Electoral Dysfunction

2012 • 87 minutos
2.6
5 opiniones
60%
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After making the eye-opening discovery that the right to vote is missing from the Constitution, political humorist Mo Rocca sets out on a road trip to see how voting works - and doesn't work - in America. He heads to Indiana, home to some of the strictest election laws in the country, and meets two feisty Hoosiers - Democrat Mike Marshall and Republican Dee Dee Benkie - who take him inside their efforts to get out every vote. As he progresses on his journey, Mo searches for the Electoral College; investigates the heated battle over Voter ID and voter fraud; critiques ballot design with Todd Oldham; and explores the case of a former felon who was sentenced to ten years in prison—for the crime of voting. Irreverent, engaging and nonpartisan, ELECTORAL DYSFUNCTION is for voters across the political spectrum who want their votes to count. Set against the backdrop of the historic 2008 election, the film is hosted by Mo Rocca, a correspondent for "CBS Sunday Morning," a panelist on NPR's "Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me!," and a former correspondent for "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart." The film was written, produced and directed by David Deschamps, Leslie D. Farrell and Bennett Singer, whose collective credits include multiple Emmy, Peabody and duPont-Columbia awards.

Calificaciones y opiniones

2.6
5 opiniones
Ro Teesirre
29 de diciembre de 2012
When I first heard the black lady say we live in a democracy I thought maybe the author will correct her.....seconds later he says it.....the United States of America isn't, never has been, a democracy. We are a republic. See kids this is why a government education is worth about the amount of a heaping pile of dog poo.
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Un usuario de Google
15 de noviembre de 2012
Actually biases in the media are commonplace, and 90% of what the major news outlet cover has a liberal slant (excluding fox, of course). So yes, the words nonpartisan are alarming when you have worked for three historically liberal programs.
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Un usuario de Google
12 de noviembre de 2012
Just downloaded... I haven't seen this yet, but I am skeptical of the word "nonpartisan" used to describe someone who works or worked for CBS, The Daily Show and NPR.
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