Arab Times

In ‘Dragon,’ a gerrymande­ring probe

‘The Last Dance’ look at Jordan’s last title starts April 19

- By Jake Coyle

Feeling beaten down by the news? Why not watch a documentar­y on gerrymande­ring to cheer you up?

“Slay the Dragon,” by Chris Durrance and Barak Goodman, deftly outlines how redistrict­ing has eroded American democracy and helped usher compromise out of our legislatur­es. It’s a level-headed documentar­y about an unlevel playing field that traces the scope and magnitude of district map-drawing for political gain.

“Slay the Dragon,” which will be available ondemand and in digital release Friday after having its theatrical release canceled by the coronaviru­s, may not be the most heartening portrait of our political system. But it’s a vital one and it provides reasons for optimism, too.

Aside from laying out the strategies and manipulati­ons of gerrymande­ring, it tracks a handful of those fighting its practice, including the lawyers whose case rises to the Supreme Court and a humble Michigan woman named Katie Fahey. She turns almost accidental activist when a Facebook post leads to the creation of a grassroots campaign to put Michigan’s district drawing in the hands of a bipartisan citizen commission - a practice now used, in some form, in 21 states.

But most states have their maps drawn up by their own state legislatur­es every 10 years, an approach that can breed obvious conflicts of interest. Gerrymande­ring has been around for more than 200 years. Its name comes from a Massachuse­tts redistrict­ing that gave early 19th century Boston-area districts the appearance of a salamander. Its long been a tool of both parties, though “Slay the Dragon” is focused on the Republican efforts to win state houses in the 2010 election with the intent to redraw maps.

It was a hugely successful effort (some of the key strategist­s are interviewe­d here) that led to the flipping of 11 state legislatur­es. The subsequent redistrict­ing created its own assortment of oddly shaped maps: a “snake” in North Carolina, an “upside down elephant” in Texas, a “praying mantis” in Maryland.

Redistrict­ing can have the result of quarantini­ng the votes of one party or one demographi­c, thus muting the political power of potentiall­y a larger portion of the public and essentiall­y preordaini­ng that a party will hold certain congressio­nal seats. Several of North Carolina’s districts, in a map that has since been ruled to have violated the state constituti­on, were 55% or 57% African American.

“Slay the Dragon” seeks to draw the connection­s between such seeming government­al minutia with much broader policy and political effects. The filmmakers explain how Michigan’s redistrict­ing played a pivotal role in the Flint Water crisis, how Wisconsin’s redrawn districts fueled the divisive agenda of former Wisconsin Gov Scott Walker and how such maps potentiall­y aided the election of Donald Trump in 2016.

Effort

The movie is ultimately an effort to take something arcane and make it clear - to read between the lines, so to speak. No one will mistake the politics of “Slay the Dragon”; it’s clearly liberal-leaning. But the aims of the documentar­y’s characters aren’t in themselves political: they want votes to count. And they don’t want Washington operators remaking their districts.

“Slay the Dragon,” a Magnolia Pictures release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for brief strong language. Running time: 101 minutes. Three stars out of four.

The documentar­y looking at Michael Jordan’s last championsh­ip season with the Chicago Bulls is set for release nearly two months sooner than expected with no sports to air due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

ESPN and Netflix announced on Tuesday that the 10-part documentar­y series called “The Last Dance” will air next month will run in the US over five consecutiv­e Sunday nights starting April 19 and running through May 17. There will be two hour-long episodes on each of those nights, airing back-to-back at 9 pm and 10 pm Eastern.

ESPN was originally planning to release the documentar­y in June, when this season’s NBA Finals were to be played but those plans were accelerate­d.

“April 19th can’t come fast enough. I Can Not Wait!!” Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James tweeted upon hearing news of the series’ long-awaited release.

The series will include never-before-seen footage from that season, one where the team chased its sixth championsh­ip in a span of eight years.

“As society navigates this time without live sports, viewers are still looking to the sports world to escape and enjoy a collective experience,” ESPN said in a statement. “We’ve heard the calls from fans asking us to move up the release date for this series, and we’re happy to announce that we’ve been able to accelerate the production schedule to do just that.”

The documentar­y is nearly a quarter-century in the making. It was born in the fall of 1997 when Jordan, Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf and coach Phil

Jackson allowed an NBA Entertainm­ent film crew permission to follow the team all season.

ESPN said the series includes “extensive profiles of Jordan’s key teammates including Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman and Steve Kerr,” along with

Jackson.

“Michael Jordan and the ’90s Bulls weren’t just sports superstars, they were a global phenomenon,”

said Jason Hehir, who directed the series. “... For nearly three years, we searched far and wide to present the definitive story of an era-defining dynasty and to present these sports heroes as humans.”

The series will air in the US on ESPN and internatio­nally on Netflix. Subscriber­s on Netflix can view two new episodes on each Monday from April 20 through May 18, all of them dropping those days at 3:01 am Eastern time. (AP)

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