Kelly Candaele

Kelly Candaele

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Kelly Candaele is a writer, filmmaker, teacher and elected official in Los Angeles. For the past ten years Mr. Candaele has written extensively for the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, The Nation magazine and other national publications. He traveled to Ireland three times with President Bill Clinton during Clinton’s attempts to push the peace process forward. His journalistic work has focused primarily on the continuing peace process in Northern Ireland, Los Angeles political developments, history and culture. In addition to Northern Ireland he has worked as a journalist in Great Britain, Brazil, Sweden, Cuba, Spain and Vietnam. Mr. Candaele has lectured at Hebrew University in Jerusalem about the peace process in Northern Ireland, and has taught politics and writing at Occidental College in Los Angeles. He is an Adjunct Associate Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Chico.

Mr. Candaele has produced and directed a number of documentary films. His documentary film A League of Their Own, about his mother’s years as a professional baseball player in the 1940s, was awarded an Area Emmy as part of a public television series. He wrote the story for the Columbia Pictures feature film about the women’s league which stared Tom Hanks and Madonna. He takes no responsibility for Madonna’s acting ability. He also produced and wrote an award-winning documentary on the life of assassinated Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme. Mr. Candaele’s most recent documentary explores the aftermath of the Northern Ireland peace agreement of 1998. The film is titled ‘When Hope & History Rhymed,’ from the poem by Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney.

Blog Entries by Kelly Candaele

Baseball's Biggest Scandal

Posted July 23, 2008 | 08:05 PM (EST)


By Kelly Candaele and Peter Dreier
This article originally appeared in The Nation.


***

When the Baseball Hall of Fame holds its induction ceremony in Cooperstown, New York, July 27, three pillars of baseball's corporate establishment will join the ranks. But the man who freed...

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Labor's Self-Inflicted Wounds Threaten Progressive Movement

Posted April 17, 2008 | 08:14 PM (EST)


By Peter Dreier and Kelly Candaele

Just as we are on the precipice of a major political realignment, a possible resurgence of progressive politics in Washington, the backbone of that movement -- organized labor -- is engaged in a self-destructive internal battle. This could not only...

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To Bring Change, Political Insiders and Outsiders Need Each Other

Posted January 17, 2008 | 12:09 PM (EST)


Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have recently been arguing whether Martin Luther King Jr. or President Lyndon Johnson was more important for securing civil rights legislation. Their campaigns and the press have turned this tempest into a controversy over race. But it is really a dispute about political strategy and...

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The Political Perils of Spiderman 3

Posted May 10, 2007 | 07:01 PM (EST)


Look, up in the sky! While the well-known phrase is from the comic book and movie hero Superman, it could be applied to the world-wide blockbuster Spiderman 3 as well. The movie, which broke box office records in its opening weekend, is set in New York. To the extent that...

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Harry Houdini's Message from the Grave

Posted December 22, 2006 | 11:51 AM (EST)


In a new biography of escape artist and magician Harry Houdini, (The Secret Life of Harry Houdini by William Kalush and Larry Sloman) the authors have received a good deal of attention by claiming that Houdini, when not hanging from buildings in a straight jacket, was a spy for the...

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