soon more then you are ready
Watch Kingsman: The Secret Service Online : A group retracing the steps of the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march arrived Friday at the Alabama Capitol,
Watch Fifty Shades of Grey Online : calling for an end to new ballot restrictions enacted in the 50 years since the landmark Voting Rights Act.
Watch The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water Online : Martin Luther King III stood near the place his famous father addressed marchers in 1965, saying the work is not yet complete and criticizing practices.
Watch Jupiter Ascending Online : Including voter identification and reduced polling hours — that he said make it harder for people to cast ballots.
Watch Hot Tub Time Machine 2 Online : "We go all over the world promoting democracy, but right at home, it seems like we are suppressing democracy," King said.
Watch The DUFF Online : King questioned why voter registration is not done electronically and why voting is held for on only one day in the middle of the week.
Watch McFarland, USA Online : "If you wanted to throw a party, and you wanted people to come, would you throw it on Tuesday?"
Watch American Sniper Online : The re-enactment march was organized by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which called for a restoration of the Voting Rights Act requirement that states with histories of minority-voter suppression get federal permission before changing voting laws.
watch The Imitation Game online : The U.S. Supreme Court in 2013 struck down the formula that determined which states were covered, saying it was outdated.
Watch The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies Online : Marchers left Selma on Monday after the nation marked the 50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday, the March 7, 1965 melee during which demonstrators were beaten by police on the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
Watch The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 Online : Weeks after the confrontation, Martin Luther King, Jr. led the march from Selma to Montgomery, arriving on March 25, 1965.
Watch Fast & Furious 7 Online : President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 into law later that year. King paid tribute to the leaders of the civil rights, some famous and some not, but said the responsibility was on everyone to continue the work.
Watch The Lazarus Effect Online : "What we've got to do is participate. Now is the time, Dad used to say," King said.
Watch Focus Online : Segregationist Gov. George Wallace in 1965 watched marchers from a window in the Alabama Capitol. On Friday, Gov. Robert Bentley shook King's hand and welcomed the group to Montgomery.
Watch Still Alice Online : However, some people greeted the Republican governor with chants of "Medicaid now." Bentley has so far declined to expand Medicaid coverage under the Affordable Care Act.
Watch Chappie Online : About 100 people made the 54-mile trek along U.S. Highway 80 to Montgomery. A few were in their 60s and 70s and had marched in 1965. Others were born decades after that.
Watch The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel Online : Denise Lassan, 54, a Buddhist monk from Atlanta, has marched the route to Montgomery more than 10 times. Arriving in Montgomery on Friday, she said the route is inspirational because of what was accomplished there with nonviolent protest.
Watch Unfinished Business Online : The group of around 100 who departed from the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma Monday arrived to the Alabama State Capitol Friday afternoon.
Watch Paddington Online : This week's march was organized both to commemorate the 1965 Selma to Montgomery March that led to the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and push for remedies to the 2013 Supreme Court decision to strike down two provisions of that same act,
Watch The Theory of Everything Online : ended with around 500 people, who congregated on the steps of the capitol building downtown.
Watch The Wedding Ringer Online : The push for "a restoration of voting rights" was the central theme of the march all week, but when a larger group congregated at the capitol Friday, other issues were loudly raised.
Watch Selma Online : "None of it happens unless we engage our United States congresspersons," said Martin Luther King III, who led Friday's leg of the 54-mile march. "Let's keep on marching, let's keep on lobbying, let's keep on working."
Watch Birdman Online : Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley briefly addressed the crowd of people, and as he grabbed the microphone, many people began chanting "Medicaid now," introducing an issue that had not been widely discussed among marchers during the week.
Watch Cinderella Online : "I want you to know, as the governor of the state of Alabama, that I welcome you," Bentley said to the crowd. "We've got a long way to go, but let me tell you, we have come a long way.
Watch Run All Night Online : After 15 or so minutes on the steps of the Capitol, at least 150 people moved to the historic Dexter Avenue Baptist Church downtown to continue the rally (which is currently starting).