The controversial Gods of Egypt, starring Gerard Butler as the villain, fails through a preposterous, tangled plot and a disengaged cast. Photo: Lionsgate
At the advance screening for Alex Proyas’ megabudgeted misfire Gods of Egypt, someone in the row in front of me turned on his phone in plain sight of those behind him and started texting. Under normal circumstances, I’d be more than happy to yell at a complete stranger over this sort of thing, but when I looked at the screen, I saw that only an hour had passed in the movie. That meant there was another hour to go. I was too depressed to confront the man. And if it didn’t violate one of my central moviegoing principles, I might have joined him.
This movie is bad. Legendarily bad. So bad you have to wonder how they managed to spend $140 million on a product that looks awful, makes absolutely no sense and wavers between being wildly overwritten and feeling completely improvised. The problem isn’t just that it’s visually disorienting. It’s not just that it’s 127 minutes of exposition that zips by without being entirely sure of its own mythology. Gods of Egypt is a focus group gone wrong, as though every idea in its conception was included, no matter how dumb, dull or defiant of its own internal logic.
The story—such as it is—follows Horus (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) as he seeks revenge against his uncle Set (Gerard Butler, who doesn’t even attempt to hide his Scottish accent) after a coup during what was supposed to be Horus’ coronation. Set seals the deal by removing Horus’ magical eye from his head and banishing him to a remote temple to live in misery. Along comes a puckish (intolerably so) mortal named Bek (Brenton Thwaites), a gifted thief who manages to steal Horus’ heavily protected eye. He brings the eye to Horus, and in so doing strikes a bargain that would bring Bek’s love from the grave if he aids Horus in his quest for revenge.
The rest of the film sees Set consolidating his power and quelling rebellions, while the duo seeks the source of Set’s power in order to weaken him. That could have been a good premise for a halfway decent escapist fantasy, but Proyas fills the proceedings with constant exposition, introducing new rules for gods and gigantic set pieces that would be difficult to follow even if they weren’t visually garbled.
Gods have liquid gold instead of blood. They’re also huge, more than twice the size of mortal men. They can transform into winged metallic beasts when they want to, except when they’re wounded, but sometimes they do anyway. There’s also a big outer space sandworm that really wants to eat the flat earth, and it is the burden of Ra (a lost-looking Geoffrey Rush) to battle this creature night after night. This happens in the film as suddenly as that description did in this paragraph. The last 20 minutes is then devoted to untangling this preposterous knot with some kind of conclusion, one that somehow manages to dredge up every subplot without resolving a damn thing.
You might remember the controversy over the almost entirely white cast depicting Egyptian characters (Chadwick Boseman being the only person of color in the main cast) that erupted shortly after the trailer debuted last year, resulting in a rare advance apology from Lionsgate. While a more diverse cast in such a high-profile film would have been a welcome change, a clearer picture begins to emerge after actually seeing the film. If the filmmakers couldn’t be bothered to put careful consideration into making a coherent story or action sequence, it stands to reason they’d be equally clueless when it comes to the ethnicity of the actors. I feel for the talented performers of color who would have been excellent in the roles. But I also pity the actors who accepted this job in good faith only to be sent adrift on an utterly doomed vessel like Gods of Egypt.
UVA’s historic preservation architect Jody Lahendro says the construction work is 76 percent done and the changes are meant to reinstate the Rotunda as a center for student life. Staff photo
Driving down University Avenue, you might notice the Rotunda’s usual cluster of scaffolding has decreased considerably. Although the UNESCO World Heritage Site is still under construction, UVA’s design team has completed the majority of its renovations, and the project is on schedule to be finished by the end of July.
The first phase included installing a new oculus and copper roof. The second phase began in spring 2014 and expands classroom space in the Rotunda, increases access and enhances programming options at a cost of roughly $42.5 million.
UVA’s historic preservation architect Jody Lahendro says the construction work is 76 percent done and the changes are meant to reinstate the Rotunda as a center for student life.
“What all of us, and the university design team, hope this project does is to bring students back into the Rotunda to have it become an active part of the daily life of the students, a daily part of the education experience,” Lahendro says,
In Thomas Jefferson’s original 1821 designs for the Rotunda, the building was meant to be the university’s main library, a natural hub for student activity. When Alderman Library became the main library on grounds in 1930, it slowly shifted student study space outside of the Rotunda.
The renovations to the Rotunda’s interior add several new areas specifically designed for student use.
“We’re opening three new student classrooms, new study spaces, and the hours will be extended for students to use,” Lahendro explains. “And we’re enhancing the Dome Room for the students to use as a study space—it will be set up for that purpose.”
While the inside of the Rotunda will remain a construction site for the next five months, Lahendro says that final exercises for the Class of 2016 will not be affected. For the big day in May, the construction team will take down the fences on both sides of the Rotunda and students will be able to process up the north portico steps, around the terraces of the Rotunda, and down the south portico steps.
The two-year-long renovations have not been all smooth sailing. Some of the outdoor work on the utilities between the Rotunda and University Avenue caused unexpected trouble.
As part of the second phase, four new utility lines had to be added, running perpendicular to utilities that had been installed as early as the 19th century. Difficulties with installation pushed this part of the project back by six months.
“We found many of the utility lines in different locations than the maps had shown,” Lahendro says. “We had to eventually go underneath all of those existing utilities and when we did that we hit rock.”
The construction team most recently has been working on closing up ceilings and walls inside the Rotunda, putting brick in the Rotunda’s new elevator, cleaning up the marble balustrades and paving the terraces. Although much of this work was planned to safeguard the historical site, Lahendro stresses again that the students are at the heart of the renovations.
“They are the most important part of this project,” Lahendro says, “Our hope is to make the Rotunda part of the students’ educational experience and get them back in there again.”
“What all of us, and the university design team, hope this project does is to bring students back into the Rotunda to have it become an active part of the daily life of the students, a daily part of the education experience,” UVA’s historic preservation architect Jody Lahendro says.
Eliza Evans' #selfies exhibit opens on March 5 at The Garage. Photo: Amy Jackson
Local artist Eliza Evans has been painting acrylic portraits from real-life scenes since 2006, and she always tries to capture a good likeness as quickly as possible so the subject doesn’t get uncomfortable sitting. Her latest exhibit is a collection of self-portraits along with some portraits of her close friends and family on canvas, wood and dipper gourds that she grew. “There is something a little different about painting myself from the mirror,” says Evans in her artist statement. “I feel like I can loosen up and do more experimenting with my painting technique.” Evans hopes that even though the exhibit displays her face over and over, people will understand she doesn’t take herself too seriously.
Her #selfies exhibit opens on March 5 at The Garage.
First Fridays is a monthly art event featuring exhibit openings at many Downtown art galleries and additional exhibition venues. Several spaces offer receptions. Listings are compiled in collaboration with Piedmont Council for the Arts. To list an exhibit, please send information two weeks before opening to arts@c-ville.com.
First Fridays: March 4
Art on Ivy 2125 Ivy Rd. #5. An exhibit of colorful, textured book art by Lyall Harris. 5-6:30pm.
C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St. “Love What You Do,” featuring ceramics by Trina Player. 6-8pm.
Graves International Art 306 E. Jefferson St. “Roy Lichtenstein & Company,” featuring paintings, drawings, watercolors, silkscreens, lithographs, and etchings by Roy Liechtenstein, Sam Francis, Erte, Jacques Villon, Jim Dine, John Chamberlain, Paul Cesar Helleu, Pierre Marie Brisson, John James Audubon, Mark King, Pierre Bonnard, and Edgar Degas. 5-8pm.
JMRL Central Library 201 E. Market St. “On Our Own,” featuring works by a peer support recovery center for people with mental health challenges. 5-7pm.
McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. “Rock, Paper…,” featuring photography by Scott F. Smith in the Sarah B. Smith Gallery; “Studio Things,” featuring works by Bruno LaVerdiere and J.M. Henry in the Lower Halls; and “ArtReach,” featuring children’s art in the Upper Halls. 5:30-7:30pm.
Mezzanine Gallery @ New Dominion Bookshop 404 E. Main St. “A Splash of Color,” featuring oil paintings by Nancy Campa. 5:30-7pm.
Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. “Vestiges and Relics,” featuring paintings by Chrissy Baucom, “Periodicities in Chaotic Forcing,” featuring installation of found objects by Heather Harvey, and “Pretty on the Inside,” featuring 3D forms and 2D drawings by Kortney Niewierski. 5:30-7:30pm, with an artist talk at 6:30pm.
Spring Street Boutique 107 W. Main St. “Beach,” featuring watercolor and sketches on paper by Barbara Grandis. 6-8pm.
The Bridge PAI 209 Monticello Rd. “A Portrait of Collaboration: Devising NO WAKE,” featuring multimedia works by Jennifer Hoyt Tidwell, Martha Mendenhall, Ted Coffey, Allyson Mellberg Taylor, Jeremy Taylor, Thadd McQuade, Sian Richards, Marianne Kubik, Deandra Irving, Miller Susen, Trina Candia, Sydney Wynn, Jennifer Downey, Samantha Pagni, Aaron Farrington, Stephen Thomas, Matt Thomas, Kim Boggs, and many children. 6-9pm.
The Loft at Freeman-Victorius 507 W. Main St. “Pottery and Paintings,” featuring clay and mixed media works by Ken Nagakui. 5-8pm.
The Women’s Initiative 1101 East High St. “The Feel of Greener Pastures,” featuring acrylic landscapes by Janet Pearlman. 5:30-7:30pm.
Welcome Gallery @ New City Arts 114 Third St. NE. “Deepsea Collaborations,” featuring prints, watercolor paintings, and drawings by Kaki Dimock and Josef Beery. 5-7:30pm.
WVTF & Radio IQ Studio Gallery 216 W. Water St. “We Dream of the House We Were Born In,” featuring paintings by Roger Williams, presented by New City Arts. 5-7pm.
Other Exhibits
Chroma Projects 107 Vincennes Rd. “Gathered from Available Data,” featuring prints, drawings, photography, paintings, and poetic text by Tanja Softic, with a reception on Sunday, March 6 at 4pm.
City Clay 700 Harris St., Ste. 104. “Functional Elegance,” featuring clay works by Patrick Gibson, with a reception on Friday, March 11.
CitySpace Gallery 100 Fifth St. NE. An exhibit by Albemarle County Public Schools, beginning March 7.
Ix Art Park 522 Second St. SE. “Hello Again,” featuring drawings and mixed media works by Polly Breckenridge.
Java Java Café 421 E Main St. “Rambunctious Still Life,” featuring paintings by Karen Siegrist.
Jefferson School African-American Heritage Center 233 Fourth St. NW. “The 1963 Danville Civil Rights Movement: The Protests, The People, The Stories,” featuring documentary portraits by Tom Cogill and text panels by Emma Edmunds.
Senior Center 1180 Pepsi Pl. “Scarlet Waterway,” featuring watercolor paintings by Rosemary Nothwanger.
Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital 500 Martha Jefferson Dr. An exhibit of paintings and photographs by BozART Group artists Craig Lineburger and Madeleine Watkins.
The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA 155 Rugby Rd. “Struggle…From the History of the American People,” featuring paintings by Jacob Lawrence; “Richard Serra: Prints,” from the collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer and his Family Foundation; “Fish and Fowl,” featuring sculptures, paintings, and prints; “Navajo Weaving: Geometry of the Warp and Weft,” featuring textiles; and “Two Extraordinary Women: The Lives and Art of Maria Cosway and Mary Darby Robinson.”
The Garage 100 E. Jefferson St. “#selfies,” featuring acrylic portraits by Eliza Evans, with a reception on Saturday, March 5 at 5pm.
Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church 717 Rugby Rd. An exhibit of watercolor paintings by Ken Chasin, with a reception on Sunday, March 6 at 12:30pm.
Jesse Matthew could be seen through an Albemarle County courthouse window on his way to entering a plea agreement for the murders and abductions of Hannah Graham and Morgan Harrington. He was given four additional life sentences. Staff photo
Convicted murderer Jesse Matthew pleaded guilty to the first degree murders and abductions of both Hannah Graham and Morgan Harrington in Albemarle County Circuit Court on March 2. He was given four life sentences—the maximum sentence for each count.
Matthew will avoid the death penalty because Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci nolle prossed his capital murder charge as part of the plea agreement. Tracci explained that the Commonwealth can re-indict Matthew for the capital murder charge if he should violate the terms of the plea agreement.
For the complete statement of facts about the Hannah Graham case, including a timeline of what happened on the night she was abducted, DNA conclusions and evidence gathered at Matthew’s apartment read Hannah Graham Statement of Facts 3-2-16. For the statement of facts about the Morgan Harrington case, read Morgan Harrington Statement of Facts 3-2-16.
Before the hearing, Matthew’s family and friends lined up to hug Harrington’s mother, Gil. Declining to give his own statement during the hearing, Matthew’s attorney said, “He is very sorry.”
Parents of both slain college students spoke about the impact the murders have had on their lives during and after the hearing.
Graham’s mother, Susan Graham, said, “When we imagine the trauma she endured at the hands of Matthew, our hearts break.” Though details of how Matthew abducted and killed each girl were typed up and handed to Judge Cheryl Higgins, they were not read aloud. Matthew’s attorney, Doug Ramseur, said he is unaware whether the parents have yet learned those details.
“Matthew dumped our girl’s body like a bag of trash,” Susan Graham said, adding that her daughter’s lifeless body was picked over by buzzards. Her daughter, an 18-year-old UVA student who disappeared September 13, 2014, was found dead several weeks later in a field off Old Lynchburg Road.
According to the statement of facts released by the county, the crop top Graham was last seen wearing the night of her abduction was found near her skeletal remains, unzipped and inside out. Her jeans were also found nearby, with one leg inside out and holes in the denim that had not been present earlier in the night.
Graham’s father, John, said many people thought his daughter would change the world. “She did change the world, but at a terrible price.”
Two of the life sentences Matthew was given March 2 pertained to Harrington, a 20-year-old Virginia Tech student who was last seen at a Metallica concert at the John Paul Jones Arena on October 17, 2009. Her body was found in a field in January 2010, about five miles from where Graham’s body was found almost five years later.
Harrington’s father, Dan, said he lives in “a world that’s gone gray, flat and devoid of joy,” now that his “beautiful, smart, talented and bright” daughter is gone. “Our family has felt the pain of this loss every second of every day.”
He and his wife, Gil, have built an African school and founded a scholarship in Harrington’s name. They also created the Help Save the Next Girl nonprofit foundation to sensitize young women and girls to predatory dangers.
Ramseur spoke after the sentencing, saying “This is obviously not a day for celebration,” before media fired questions about his client, such as why Matthew didn’t apologize himself and if he ever explained why he murdered two young women. The attorney deflected the questions and said it’s “unfortunate” that, because Matthew won’t have a trial, the public might never hear evidence from the the defense. He did say in an initial statement during the hearing that Matthew decided to plead guilty because he didn’t want a death sentence “hanging over his head.”
Legal expert David Heilberg says most capital murder cases now end in plea bargains, and he expected this as the likely outcome for Matthew.
Now that the death penalty is off the table, Matthew’s four additional life sentences are debatably meaningless, Heilberg says. Last summer, Matthew was given three life sentences for abducting, violently sexually assaulting and attempting to kill a Fairfax woman in 2005.
“You only have one life to serve,” Heilberg adds. “At this point, it can’t get any worse.” Watch a video of Gil Harrington addressing the public below.
Expect nothing but showmanship and mind-boggling basketball when El Gato and the Harlem Globetrotters take the court at John Paul Jones Arena on Thursday. Photo: Publicity photo
It’s been 90 years since the Harlem Globetrotters began showing off their goofy, talented basketball antics, and to mark the anniversary season, the team named Pope Francis as an honorary member. The Globetrotters are also celebrating the addition of El Gato Meléndez—the team’s first player born in Puerto Rico—who got his nickname after repeated incidents of stray cats following him to the basketball court throughout childhood.
Thursday 3/3. $27.50-99.50, 7pm. John Paul Jones Arena, 295 Massie Rd. 888-575-8497. johnpauljonesarena.com.
Each year, we field your calls after Best of C-VILLE hits stands: “Why didn’t you include this category?” “Next year, you should add that category!”
Well, now’s your chance to be heard.
On Thursday, March 10, from 5:30-7:30pm, tweet the C-VILLE editorial staff as we sit down to talk about what categories to include in 2016. Feel passionately about French fries? Or dog parks? Or your electrician? Send your ideas to @cvillenews_desk.
Check out what there is to do in town in this week's Living Picks. Photo: File photo
Nonprofit
Dance for Life
Put on your boogie shoes and get down to music by The Gladstones during the Marty Whitlow Ovarian Cancer Research Fund’s fifth annual Dance for Life. All funds raised during the evening, which also includes a silent auction, support efforts at the University of Virginia to find a cure for ovarian cancer.
Friday, March 4. $30, 7:30pm. Holiday Inn University Area, 1901 Emmet St. 249-5445.
Health & Wellness
The Haven Run for Home 4K and 8K
Get moving for a good cause with The Haven’s fifth annual Run for Home 4K and 8K races. Enjoy the scenic course through downtown neighborhoods and on the Downtown Mall, as well as the post-race complimentary breakfast.
Saturday, March 5. $15-40, 8am. The Haven, 112 W. Market St. 293-3367.
Festival
S’mores concert and dinner
Victory Hall Opera teams up with The Local’s chef Matthew Hart to host S’mores, a three-course dinner followed by a concert featuring tenor Michael Slattery.
Wednesday, March 2. $70, 6-10pm. The Hearth Room at The Local. 824 Hinton Ave. 227-9978.
Food & Drink
Paella cooking class
Chef Terre Sisson will teach you how to prepare Venezuelan-style paella, paired with wine and key lime pie.
Sunday, March 6. $68, 11am-2pm. First Colony Winery, 1650 Harris Creek Rd. 979-7105.
Well, here we are again: facing a blank page, days away from hugely important elections, fully realizing that you, dear reader, know exactly what happened. But we do not! And yet file we must, and so we jump once more into the abyss, gleefully predicting things that will be proven or disproven in real time. Such is the life of a print journalist.
On the Democratic side, we’ve already made it abundantly clear that we think Hillary Clinton basically has the nomination wrapped up, even as Bernie Sanders continues to close the gap in national polls. The reasons are myriad, but it really comes down to a weird quirk in the donkeys’ primary process. Instead of letting all of the necessary delegates be apportioned through state primaries and caucuses (as the Republicans do), the Dems have created a block of “superdelegates”—a group of 712 party insiders who can back whomever they wish. Clinton has done a typically expert job of courting these folks, and at this writing has 449 pledged superdelegates (Sanders has 19). And so, even though they both had the same number of earned delegates going into the South Carolina primary, in reality Clinton had an effective lead of 430 delegates (the first candidate to amass 2,382 delegates will clinch the nomination).
Yes, these superdelegates can change their minds, and if Bernie managed to carry South Carolina, and also won the majority of available delegates on Super Tuesday, you would definitely see a sizable increase in his superdelegate count. But we are absolutely certain that did not happen. Hillary’s performance in the Nevada caucus showed that her popularity with black and Latino voters matched the pre-caucus polling, and we would bet real money that she easily carried South Carolina (editor’s note: She received 73.5 percent of the vote), as well as the majority of Super Tuesday states (including Virginia). And if that’s true, then it’s basically all over but the shouting.
On the Republican side, however, we are far less certain of the outcome. There’s no doubt that Donald Trump had a commanding position going in, having won three of the first four contests (New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada) by wide margins. But not since Barry Goldwater’s 1964 run has a frontrunner for the nomination of a major party been so hated by the power brokers within that party, and there’s no doubt that panicked GOP bigwigs are going to do everything in their power to, at the very least, try to deny him the 1,237 delegates he needs to win outright. This would result in a brokered convention, where the insiders would be able to push a more palatable alternative.
The problem is that Trump’s main competitor, Marco Rubio, had not won a single contest going into Super Tuesday, and only had a meager 16 delegates to Trump’s 82. Yes, he finally took the fight to Trump in last week’s feisty Republican debate, but was it enough to push the needle?
As for Virginia, we are cautiously predicting a Trump victory (a pre-election Monmouth University survey had him capturing 41 percent of likely Republican voters). But who knows? The combination of fallout from the Republican Party of Virginia’s now-abandoned “loyalty oath” and a late Rubio surge might have pushed him out of first place, but we doubt it.
And so, at this point, the smart money is on a Clinton-Trump presidential race, whichis perhaps the single craziest thing we’ve ever written. Until we actually have to write the words “President Trump,” that is.
Odd Dominion is an unabashedly liberal, twice-monthly op-ed column covering Virginia politics.
Updated March 3 at 9am with a reference to donkeys rather than elephants.
People who attended the Bernie Sanders rally Saturday, February 27, on the Downtown Mall, painted each other’s faces during the festivities. Photo: Ryan Jones
Bernie Sanders is standing in Nour Sulaiman’s living room. That is, a life-sized cardboard cutout of the senator dressed in a suit and tie has taken up residence in the far corner of the UVA fourth-year’s home.
A friend dropped off the likeness for the February 27 Sanders rally that was held—where else?—near the Free Speech Wall on the Downtown Mall, organized by two local grassroots organizations: Charlottesville and Central Virginia for Bernie Sanders and UVA for Bernie Sanders.
Two days before the rally, Sulaiman, one of the organizers of UVA for Bernie Sanders, along with several Sanders’ supporters, painted the Beta Bridge with a message directing people downtown. The goal was to draw as many people as possible to listen to local speakers talk about why they support the independent socialist democratic senator from Vermont to be president of the United States.
Even though he trails former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in delegates (65 to her 91; or 85 to 544 counting superdelegates, those who can vote any way at the Democratic National Convention) Sanders’ supporters say he has a higher percentage of the popular vote. They also say polls showing Clinton has a large lead in most of the 11 state primaries, including Virginia, on Super Tuesday, March 1, can be unreliable, especially if first-time millennial voters turn out, a generation Sanders has largely captured with his platform of free tuition to public colleges and universities. Up for grabs in Virginia are 95 delegates (and 15 superdelegates) that are split proportionally based on percentage of the vote.
The cutout isn’t the only preparation that’s been done to spur Sanders to a win in not only Charlottesville but Virginia as a whole on Super Tuesday. These two groups have been active since the summer and fall, first working to get Sanders on the Democratic presidential candidate ballot—grassroots groups across the state collected 17,882 signatures, 300 percent more than the 5,000 required.
In the last few days leading up to our local election, the focus is on reaching as many potential voters as they can, to inform them of their polling locations and the date of the election, and to answer any questions they have about Sanders’ platform.
Kurt Schlegel, a volunteer, works on the campaign full-time at the moment, mostly through canvassing, 12-hour days if needed. He believes he’s knocked on more doors than anyone else in the state—at least 1,500.
When canvassing he likes to have a conversation with the people he meets, his neighbors, because he says a lot of them have concerns similar to his.
“I’m just glad to help out,” he says. “Somebody’s got to do it.”
Getting organized
A Bernie Sanders volunteer inspects a neighborhood turf map that outlines one of the canvassing areas. Photo: Ryan Jones
After Sanders officially announced his candidacy in May 2015, grassroots efforts throughout the country started mobilizing. Charlottesville and Central Virginia for Bernie held its kick-off event, Stand with Bernie, in July at Firefly. Sanders spoke in a live webcast during the event, and supporters began throwing out ideas on how to spread the word about the senator. One of those attendees was retired political scientist David RePass, who eventually also helped a representative from the official campaign find space for the local Sanders field office, which opened underneath the Water Street parking garage February 10. For his part, RePass has spoken about Sanders—from people’s living rooms to an official talk just last week to the Democratic party chairs in Augusta, Waynesboro and Staunton. He also attended the opening of the field office, and said it was packed “to the ceiling—you couldn’t move.”
Nic McCarthy was manning the door during opening night—greeting everyone as they arrived. He got involved in the grassroots effort circuitously through the Black Lives Matter and Allow Debate movements. He had attended protests for both, and some local grassroots people recognized him and mentioned the Sanders group. McCarthy had seen Sanders in person when he spoke at Trinity Episcopal Church in May, but he was unimpressed.
“I didn’t believe him, I guess. He just seemed like another guy, which is something he combats,” McCarthy says. “He doesn’t speak in a folksy way.”
It wasn’t until months later, when he started seeing Bernie memes on Facebook and reading more about the senator’s viewpoints that he found a candidate he wanted to support.
“What I like about Bernie Sanders, he points out things that are common sense when he says them, but it’s like I feel like I never thought about that before,” he says. “Like why isn’t election day a national holiday? People have to find an hour [to vote] and work, and that disproportionately affects the working class.”
He missed the first local grassroots gathering last summer, but attended subsequent meetings. He estimates that hundreds of people are involved with the local grassroots effort, with a core of about a dozen to two dozen people consistently involved.
Sanders supporters also attended statewide grassroots meetings. At the three meetups held last summer they talked about how to organize in their local communities, how to create a structure so they could be more effective statewide, and a campaign official attended one of the meetings in Richmond to help with organization as well. They decided to create a centralized place to share information—using Facebook and Slack, a messaging app that can also store documents. But the technology options posed an intergenerational problem, when older group members were not able to figure out how to use Slack. They wondered would e-mails work better? Phone calls?
“We were learning a lot of things for the first time,” McCarthy says.
Before Sanders was on the ballot, a lot of the group’s efforts were focused on reaching out to community leaders (referred to as grass-tops) and organizations to share information about him. McCarthy remembers getting phone calls from City Council members during his morning shift cooking at the Jefferson Area Board for Aging. He works part-time in the mornings now and volunteers full-time on the campaign until late at night.
After Sanders was on the ballot, the official campaign’s statewide director wanted the group to focus on phone banking, McCarthy says. The local chapter met about once a week—often holding meetings in the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library main branch—to talk about other ways people could get involved, whether making a poster or brainstorming ways to organize better.
“It was really important to me that we try to be as participatory as possible, to engage as many people as possible,” McCarthy says.
In the last few weeks the local campaign office, which has one employee, Central Virginia field organizer Dan Epstein, has served as the hub of activity. Volunteers have staffed the office in shifts—there’s always someone manning the front door—and phone banking and canvassing have taken place at regular daily intervals. Large-scale maps of city streets and voting districts are colored in bright highlighters to denote where the districts are and which ones the group has already canvassed. On opening night, volunteers wrote on Post-Its what they needed to equip the office, and whoever could bring in that item took the Post-It with them. There is also a makeshift wall calendar created out of blue painter’s tape in which volunteers’ shifts are scheduled via Post-It notes as well. The temporary scheduling system makes sense—everything in the office will be moved out March 2.
The UVA for Bernie Sanders group started in true grassroots fashion—Sulaiman and three other students founded it in September and started putting up fliers around campus to advertise their meetings. She says they’re now 200 strong, with about 50 active members, who have gotten together to watch the debates, as well as phone bank and canvass.
“We have one of the most active groups in Virginia, if not the most active group, according to the campaign,” she says.
One of the founders, Rich Olszewski, a third-year UVA law student, drafted a petition asking the university to either give students the day off on election day or encourage leniency in attendance and not schedule tests on those days. They submitted the petition, with 555 student signatures, to President Teresa Sullivan last week; even if the university takes months to review it, the group hopes its petition will be approved for future elections.
“We wanted to encourage students to just go out and vote for whoever they want,” Sulaiman says. “We think it’s necessary for a democracy to flourish to have people of all ages voting in all kinds of elections, including local elections.”
The week before Super Tuesday Sulaiman estimates she is spending about 25 hours a week on the campaign and organizing the rally.
“There are a certain number of folks who are intimidated by being politically active, and I think a certain number, maybe just as many, find it cheesy, hokey, and it’s really important to overcome those feelings,” Olszewski says. “This campaign is sincere, authentic, it’s the real deal. There’s nothing manufactured about people’s passion and enthusiasm for Bernie.”
One month before Super Tuesday
Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy speaks before a packed room and introduces Virginia first lady Dorothy McAuliffe during the Thursday, February 25, opening of the Hillary Clinton field office behind the Ming Dynasty restaurant on Emmet Street. Photo: Ryan Jones
Schlegel is 20 minutes from Ames, Iowa, in a small town called McCallsburg. It’s 8 o’clock at night, pitch black save for the blinking cell tower lights miles away. He has a list of 15 doors he needs to knock on—in days the town’s residents will be participating in the February 1 Iowa caucus.
There’s snow on the ground, and at some point during his canvassing over the last few days he took a photo of a thermometer outside: 18 degrees. You get used to the cold, he says.
He parks his truck at the bottom of the driveway of a farmhouse and starts walking toward the home. He searches for a path to the main entrance but can’t find one. He thinks to himself, “I don’t want to get shot in Iowa in the freezing cold, thousands of miles away from home and nobody even knows where I am.”
Schlegel saw Sanders speak in September at UVA’s Miller Center. Even though he arrived two hours early, Schlegel still was unable to snag one of the 125 or so seats inside. Sanders came out after taping “American Forum” and spoke for about five minutes. The buzz was electric, Schlegel says.
This encounter motivated Schlegel to get involved for the first time in a presidential campaign. He did a little phone banking for the local grassroots efforts but quickly found he wasn’t much of a phone talker. He read on Facebook about a call for volunteers for the Iowa caucuses and tried to recruit others to go with him, with no luck. So it was just him and his dog, Gus Burger, who drove the 1,047 miles to Ames to start knocking on doors for Sanders (Gus visited 250 doors with his owner). Schlegel slept in a friend’s basement during the hours he wasn’t canvassing. He estimates he knocked on 400 doors in Iowa, a dedication that led Schlegel to be invited to a volunteer rally with Sanders the day before the caucuses—he even got to shake Bernie’s hand.
But back in McCallsburg, Schlegel is headed down the driveway. After walking 300 feet, he looks up at the house. This is the only house for miles. He has to knock on this door. He sees that the driveway goes to the back of the house and he knocks tentatively on the door. “Bernie!” a woman exclaims as she opens the door.
“It’s a revelation,” he says. “You don’t necessarily feel like you’re going to go out in the middle of nowhere and meet these people who feel the way you do.”
The woman who answers the door says she is an avid Bernie supporter and thinks she can get her husband on board, too.
The next morning campaign organizers tell Schlegel they ran some numbers and they need one more voter in McCallsburg. He calls everyone he met the day before—including Olive, the 84-year-old Clinton supporter who said she was undecided after talking with Schlegel. He calls the farmhouse woman and asks if she will pick up Olive and drive her to the caucus. He says she has five blocks on the way to sell her on Bernie.
Later that day he gets a text from the woman, who wanted to let him know she got two more people—one more than they needed.
When he returned to Charlottesville, Schlegel was initially disappointed—there were no TV ads, no banners everywhere, and the local field office hadn’t opened yet. But now, in the last few days before Super Tuesday, this is what Iowa was like, he says. A few days ago he even drove to Richmond to help canvass there.
Win or lose on Super Tuesday, Schlegel will continue being involved with the grassroots effort. A couple of friends he made in Iowa are in South Carolina now, but plan to go to North Carolina for the primary next weekend.
“Once you get your feet wet it’s like quicksand in this campaign and you don’t want to leave,” Schlegel says. “You can’t walk away because you get committed. It’s great.”
The rally
Rally signs included homemade ones with slogans such as “Feel the Bern” and “Keep $ out of politics.” Photo: Ryan Jones
At noon on Saturday, February 27, weeks of planning come to fruition.
As the band Das Homage plays, someone holds up the Sanders cutout behind the Free Speech Wall, and bounces the senator’s smiling face in time to the music. After the set, Bernie is returned to his spot leaning against a lamppost by the stage, where supporters flock to take selfies with the senator.
McCarthy, one of the main rally organizers, grabs the mic and steps on the small stage, upon which leans a black-and-white poster of Sanders being arrested during a civil rights protest. McCarthy asks the crowd, which is decked out in Bernie shirts, hats and even face paint, if they’re ready to “feel the Bern,” and comments on how there are fewer supporters at this rally than the one January 30, due to the final Get Out the Vote push happening over the weekend. He urges supporters to stick around after the rally and sign up for phone banking or canvassing shifts.
Speakers include Sulaiman, one of the rally organizers, as well as a local activist who supports Sanders’ desire to end fracking, and a living wage campaign organizer who speaks about his support of the $15 minimum wage. Rally attendees are invited to share why they support Sanders in 30 seconds or less. From high school students to baby boomers, each person has a different reason. A Fredericksburg Sanders campaign volunteer likes the senator’s support of universal health care. “The cause is right and the time is now!” the crowd chants as he leaves the stage.
A local reenactor who plays Thomas Jefferson’s master builder, James Densmore, speaks to the crowd on Jefferson’s behalf: “Mr. Sanders represents what Jefferson called the natural aristocracy, the middle class,” he says.
And a high school student says she supports Bernie because her generation will be the one battling the effects of climate change, and “he’s the only candidate that’s going to deal with that and turn that around.”
“Show me what democracy looks like. This is what democracy looks like!”
McCarthy and the crowd chant in call-and-response.
Afterward, the group parades down the mall. They shout several refrains about Sanders, while onlookers snap photos or stop to watch. One gives the group two thumbs down as they pass—democracy in action.
Once assembled back at the Free Speech Wall, Lee White, who moved to Charlottesville in 2014 from England, spurs the rally attendees to be involved as much as they can in the final push before Super Tuesday. Although he can’t vote in this election, he’s been an active grassroots member since that first meeting last summer.
“We know where his heart is at, this guy is just fighting for all of us, for a better world basically,” he tells the group. “I have an absolute burning desire to do something here, to make something happen. Every single person that is here, every single person who is out there who might vote for Bernie is important. What if on Tuesday night we’re all sitting around the TVs watching returns come in for Virginia and it’s almost there. What if we can just do a little bit more this weekend?”
One last push
UVA for Bernie Sanders founder Nour Sulaiman paints Beta Bridge with other supporters February 25 to promote Saturday’s rally. Photo: Ryan Jones
After the rally, the Bernie cutout is moved to the front room of the field office. It’s propped against an office window, along with the myriad colorful signs that have sprouted up in the last few weeks. About a dozen rallygoers sit in the main room, receiving canvassing training from Kimberly Stevens. She’s showing them how to download the MiniVAN app, which they can use to track their canvassing results instead of paper.
McCarthy leads a team–including Evan Brown, Mallory Napier and Mark Soechting—to turf districts 14 and 16 in the Walker neighborhood. As the group leaves the mall, McCarthy stops to put a $20 bill and a $1 bill in an open guitar case of the Buskers for Bernie. Along the walk, past the 250 bypass, up Park Street to North Avenue, he gives the team some pointers on canvassing. He, too, says it should be more of a conversation and you always want to leave a positive impression on a potential voter.
McCarthy knocks on the first few houses while the group watches.
Most people are not home, courtesy of the nice weather that day, McCarthy surmises. If no one answers, they leave a door hanger and pamphlets with information on Sanders and how to vote. Eventually the group splits into two, dividing the turfs up to perform the canvassing faster.
Out of about 20 stops in the neighborhood, 25 percent are confirmed Sanders supporters. One woman says she’s undecided and engages the group in a conversation about Sanders’ stance on several issues.
Three hours later, during the return trip to downtown, the conversation turns toward Sanders’ potential running mate. There’s also talk of who the Republican candidate will be and if Clinton would be able to beat Trump, should they both win the nominations. They all say Sanders is the best candidate to defeat any Republican candidate.
There’s a Super Tuesday watch party at South Street Brewery, followed by a volunteer recognition event the next day. What will the atmosphere at those events be like if Sanders doesn’t win—will the effort have been worth it?
“Even if he doesn’t seem like he’s winning after Super Tuesday, I think he’s going to stay in because he still represents a real core. He represents the millennial vote, and they’re arguing he’s going to stay all the way to the convention and really push for these issues,” McCarthy says. “In terms of politics I think we’re in a really transformative time, and this is just the beginning.”
This article went to press the morning of Super Tuesday, when the primary election results were unknown.
Fourth-year English major Vanessa Braganza worries the renovations to Alderman will permanently remove a large amount of Alderman’s collections to an off-site location. Photo by Amy Jackson
In this digital age, many speculate that printed literature is on the decline, with Kindles, iPhone apps and Google Books able to supply previously printed materials. However, this view of a digitized reading future holds little weight at the University of Virginia, where faculty and students alike are fighting to “save the books” at Alderman Library.
Alderman Library, opened in 1938, has not been renovated since the late ’60s, and plans are currently in the works for a renovation that would address health and safety issues, such as modernizing the fire suppression systems, as well as plumbing and electrical. In the wake of these proposed renovations, some UVA students fear that Alderman Library’s roughly 2.5 million books, government documents and newspapers are in danger.
Fourth-year English major Vanessa Braganza worries the renovations to Alderman will permanently remove a large amount of Alderman’s collections to an off-site location.
“It’s been proposed that only 800,000 of the 2 million books here might be left,” Braganza says. “And although this is only speculation, it’s an alarming speculation to even consider.”
Braganza, whose petition to Keep the Books in Alderman has garnered more than 580 undergraduate signatures, says that removing books from Alderman would undermine one of the primary functions of a library.
“The library is several things,” Braganza says. “It’s the equivalent of a laboratory to a researcher. It’s a sort of museum where you can come and touch things. And while the book as artifact is only one facet of the library, the primary function of a library is to come and browse the books.”
Former university president and current English professor John Casteen agrees that the physicality of a book is important, especially for incoming professors.
“There were people who came to UVA specifically because we had a spectacular collection and who would build upon these special kinds of collections,” Casteen says. “[The renovation] has huge implications for how we teach our courses and how we attract new faculty with the strength of our collections.”
Interim university librarian Martha Sites says the students’ and faculty members’ fear of a large-scale removal of books from Alderman Library is relatively unfounded.
“The thing that I just can’t overstate is that there is no plan yet,” Sites says, adding that the library renovations are still “working documents” and that nothing will be confirmed until the state legislature approves or denies funding for the project (full renovations could cost as much as $160 million). “When people speculate about [the renovations],” Sites says, “it can create a kind of hysteria that is just not necessary when an open dialogue is forthcoming.”
Sites also says rumors have arisen that Alderman will digitize its books and remove the physical copies, which she says is not part of the plans. According to Sites, 78 percent of Alderman’s collections are under copyright, making it nearly impossible to digitize these works and make them publicly available online, thus requiring them to stay where they are.
Even if these books were available online, Braganza emphasizes how different searching online is from searching in person.
“How often do you go in search of a book and you look around you in the stacks and find related things, or you find that the book you wanted was not what you thought it would be?” Braganza asks, adding that the ability to browse through the stacks is paramount to student research.
Sites does say that books will have to be removed temporarily for renovations to take place. She points to a corroded piece of plumbing as evidence that these renovations are necessary.
In order to protect the books from dirt and dust, plans are in the works to move them to a storage library on Ivy Road, where students would be able to check them out in person or request a book, which would be shuttled to Grounds that day.
Above all, Sites says that the staff of Alderman Library has no intention of permanently removing large numbers of books.
“I can’t tell you how bothered some of our staff were at the assumption that librarians don’t care about books,” Sites says. “That’s why most of our people are here —because we do care about books.”
By the numbers:
Volumes in Alderman (including books, documents and serials): 2.5 million
Volumes added per year: 35,000
Seats in Alderman (for studying purposes): 1,447
Estimated cost for necessary renovations: Between $40 million and $100 million
Estimated cost for full renovations (including restoration of certain spaces): $160 million