Who's Your Daddy? is a 2002 comedy film directed (and co-scripted) by Andy Fickman.
Who's Your Daddy? | |
---|---|
Directed by | Andy Fickman |
Produced by | Verna Harrah |
Screenplay by | Maria Veltre Druse Jack Sekowski Andy Fickman |
Story by | Maria Veltre Druse Jack Sekowski |
Starring | Brandon Davis Kadeem Hardison Christine Lakin Ali Landry Marnette Patterson Robert Ri'chard Lin Shaye Josh Jacobson Charlie Talbert William Atherton Justin Berfield Robert Torti Ryan Bittle Martin Starr David Varney Dave Thomas Colleen Camp Patsy Kensit |
Music by | Nathan Wang |
Cinematography | Nathan Hope |
Edited by | Tim Board Jeff Canavan Scott Conrad |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date
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January 18, 2002 |
109 minutes 111 minutes (unrated) |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $5,713,425 |
Synopsis[edit]
Chris Hughes (Davis), an adopted and geeky Ohio high school senior, discovers that his recently deceased birth parents are the proprietors of a vast pornography empire and he is the inherited heir. Dropped into a bitter power struggle, his new flock of beautiful co-workers come to his aid. Chris Hughes was an outsider and geek in Ohio. He is in the middle of his senior year at high school and he is 18 years old. Chris earns extra money working on a paper route riding a moped. Right now, he would do anything to get out of here. Mostly Chris is raised by his religious parents, Carl Hughes (Dave Thomas) and Beverly Hughes (Colleen Camp). They own a grocery store, they are very strict on no drinking, smoking and no sex until you are married. They also don't tolerate porn or porno magazines, that Chris hides under his bed. His little adopted brother Danny Hughes is popular and has a better chance with a girl than Chris. Danny usually gets away with murder by his parents, mostly Chris always ends up getting in trouble. Chris is a reporter in the school newspaper, but he is a good writer. But he is always late on deadlines or dedication. He has a crush on the most popular girl Brittany Van Horn (Marnette Patterson), who is the mean girl of their school. She dreams about getting out of this town and becoming a famous actress or model. She has an entourage, too, and she is dating Hudson Reed (Ryan Bittle) on and off. Hudson is the popular jock, handsome and able to get any girl he wants. Chris always wished he could be like him sometimes, he even fantasizes a lot of times, he wishes he could hook up with Brittany. Empire earth 2 gold edition. It is never going to happen, as she does not know Chris even exists, she only dates good looking popular guys. Chris and his friends, who are nerdy perverts like Adam Torey (Charlie Talbert), Scooter (Martin Starr), Murphy (Robert Ri'chard) and Steven Chambers, are labeled as the outsiders and geeks of their high school. For once, they want to do something cool to earn a ticket to the popularity train. Chris had an idea, to throw a huge cool party at his house, while his parents out of town. They need the booze to attract the popular crowd, especially Brittany and her entourage.
Production and release[edit]
The film's producers intended for Who's Your Daddy? to capitalize on the start of the 21st century's teen sex comedy revival, as spearheaded by 1999's American Pie.
Fickman shot the film in 2001, but after an unsuccessful test-screening process, the film was shelved for a number of years. Never released theatrically in the United States, Who's Your Daddy? finally reached American audiences on DVD in January 2005, followed by a short run in Icelandic cinemas the following summer.
External links[edit]
- Who's Your Daddy on IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Who%27s_Your_Daddy%3F_(film)&oldid=903523094'
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Decreței (from the Romanian language word decret, meaning 'decree'; diminutive decrețel) are Romanians born in the late 1960s and 1970s, shortly after the communist regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu issued Decree 770, aimed at the creation of a new and large Romanian population by restricting abortion and contraception.
The birth rate surged in 1967 and returned to its previous trend as people found ways to circumvent the decree.
Origin of the decree[edit]
Before 1967, the Romanian abortion policy was one of the most liberal in Europe. Because the availability of contraceptive methods was poor, abortion was the most common means of family planning.
Through a combination of modernization of the Romanian community, the high participation of women in the labor market and a low standard of living, the number of births significantly decreased after the 1950s, reaching its lowest level in 1966. Romanian leaders interpreted the decreasing number of births to be a result of the 1957 decree legalizing abortion.
To counter this sharp decline in the birth rate, the Communist Party decided that the country's population should be increased from 23 to 30 million inhabitants. In October 1966,[1] Decree 770 was authorized by Ceaușescu. Abortion and contraception were declared illegal, except for:
- women over 45 (later lowered to 40, then raised again to 45)
- women who had already borne four children (later raised to five)
- women whose life would be threatened by carrying to term, due to medical complications
- women who were pregnant through rape and/or incest
Enforcement[edit]
To enforce the decree, society was strictly controlled. Contraceptives disappeared from the shelves and all women were forced to be monitored monthly by a gynecologist.[citation needed] Any detected pregnancies were followed until birth. Secret police kept a close eye on hospital procedures.
Sex education was refocused primarily on the benefits of motherhood, including the ostensible satisfaction of being a heroic mother who gives her homeland many children.
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The direct consequence of the decree was a huge baby boom. Between 1966 and 1967 the number of births almost doubled, and the estimated number of children per woman (TFR) increased from 1.9 to 3.7. The generation born in 1967 and 1968 was the largest in Romanian history. Hastily, thousands of nursery schools were built.
Circumvention and mortality[edit]
In the 1970s, birth rates declined again.[citation needed] Economic pressure on families remained, and people began to seek ways to circumvent the decree.[citation needed] Wealthier women were able to obtain contraceptives illegally, or bribed doctors to give diagnoses which made abortion possible.[citation needed] Especially among the less educated and poorer women there were many unwanted pregnancies.[citation needed] These women could only utilize primitive methods of abortion, which led to infection, sterility or even their own death.[citation needed] The mortality among pregnant women became the highest of Europe during the reign of Ceaușescu.[citation needed] While the childbed mortality rate kept declining over the years in neighboring countries, in Romania it increased to more than ten times that of its neighbors.[citation needed]
Many children born in this period became malnourished, were severely physically handicapped, or ended up in care under grievous conditions, which led to a rise in child mortality.[citation needed]
Romanian orphans[edit]
A consequence of Ceaușescu's natalist policy is that large numbers of children ended up living in orphanages, because their parents could not cope. The vast majority of children who lived in the communist orphanages were not actually orphans, but were simply children whose parents could not afford to raise them.[2]
Romanian revolution[edit]
In their book Freakonomics, authors Steven Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner make the argument that children that are born after their mothers are refused an abortion are much more likely to commit crimes or refuse to recognize authority when they reach adulthood. They further argue that the Decreței are exactly the same people who spearheaded the effort to violently overthrow Ceaușescu's regime in 1989. In that year, the oldest Decreței would have been 22 years old, in the general age range of most revolutionaries. Levitt and Dubner note that Romania was the only east-European communist country with strict anti-abortion and anti-contraception laws at the time, and also the only country whose ruler was violently overthrown and killed at the end of the Cold War. Most other such countries experienced a tumultuous, but peaceful, transition. There were however[original research?] other aspects of totalitarian rule that would promote violent reaction instead of peaceful transition, including a lack of associational life and legal gatherings, a more extensive system of informants and special police than any state other than East Germany, and a cult of personality[3] built up around the supreme leader. The actual violence of the revolution can be attributed to divisions among the ruling and military/secret police and the vacuum of power that resulted. Revolutions are often observed to come in waves, and it is believed by some authors that Romania would have experienced violent revolution no matter its demographic situation.[4]
Abortion after 1990[edit]
Although in the early 1990s, shortly after abortion was legalized, the abortion rate was very high, it has gradually decreased, as more couples started using contraception, and the economy also started to improve after the instability of the transition. According to the National Institute of Statistics, the rate of abortions since 1990 is as follows:[5]
Year | Abortions | Per 1,000 women | Per 1,000 live-births |
---|---|---|---|
1990 | 899,654 | 177.6 | 3,158.4 |
1991 | 866,934 | 153.8 | 3,156.6 |
1992 | 691,863 | 124.2 | 2,663.0 |
1993 | 585,761 | 104.0 | 2,348.4 |
1994 | 530,191 | 93.2 | 2,153.5 |
1995 | 502,840 | 87.5 | 2,129.5 |
1996 | 455,340 | 78.6 | 1,971.9 |
1997 | 346,468 | 59.5 | 1,465.6 |
1998 | 270,930 | 46.5 | 1,144.0 |
1999 | 259,266 | 44.6 | 1,107.5 |
2000 | 257,267 | 44.3 | 1,099.5 |
2001 | 253,426 | 43.6 | 1,153.3 |
2002 | 246,714 | 44.0 | 1,174.9 |
2003 | 223,914 | 39.9 | 1,056.5 |
2004 | 189,683 | 33.8 | 879.5 |
2005 | 162,087 | 29.0 | 735.1 |
2006 | 149,598 | 27.0 | 683.5 |
2007 | 136,647 | 24.8 | 638.1 |
2008 | 127,410 | 23.5 | 578.3 |
2009 | 115,457 | 21.3 | 520.9 |
2010 | 101,271 | 18.8 | 478.9 |
Sources[edit]
This article, or a previous version, was translated from the article 'Decreet 770' on the Dutch Wikipedia. This Dutch article used the following sources:
- Children of the decree (Das Experiment 770: Gebären auf Befehl), German movie from 2004 by Florin Iepan
- 'The 1966 law concerning prohibition of abortion in Romania and its consequences - the fate of one generation', Manuela Lataianu, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw
References[edit]
- ^'Decretul 770/1966 - Legislatie gratuita'. www.legex.ro. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- ^'BBC NEWS - Europe - What happened to Romania's orphans?'. news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- ^Gilberg, Trond. Nationalism and Communism in Romania: The Rise and Fall of Ceausescu's Personal Dictatorship Westview Press, 1990
- ^Katz, Mark. Revolutions and Revolutionary Waves. St Martin's Press, 1999, p. xi, 2–3
- ^http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/Anuar%20statistic/02/2.11.xls[permanent dead link]
See also[edit]
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