It's no secret that an uncomfortable percentage of residents that have been transferred out from the Motion Picture Home have withered and died. Some may have you believe that death is an inevitable part of life and at their advanced age, well ... it was bound to happen no matter where they found themselves. It's the circle of life in Woodland Hills where Dr. Lion King has been all but de-fanged, de-clawed and gelded.
He will soon leave the pride. We will make sure that he does.
Others may point out that the very nature of a new environment, and all that comes with the move, is jarring and life-threatening to anyone in the advanced years that our residents find themselves in.
I tend to buy that argument. It makes more sense to me.
Let's avoid the debate on transfer trauma, I mean -- who cares at this point? The warnings were sent to the Motion Picture administration about the likelihood that some residents may not survive being kicked out or willingly transferred from their "home." That warning was not heeded, and as you would expect, we've lost some very beautiful brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers and loved ones. Possibly needlessly. What a tragedy.
Oh well.
Let's instead look at the positive effects of transfer trauma. In this case, let's look at how beneficial the transfer and how minimal the trauma would be to the future of motion picture and television health care if Dr. David Tillman and Nurse Seth Ellis were summarily removed from their positions of power. There would still hope for the continuum of care at the Motion Picture Home.
As I have been warned, I must tread lightly here. They are on the defense -- and their ranks are splintered. We've gone way past the date that Seth Ellis targeted for the closing of the Long Term Care center. The families and concerned industry members are more resolute than ever that the facility will never close. The motion picture and television industry is behind us. The Teamsters are behind us. SAG is on record as being against the closure, and true to the nature of these fine folk -- a Christmas tree has been placed in the foyer of the Skirball entry compliments of the SAG Seniors Committee and SAG Foundation.
Those in the administration who finally see the truth of the situation, and who recognize the momentum the families and concerned industry members have, are turning the situation around; they are beginning to "get it."
With that knowledge comes an uneasy awakening that they have been trapped on the wrong side of an important social issue.
Once the smoke clears, what side you are on will be important. Please take a note of that. There is a right and wrong side to this issue.
Back to the subject of transfer trauma, and how I see it working in this situation:
Winner of the Los Angeles Press Club's Best Blog Award for his Hollyblogs, and as one of the voices of the grassroots coalition that saved long-term care for the motion picture and television industry, Stellar's "vituperative blog on TheWrap'" (Vanity Fair) has caused great discomfort to the Motion Picture and Television Fund Board and Management, and seemingly added to the weight of the "refrigerator that Jeffrey Katzenberg carried on his back" during the struggle for the Motion Picture Home's Long Term Care.
As Katzenberg remarked to a journalist regarding Stellar, "He's annoying as hell, but I get it." On the other hand, a major donor to the Motion Picture Home remarked "we may not always agree with Richard, but we ignore him at our peril."
Stellar lives in Woodland Hills, a stone's throw from the Motion Picture Home with his wife of 27 years, two dogs and a 1965 Epiphone Casino.
How much good would the millions spent on the Super Bowl halftime show have done for the children of Indianapolis? Give us less Madonna and more Clint Eastwood