Tag: Corporate Interests

  • The Oscars at a Crossroads: Celebration, Contradiction and the Future of Hollywood’s Biggest Night

    For nearly a century, the Academy Awards have served as Hollywood’s grand self-portrait. Each year, the global film industry gathers beneath the lights of the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles to celebrate the achievements of the previous year and crown its winners with cinema’s most famous prize. The Oscars remain one of the most recognisable cultural rituals in entertainment, a night where prestige, performance, and spectacle converge.

    At their best, the Academy Awards remind audiences why films matter. They celebrate storytelling, craftsmanship, and the collaborative art that lies behind every frame projected on screen. This year’s ceremony offered those familiar moments of emotion and theatre that have defined the Oscars for generations. Emotional speeches, unexpected wins, and the occasional flash of genuine humility all played their part.

    Yet beneath the glamour, the Oscars also reveal something else about Hollywood. They show the industry’s contradictions.

    For years, the Academy has struggled with an image problem. Television ratings have fallen, and audiences have grown increasingly sceptical of a ceremony that often feels disconnected from the people who watch the films it celebrates. While the awards still carry enormous prestige within the industry, the cultural authority of the Oscars is no longer unquestioned outside Hollywood.

    One of the most visible flashpoints came during the “Oscars So White” controversy, which erupted in 2015 when all twenty acting nominees were white for the second consecutive year. The hashtag quickly grew into a wider conversation about systemic racism and representation in Hollywood casting and award recognition. Those concerns were legitimate and long overdue. For decades, the industry had struggled with meaningful inclusion, particularly regarding roles, opportunities, and recognition for minority performers.

    But the debate was not without its own contradictions. Some of the loudest voices calling for reform came from figures within the same privileged industry structure they were criticising. Actor Will Smith was among those who publicly criticised the Academy’s lack of diversity and announced a boycott of the ceremony.

    The irony was difficult to ignore. Smith himself had already been nominated for Academy Awards twice during his career, and on both occasions he lost to other Black actors. The controversy highlighted a deeper problem in Hollywood’s culture of public advocacy. Genuine structural issues were sometimes entangled with personal grievances and industry politics.

    This dynamic is part of what fuels the public perception that the Oscars can feel self-congratulatory. Hollywood is often eager to celebrate its own moral awareness, yet less comfortable confronting the structural realities of the system that produces it. When actors deliver speeches about social justice from one of the most exclusive stages in entertainment, audiences sometimes hear sincerity. At other times, they hear a lecture from people whose lives are far removed from those watching at home.

    The Academy has taken steps to address these criticisms. Membership has expanded significantly in the past decade, bringing in more international voters and a more diverse professional base. In theory, this broadening of the voting body should create a more representative awards system and reflect the increasingly global nature of filmmaking.

    A recent rule change has also addressed one of the Oscars’ long-standing open secrets. Voters must now confirm that they have actually watched the nominated films before casting their ballots. For years, it was widely acknowledged within the industry that some voters based their decisions on reputation, studio campaigns, or partial viewing rather than the films themselves.

    Requiring voters to watch the nominated work may sound like an obvious standard, but its impact is potentially significant. Smaller films and less aggressively marketed productions now have a better chance of competing against studio campaigns backed by massive advertising budgets. In theory, it gives a fairer hearing to the many craftspeople and independent creators whose work might otherwise be overshadowed by prestige marketing.

    But the Academy’s attempts at reform continue to raise questions about priorities.

    In 2024, the Academy announced a new competitive category for Best Casting, which debuted at this year’s ceremony. While casting directors play a vital role in filmmaking, the decision puzzled many observers. Poor or uninspired casting has become one of the most common complaints among modern audiences, particularly when studios adapt beloved intellectual properties or franchise material.

    In that context, the decision to create a casting award felt strangely misaligned with audience concerns. If the Academy truly wished to recognise overlooked parts of filmmaking, many critics argue that a far more obvious addition has existed for decades.

    Stunt performers.

    From high-speed car chases to physically demanding fight choreography, stunt work has defined some of cinema’s most memorable moments. Yet despite the skill, training, and risk involved, stunt performers remain entirely absent from the Oscars. The omission is especially striking when compared with other awards ceremonies. The Screen Actors Guild has recognised stunt ensembles for years, and audiences regularly celebrate stunt professionals as central figures in action filmmaking.

    Unlike many areas of the film industry, stunt work is also often rooted in working-class labour. These performers risk injury to create the illusion of danger that defines modern blockbuster cinema. Their absence from Hollywood’s most prestigious awards has long been viewed as one of the Academy’s most glaring oversights.

    The contrast between recognising casting while continuing to ignore stunt performers highlights a broader issue. The Oscars have historically favoured certain forms of artistic labour while overlooking others. Cinematographers, composers, and editors rightly receive recognition, but many of the physical and technical crafts that shape filmmaking remain outside the Academy’s spotlight.

    The industry now faces an even more complicated challenge as artificial intelligence begins to reshape the landscape of creative work.

    AI technology is already capable of replicating voices, generating visual effects, and producing script-like text. While some filmmakers see the technology as a tool that could enhance production, others view it as a direct threat to creative labour. During recent Hollywood labour disputes, writers and actors voiced serious concerns that studios could use AI to replicate performances or generate content without fair compensation.

    The implications are profound. Cinema has always evolved alongside technology, from sound to colour to digital effects. But AI raises deeper questions about authorship and artistic ownership. If performances can be digitally reproduced or scripts partially generated by machines, what exactly counts as creative work?

    The Academy cannot avoid that debate. As the symbolic guardian of cinematic excellence, the Oscars have commented on AI through jokes and skits, but a serious denunciation has yet to occur.

    AI is a threat to workers’ rights, art, and the environment, and the Academy needs to hold the studios wanting to use it to account. Disney has shown to be hypocritical in this regard, announcing that they intend to use generative AI in their filmmaking while seeking legal action against AI generators who use Disney-licensed material.

    Hollywood’s most prestigious awards ceremony has never been entirely free from controversy, and few scandals have cast a longer shadow over the Academy Awards than those involving sexual abuse and misconduct within the film industry itself. Two names in particular, Harvey Weinstein and Roman Polanski, have become emblematic of the tensions between artistic prestige and moral accountability.

    For decades, Harvey Weinstein was one of the most powerful figures in Hollywood. As co-founder of Miramax and later of The Weinstein Company, he became notorious for aggressive Oscar campaigns that helped shape modern awards-season strategy. Films such as Shakespeare in Love, The King’s Speech, and Chicago all benefited from Weinstein’s relentless lobbying of Academy voters. Yet behind the scenes, Weinstein’s power masked years of horrific abuse. In 2017, investigative reporting revealed a pattern of sexual harassment, assault, and coercion spanning decades. The revelations triggered the wider #MeToo movement, forcing Hollywood to confront the culture of silence that had allowed such behaviour to persist. Weinstein was expelled from the Academy shortly afterwards and later convicted of rape and sexual assault in court, but that was somehow even more damning as the Academy, and the industry in general, had enabled Weinstein’s abuse for decades.

    The case of Roman Polanski presents a different but equally troubling chapter in the Academy’s history. Polanski fled the United States in 1978 after pleading guilty to unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor. Despite this, he continued to work internationally and remained a celebrated director for decades. In 2003, he won the Academy Award for Best Director for The Pianist. Polanski did not attend the ceremony due to his fugitive status, but the moment nevertheless highlighted the Academy’s hypocritical relationship with its own values. For years, he remained a member of the organisation, only being expelled in 2018 after renewed pressure following the Weinstein scandal.

    Together, these cases illustrate the uncomfortable truth that Hollywood’s culture of prestige has often coexisted with a reluctance to hold powerful figures accountable. The Academy’s responses have evolved over time, but the legacy of these scandals continues to shape how audiences view the institution today. It makes the moral grandstanding and lecturing for Hollywood’s elite all the more unpalatable.

    Despite the criticisms and scandals, the Oscars remain a powerful institution. Winning an Academy Award can transform careers, elevate independent films, and introduce audiences to voices they might otherwise never encounter. The ceremony still serves as one of the few global stages dedicated entirely to celebrating cinema as an art form.

    But prestige alone is not enough to sustain credibility.

    For the Oscars to remain meaningful in the modern era, the Academy must continue to evolve. Recognising stunt performers would acknowledge one of the industry’s most overlooked crafts. Expanding transparency in voting and membership could rebuild trust in the awards process. Confronting the implications of AI would demonstrate that Hollywood understands the future of its own medium.

    Most importantly, the Academy needs to lead the industry in holding power to account. It can no longer sit idle while thinking that a skit or joke on a safe stage is enough. Award winners need to do more than make meaningless statements in sugary speeches. Actions speak louder than words.

    The Academy Awards were created to celebrate the best of filmmaking. The challenge now is to ensure that the celebration reflects the full reality of the industry behind the scenes.

    Hollywood loves stories about reinvention. If the Oscars wish to remain the ultimate symbol of cinematic achievement, they may need to embrace one themselves.

  • Aetna, the latest scandal in healthcare, the cost to Americans

    Aetna Inc., a national health insurer incorporated in Pennsylvania, has agreed to pay $117.7 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by submitting — or failing to correct — inaccurate diagnosis codes for patients enrolled in its Medicare Advantage plans. According to federal investigators, those inaccurate codes resulted in inflated payments from Medicare.

    On its face, the settlement reads like another corporate compliance case. A large insurer, a large payout, a set of allegations resolved without an admission of wrongdoing. But beneath the legal language sits a far more uncomfortable question about the structure of the American healthcare system itself: what happens when private corporations are paid billions of taxpayer dollars to care for the nation’s elderly, while simultaneously being rewarded by investors for maximizing revenue and reducing costs?

    By Kenneth C. Zirkel – Own work, CC BY 4.0, Aetna Insurance building, Hartford, Connecticut

    The Aetna case offers a window into that tension.

    Medicare Advantage, also known as Medicare Part C, allows seniors to enroll in private insurance plans instead of traditional government-run Medicare. These plans are run by private insurers known as Medicare Advantage Organizations.

    Under the program, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services pays insurers a fixed monthly amount for each enrollee. That payment increases depending on how sick a patient is expected to be. The more serious the diagnoses attached to a patient’s file, the higher the payment the insurer receives.

    To calculate those payments, insurers submit diagnosis codes to the government documenting the medical conditions of their patients.

    Federal officials say Aetna submitted inaccurate or unsupported diagnosis codes that increased those payments. Investigators also say the company failed to withdraw certain codes after they were found to be unsupported and falsely certified that the data submitted to regulators was accurate.

    The settlement resolves those allegations.

    “The government pays private insurers over $530 billion each year to care for Americans enrolled in Medicare Advantage,” said Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “We will continue to hold accountable insurers that knowingly submit inaccurate or unsupported diagnoses to improperly inflate reimbursement.”

    Investigators say part of the issue traces back to a chart review program Aetna used in 2015. The program paid coders to review patient records and identify conditions supported by medical documentation.

    According to federal officials, Aetna used those reviews to add new diagnosis codes, thereby increasing the payments it received from Medicare.

    But when those same reviews suggested that previously submitted diagnoses were unsupported, investigators say the company did not remove them — a step that would have required the insurer to repay the government.

    In effect, prosecutors argue the program allowed the company to identify opportunities for additional payments while ignoring evidence that it may have already been overpaid.

    The settlement also resolves allegations spanning 2018 through 2023 involving diagnosis codes related to morbid obesity.

    Morbid obesity diagnoses are typically supported by Body Mass Index measurements documented in patient records. Federal investigators say some of the codes submitted by Aetna were inconsistent with BMI data in those records, resulting in increased Medicare payments.

    Part of the case arose from a lawsuit filed by a former Aetna risk-adjustment coding auditor under the False Claims Act’s whistleblower provisions. Those provisions allow private individuals to sue on behalf of the government when they believe fraudulent claims have been submitted for federal funds.

    The whistleblower in the case, Mary Melette Thomas, will receive $2,012,500 as part of the settlement.

    While the agreement resolves these allegations, Aetna’s legal history reflects a broader pattern that has followed the private insurance industry for decades.

    The company, now owned by CVS Health following a massive merger in 2018, has previously faced lawsuits and investigations related to physician reimbursement, billing practices, and claim denials. In the early 2000s, Aetna paid hundreds of millions of dollars to settle class-action lawsuits brought by doctors who accused the insurer of systematically underpaying medical providers.

    Patient advocates have also raised concerns about the growing use of automated claim review systems and complex billing processes that can result in delayed or denied care.

    For many Americans, those disputes are not abstract policy debates. They are decisions that can shape whether a patient receives treatment.

    One of the most widely cited cases involved Nataline Sarkisyan, a 17-year-old leukemia patient in California whose doctors recommended an emergency liver transplant in 2007. Her insurer initially denied coverage for the procedure, calling it experimental. After intense public protests and national media attention, the company reversed its decision. Sarkisyan died hours later before the transplant could take place.

    Stories like that have helped fuel a growing frustration among patients navigating the American healthcare system.

    Even when people have insurance, the path to receiving care can involve prior authorization requirements, coverage disputes, and complex billing rules that many patients struggle to understand.

    At the same time, healthcare costs continue to climb.

    In 2024, healthcare spending in the United States reached approximately $5.3 trillion, accounting for roughly 18 percent of the country’s entire economy.

    Insurance premiums have also surged. The average annual premium for family coverage reached nearly $27,000 in 2025, with workers paying thousands of dollars of that cost themselves.

    Since 2015, family premiums have increased by more than 50 percent.

    Prescription drugs add another layer of pressure. Americans spend more than $600 billion each year on medications, and surveys show nearly one in four patients struggles to afford their prescriptions.

    Yet the challenges facing the system extend beyond cost alone.

    Across the country, hospitals are grappling with staffing shortages, rising operating costs, and the financial strain of caring for aging populations. In rural communities, dozens of hospitals have closed or scaled back services in recent years, leaving many patients with fewer options for care.

    Meanwhile, Medicare Advantage itself has become a financial powerhouse on Wall Street.

    Today, more than half of all Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans, and the program represents one of the most profitable segments of the private insurance industry. Investors closely watch enrollment growth, reimbursement rates, and risk-adjustment payments because they directly influence the revenues of companies like UnitedHealth, Humana, and CVS Health.

    That dynamic creates a difficult reality at the heart of the system: the same program designed to care for aging Americans has also become a major revenue stream for publicly traded corporations whose primary legal obligation is to deliver returns for shareholders.

    Cases like the Aetna settlement sit at the intersection of those two realities.

    Supporters of private insurance argue that companies help control costs and coordinate care within a complex healthcare system.

    Critics say the incentives embedded in that system encourage insurers to push diagnoses upward when billing the government while pushing payments downward when covering patient care.

    The result, for many Americans, is a system that often feels impossible to navigate.

    Coverage may exist on paper. But access to timely, affordable care can still depend on whether a treatment is approved, whether a provider is in network, or whether a claim is denied.

    The Aetna settlement will return more than $117 million to the federal government. But the deeper issue it exposes is not simply about one insurer or one case.

    It is about a healthcare system that now consumes nearly one-fifth of the American economy while leaving millions of patients struggling to afford care, find doctors, or understand the rules governing their own insurance.

    When a comment was requested from Aetna, they responded with:

    “Aetna continues to disagree with the DOJ’s industry-wide allegations, and this settlement should not be seen as an acknowledgment of liability. Instead, we are now able to avoid the uncertainty and further expense of prolonged litigation, as we maintain our focus on delivering first-in-class member experience across our Medicare Advantage plans.” Phillip Blando, Aetna Spokesperson.

    In 2025, Aetna generated $2.9 billion dollars of profit.

    At some point, the question stops being whether one company misreported diagnosis codes.

    The real question becomes whether the structure of the system itself is working — or whether the country has built a healthcare economy so financially complex that accountability arrives only after billions have already been spent.

    For millions of Americans trying to navigate illness, insurance, and rising costs, that question is no longer theoretical.

    It is urgent.


  • Corporate Interests vs Community: Roxbury Stands Against ICE

    Amid widespread resident outrage over a warehouse sale, New Jersey residents stand against ICE in Roxbury. DG Roxbury Property Owner, L.P., linked to Dallas-based Dalfen Industrial and a Goldman Sachs asset management fund, sold a 470,000-square-foot warehouse at 1879 Route 46 in Roxbury to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for ICE. The deal closed on February 19, 2026, for $129.3 million, raising concerns about the local community’s future and the influence of corporate and financial interests. The protest drew over 150 people from Roxbury and neighboring towns. With signs held up that said NO ICE and referencing the disgraced Trump admin as equal to nazis many spoke up for what they believed in.

    Aerial view of a large commercial building with a white flat roof and a parking lot beside it, surrounded by sparse trees.
    Credit: No ICE North Jersey Alliance. Aerial view of the Roxbury warehouse sold to ICE.

    Roxbury Township in Morris County, NJ, is a suburban area with about 23,111 residents as of 2023 and an average age of 43.3. The community is mostly white, comprising roughly 71-80% of the population, and has a median household income of over $130,000. The poverty rate is low, at approximately 5.4%. 

    The call is clear: get ICE out of New Jersey. The GSA, which oversees the sale and leasing of property, has been contacted and requested documents related to the sale of the warehouse. The agency responded to the request and alerted The Penny Tribune that they will try to release the documents pertaining to another property in Roseland, NJ, as well as the detention facility in Newark, NJ. The GSA confirmed this on February 19th 2026, they would release the files.

    A screenshot of a web form for submitting a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. It includes details such as the request date (03/01/2026) and status (To be Processed), along with options for Agency Office and Request Type.

    A video submitted by a protester shows them walking up to the group of people. A line formed along the street as drivers passed by, witnessing their community standing up for the non-citizen population.

    Photos of the protest:

  • New Epstein files link Trump to Mar-a-Lago ‘Calendar Girl’ auctions. 3.5M documents released by DOJ reveal ties to Elon Musk and Jack Lang.

    Grappling with the president’s involvement in the Epstein case

    The Department of Justice released over 3.5 million additional files from the Epstein Files mandated by law. This comes 45 days after they were required to release the documents in a press conference held by Deputy AG Blanche. He states that all photos of women have been redacted, but the DOJ made redaction errors, took files down in real time, and links began expiring. The government partnered with Akamai to deliver the files using a content delivery network. As the files were indexed, President Trump was mentioned over 38,000 times.

    Controversy arose when initial files showed witnesses attesting to “Calendar Girls,” an auction at Maralago, where Trump auctioned off girls measuring their vulva by placing a finger to see tightness. The tip implicates multiple Trump family members, including Elon Musk. In June of 2025, Elon posted on X (Formerly Twitter) stating that the files had not been released because they contained Donald Trump’s material.

    Elon asked to visit Epstein at his New Mexico ranch along at his island.

    Screenshot

    As more digging is happening, the Truth will be uncovered. The victims over the years have participated in interviews, with many committing suicide, under the pressures of surviving horrendous suffering at the hands of convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

    Trump recently has distanced himself from Epstein and has called the files a Democratic hoax. Evidence suggests close ties between Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump, with Trump even calling Epstein a terrific guy.

    “I’ve known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy,” Mr. Trump told New York magazine in 2002. “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”

    Portrait Jeffrey Epstein (left) and real estate developer Donald Trump as they pose together at the Mar-a-Lago estate, Palm Beach, Florida on February 22, 1997. Davidoff Studios/Getty Images

    George Houraney and his girlfriend attended a dinner with Trump in 1992, during Trump’s first presidential bid in 2016. Houraney participated in an interview and made an assertion that he had to ban Jeffrey Epstein from his events and could not sign on to deals because of Epstein’s conduct. Houraney also goes on to explain the business deals that failed due to Trump’s inappropriate conduct with girlfriend, Jill Harth.

    Donald Trump with Jill Harth in 1992.Credit…George Houraney

    Jan. 24, 1993, Harth and Houraney visited to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida for a contract-signing celebration, At the request of Trump “Calendar girls” were brought along. He offered Harth a tour of the estate and then pulled her into the empty bedroom of his daughter Ivanka. In the FBI tips released in the latest files calendar girls can be attested by multiple sources. Trump has denied this claim.

    Screenshot

    NY Times reporter Nicholas Kristof asked Harth in 2016, “Why would a woman who accused Trump of attempted rape ever go out with him?”

    Harth replied

    “I was scared, thinking, ‘what am I going to do now?’” she says. “When he called me and tried to work on me again, I was thinking maybe I should give this a try, maybe if he’s still working on me, I should give this rich guy a chance.”

    Documents released as part of this new trove of files showed prominent international figures such as Prince Andrew and Jack Lang working with Epstein. Lang began a non-profit, with Epstein spearheading the founding and an initial donation of $75,000. Sylvie Aubry, A long-time friend of Jack Lang and a co-founder of the non-profit, also runs a floral business in France. Jack Lang was previously the minister of Culture, who also states that the non-profit was created to fund a movie. The movie funding was never disclosed. Other Associates of the non-profit, such as the president, treasurer, and secretary, were described as long-term staffers or friends of Lang.

    Bill Gates can be seen in multiple photos with Epstein and world leaders, with some of the pictures of Gates with redacted women discovered during an FBI raid of Epstein’s Island. Recently, in the files, documents state that Gates contracted an STI from Russian girls, but Gates has denied the claims.

    Gates on emails released from files:

    “These claims are absolutely absurd and completely false,” a spokesperson for Gates said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE.

    Further, Gates’s statement states that the files show only Epstein’s frustration at not obtaining a long-term business partnership with Gates.

    Screenshot

    As more information comes out from the files, be sure to check back at this article for updates.