Monday, June 1, 2026

DÖBLIN: His Misadventures in Hollywood

 


Alfred Döblin was a refugee writer in Hollywood during WW2.  Known for his 1929 novel, Berlin Alexanderplatz (an underworld of prostitutes, criminals, addicts), he struggled to obtain script commissions in California.

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 Alfred Döblin Goes Hollywood (1942)

Unlike fellow German émigrés such as Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht, Alfred Döblin struggled financially in Los Angeles. Living in a tiny bungalow in a modest section of Hollywood, the physician, psychiatrist, and novelist sought work in the movie business.

At his first meeting with a studio producer, Döblin pitches a gritty drama set in Hell's Kitchen, New York. The story follows two morphine addicts, two prostitutes, and one prostitute who is also a morphine addict as they drift through a maze of doomed romances, petty crimes, and mutual betrayals. Their lives intersect in flophouses, cheap cafés, and police stations, ending in disappointment for nearly everyone involved. The producer summarizes it as "Berlin Alexanderplatz meets Midnight Cowboy" and points out that America might be looking for something a little more contemporary and optimistic.

Several weeks later, Döblin returns with a revised idea. This time the action has been moved to Santa Monica, California. Two morphine addicts, two prostitutes, and one prostitute who is also a morphine addict spend their days wandering the beach, getting mixed up with carnival operators, amateur fortune tellers, and dubious real-estate schemes. A stolen jetski, a mistaken identity involving a lifeguard, and a disastrous attempt to start a beachfront nightclub straight out of Cabaret lead the group into a series of calamities. The producer stares at him and says, "Berlin Alexanderplatz meets...Gidget?"

Looking through Döblin's résumé, the producer notices that he is also a physician and psychiatrist.

"Medical stories always sell," the producer says. "Can you write a medical drama?"

Döblin eagerly agrees.

A few weeks later he returns with a new treatment. 

The hero is a physician working in a Santa Monica emergency room. He lives in an apartment with two prostitutes and, unfortunately, he is also a morphine addict. To avoid eviction, he convinces his suspicious landlord that he is gay and merely sharing the apartment as a platonic arrangement. The doctor spends each episode trying to conceal his addiction, his roommates' occupations, his heterosexuality -- all while dodging a rotating collection of eccentric hospital patients that he carts home. By an astonishing coincidence, Döblin has independently invented the exact premise of the future television sitcom Three's Company thirty-five years ahead of schedule.

The producer finally brightens.

"This," he says, sliding the treatment into his briefcase to take home, "may actually have possibilities."

"We'll call you."

 ###

--

Earlier remarks by me on Döblin here.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

DÖBLIN: Poet and Doctor; Novelist; Author of Berin Alexanderplatz; Parkinson's

 

DÖBLIN POET AND DOCTOR


 

Alfred Döblin was a German psychiatrist as well as novelist (Berlin Alexanderplatz, 1929).   He had a colorful and difficult life.   He fled the Nazis to France and escaped around 1940 to the U.S. where he lived unhappily in Hollywood and knew other refugees like Brecht.  In about 1946, Döblin headed rapidly back to Germany.  His last decade, about 1947-1957, was also difficult.  Increasingly forgotten, he lived in both Germany and France but after 1952 was increasingly disabled by Parkinson’s and other illnesses.  He did, however, live to the advanced age of 78.  1878-1957. 

 

This is one passage he left behind re: Parkinson’s disease.

Since this affliction seized me and carries me off into the darkness like a tiger carrying away a deer; since my legs and my hands now hang from me almost uselessly; since my voice fails me more and more, and more and more craters of wounds open within me—since then, from time to time, I look out the window…

There in Paris at the iron metro overpass, but my attention no longer belongs to the world outside. It belongs nowhere—or perhaps somewhere I cannot name.

Memory grows dim. Thoughts seem less my own than visitors moving through me, and I let them come and go.

In sleep there arise dreamlike oases, islands of existence in a desert, experiences in which I take part. Recently these visions have shone with a happiness unlike any I had ever known. It seemed to me that I had passed beyond the frontier of life and entered another realm of being. Does life end with death? Death, I felt, is merely an empty word.

And below is a Chat GPT translation of his two-page essay in which Döblin the doctor discusses Döblin the poet, and vice-versa.

 

TLDR

This essay below is a witty self-portrait split into two mock interviews: “Dr. Döblin” dismisses “the poet Döblin” as obscure, overly difficult, politically confusing, and not worth much attention; then “the poet Döblin” visits “Dr. Döblin” and finds him a hard-working, anonymous Berlin panel doctor, almost the poet’s opposite — not a prima donna, but “a gray soldier in a quiet army.”

The joke is that Döblin stages his own divided identity: doctor versus writer, public literary ego versus ordinary clinical laborer, observer versus observed.

 

 

 

The Neurologist Döblin on the Poet Döblin

As a physician, the poet who bears my name is known to me only from a great distance. To speak honestly, he is really not known to me at all. I have a medium-sized, not overly large, panel medical practice in eastern Berlin; I am a neurologist/psychiatrist, and during the day I am reasonably occupied with that.

My literary inclinations are not great. Books bore me considerably. As for the books by the man who, as you say, bears my name, I have occasionally picked them up at acquaintances’ houses; but what I saw there was completely foreign to me and also totally indifferent. This gentleman seems to have a great imagination, but I cannot go along with it. My income permits me neither trips to India nor to China. And so I cannot check up on what he writes. Besides, I prefer to read such things in the original — namely, actual travel descriptions, of which, incidentally, I am a great lover.

Nor can I do anything with this gentleman — I mean the author who has the same name as I do — because of his style. He is simply too difficult for me. One cannot ask exhausted people to work their way through such things voluntarily.

Permit me, by the way, a general remark that may sound somewhat political or ethical. More than this author’s books, I know his occasional public statements, which my newspaper brings me — and of course I read my newspaper. I must confess, I cannot make sense of the man, politically or generally. My appetite to get to know him does not grow after these statements. Sometimes he seems definitely to stand on the left, even very far left — left squared, so to speak. Then again he utters sentences that are either thoughtless, which is quite impermissible in a man of his age, or else he acts as though he stood above the parties, smiling in poetic arrogance.

In short: it was you, Mr. Editor, who asked me for my opinion about the author, the man with the red rose. The accidental coincidence of names led you to do so. I myself would never have concerned myself with him, any more than with the other young authors. And I say once more, briefly: the gentleman is almost unknown to me; he does not interest me; I am related to him neither by blood nor by marriage; and I calmly await his judgment of me, since you have informed me that you intend to question him about me as well. His apparently humorous attacks will not touch me.

The Poet Döblin on the Neurologist Döblin

I am very grateful to you, Mr. Editor, although at Easter, as you can imagine, I have all sorts of things to suffer from — questionnaires and so on — that you have put this curious question to me and, in a certain respect, enriched my knowledge.

I am just now occupied with a Berlin novel — I mean, an epic work in normal language — dealing with eastern Berlin, the area around Alexanderplatz and the Rosenthaler Tor. So your request that I comment on the neurologist/psychiatrist of my name was an interesting hint. Perhaps I can get some more material there, I thought — not only from the Salvation Army, the cattle yard, and criminal files.

So I went there, and I will report to you. The gentleman makes a lively and not at all bad impression. I was at his office hours; I sat in his waiting room. Such a waiting room is the strangest milieu one can imagine. And when I introduced myself to the gentleman and we had laughed at each other — we come, God knows, from the most different regions — he told me many things, which, with his permission, I immediately wrote down.

These panel doctors are not to be envied. I saw the peculiar, intensely pressured work in which he moved, and with especially constituted patients besides. I am convinced he is no special specimen in this branch, but precisely the way he worked there anonymously pleased me quite a bit. He is my exact opposite, it occurred to me in passing, as he handled things matter-of-factly, spoke, paid attention: I am always a solo dancer, a prima donna, as my publisher once said; he is a gray soldier in a quiet army.

I am convinced I made no particular impression on my namesake. Several times I grew quite anxious when he looked at me with a psychotherapeutic gaze. I have all sorts of defects, probably complexes, and the old hand there likely smelled something of the sort. Please do not be angry with me if I confess to you that for this reason I did not deepen my knowledge or my acquaintance with this namesake very much.

Honestly speaking, I did not feel very comfortable sitting in the chair opposite him; too many unpleasant things come to mind there. But I retain a good memory of the slender, not tall man with the doctor’s spectacles, and I would actually be pleased if you would tell me what this anonymous man — to whom I was surely not an author, but merely a human being — told you about me.

 

Friday, May 29, 2026

CAP Publishes New Guidance on Measuring, Managing A.P. Errors

 

 

Dintzis SM, Evans JJ, Hernandez M, Kalicanin T, Lacchetti C, Nakhleh RE, Otis CN, Pantanowitz L, Parkash V, Raab SS. Interpretive Diagnostic Error Reduction: Guideline Update from the College of American Pathologists in Collaboration With the Association of Directors of Anatomic and Subspecialty Pathology. Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine. Published online 2026.
doi: 10.5858/arpa.2026-0016-CP.

_____

CAP Error Reduction: What Pathologists, Labs, and Genomics Stakeholders Need to Know

TLDR

CAP has released an important 2026 update on Interpretive Diagnostic Error Reduction in anatomic pathology. The headline is simple: pathology groups should have structured, documented, timely case-review processes to detect disagreements, reduce interpretive errors, and improve patient care. But the article is more interesting than a generic “peer review is good” statement. CAP is effectively saying that diagnostic accuracy in pathology is no longer just an individual professional virtue; it is a system property that must be designed, monitored, and improved.

The guideline update is grounded in a systematic review of the literature since the 2016 CAP guideline. It focuses mainly on surgical pathology and cytology, especially secondary review, targeted review, reviewer expertise, agreement, disagreement, and the emerging role of digital pathology and AI. CAP lands on two strong recommendations: first, pathologists should develop procedures to review cases for disagreements and potential interpretive errors; second, these reviews should be performed timely enough to affect patient care. CAP also recommends documented procedures, periodic monitoring, corrective steps when poor agreement is found, and use of clinically relevant grading systems, especially simpler systems with meaningful clinical cut points.

Strategically, this is a major move for CAP. It positions pathology not merely as a craft practiced by experts at microscopes, but as a modern diagnostic discipline with quality systems, measurable variation, AI-adjacent workflows, and accountability for patient-facing diagnostic outcomes. The implications extend beyond anatomic pathology. Genomics, molecular pathology, tumor profiling, and AI-enabled diagnostics all face analogous problems: complex interpretation, variable reporting, uncertain agreement, high clinical stakes, and the need for structured review before results become treatment decisions.

__________________________________________

LACMA Leadership Vague on Reopening of "Japanese Pavilion"

 LACMA management has been evasive on the issue of when the Japanese Pavilion will reopen.



REPORTER: Director Williams, museum visitors have one question above all others. When will the Japanese Pavilion reopen?

DIRECTOR: We're extremely excited about the Pavilion. It represents a vital component of our long-term vision for visitor engagement and cross-cultural dialogue.

REPORTER: Yes, but when will it reopen?

DIRECTOR: The public response to our new galleries has been extraordinary.

REPORTER: The Pavilion.

DIRECTOR: Exactly.

REPORTER: No, not exactly. The Japanese Pavilion. When does it open?

DIRECTOR: We continue to make excellent progress.

REPORTER: Toward what date?

DIRECTOR: Toward a future in which visitors will enjoy an enhanced experience.

REPORTER: Is that future next month?

DIRECTOR: We don't think in terms of months.

REPORTER: What terms do you think in?

DIRECTOR: Experiences.

REPORTER: Is the experience scheduled?

DIRECTOR: We are actively evaluating scheduling opportunities.

REPORTER: So there is no date.

DIRECTOR: There are many dates.

REPORTER: Name one.

DIRECTOR: Today, for example.

REPORTER: A reopening date.

DIRECTOR: We prefer not to limit ourselves with labels.

REPORTER: Is the building finished?

DIRECTOR: The Pavilion occupies a unique place within our campus ecosystem.

REPORTER: Is that a yes?

DIRECTOR: The building exists.

REPORTER: Was it finished last year?

DIRECTOR: Completion is a multifaceted concept.

REPORTER: Are visitors allowed inside?

DIRECTOR: Not currently.

REPORTER: Why not?

DIRECTOR: We are preparing for a world-class visitor experience.

REPORTER: By keeping visitors out?

DIRECTOR: Quality requires patience.

REPORTER: How much patience?

DIRECTOR: The Japanese have long valued patience.

REPORTER: The museum has been valuing it for several years.

DIRECTOR: We see that as evidence of our commitment.

REPORTER: Can you give me any estimate? Summer? Fall? This decade?

DIRECTOR: We are very pleased with the trajectory.

REPORTER: Toward what?

DIRECTOR: Reopening.

REPORTER: When?

DIRECTOR: At the appropriate moment.

REPORTER: Which is?

DIRECTOR: Appropriate.

REPORTER: Let me try another way. Suppose I return one year from today. Will the Pavilion be open?

DIRECTOR: We look forward to welcoming all visitors to LACMA.

REPORTER: That's not an answer.

DIRECTOR: It's an invitation.

REPORTER: Suppose I return ten years from today.

DIRECTOR: We remain committed to excellence.

REPORTER: Twenty years?

DIRECTOR: Our commitment is long-term.

REPORTER: Are you personally aware of a reopening date?

DIRECTOR: I am aware of many things.

REPORTER: Is a reopening date among them?

DIRECTOR: Museums are ultimately about discovery.

REPORTER: I feel as though I'm discovering very little.

DIRECTOR: Then perhaps you are experiencing the Pavilion exactly as intended.

REPORTER: Meaning?

DIRECTOR: It remains, at present, a meditation on absence.

REPORTER: So the exhibit is already open?

DIRECTOR: Conceptually, yes.

REPORTER: Thank you.

DIRECTOR: We appreciate your interest in the Pavilion.



Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Chat GPT Takes First Pass at Qnomyx

At LINKED IN, Alex Dickinson speaks highly of QNOMYX.ai. But it's hard to know if it's real or vaporware from the website, or whether they've raised a viable amount of growth capital. https://www.qnomx.ai/ Here is Alex article. Tell me "the story behind the story". 

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7465067510950727680/

Chat GPT:  20260526

[Online Chat GPT output had numerous hotlinks]

I’ll treat this as a due-diligence read rather than a website summary: corporate footprint, people, financing signals, product/regulatory claims, and whether Alex’s post changes the credibility picture.

Monday, May 25, 2026

The Southern Reception: Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

From Claude Opus 4.7

##

Use agentic research and internet to write an essay about the reception of 1967's GUESS WHO'S COMING DINNER, in the American South.    Give a bit of context, such as southern sponsors threaten to wihdraw 5-10 years earlier if e.g. Ed Sulivan showed a Black act, especially if any whites and blacks appeared in the same camera frame.

 


A Surprise at the Box Office: How the American South Received Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

The Climate Before the Film

To understand what Guess Who's Coming to Dinner did when it opened in late December 1967, you have to understand what television and movie executives believed they knew about the white Southern audience — and how rigidly those beliefs had governed what that audience was permitted to see.

Through the 1950s and into the early 1960s, Ed Sullivan ran the most-watched variety show in America and used that platform to book Black performers — Pearl Bailey, Nat King Cole, Mahalia Jackson, Harry Belafonte, Diahann Carroll, the Supremes. He paid for it. Southern sponsors threatened to pull advertisements from his show because Ed had kissed Pearl Bailey on the cheeks, and another time because he shook hands with Nat King Cole on The Ed Sullivan Show. He even got death threats and major advertisers dropped their sponsorships because Sullivan refused to keep black performers off national television. Sullivan's primary sponsor through much of this period was Lincoln-Mercury, and during the 1950s, with segregation still widespread throughout the South and few Blacks allowed to vote in some states like Mississippi, Sullivan frequently hosted Black entertainers on his show, despite sponsor (Lincoln/Mercury) fears that Southerners would not watch them.

The specific anxieties were granular and revealing. A handshake was a problem. A kiss on the cheek was a problem. The mere sharing of a frame — Black performer and white host within the same camera shot, equals in proximity — was treated by network sales departments as a commercial liability. Other television shows refused to present African-American guests due to sponsor complaints. The assumption ran through Hollywood marketing as well: that white Southerners would not buy tickets to films featuring Black leads, and certainly not films in which a Black man was placed at the center of a white family's life.

That was the industry's working hypothesis when Stanley Kramer began shooting Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in early 1967.

The Film Arrives — Then the Verdict

The legal ground had shifted dramatically just before release. On June 12, 1967 — two weeks after Tracy filmed his final scene — the Supreme Court decided Loving v. Virginia, striking down anti-miscegenation laws that were still on the books in seventeen states, almost all of them Southern. The film opened in New York on December 11 and went into wide release the following day. Theaters in Atlanta, Memphis, Nashville, Birmingham, Charlotte, New Orleans, Dallas, and Houston booked it.

And it did business.

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner was a box-office hit in 1968 throughout the United States, including in Southern states where it was traditionally assumed that few white filmgoers would want to see any film with black leads. The success of this film challenged that assumption in film marketing. Against a budget of roughly $4 million, the picture grossed close to $57 million domestically, making it one of the top earners of the year. The Southern numbers were not an asterisk to a national result; they were part of why the result happened.

In Mark Harris's Pictures at a Revolution — the definitive account of the 1967 Best Picture race — the larger context becomes clear: Sidney Poitier was, that year, simply too big a draw to be denied. Box Office magazine . . . rated Poitier as the fifth biggest star in Hollywood, ahead of Sean Connery and Steve McQueen. His drawing power was a shock to an industry that had, until recently, treated his employment in movies as something akin to an act of charity. In the Heat of the Night, which won Best Picture, was a film explicitly about the racial South. Guess Who's Coming to Dinner was a film white Southerners watched in spite of its subject, or because of it, or both.

Why It Worked Where Hollywood Expected It Wouldn't

Several factors converged. The film was, by deliberate design, the safest possible vehicle for its premise. Kramer and screenwriter William Rose engineered John Prentice to be unimpeachable — a Johns Hopkins–trained physician with World Health Organization credentials, perfect manners, and a refusal to consummate the engagement before marriage. The most cited later critique of the film — that Prentice is too perfect — is exactly the feature that made the picture exhibitable in Mobile and Richmond. James Baldwin would later write, with characteristic acid, that "As concerns Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, we can conclude that people have the right to marry whom they choose, especially if we know that they are leaving town as soon as dinner is over". The young couple were leaving for Geneva. The film was not asking the South to integrate its neighborhoods; it was asking it to bless a wedding that would happen elsewhere.

The casting did the rest. Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn were, for the older white Southern moviegoer, beloved figures from a Hollywood that predated the civil rights crisis. Tracy's final on-screen speech — his benediction on the marriage — was, in effect, the establishment giving permission. Tracy's character arc, a struggle to fuse public and private morality, is a brilliant summation of his life and career, as is the benediction he gives in the film's final act. Audiences who would have walked out of a more confrontational film stayed for Tracy, and stayed because the film's emotional center was a father's reluctant grace.

There was also a grim, accidental edit that traveled through Southern prints. The original release contained a sarcastic line from the family's Black housekeeper Tillie — "The Reverend Martin Luther King?" After King's assassination on April 4, 1968, that line was cut from prints in circulation; by August of that year almost no theater was running it. Whether the excision changed the film's Southern reception is impossible to know, but the cut traveled with the print, and the print kept playing.

The Quiet Significance

The reception of Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in the South did not signify that the South had changed its mind about interracial marriage. It signified something narrower and, in its way, more interesting: that the commercial assumption underlying a decade of sponsor anxiety — that white Southern audiences would refuse, en masse, to sit in a theater and watch a story sympathetic to a Black leading man and a white leading woman — was wrong, or at least no longer reliably right. The industry had been treating Southern bigotry as a precise market signal. It turned out to be noisier than that. Some people stayed away. More people bought tickets.

Sullivan had wagered, a decade earlier, that the sponsors were overestimating their own audience. The box-office returns from Atlanta and Dallas in the spring of 1968 quietly confirmed his bet. The film itself was a compromise — sentimental, cautious, criticized then and since for soft-pedaling its own premise — but its Southern numbers helped retire one of the more durable, and more cynical, axioms in American mass entertainment.

That, perhaps, is the film's most underappreciated legacy. It did not change the South. It changed what Hollywood thought it could sell there.


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Chat GPT 

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“Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” in the South: A Polite Bombshell in a Segregated Living Room

When Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner opened in December 1967, it landed in a country that had only just stopped criminalizing its central premise. Six months earlier, on June 12, 1967, the Supreme Court decided Loving v. Virginia, unanimously striking down state laws that banned interracial marriage as violations of the Fourteenth Amendment. (Justia Law) In practical terms, Stanley Kramer’s drawing-room drama appeared at the exact hinge point between interracial marriage as a crime and interracial marriage as a constitutional right.

That matters especially for the American South. Anti-miscegenation laws were not an antique curiosity in 1967; they were still on the books in much of the South until Loving. Contemporary public opinion was also nowhere near the later consensus. Gallup’s long-running trend shows that only 4% of Americans approved of Black-white marriage when first asked in 1958, and a 1965 Gallup question found Americans nearly split on whether laws making such marriages a crime should exist. (Gallup.com) (Gallup.com) A later scholarly summary of polling reported that in July 1968, only 20% approved of marriage between whites and Blacks/non-whites, while 72% disapproved. (JSTOR) So the film’s premise was not “progressive but safe.” In 1967–68 it was, in many communities, a direct affront to prevailing social taboo.

The interesting historical twist is that Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner was not rejected by the South in the simple way Hollywood might have feared. It became a major national box-office success, and contemporary film history accounts note that it performed successfully including in Southern states, challenging the assumption that white Southern moviegoers would not pay to see a film with a Black star and an interracial-marriage plot. (Wikipedia) That does not mean Southern audiences embraced its message in any modern liberal sense. Rather, the film succeeded because it was engineered as the most genteel possible delivery system for an explosive subject.

Kramer made the pill swallowable. Sidney Poitier’s Dr. John Prentice is not merely admirable; he is almost absurdly idealized: handsome, restrained, internationally distinguished, medically heroic, sexually disciplined, courteous to a fault. The question posed to white liberal parents — and by extension to white liberal America — was not, “Can you accept a real Black son-in-law?” but almost, “Can you accept this impossibly perfect Black son-in-law?” Later critics have often seized on that very point: the movie’s social challenge was real, but it was cushioned by Poitier’s near-saintliness, by the San Francisco hilltop setting, by Tracy and Hepburn’s old-Hollywood authority, and by a tone closer to polished stage comedy than to street-level racial conflict. Contemporary and later criticism has repeatedly noted that the film made interracial marriage “palatable” by making the Black fiancé nearly unassailable. (Wikipedia)

That calculation was especially important because the South had only recently been a place where even ordinary television integration could trigger sponsor panic. The Nat King Cole example is crucial background. Cole’s 1956–57 NBC variety show struggled not because Cole lacked fame or talent, but because major national sponsors feared boycotts, especially from white Southern consumers, if they backed a prime-time show hosted by a Black man. The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture summarizes the sponsor problem directly: major companies feared their products would be boycotted, “particularly in the South,” if they backed The Nat “King” Cole Show. (National Museum of African American History) The Jim Crow Museum similarly notes that advertisers did not want to upset white Southern customers who resisted seeing a Black man on television except in a subservient role. (Jim Crow Museum)

Ed Sullivan’s show provides the adjacent image: not a Black host, not interracial marriage, but merely public, respectful, physical or visual equality between Black and white performers. Sullivan’s own program history records that Southern sponsors threatened to pull advertising when he kissed Pearl Bailey on the cheek and when he shook Nat King Cole’s hand on camera. (Ed Sullivan Show) That is the earlier media climate against which Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner should be read. Only a decade before Kramer’s film, a handshake or cheek kiss between a white host and a Black star could be treated by advertisers as commercially dangerous in the South. By 1967, Columbia Pictures was selling a film in which a white woman kisses Sidney Poitier and intends to marry him.

The film therefore occupied a peculiar middle position. It was bold in subject matter but conservative in form. It challenged a Southern taboo, but it did so through elite respectability: a Black physician, a white newspaper-publisher father, a Catholic monsignor, an art-gallery mother, a San Francisco mansion, and a script that keeps the conflict within polished dialogue. It is civil-rights cinema filtered through mahogany furniture and good china.

The Southern reception seems to have had at least three layers. The first was commercial curiosity and success. The film did not collapse in Southern markets; it drew audiences. That alone was historically meaningful, because it undermined a long-standing entertainment-industry assumption that Black-centered or racially progressive stories were poison below the Mason-Dixon line. (Wikipedia) The second layer was hostility from some viewers, including hate mail and death threats. The Los Angeles Times later reported that Kramer and Katharine Houghton received death threats after the film’s release, and specifically noted that Kramer challenged Southern white audiences early with a kiss between Poitier’s character and his white fiancée. (Los Angeles Times) The third layer was ambivalence from Black critics and more radical observers, who saw the film as both historically useful and dramatically evasive. Poitier’s character could be criticized as a fantasy of Black acceptability built for white comfort — noble, controlled, sexually nonthreatening, and more symbolic than fully human. (midlandshistoricalreview.com)

This explains why the film could be both controversial and popular. It did not ask Southern white audiences to enter Black life. It asked them to sit in a rich white living room and watch respectable white people decide whether their liberal principles extended to their own daughter. That was a shrewd dramatic strategy. It made the “problem” legible to white audiences as a test of conscience, not as a demand to understand Black political anger, segregation, police violence, housing exclusion, or poverty. In a South still absorbing civil-rights legislation, desegregation battles, and the legal death of anti-miscegenation statutes, that narrowing of the question may have made the movie watchable.

But the narrowing also dates the film. Seen from today, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner is often less radical than exquisitely managed. It stages racism as a conflict between good manners and inherited prejudice. Its most dangerous image — a Black man marrying a white woman — is surrounded by every reassurance imaginable. Poitier’s Dr. Prentice is not a militant, not poor, not sexually aggressive, not socially disruptive, not even impatient except in the most dignified way. He is the Black son-in-law as Nobel Prize résumé.

That was not an accident; it was the price of admission. In the Southern media environment of the 1950s, sponsors worried about a handshake. In 1967, Kramer and Columbia Pictures dared to show an interracial engagement, but they wrapped it in Spencer Tracy’s paternal anguish, Katharine Hepburn’s moral radiance, and Poitier’s unimpeachable dignity. The result was a film that could enter Southern theaters not as a Molotov cocktail but as a tense dinner invitation.

The most revealing fact about its Southern reception, then, may be this: it was not simply suppressed, and it was not simply accepted. It was consumed, argued with, resented, admired, and commercially validated. It arrived just after the law changed but long before public opinion did. In that gap — between constitutional equality and social acceptance — Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner found its audience.

AI PARODY: Guess Who's Coming to Disrupt Dinner

When Joey Drayfuss brings home her fiancé — an AI billionaire proposing an "open covenant marriage" with scheduled offspring — her liberal newspaper-publisher father is appalled. Over one tumultuous dinner, a jet-lagged Monsignor armed with Pope Leo XIV's new encyclical brokers a startling compromise. A sharp, funny update of Kramer's 1967 classic.

x



X

GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DISRUPT DINNER

A Feature Treatment A romantic comedy-drama in the spirit of Stanley Kramer, updated for the age of the algorithm

Logline: When a Dartmouth senior brings home her fiancé — one of the four wealthiest AI billionaires on Earth — for dinner with her aging liberal-newspaper-publisher father, the clash isn't about race or class. It's about whether love can survive a Series E valuation, an "open marriage," and a freshly-released papal encyclical that nobody saw coming.


THE SETUP

San Francisco, late spring 2026. Pacific Heights. The Drayfuss house has solar panels that talk to each other, a Tesla in the garage that the family no longer trusts, and a print edition of the San Francisco Reporter on the kitchen counter that nobody under thirty has touched in a decade.

MARK DRAYFUSS, 70, publisher of the Reporter, is the kind of liberal who marched for everything and now spends his mornings yelling at a sourdough starter. His paper has been "thoughtfully measured" on artificial intelligence — which is journalism-speak for we take ad money from three of these companies and our op-ed page is held together with prayer.

CHRISTIE DRAYFUSS, 60, runs a gallery in Hayes Valley that exclusively shows art "made by human hands, verified." She has a certificate of authenticity for her own husband.

Their daughter JOANNA "JOEY" DRAYFUSS, 22, is finishing her senior thesis at Dartmouth on "Settlement House Movements and Algorithmic Welfare: A Comparative History." She is brilliant, idealistic, and about to make what her father will call "the single most San Francisco decision in the history of San Francisco."

She is bringing home her fiancé.


THE FIANCÉ

Enter ELRON MERCK, 41. One of the Four Horsemen of the Foundation Model Apocalypse. Net worth: a number that fluctuates faster than the script can be revised. He arrives in a car that drives itself badly, on purpose, because he finds full autonomy "spiritually evasive."

Elron is not a villain. That's the trick. He is genuinely brilliant, oddly tender, vegan on weekdays, and speaks in the cadence of a man who has been interviewed by Lex Fridman fourteen times. He has read everything. He has understood roughly sixty percent of it.

He loves Joey. Probably. He has run the numbers.

The hitch: Elron proposes an "open covenant marriage." Joey will bear two to three children — he is precise about this, the way he is precise about everything — and Elron retains "optionality regarding additional pair-bonds, consistent with my obligations to the long-term flourishing of the species." He has a slide deck. He brought it to dinner.

Joey, to her parents' horror, has agreed. She frames it in the language of her thesis: "Dad, monogamy is a Victorian welfare structure. We're iterating."

Mark Drayfuss, who once wrote a column titled "Free Love and Why It Was Mostly Just Free For The Guys," requires a moment alone in the pantry.


THE COMPLICATION

Christie is appalled but trying to be supportive, because her therapist has charged her four hundred dollars an hour to learn the phrase "holding space." Mark is openly hostile, which would be easier if Elron weren't also funding the journalism school fellowship that keeps the Reporter's investigative desk solvent. Mark's editorial line on AI has been, to use the technical term, chickenshit. Now the chicken is at his dinner table asking for the salt.

Elron's parents arrive: DR. MARTHA MERCK, a retired Stanford bioethicist, and JOHN MERCK SR., a Lutheran minister from Saint Paul who has not been informed that his son is proposing what he is proposing. When he finds out, he goes very quiet in a way that suggests Minnesota.

Across the table: Joey's godfather, MONSIGNOR RYAN MARKS, an old golf buddy of Mark's and — as it happens — one of the contributing theologians on Pope Leo XIV's just-released encyclical Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence. The document dropped six days ago. Monsignor Marks is jet-lagged, mildly hungover from a Vatican reception, and has been waiting his entire priestly career for exactly this dinner.


THE DEBATES

Round One — Mark vs. Elron. Mark accuses Elron of building a tower in Shinar. Elron, who actually read the encyclical on the flight in (his model summarized it; he then read the summary; he is honest about this), counters that he is "Nehemiah-coded." Mark throws a breadstick.

Round Two — Christie vs. Joey. A genuinely tender scene. Christie isn't worried about the money or the fame. She is worried that her daughter is signing a term sheet and calling it a vow. Joey, for the first time, looks uncertain.

Round Three — The Mothers. Dr. Merck and Christie discover they were in the same consciousness-raising group in 1986. They drink an entire bottle of Sancerre and emerge united against everyone.

Round Four — The Fathers. John Merck Sr., who has not spoken in forty minutes, finally says: "Son. When I was your age I wanted to translate the Book of Job into Esperanto. Your mother told me no. I have been grateful every day since." Elron blinks.


THE SPEECH

Dessert. The Monsignor rises.

He does not lecture. He pours himself a brandy and begins, almost casually, by reading aloud from Magnifica Humanitas — the passage about Babel versus Jerusalem. About how "technology is never neutral, because it takes on the characteristics of those who devise, finance, regulate and use it." About how the family is "the fundamental and irreplaceable cell of every community organization." About the dignity of the limit. About how human persons flourish "not despite limitations, but often through them."

Then — and this is the pivot — Monsignor Marks does something nobody expects. He turns to Elron and quotes the encyclical's warning against transhumanism: the temptation to treat the human being as "a project to be optimized rather than as persons called to relationship and communion." He notes, mildly, that an "open covenant" with predetermined reproductive deliverables is, in fact, the most optimized arrangement anyone at this table has ever heard of. It is a product roadmap with a wedding registry attached.

But then he turns to Mark. And here is the twist. He points out that Magnifica Humanitas also insists — explicitly, repeatedly — on subsidiarity: the principle that decisions belong "at the closest level possible to the persons involved." That higher authorities — including, the Monsignor notes with a small smile, fathers — must not supplant the freedom and responsibility of those actually living the decision.

In other words: Mark, you don't get to veto. And Elron, you don't get to spreadsheet.

The solution he proposes is almost embarrassingly traditional. A regular marriage. Two people. Vows that mean what the words say. Children if and when they come, as gifts rather than as deliverables. The wealth disclosed, the prenup negotiated honestly, the open-covenant clause struck.

In exchange — and this is the part the Monsignor enjoys — Elron commits, on the record, to funding an independent AI ethics desk at the Reporter, with editorial firewall, the kind Mark has been too cowardly to demand. The dignity of work. The dignity of the press. The dignity of a man who finally gets to print what he actually thinks.

Elron, to his credit, sits with it for a long moment. Then he closes the laptop. "Okay," he says. "I retract the deck."

Joey cries. Christie cries. Dr. Merck pours more wine. Mark, gruffly: "Pass the salt, Elron."

The salt is passed. By hand. Human hand. Verified.

           END-TITLES HERE


TONE & CASTING NOTES

Think Knives Out by way of The Social Network, with the moral weight of late-period Kramer played absolutely straight underneath the satire. The comedy comes from the precision of the dialogue, not from anyone being a fool. Every character is the smartest person in their own scene.

Elron should be cast against type — not a tech-bro caricature but someone the audience genuinely likes and can imagine themselves agreeing with for the first forty minutes. The horror, and the comedy, is recognition.

Monsignor Marks is the Cecil Kellaway role, but younger, sharper, with a Roman collar and a Jesuit's footwork. He has the best lines and he knows it.

Running time: 108 minutes. (It worked the first time.)


Closing image: Mark in his study at dawn, typing the lead editorial. The headline reads: "On Marriage, Machines, and the Things That Should Not Be Optimized." His cursor blinks. He does not ask the AI for help.

Fade out.