Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

"Noah" vs. "God"s Not Dead" Highlights Hollywood"s Culture War Advantage

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"Noah" vs. "God"s Not Dead" Highlights Hollywood"s Culture War Advantage

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

HISTORY OF US SLAVERY IN AFRICA; A Documentary of Enslaved africans loss of identity and culture

At The Daily News Source, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by The Daily News Source and how it is used.


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HISTORY OF US SLAVERY IN AFRICA; A Documentary of Enslaved africans loss of identity and culture

Friday, March 14, 2014

The Main Problem with Israel: A Culture of Entitlement

At The Daily News Source, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by The Daily News Source and how it is used.


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The Main Problem with Israel: A Culture of Entitlement

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Viral Video “Don’t Freak I’m Sikh” Spreads Amazing Message About Race, Culture & Religion

It’s a special moment when you can look at another human being entirely for who and what they are: another soul having an experience here. So often do we taint this idea with judgments and connotations about who and what people are by putting them into boxes based on culture, gender, looks, style etc. Wouldn’t it be amazing if we could just see each other and appreciate each other for exactly who we are? I’m not talking about avoiding culture, gender or race, but instead just embracing it all – realizing that these socio-cultural attributes are only part of a role we are playing in this life time and that we are one in the same.


I believe this video spreads an important message we can all embrace.



Collective-Evolution



Viral Video “Don’t Freak I’m Sikh” Spreads Amazing Message About Race, Culture & Religion

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Is there rape culture in politics?

| February 3, 2014





Artist: Feminist Current


Title: Is there rape culture in politics? Jan 29 2014 panel – rabble


Year: 2014


Length: 41:06 minutes (37.64 MB)


Format: 44.1kHz, 128Kbps




Show Notes:



This episode features a panel discussion on rape culture in politics. The panel took place on January 29, 2014 at the University of British Columbia and was organized by The Canadian Women Voters Congress, the UBC AMS Sexual Assault Support Centre, and the UBC Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions. Panelists are: Irene Tsepnopoulos-Elhaimer, Executive Director at Women Against Violence Against Women Rape Crisis Centre (WAVAW); Grace Lore, a PhD Candidate in Political Science at UBC; Ellen Woodsworth, an activist, a founder of Women Transforming Cities, and a former Vancouver City Councillor; and Meghan Murphy, writer, journalist, and founder of Feminist Current.


For more on Feminist Current. Visit us online.


Follow us on Twitter @feministcurrent.




rabble.ca



Is there rape culture in politics?

Saturday, December 28, 2013

France Seeks Another Tax on Facebook, Google And YouTube, to Finance "French Culture" Cinema

The economic stupidity in France is astounding. It’s hard keeping up with all the inane ideas of President Francois Hollande’s socialist administration. Here’s another one of Hollande’s ideas for your amusement.


RT reports French broadcasting watchdog CSA eager to tax YouTube, Facebook, Dailymotion

France’s Superior Council of Audiovisual, an independent broadcasting authority, wants to impose taxes on media giants like YouTube, Facebook and Dailymotion to force them to contribute to financing French culture.

The sites fall into the same category as video-on-demand services, the organization said; so they would be subject to French cultural protection laws that require distributors to hand over some of their revenues to help subsidize productions.


“These platforms have been developing partnerships with audiovisual publishers and content providers for years, with which they share revenues from advertising,” the report [in French] said.


The watchdog has urged the French government to conduct research into the websites’ profit from professional productions and to determine how much they may be required to pay.


The obstacle which remains, though, is the fact that the legislation is only applicable to websites that are based in France. In the future, the organization is planning to demand all video-on-demand services to declare their existence to the CSA.


Culture Tax


Bloomberg reports France’s ‘Culture Tax’ Could Hit YouTube and Facebook

Should YouTube subsidize le cinéma français? France’s audiovisual regulator thinks so. In a report this week, the Superior Audiovisual Council (CSA) says that video-sharing websites should be subject to a tax that helps finance the production of French films and TV shows.

The so-called culture tax, totaling more than €1.3 billion ($ 1.8 billion) annually, is paid by movie theaters, broadcasters, and Internet service providers in France. The CSA contends that YouTube (GOOG), French video-sharing site DailyMotion, and their ilk are effectively providing video-on-demand services, which are already subject to the tax.


Separately, France is considering a tax on smartphones, tablets, and other devices as another source of revenue for cultural subsidies. A government-commissioned report, released in May, said that a sales tax of 1 percent should be imposed on electronic devices capable of accessing movies, music, and other content. The proposed tax would raise an estimated €86 million annually that would be used to finance the “cultural industries’ digital transition,” France’s Culture Ministry said at the time.


Trade associations for French Internet and technology companies spoke out against the proposal, which the government has not yet acted on. Rejecting the government’s assertion that a 1 percent tax would be “painless,” the groups warned in a statement in July that the government should be encouraging growth of the digital economy, rather than taxing it.


Subsidies For Films No One Watches


Forbes has some interesting comments as well. Please consider French Try Another Tax On Facebook, Google And YouTube

France is trying to impose another tax upon Facebook, Google and YouTube. It’s going to go into subsidies for all those French films that no one ever watches. Which is, of course, why they need subsidy.

The basic background here is that the French are so proud and so confident of the superiority of their culture that they fear it will be wiped out by all these imports of American and other “Anglo” productions. They thus have various limits on how many of these imports there can be: even to the point that in the past they have had exemptions from the standard European Union strictures on the free movement of goods and services. They’ve even got a law stating that English cannot be used in advertising: this named after the Minister that brought it in, Jack Allgood.


There is just one small problem with this:


The obstacle which remains, though, is the fact that the legislation is only applicable to websites that are based in France.


The moral of the story is “Don’t base websites, start businesses, or expand businesses in France”.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



France Seeks Another Tax on Facebook, Google And YouTube, to Finance "French Culture" Cinema

France Seeks Another Tax on Facebook, Google And YouTube, to Finance "French Culture" Cinema

The economic stupidity in France is astounding. It’s hard keeping up with all the inane ideas of President Francois Hollande’s socialist administration. Here’s another one of Hollande’s ideas for your amusement.


RT reports French broadcasting watchdog CSA eager to tax YouTube, Facebook, Dailymotion

France’s Superior Council of Audiovisual, an independent broadcasting authority, wants to impose taxes on media giants like YouTube, Facebook and Dailymotion to force them to contribute to financing French culture.

The sites fall into the same category as video-on-demand services, the organization said; so they would be subject to French cultural protection laws that require distributors to hand over some of their revenues to help subsidize productions.


“These platforms have been developing partnerships with audiovisual publishers and content providers for years, with which they share revenues from advertising,” the report [in French] said.


The watchdog has urged the French government to conduct research into the websites’ profit from professional productions and to determine how much they may be required to pay.


The obstacle which remains, though, is the fact that the legislation is only applicable to websites that are based in France. In the future, the organization is planning to demand all video-on-demand services to declare their existence to the CSA.


Culture Tax


Bloomberg reports France’s ‘Culture Tax’ Could Hit YouTube and Facebook

Should YouTube subsidize le cinéma français? France’s audiovisual regulator thinks so. In a report this week, the Superior Audiovisual Council (CSA) says that video-sharing websites should be subject to a tax that helps finance the production of French films and TV shows.

The so-called culture tax, totaling more than €1.3 billion ($ 1.8 billion) annually, is paid by movie theaters, broadcasters, and Internet service providers in France. The CSA contends that YouTube (GOOG), French video-sharing site DailyMotion, and their ilk are effectively providing video-on-demand services, which are already subject to the tax.


Separately, France is considering a tax on smartphones, tablets, and other devices as another source of revenue for cultural subsidies. A government-commissioned report, released in May, said that a sales tax of 1 percent should be imposed on electronic devices capable of accessing movies, music, and other content. The proposed tax would raise an estimated €86 million annually that would be used to finance the “cultural industries’ digital transition,” France’s Culture Ministry said at the time.


Trade associations for French Internet and technology companies spoke out against the proposal, which the government has not yet acted on. Rejecting the government’s assertion that a 1 percent tax would be “painless,” the groups warned in a statement in July that the government should be encouraging growth of the digital economy, rather than taxing it.


Subsidies For Films No One Watches


Forbes has some interesting comments as well. Please consider French Try Another Tax On Facebook, Google And YouTube

France is trying to impose another tax upon Facebook, Google and YouTube. It’s going to go into subsidies for all those French films that no one ever watches. Which is, of course, why they need subsidy.

The basic background here is that the French are so proud and so confident of the superiority of their culture that they fear it will be wiped out by all these imports of American and other “Anglo” productions. They thus have various limits on how many of these imports there can be: even to the point that in the past they have had exemptions from the standard European Union strictures on the free movement of goods and services. They’ve even got a law stating that English cannot be used in advertising: this named after the Minister that brought it in, Jack Allgood.


There is just one small problem with this:


The obstacle which remains, though, is the fact that the legislation is only applicable to websites that are based in France.


The moral of the story is “Don’t base websites, start businesses, or expand businesses in France”.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



France Seeks Another Tax on Facebook, Google And YouTube, to Finance "French Culture" Cinema

Sunday, December 8, 2013

VIDEO: Miley Cyrus, Is That You?







Miley Cyrus is mixing up her look once again! The singer covered up her edgy pixie cut with a wig at the KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas event in LA. The short blonde bob features mid-length bangs and stops short of her jawline, making it look like she grew her hair out overnight. Miley shared her fresh look on Twitter, saying she was “bored” and playing with wigs, and she also shared a snap on Instagram, posing with a friend.













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VIDEO: Miley Cyrus, Is That You?

Friday, December 6, 2013

Obama Creates Culture of Fear in America!!!

At A Political Statement, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by A Political Statement and how it is used.

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Like many other Web sites, A Political Statement makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.

Cookies and Web Beacons

A Political Statement does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.

DoubleClick DART Cookie

  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on A Political Statement.
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  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on A Political Statement send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.

A Political Statement has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.

You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. A Political Statement"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.

If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.


Obama Creates Culture of Fear in America!!!

Saturday, November 9, 2013

VIDEO: Zoe Saldana"s Husband Marco Perego"s New Tattoo







Star Trek actress Zoe Saldanda was spotted leaving Dominick’s in West Hollywood, CA with her new husband Marco Perego, and along with their wedding bands, Marco looked to be sporting some unique new ink. Perego has, what looks to be a tattoo of Saldana’s face on his his left forearm. Getting your partner’s name or face tattooed on yourself is like inviting the kiss of death into your relationship. Haven’t celebrities learned anything from Johnny Depp or Angelina Jolie?













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VIDEO: Zoe Saldana"s Husband Marco Perego"s New Tattoo

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Unions Take High Culture Hostage


This past week featured two stories about major orchestras dealing with their adamant unions. The first incident occurred on Wednesday, October 2 at Carnegie Hall in New York City. A fancy opening night gala, featuring the violinist Joshua Bell and the young jazz performer Esperanza Spalding, was called off due to a surprise strike by Local One of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. 


The second dispute, still unresolved, involves the protracted labor impasse at the Minnesota Orchestra. On October 1, true to his promise, star music director Osmo Vänskä resigned because of the inability of the orchestra and its musicians’ union to hammer out a new contract in time to prepare for concerts scheduled at Carnegie Hall on November 2 and 3. The issues in these two labor disputes could scarcely be more different. But each of them, in its own way, illustrates the long-term toll that American labor law takes on the cultural lifeblood of our nation.


The Stagehands at Carnegie Hall


The incident at Carnegie Hall raised more than a few eyebrows when it was revealed that the strike was organized by the five full-time Carnegie Hall stagehands who were members of Local One. Their annual compensation in wages and overtime averaged a cool $ 419,000 per year, making them—one properties manager, two carpenters, and two electricians—five of the seven highest paid workers at Carnegie Hall after Carnegie CEO Clive Gillenson. Other union members in unspecified numbers were called in to help from time to time, presumably at rates on par with those Carnegie Hall paid to its full time workers.


As befits the sorry state of labor relations in the United States, the dispute was not about the status of these five workers. Rather, it focused on the new jobs that would open upon the completion of a new education wing in 2015. Mr. Gillenson was not exactly breathing fire when, well-coached in the pitfalls of labor law, he eschewed any anti-union sentiment and announced that he expected union workers to take the stagehand slots in that new facility. It was just that he insisted on dealing with unions that lacked the clout and the wages of the hardy men from Local One.


Local One’s President James Claffey Jr. was quite unapologetic about his opposition to this plan. His public statement read in part:


Carnegie Hall Corporation has spent or will spend $ 230 million on its ongoing studio tower renovation, but they have chosen not to appropriately employ our members as we are similarly employed throughout the rest of Carnegie Hall. . . .


Carnegie Hall Corporation continued for 13 months to fail to acknowledge the traditional and historic work that we perform, and after no significant progress, we found it absolutely necessary to take action to protect the members that we represent.



The economic realist offers this translation of Claffey’s brief utterances. The management now wants to expand its business. We know that it has sunk about $ 230 million into a new facility, so we want to extract some portion of that money by having our workers tax that new venture by supplying these services at outlandish rates. That implicit tax, moreover, is not small. Assume that the unit contains about six full-time stagehands, and the total labor bill for their services is around $ 2,500,000 per year.


On the generous assumption that these union members working in other facilities earn about $ 100,000 per year, Carnegie Hall pays out annually in monopoly rents to these preferred union workers about $ 2,000,000, more or less in perpetuity. On the assumption that Carnegie Hall’s investments throw off about 5 percent per year, it takes $ 40 million in endowment to service these claims, which works out to about $ 8 million per worker, present or future.


The question then arises: why did Carnegie Hall choose to make a stand at this moment. Mr. Gillinson never once challenged the legitimacy of the current exorbitant labor costs at Carnegie Hall. Instead, he objected to Local One’s desire to expand its turf. He did so because he knew that Local One was in part a captive to its own exorbitant contracts. Thus, if those five workers went out on strike to secure the new positions, at a minimum they would have to forfeit their juicy compensation for the duration of the strike, with no opportunity to recoup those gains once the strike was over.


In essence, the union ploy to expand its power may have given some benefits to a few other members of Local One, but not those on strike. The management for its part knew that by holding relatively firm they could cut out a major expense that would offset its short-term losses.


Of course, in any strike, the positions of both management and labor matter. In this case, Local One had more to lose from the strike than did Carnegie Hall, even if it remained closed for a number of performances. So it was not surprising that the strike settled on ambiguous terms within two days. The union got to preserve the status quo ante on the concert hall for at least another four years. But the final settlement also “includes limited jurisdiction for I.A.T.S.E. Local 1 in Carnegie Hall’s newly created education wing.”


Cashed out, that limited jurisdiction appears to allow a single new Local One member to perform limited tasks in the new wing for reduced wages. Think of this as a charge on endowment of approximately $ 2 million, compared to the $ 25 million or so that the union wanted from three new full time employees. Thus, peace was restored in our time.


The Case of the Minnesota Orchestra


The bargaining dynamics could not have been more different in the Minnesota dispute. It is no secret that unionized musicians command a short-run monopoly premium for their members. The orchestra knows that it can earn back some fraction of that wage premium by securing the most talented musicians. But by the same token, any generous deal opens the orchestra up to financial ruin if its endowment shrinks or if its key donors cut back their support in hard times. But usually the large gains for older musicians carry the day.


Unions in all industries—think of the debacle at General Motors—do not do well in negotiating givebacks to management. Yet, ironically, the higher the premium that unions are able to extract during good times, the larger the give-backs are needed to bring the employer’s fiscal position into balance during bad times.


 Just that dynamic was in play with the Minnesota Orchestra. The high wages before 2009 led to one round of union concessions. But in 2011, the budget was still out of balance, and management came back with a request for further cuts of about 32 percent. It later softened its demands to insist on wage cuts that would reach 25 percent after three years. Those cuts would be offset by a one time $ 20,000 bonus, which would, of course, not be part of the wage base in future years.


The union proposals were for pay cuts in the range of six to eight percent. This would have left an annual deficit in the order of $ 6 million. In the end, no deal could be reached, which precipitated Vänskä’s departure and the subsequent huge hit to prestige of the orchestra’s hard-earned international reputation.


Even now, it seems clear that the disappointed musicians will be worse off without their jobs than they would have been if they had accepted the least attractive offer they received from management. But with each side accusing the other of steering the car over the cliff, these smash-ups are to be accepted. Vänskä, it appears, will come out fine.


What Next?


One of the most disheartening features in the coverage of these two disputes is the unwillingness of any of the commentators to think seriously about the kind of major structural reforms desperately needed to reduce the risk of system-wide failure, which occurs not only in music, but also, most obviously, in professional sports. At various times, the well-heeled athletes in baseball, basketball, football, and hockey have forced shutdowns that they later came to regret. Today, the common discussion is confined to second-order questions of proper bargaining strategy coupled with pious demands for social responsibility on all sides. But these palliatives cannot alter the fundamental bargaining dynamics under current labor law.


The sad truth is that American law during the period from about 1914 to 1940 committed itself to the creation of monopoly unions in the name of the public interest. Union defenders insisted that stronger unions would increase overall purchasing power to fuel economic growth for the middle class, or that only strong unions could offset the employer’s superior bargaining position. These rationales led to giving many unions exclusive bargaining rights with employers that necessarily imposed huge costs on the employer, and losses on non-unionized workers, frustrated suppliers, customers, and the public at large. But these system-wide losses from strikes and lockouts were deemed justified for the lofty end they helped to achieve.


In recent years, industrial unions have lost their power because the firms that they seek to unionize do not have any ability to raise wages given the rising competition that unionized firms face in their own product or service markets. So overall, the union movement in the private sector is in decline. But in certain niche professional markets, competitive constraints from new entrants are far weaker, as there is little if any direct competition for either the Carnegie stagehands or the Minnesota musicians.


But it is equally clear that five workers who can shut down an entire opening night gala can garner more gain per worker than the hundred or more members of a struggling symphony orchestra. So the union bargaining cycle gives stagehands far greater returns, and, with a jurisdictional strike, a far stronger incentive to settle. The orchestra members, on the other hand, can only bargain over the decline in their real wages given the limited revenues available.      


The union leaders and their backers, who tout the wage increases and benefit packages from successful actions, do not recognize the heavy toll that their actions impose on everyone else. In today’s intellectual climate, unrepentant progressives like New York’s mayoral apparent Bill de Blasio continue to prime the pump and garner ecstatic union endorsements, by speaking as if their progressive agenda has a proven track record of success in rehabilitating the fortunes of the middle-class.


Don’t believe it. Happily I am not running for public office, so I am not reluctant to note this singular truth about labor relations. Forget the searing populist rhetoric; competitive markets that allow for free entry and continuous wage and benefit adjustments will produce far better results over the long haul than monopolistic unions that say they advance so-called social justice. It is foolish to think that this current form of regulated toe-to-toe combat can be tamed with some subtle tweak in labor law. The entire system has to be dismantled root and branch to prevent the Minnesota meltdown, the stagehand strangulation, and, more ominously, the coming disintegration of New York City. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Unions Take High Culture Hostage

Friday, October 4, 2013

VIDEO: The Decades Series - The Decades Series: The 1990s, by Judd Apatow, Behind the Scenes







In this behind-the-scenes look at “The Decades Series: The 1990s,” Judd Apatow explains why he used Vanity Fair to gain access to comedienne Maria Bamford and how he keeps the grunge era alive.













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VIDEO: The Decades Series - The Decades Series: The 1990s, by Judd Apatow, Behind the Scenes

Thursday, October 3, 2013

VIDEO: The Decades Series - The Decades Series: The 1990s, by Judd Apatow







Director Judd Apatow puts comedienne Maria Bamford’s 1990s knowledge to the test as the two reminisce about the highs and lows of the grunge era.













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VIDEO: The Decades Series - The Decades Series: The 1990s, by Judd Apatow

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

The Culture Gabfest “Butchery and Bitchery” Edition


Listen to Culture Gabfest No. 263 with Stephen Metcalf, Dana Stevens, and Julia Turner with the audio player below.





And join the lively conversation on the Culturefest Facebook page here:




The sponsors of this week’s show are Stamps.com and 23andme.com. Go to Stamps.com and use the promo code “CULTUREFEST” for your no-risk free trial and bonus offer. Go to 23andme.com/Slate for your $ 99 personal genetic profile.




Culturefest is on the radio! “Gabfest Radio” combines Slate’s Culture and Political Gabfests in one show—listen on Saturdays at 7 a.m. and Sundays at 6 p.m. on WNYC’s AM820.




On this week’s episode, the critics discuss Drake’s new album Nothing Was the Same. With the help of New York magazine’s music critic Jody Rosen, they explore Drake’s wildly-popular brand of hip hop, in which authenticity is tied to emotional availability instead of street credibility. Next, the gabbers join in on a debate initiated by Clive James in the New York Times, lamenting the state of the American book review. Have American critics lost their bite? Finally, the critics take stock of Apple’s newest operating system iOS7, assessing its successes, controversies, and departures from a Jobs-approved aesthetic.




Links to some of the things we discussed this week:




Julia: The unexpectedly delightful shelter magazine House Beautiful




Outro: “Started from the Bottom” by Drake




You can email us at culturefest@slate.com.




This podcast was produced by Sally Herships and engineered by Chris Wade. Our intern is Anna Shechtman.




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The Culture Gabfest “Butchery and Bitchery” Edition

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

VIDEO: The Decades Series: The 1930s, by Barbara Kopple, Behind the Scenes







Go behind the scenes of “The Decades Series: The 1930s” with Oscar-winning director Barbara Kopple.













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VIDEO: The Decades Series: The 1930s, by Barbara Kopple, Behind the Scenes

Friday, September 27, 2013

VIDEO: The Decades Series: The 2000s, by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing, Behind the Scenes







Directors Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing reveal the inspiration for their homage to the aughts in this behind-the-scenes look at their short film “Y2Krazy.”













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VIDEO: The Decades Series: The 2000s, by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing, Behind the Scenes

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

VIDEO: The Decades Series: The 1950s, by Joe Sabia, Behind the Scenes







In this behind-the-scenes look, director Joe Sabia explains how he translated the optimism and prosperity of the 1950s into his musical short “Booms.”













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VIDEO: The Decades Series: The 1950s, by Joe Sabia, Behind the Scenes