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Building Community Beyond Belief, Exercising Progressive Values, and Defending Separation of Church and State

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Thanks to everyone who came to yesterday’s movie club, and a special thanks to Susie Adams for hosting. The media room at The Overture was a great space, and I am grateful to have an additional venue for watching older films.

I am sorry for the technical difficulties that prevented us from watching Saved!

I had a backup plan in case of technical problems, but then forgot to put my laptop bag in my car when we left home. 🤷‍♂️ I am happy that we were able to pivot to watching Wicked Little Letters on Netflix. I know a handful of us had already seen it, but it is a good movie and seemed well received.

I’ve been looking at a bunch of different articles online about the true story dramatized in Wicked Little Letters. It’s pretty interesting, but I haven’t found a single article that tells as much of the story as I would like. Here are two that together paint a pretty full picture. The first one has most of the story and pictures from the original news reports, but leaves out “Woman Police Officer” Gladys Moss.

https://www.findmypast.com/blog/history/wicked-little-letters

Details about Moss’ involvement in the case can be read in this article (if you can get past all the annoying ads):

https://screenrant.com/wickedlittle-letters-true-story-explained/

For anyone disappointed that we didn’t get to watch Saved!, it is available on Amazon Prime Video. If you watch it, I would love to hear what you think.