logo
'Deaf President Now!' peels back curtain on Deaf culture

'Deaf President Now!' peels back curtain on Deaf culture

That's about to change with new documentary "Deaf President Now!" (streaming now on Apple TV+, home of Oscar-winning film "CODA"). It chronicles the students at the world's only Deaf university, Gallaudet, in 1988, who fought back against the college's decision to hire a hearing president. In its 124-year history, there had only been hearing presidents.
The students locked gates. Used buses to block the entrance. Went on national television to air their grievances. All in the name of their community.
It's a story co-director Nyle DiMarco, Deaf actor and filmmaker, has wanted to tell for years. Initially, he and producer Jonathan King tried for a scripted version that didn't pan out.
"The story of 'Deaf President Now!' was about so much more than just appointing a deaf president," DiMarco says. "It's more complex, more layered and contains much more nuance than what we would have been able to provide within a scripted format. And because it didn't lend itself to really telling the story the way that we needed to, we brought it to (co-director Davis Guggenheim), who immediately said, 'No, no, no, this has to be a doc.'"
And so it became one - one that everyone, from Deaf people to hearing people to today's student protesters, ought to give a watch.
'They were able to overcome those internal conflict'
Guggenheim, who is a hearing person, felt like he was pretty informed about the Deaf community when he signed on to the project. "Now, two years later, I feel even more ignorant than when I started," he says, "meaning it's a beautiful, complex world that I'm just a visitor in, and Nyle has been so generous to sort of invite me in." That collaboration will mean a unique viewing experience for the audience; for hearing people, that means they will appreciate sound like a deaf person might. By vibration, for example.
"Growing up Deaf, a lot of people have this assumption that we have no relationship or interaction with sound whatsoever," DiMarco explains, "but that's not true. It's not entirely lacking in our world. We just experience it in a different way."
Appreciating differences is a key throughline in the documentary. Watching the film, one can't help but compare it to other college campus protests, stretching from the Vietnam War to the current war between Israel and Gaza.
"When we were editing the movie, on one screen would be our characters in 1988 and then on the TV over here was, protests at Columbia and UCLA and and it was a striking, striking contrast," Guggenheim says. The students profiled in the film, for example - Jerry Covell, Greg Hlibok, Bridgetta Bourne-Firl and Tim Rarus - didn't all get along. But they still managed to fight for a common goal.
"They were able to overcome those internal conflicts and those differences of opinions and work together every day until they got what they wanted," DiMarco says.
'I'm exactly where I'm supposed to be': Nyle DiMarco talks Deaf, queer culture in 'Deaf Utopia' memoir
'I don't think there's any one right way to be Deaf'
Not only did the protests lead to the resignation of the appointed president, Elisabeth Zinser, but also the stepping down of Jane Bassett Spilman, chair of the board of trustees of the university.
Ultimately, the students do see their Deaf president in I. King Jordan, then a dean. But not before they grew angry at him for switching back and forth between siding with students, then the university. Jordan became deaf as a 21-year-old in an automobile accident.
"He's sort of bordering between these two worlds. And there's a moment where, he says, 'I never really felt, you know, completely home in one place or the other.' And as I always say, I don't think there's any one right way to be Deaf," DiMarco says.
'I am not ashamed': Disability advocates, experts implore you to stop saying 'special needs'
You're 'not powerless'
What should people take away from the film? Well, a lot. The significance, for starters.
"This protest alone gave rise to the passage of the ADA, major American federal legislation which serves to protect and provide rights to over 80% of the American population," DiMarco says. "So we are very big contributors to our history, you know, and I would hope that they would see that we're no longer second last class citizens." Gallaudet has had a Deaf president ever since.
Guggenheim hopes people consider it in the context of today's divisive politics: "I think there are a lot of people right now who are seeing big, big changes to our political landscape, and they're feeling powerless. And I hope people watch this movie and realize that they're not powerless."
And don't forget, there's strength in numbers. DiMarco adds, "I think you'll be surprised when you do start speaking up, just how many people you'll find in your corner behind you."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jo Whiley felt ‘tingles' when Oasis played in her studio for first time
Jo Whiley felt ‘tingles' when Oasis played in her studio for first time

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Jo Whiley felt ‘tingles' when Oasis played in her studio for first time

Whiley and co-presenter Steve Lamacq played Columbia by Oasis on their Radio 1 Evening Session in 1993 – the first time the band was ever played on the radio. She said she felt 'tingles' when the group, fronted by brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher, then went on to play a live session in the studio. Ahead of their reunion tour, which kicks of on Friday, Whiley reminisced about the early days of the Manchester-based band with fellow DJ Sara Cox, who was standing in for Scott Mills on his Radio 2 breakfast show. Whiley said: 'I remember our producers said (then-Oasis manager) Alan McGee has got this record. It's really good. 'He says this band are amazing, you've got to play it.' Whiley said the song was Columbia, adding: 'Then they came in and did a session. It was so beautiful, you can just see the star quality. 'You could feel the charisma and the tension between the brothers. 'They did Live Forever, and it was unbelievable. 'I'm going to play that on my show tonight because we're doing this big Oasis show this evening. 'I just remember sitting there, watching them, listening to Liam singing Live Forever, and just thinking tingles, proper tingles, I'll never forget it.' The Oasis Live '25 Map Experience is here 🌍📍 Check out the tour cities' Oasis history and Live '25 events📍 Share your Live '25 experiences and shoutouts📍 Unlock exclusive Oasis contentJoin the journey 👉 — Oasis (@oasis) July 2, 2025 Oasis, who split in 2009 after a backstage brawl between the Gallagher brothers at a festival, confirmed their long-awaited reunion in August 2024. Cox joked about how it was down to Whiley that Oasis have reformed after she suggested to Liam when he came on her radio show in more recent years that he call Noel. 'It's basically down to you,' Cox said. Whiley said her Radio 2 show on Thursday evening will be an Oasis special, 'just to get people excited about the gigs'. #oasislive25 — Oasis (@oasis) June 30, 2025 She asked listeners to get in touch and share their memories of the band, while she will also be playing archive clips. 'It's important because they mean so much to so many people. People have grown up with them,' she added. The long-awaited Oasis Live '25 tour kicks off in Cardiff on Friday before a run of shows in London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Dublin.

Jo Whiley felt ‘tingles' when Oasis played in her studio for first time
Jo Whiley felt ‘tingles' when Oasis played in her studio for first time

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Jo Whiley felt ‘tingles' when Oasis played in her studio for first time

She said she felt 'tingles' when the group, fronted by brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher, then went on to play a live session in the studio. Ahead of their reunion tour, which kicks of on Friday, Whiley reminisced about the early days of the Manchester-based band with fellow DJ Sara Cox, who was standing in for Scott Mills on his Radio 2 breakfast show. Whiley said: 'I remember our producers said (then-Oasis manager) Alan McGee has got this record. It's really good. 'He says this band are amazing, you've got to play it.' Whiley said the song was Columbia, adding: 'Then they came in and did a session. It was so beautiful, you can just see the star quality. 'You could feel the charisma and the tension between the brothers. 'They did Live Forever, and it was unbelievable. 'I'm going to play that on my show tonight because we're doing this big Oasis show this evening. 'I just remember sitting there, watching them, listening to Liam singing Live Forever, and just thinking tingles, proper tingles, I'll never forget it.' The Oasis Live '25 Map Experience is here 🌍📍 Check out the tour cities' Oasis history and Live '25 events📍 Share your Live '25 experiences and shoutouts📍 Unlock exclusive Oasis contentJoin the journey 👉 — Oasis (@oasis) July 2, 2025 Oasis, who split in 2009 after a backstage brawl between the Gallagher brothers at a festival, confirmed their long-awaited reunion in August 2024. Cox joked about how it was down to Whiley that Oasis have reformed after she suggested to Liam when he came on her radio show in more recent years that he call Noel. 'It's basically down to you,' Cox said. Whiley said her Radio 2 show on Thursday evening will be an Oasis special, 'just to get people excited about the gigs'. She asked listeners to get in touch and share their memories of the band, while she will also be playing archive clips. 'It's important because they mean so much to so many people. People have grown up with them,' she added. The long-awaited Oasis Live '25 tour kicks off in Cardiff on Friday before a run of shows in London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Dublin.

Charlize Theron, 49, details 'amazing' one-night stand with a 26-year-old
Charlize Theron, 49, details 'amazing' one-night stand with a 26-year-old

Metro

time4 hours ago

  • Metro

Charlize Theron, 49, details 'amazing' one-night stand with a 26-year-old

Charlize Theron has spoken candidly about her sex life aged 49, revealing she recently had sex with a 26-year-old man – and it was 'f***ing amazing'. Theron also said she was having the 'kind of sex I never had in my twenties or in my thirties'. The Oscar-winning actress, known for her roles in Mad Max: Fury Road and Monster, shared that despite being single and focused on raising her two adopted daughters, she is very satisfied with her sex life. 'I've probably had three one-night stands in my entire life. But I did just recently f*** a 26-year-old and it was really f***ing amazing,' she told host Alex Cooper on the Call Her Daddy podcast. 'I've never done that. And I was like, 'Oh, this is great. OK.'' Cooper then joked that the man in question was 'the luckiest man walking on this goddamned planet' who would be 'walking different today' knowing he'd been intimate with Theron, to which she laughed: 'He for sure is not, but thank you.' While the South African-born star, who was previously in relationships with actor Stuart Townsend from 2001 to 2009 and Sean Penn from 2013 to 2015, said she hadn't made a habit of having one-night stands in her life, she was clear he had no regrets about embracing them now. 'I don't have many of them, I'm sitting here sounding like I do. So when I do, I'm like, 'Oh, f*** yeah, I should have done this in my twenties.'' She went on: 'I was married from the time that I was like having sex to the time that I had my last relationship. Then I had children. Who has f***ing time for dates and shaving and waxing and make-up? And I've got two children that have to go to school.' She adopted her first daughter Jackson in March 2012 and then August in June 2015, announcing in 2019, that Jackson, then seven, was transgender. The actress, who is in new Netflix film The Old Guard 2, also emphasised that being single has allowed her to explore sex in a way she hadn't previously. 'I'm having sex now for the first time, like I never had before, because I'm not in relationships,' the FX star shared – who will be seen next summer in Sir Christopher Nolan's upcoming adaptation of The Odyssey. 'That part has been really exciting. But I'm not missing a relationship. I'm not missing the partnership that I think people think you miss when you're me.' In terms of sex advice when she was asked to proffer it, Theron was equally candid saying she'd observed that 'women who come across as confident, women who come across as outspoken, ones that wouldn't speak up for themselves tend to also be, in bed, people who want to please males'. 'And I have found this in my experiences with talking to other women about this,' she continued. 'Isn't it strange? We should be the ones that are like, 'F**k you. I'm gonna have an orgasm.' And yet I, my whole life, was so concerned about [pleasing].' After Cooper agreed it had been the same for her, Theron continued: 'Okay, so my advice would be this. Don't f***ing do that – for two reasons. You're gonna have better orgasms and guess what? Your man's gonna like that.' She added that she 'found this freedom' in her forties. Theron also recently made headlines for slamming the star-studded excess of billionaire Jeff Bezos and fiancée Lauren Sánchez's three‑day £40million Venice wedding. More Trending The guestlist was a who's who, including the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Brady, Oprah Winfrey, Ivanka Trump, Bill Gates, Orlando Bloom and Kim Kardashian. The actress quipped at her fifth annual Block Party for the Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project over the weekend: 'I think we might be the only people who did not get an invite to the Bezos wedding.' After giggles and applause from the audience, with a deadpan expression, she added: 'But that's OK, because they suck and we're cool.' Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Lorde shocks fans releasing album cover with nude photo of herself MORE: Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song MORE: Cassie Ventura releases statement after ex Sean 'Diddy' Combs sex trafficking verdict

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store