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>>180571Speaker Mike Johnson @SpeakerJohnson - Video: The SAVE America Act is about proof of citizenship to register to vote and using a Photo ID when you do so.
Why are Chuck Schumer and Democrats AGAINST this common sense measure?
Because they want illegal aliens to vote in our elections.
https://x.com/SpeakerJohnson/status/2042245252489122171Steve Herman @newsguyusa - Russia’s FSB detains a former Russian freelancer for RFE/RL, accusing him of treason and claiming he allegedly communicated with Ukrainian intelligence.
https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-fsb-freelancer-rferl-detained-treason/33728421.html https://flipboard.social/@newsguyusa/116374431530874104https://x.com/newsguyusa/status/2042198491225604370The Sting @TheStingisBack - Video: All the President’s Men turns 50 today.
This famous “six‑minute shot” is a masterclass in phone acting and pure technical nerve.
Director Alan J. Pakula and cinematographer Gordon Willis pull off a single, unbroken slow zoom: from a wide, humming newsroom to a tight close-up on Redford. No cuts. No safety net. Tension builds in real time.
Redford carries it with typical quiet confidence. Six minutes of note-taking and talking into a phone, no flashy “Oscar clip.” He even flubs a name (“McGregor” for “Dahlberg”), corrects himself naturally, and Pakula keeps it because it feels authentic.
The background is part of the story. As Woodward hones in on his phone call, everyone behind him huddles around a TV watching Senator Tom Eagleton resign. The contrast is deliberate: they chase the “obvious” headline, while the camera drifts past them to Woodward, and the real story.
To hold Redford and the busy background in focus early on, they used a split‑diopter lens, then had to ease it out as the camera moves in. A technical tightrope. The timing of both actor and cinematographer is spot on.
As Woodward closes in on the truth, the world literally falls away: the newsroom blurs, the noise fades, and we lock into his obsession. It’s one of cinema’s great moments: Redford doing almost nothing—and somehow everything at the same time.
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