Summarize this content to 2000 words in 6 paragraphs in Arabic Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for freeYour guide to what the 2024 US election means for Washington and the worldThe writer is a contributing columnist, based in ChicagoIn my small corner of the Midwest, this was the weekend of Wicked. The Starbucks in my apartment building sold “Glinda’s pink potion” and “Elphaba’s cold brew”; the local Target showcased Ozdust eyeshadow; Walmart peddled lurid Elphaba-hued macaroni and cheese. Wicked was everywhere.But beyond the merchandising moment is the political moment. Released in US cinemas just over a fortnight after the most emotionally bruising presidential election in my nearly seven decades, it’s hard not to see Wicked as a parable for our fractured times. Director Jon Chu thinks we can all learn a thing or two from feuding leads Glinda and Elphaba (one of whom wafts around onscreen in a pink bubble) and the way they learn to listen, and then to love. “Hearing each other means getting out of your bubble a little bit. It takes courage to pop your bubble and to see other things and to hear it and to forgive each other . . . because that’s the spot we’re in right now”, he said.Chu wants Americans to do what spoiled, privileged Glinda and outcast, green-skinned Elphaba did when thrust together unwillingly as roommates: move beyond the “unadulterated loathing” they declare for each other in a famous duet — sung movingly by Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo — and end up declaring themselves friends. So far, in the heavily Democratic suburb of Chicago where I live, many of my friends and neighbours seem more committed to their bubbles than they did before the election. On the day after November 5, one acquaintance told me she thinks all white male babies should be given vasectomies at birth and have the operation reversed at age 18 “only if they can prove they can use their masculinity wisely”. She blames the Republican party’s sweeping victory on “toxic masculinity”. That kind of talk won’t have her singing duets with Republicans anytime soon.Mónica Guzmán hosts A Braver Way, a podcast for Braver Angels, a grassroots group working to bridge the political divide. She tells me it’s natural that Americans are isolating with like-minded people more than ever right now: “For folks who are really hurting and really afraid . . . the natural reaction is to want to come together and hold each other’s pain . . . and help each other feel less threatened”. The risk of that, she says, is that it could amplify fears that may not be rational.Fear is indeed a big problem post-election, says the Pew Research Center, which published a poll last week that found that nearly three quarters of Democrats say they are “fearful” about the state of the country and over half feel “angry”.“Democrats can’t listen when they are red-alert scared,” says Guzmán. “I don’t think what they need is people telling them they’re wrong, they need people to listen. There is something magical that can happen when people are witnessed”. In other words: it’s no use me quoting demographic voting statistics to my acquaintance who is so angry at men. I have to find the humility to listen — no matter how convinced I am that extreme views like that helped defeat the Democrats. If they won’t pop their bubble, then I’d better figure out how to escape mine.Wicked also crossed another frontier: with a rumoured budget of around $150mn, it marks a milestone as one of only a few major non-Asian blockbusters directed by an Asian-American (Chu also directed the hit film Crazy Rich Asians). “Chu is being trusted with huge budgets, he is a director of blockbusters, and he’s not the only one these days. It used to be that nobody Asian-American was entrusted with blockbusters by the studios,” says Frank Wu, an expert on Asian-American history and culture. Chu recently published a powerful memoir, Viewfinder, about growing up Asian-American in the US and succeeding in Hollywood. In it, he talks about raising his director’s “viewfinder” to figure out how to frame a shot. “When you’re lost, it helps you find your way,” he writes. Here’s hoping that Wicked can do its little bit to help America find its way: to the bursting of bubbles and the making of friends, even between America’s new politically popular class, the Republicans, and its new outcasts, the Democrats. If Glinda and Elphaba can do it, why can’t we?
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rewrite this title in Arabic What the US can learn from ‘Wicked’
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