, fueled speculation that the cancellation involved the  film’s 
subject matter, thus triggering claims of censorship.
Vittoria’s critically acclaimed film is about imprisoned  journalist/author 
Mumia Abu-Jamal. Unlike past films that focus on  ‘whodunit’ aspects of this 
contentious case, Vittoria’s film examines  the ‘who’ of Abu-Jamal.
An imprisoned journalist, Abu-Jamal has written over a half dozen  acclaimed 
books and thousands of commentaries during his decades in  prison – most spent 
on death row – following his 1982 conviction for  killing a Philadelphia 
policeman. Abu-Jamal worked as an award-winning  radio reporter bprior to his 
1981 arrest.
One of the many favorable reviews of Vittoria's film states that it  “puts a 
human face on its subject, for so long now just an  anti-capital-punishment 
icon…” A New York Times review of “Long  Distance” credited illuminating views 
about Abu-Jamal in the film from  leading activists like Dick Gregory and 
academics like Michelle  Alexander.
O’Neal has a long-term interest in law enforcement, associating  himself in a 
reserve capacity with police agencies in Los Angeles and  Miami, two cities 
where he played professional basketball before  retiring in 2011 with an 
impressive string of NBA championships, scoring  titles and MVPs.
One controversy in the Abu-Jamal case is abuses by Philadelphia  police, 
including officers tampering with murder scene evidence and  intimidating 
eyewitnesses.
In 1981, the year of Abu-Jamal’s arrest, Philadelphia police charged  five 
persons with high-profile murders, proclaiming each guilty.  However, evidence 
later proved the innocence of four of those five –-  including releasing one 
from death row –- leaving only Abu-Jamal still  imprisoned. Courts have 
repeatedly rejected Abu-Jamal's appeals despite  evidence of innocence 
(inclusive of police improprieties) -- evidence  that far exceeded what was 
uncovered in those four other flawed and  overturned convictions.
Vittoria said he “expected some backlash to the film because of the  truth 
tends 
to aggravate the wealthy and corporate elite as well as  those who support a 
false narrative about Mumia Abu-Jamal.” He called  the cancellation of the film 
a “cowardly move” by the CityPlex-12 and a  “direct insult” to the people of 
Newark.
Newark activist Lawrence Hamm, chairman of the People’s Organization  for 
Progress, stated he met with CityPlex-12 management urging them to  reconsider 
the cancellation, even pledging to employ the coalition of  170 organizations 
and churches he has assembled to ensure a sold-out  performance.
Hamm has stated that management told him the cancellation was a “cold  business 
decision” arising from the complex’s claimed practice of only  showing 
Hollywood 
studio-produced films. Hamm notes that management did  acknowledge having shown 
at least one independent film.
Last August, CityPlex-12 served as the venue for the Paul Robeson  Awards of 
the 
Newark Black Film Festival that honored films all  independently produced. That 
film festival, launched in 1974, has  utilized the CityPlex movie complex for 
screenings since 2001, beginning  under previous ownership.
Vittoria and his supporters counter CityPlex-12 claims of ‘cold  business 
decision’ arising from fear of economic loss by noting the  ticket sales 
success 
of “Long Distance Revolutionary” when it opened in  NYC on February 1 as #3 in 
the country for documentaries,adding that it  was #1 for documentaries during 
the March 1 opening in Los Angeles and  was #1 during the March 8 opening in 
the 
San Francisco Bay Area.
The multi-screen CityPlex-12, which is the only movie theater in  downtown 
Newark, features a premiere hi-tech auditorium, dubbed the  SHAQ-DX, in 
reference to O’Neal’s nickname Shaq.
This movie facility that underwent a multi-million-dollar  renovation/expansion 
before formally reopening last fall, received rave  reviews from Newark’s Mayor 
Cory Booker, who considers this venue part  of his efforts to revive the 
long-depressed city, the largest in New  Jersey.
This Newark movie cancellation controversy is not the first  high-profile 
incident igniting charges of censorship directed against  Abu-Jamal. In 1994, 
for example, National Public Radio cancelled airing  commentaries by Abu-Jamal 
on prison life that the public network had  commissioned him to write from 
death 
row. NPR bowed to pressure from  police and right-wing politicians like then 
powerful U.S. Senator Bob  Dole, who threatened to slash NPR’s federal funding 
if it went ahead  with the project.
Censorship even extends to others examining Abu-Jamal. In 1997 NPR  canceled 
airing a poem it commissioned from award-winning poet Martin  Espada when the 
subject of Espada’s work was Abu-Jamal’s then death-row  plight. Philadelphia’s 
mainstream media has placed a blackout on two  insightful books on the 
Abu-Jamal 
case: the 2003 Killing Time extensive examination by investigative reporter 
Dave 
Lindorff, who lives  in a Philadelphia suburb, and J. Patrick O’Connor’s 2008 
The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal that names the probable killer of Officer Daniel 
Faulkner.
While pressure from police drives much of this censorship,  Abu-Jamal’s 
critiques of America’s discriminatory status-quo is a  salient element in the 
censorship, which resembles the censorship once  directed at legendary black 
activists like singer-actor Paul Robeson and  author Richard Wright. That New 
York Times review of  Vittoria’s documentary cites Abu-Jamal’s “radicalized” 
views, saying  they are distrustful of “the political system…and the very 
notion 
that  America is at heart the land of the free.”
Intense censorship drove Robeson into destitute obscurity in the  decades 
before 
his 1976 death in Philadelphia. And censorship/racism  drove Wright to flee the 
U.S. for France in 1946, spending the remainder  of his life there. Perhaps not 
surprisingly, Wright’s writer daughter,  Paris-based Julia Wright, is a leading 
activist in France for Abu-Jamal.
Newark activists plan protests in front of the CityPlex-12.
“We condemn the decision to cancel this film on Mumia to the fullest  and we 
call upon all of our Mumia supporters…to rally around our  community’s right to 
artistic self-determination,” states a press  release issued by Newark activist 
Zayid Muhammad, who has been active in  the Abu-Jamal case since 1990.
Note: Linn Washington Jr. is a recurring interview subject in  Vittoria’s 
documentary film. Washington has followed the Abu-Jamal case  since Abu-Jamal’s 
December 9, 1981 arrest.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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