The Boring Utopia of a World Without Men – The Atlantic

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Within days of the sudden disappearance of every last earthly bearer of XY chromosomes (fetuses included), things are pretty much back to normal. Trash collection in Los Angeles is up and functioning again. Cross-country flights are soon available, the subways run, and in one small town, things are even better than normal: A seemingly unlimited supply of pizza dough keeps people happily fed. The remaining XXers are so capable that they overcome, lickety-split, what might seem like fundamental obstacles to life without half the populationlearning to operate new machinery, reupping the power grid and water filtration, and, though its never mentioned, presumably hauling in the years harvest. A few weeks later, Zillow creates a brand-new function to pair left-behind citizens with now-vacant houses; the CMS works like a charm, with excellent functionality and zero error messages. And that is how we know this is science fiction.

The left-behind women of Sandra Newmans novel The Men can do it all. Who run the world? Girls. How do they do it? With an uncanny aptitude for systems management and an unlikely ability to maintain the amenities of modern life with 50 percent of the, er, manpower.

Such is the world Newman constructs in the gap where half of humanity once dwelled. When Jane Pearson comes down a mountain in Northern California after searching for her missing husband and son for 10 days, she hears a faint, sweet clamor of voices in the air They werent angels or children. It was the sound of a hundred women with no men. The women are drinking Bud from cans and sunbathing in underwear while little girls are dancing to Elton John; the trauma of losing husbands, fathers, sons, and friends in an unexplained cataclysmic event isnt enough to get in the way of a good time. In that moment, Jane thinks, I was struck by how profoundly a scene was changed by the removal of the masculine element. It felt very sweet and fantastical: a world of lambs with no wolves.

Relieved from the terror of prowling, howling beasts, these soft, delicate, no-longer-helpless women take back the night, and the streets, and the dark alleys, and all the places where they might have once clutched cans of pepper spray. Far-off problems occasionally float into viewtruckers ambushed as they move supplies across the country, towns running out of food and resorting to violencebut this world of fluffy little lambs is billed as a paradise, if only its inhabitants would embrace it.

Except, for this reader, paradise is boring. (Theres a reason we relish Dantes Inferno so much more than his Paradiso.) The defining feature of The Men, a snappy premise in search of a novel, is the utterly flat reality it imagines for its women. Building an entirely new world order of this sort ought to puff up dramas great and small. But pfffffft. Why does the air seem to go right out of them?The Men launches women into positions of uncontested power but entirely underestimates their complexity. It makes you long, against all your better instincts, for the men to come back.

Theres a big, ugly problem built into the foundation of The Men. The novel slices a clean chromosomal line through the middle of humanity, XX on one side, XY on the other, as if biology were destiny. Trans characters appearthough they dont speakbut their presence is a moral badge for those who reminisce about disappeared trans friends or watch, with horror, while trans men are beaten in the street. Before publication, the book met with some controversy, based on some early readers and, in some cases, its premise alone. Goodreads reviewers showed up to one-star it, often admitting they hadnt read the book. The essayist Lauren Hough was removed from contention for a Lambda Literary Award after she defended Newman and The Men on Twitter. But the novel isnt transphobic as much as sadly ill-considered and unoriginal. Newmans world isnt binary, but her mechanism is, and no amount of shoehorned asides can shore up that rotting mooring. The history of feminist utopias in literature is long and fitful, with squabbles among renowned novelists and calls for a more expansive view of gender identity, but The Men lazily fumbles back toward simplicity.

Art is not required to be moraland shouldnt strive to bebut good art is never this careless in its conception. Utopias are ripe for wild imagining. Why not reckon with the reality of gender, especially when decades past have already seen this sort of utopian premise time and again? It appears the answer is that the gender-war narrative is too convenient to give up.

Novelists have been banishing men from the planet for at least a century, and Newman clearly nods to her experiments precursors in The Mens acknowledgments. (Always read the paratext.) Thanks to writers of feminist utopias who came before, she notes, especially Joanna Russ, Alice Sheldon, and Sherri Tepper, women brave enough to say, unapologetically, in a far more patriarchal world, that there should be no men. Each of these writers built little paradisesRuss most ruthlessly with The Female Man, a 1975 time-hopping, rage tornado aimed directly at testicleswhere women could live in harmony if not for the men who parachute in to observe, dissect, and, in some cases, try to destroy their idylls.

If I can offer an understatement: Theres a lot for women to be pissed about. Simmering resentment at our still-second-class existence is the de facto emotional state many of us exist in from moment to moment. Gender dystopias, in which men find new and creative ways to explicitly oppress women, have become outlets for that fury; theres a Look what theyll do to us if given the chance! snarl beneath every line of The Handmaids Tales descendants. Dystopian schemes grant men enough license and the right circumstances to keep women as if they were pets. Worst-Case-Scenario Fiction can feel like its doing the same work as worry, like we can ward off theocracies and maternal penal colonies by imagining them ahead of time.

The allure of the feminist utopia is that it dispenses with existential anxiety just as readily as it dispenses with men. In Charlotte Perkins Gilmans Herland, the original American feminist utopia from 1915, citizens have achieved perfect health; theyre a clean-bred, vigorous lot, having the best of care, the most perfect living conditions always. The family units in Ursula K. Le Guins story The Matter of Seggri mete out child-rearing and domestic duties in harmony with larger governance work. On Whileaway, the single-gendered planet in The Female Man, the workweek is 16 hours; the planet is a place so pastoral that at times one wonders whether the ultimate sophistication may not take us all back to a kind of pre-Paleolithic dawn age. Women organize into efficient and congruous guilds. They get shit done, they have it all, they live out wellness mantras and T-shirt slogans. But their interpersonal struggles never seem to be enough to launch great stories. Men always appear, intervene, stir trouble. Once novelists create female bliss, theyre hard-pressed to do much with it.

The men of The Men are gone only for a short while. Weeks after their August 26 flash disappearance renders the first law of thermodynamics moot, videos begin to appear online that show the recently departed gathering in prison yards and by dried-up riverbeds. The setting looks like Earth, but it cant be; its too apocalyptic. The men appear as if underwater, moving their lips in the jerky, stylized speech motions of Claymation, cognitively tasered and on a different plane of consciousness.

The clips spawn branches of academia, cults of dedication, and righteous protestations that they certainly are or are not a hoax. If this is a rapture, the women wonder, why have the men been taken instead of them? If miracles were happening, Jane posits, there must be gods. Might it be punishment, after all the wars, the pollution, the rapes? Women doggedly watch The Men, as the clips come to be called; they host viewing parties and hole up with their laptops, more immersed in the surreal digital version of the missing men than the tangible presence of other women. The integrity of the videos becomes a key talking point for the women running for president of the United States, including Evangelyne Moreau, Janes former best friend and almost-lover. The men are just as present when theyre missing as they were when they walked the earth.

Here is where the tension dry-rots. Rather than pivot toward the women, to the rush of possibility for a world full of ambitious, complex, at-odds women; rather than push sci-fi heurism to a new dimension by investigating the thrilling, unbearable prospect of a world now populated by the grieving, formerly oppressed class; rather than defy the cruel banality of a binary gender apocalypse, Newman gives men the narrative. She even gives them the title.

Because the men show up from the past too. As placidly as the women livesome in a lush, communal Los Angeles mansion, others on the road with an erudite girl gangthe histories of their violent and power-engorged relationships with men break through. In retrospect, some spot minor flaws that now loom larger: Blancas father brought home scores of women and barked at her to mind her business. Ruths son Peter, experiencing some variety of mental illness, perhaps made her life worse, and not better? Jane, the woman at the center of this story, reunites with Evangelyne, but then splices her peaceful and joyous time during Evangelynes rise to political dominance with the story of Alain, the grimy little ballet administrator who coerced her, as a teenager, into having sex with underage boys while he watched.

Its only secondhand, through Jane, that the most vivid character of The Men comes to life. Evangelyne, raised in a bookish, small-time cult, has an intriguing back story: When she was 16 she killed two police officers who were involved in a raid on her community. She landed in prison, rather than Cornell, where she had just been accepted. This magnet of a woman, the preposterous hope of the world, writes a best-selling treatise on commensalismher political theory, akin to communism, that wealth should be more evenly redistributed, where eating the rich is a natural processfrom behind bars, and hopscotches through academic, artistic, and political circles. With the men gone, her ideas rip through masses of women eager to see power radiate through circles, rather than up ladders. She fast-tracks toward a nomination for president. Her story, a gay Black womans glorious risebuoyed by an apocalyptic raptureis the novels standout twist against convention. But Ill let you guess what end Evangelyne meets. Heres a hint: Its at the hands of angry men.

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The Boring Utopia of a World Without Men - The Atlantic

Slog PM: QFC Introduces Plexiglass Maze, Virginia "Ginni" Thomas Eager to Explain Her Seditious Texts to Jan. 6 Committee, Cold Weekend…

Utopia is never in the future or airy-fairy. It always here with us. It's always concrete.

That said, dystopia tends to be more concrete (and, sadly, more compossible) than utopia. Capitol Hill Seattle Blog reports that the QFC on Broadway has added a new dystopian level to the "modern grocery shopping experiences..." This has taken the form of "plexiglass barriers installed inside across the front entrance area of the Broadway Market store that show a new maze-like structure for shoppers to channel through when entering or leaving the store." The only hope for this development is that it's so extreme that actually draws tourists.

This is truly remarkable. This weekend will be cold. We are in the second half of June. You can still wear a sweater. In the words of Roxy Music: "There's nothing more than this."

On August 1, the former executive of KEXP, Tom Mara, will become SIFF's new executive director. Seattle Times has this story.

Local soccer fans learned today that Seattle will be one of 10 US cities to host the 2026 World Cup. Kansas City was also picked. (Sorry, I have almost no interest in socceror, correctly, football. Human feet have none of the intelligence, the sophistication, the conceptual power of our hands.)

Cancelled is a gun show that was to take place this Friday at Everett's Angel of the Winds Arena. The reason? The location is also hosting "multiple Everett Public Schools graduations." Herald Net: "Gun show [and graduations] were to be held in the building at the same time." The organizers decided to reschedule the gun event because 'of the potential for bad optics and conflict.'"

"Wetsuits, helmets and lifejackets" were not enough to protect the lives of two people who fell into Nooksack River while rafting earlier this week. Their bodies were caught by the furious water. It sent them to their deaths. Their bodies have been recovered.

The Trump-mad wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, Virginia "Ginni" Thomas, is apparently eager to "appear before the congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol." She is under the impression that her testimony will "clear up misconceptions" like that. Those emails and texts that tried to kill what remains of American democracy? You got it all wrong. Try to see it her way, America.

The rat to cat: Let me explain why I'm in the kitchen.

The lawyer who wrote the script for the coup, John Eastman, also sought a pardon from Trump after the January 6 coup failed and it was clear Trump had run out of options to keep power. Eastman and Ginni Thomas also exchanged emails.

Meanwhile in Georgia: This is so on-brand for a Republican.

10-year-old son of Mr. Walkers with whom he is not in contact.

Herschel Walker, the Republican nominee for Senate in Georgia, who has been a frequent critic of absentee fathers, especially in Black households, has acknowledged that he is the father of a second son he had not previously mentioned publicly, as well as an adult daughter who was born when he was in his early 20s.

Walker, who wants a universal ban on abortions, has had no contact with his 10-year-old son. He also has a secret daughter. The GOP. The GOP.

Clouds, rain, cool temperatures, June. Let's end PM with Loscil's utterly gorgeous and utterly Pacific Northwest "Fern and Robin":

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Slog PM: QFC Introduces Plexiglass Maze, Virginia "Ginni" Thomas Eager to Explain Her Seditious Texts to Jan. 6 Committee, Cold Weekend...

Books: From fantastical children’s books to heart-rending memoirs, take a look at what’s new this week… – HeraldScotland

Julia May Jonas

Picador, 14.99 (ebook 12.99)

Vladimir is an interesting take on the #MeToo movement - told not from the perspective of the survivor or victim, but from someone else. Our narrator is an English professor at a small college in New England, who - despite having an open relationship and knowing about the affairs - is grappling with her husband coming under investigation for historic relationships with students. Things become even more complicated when a new, young professor joins the college, and the unnamed narrator becomes increasingly obsessed with him. While the book initially feels edgy and nuanced, by the end, it veers into melodrama - which somewhat takes away from the realism, and it ultimately feels like Jonas hasn't quite decided what she wants the book's message to be. While it's an interesting, readable and prescient take on issues society is still dealing with, it perhaps could've done with a lighter touch and a clearer vision.

7/10

Ungrateful

Angela Chadwick

Dialogue Books, 18.99 (ebook 7.99)

Ungrateful tells the story of Cat, a woman who missed out on university as a teenager, and now, in a relationship that is comfortable but unfulfilling, finds herself trying to make up for lost time. This is a book that tries to be many things - a tale of second chances, relationships and a social commentary. At times it feels bogged down in unnecessary detail. Cat is a complicated, flawed and interesting protagonist, but some of the secondary characters could do with further exploration. While the reader feels for the plight of some, such as Cat's alcoholic mother Bernice and her colleague Laura, there is a sense of wanting to know more about their backstories. The novel is readable, but unlikely to stay in the reader's mind after it is finished.

6/10

The Men

Sandra Newman

Granta Books, 14.99 (ebook 14.99)

Feminist science fiction has long been gripped by the concept of a utopian society without men. Sandra Newman's latest novel, The Men, explores just that. When all of the men suddenly and inexplicably vanish from the face of the earth, a new society emerges, and is unnervingly enthralled by an evolving series of video clips that show the men acting peculiarly in a strange alternate world. Focused on the harrowing, intertwining past and present of Jane Pearson and Evangelyne Moreau, Newman ambitiously delves into disturbing themes of racism, sexual assault, police violence, and coercive control. Yet her wonderful prose is let down by a meandering narrative that seems lost in its own confusion. Jane and Evangelyne aren't especially likeable, and the purported feminist utopia is thwarted by female violence against trans men and a morally questionable emerging political entity. Add to that a mind-bending conclusion, and you're left wondering whether you should feel offended, terrified, or beguiled.

5/10

Non-fiction

Black Sheep: A Story Of Rural Racism, Identity And Hope

Sabrina Pace-Humphreys

Quercus, 16.99 (ebook 9.99).

From growing up feeling out of place in a small town, to becoming pregnant as a teen, battling bigots and running ultramarathons, Sabrina Pace-Humphreys's anti-racist manifesto is deeply personal. A blend of storytelling and direction, Pace-Humphreys shares the darkest lows of her life and the incredible ambition she had to push through them, overcoming her circumstances in a world that tried to marginalise her - while also clearing the way for other black women along the way. This is a brilliant exploration of what it means to be mixed-race in Britain, and how our trauma shapes us. Although sometimes overcrowded, and often too fast-paced, it is an excellent non-fiction debut.

8/10

Children's book of the week

Escape To The River Sea

Emma Carroll

Macmillan Children's Books, 12.99

(ebook 7.49).

Escaping the Nazis before the Second World War was never going to be enough adventure for Rosa Sweetman. Living in an English stately home with a group of other evacuees, she craves fresh excitement - and she gets rather more than she bargained for when she comes across the Nazis again, this time in the South American jungle. Escape To The River Sea weaves together the hopes and fears of a young girl, giving a fascinating insight into the life of the indigenous people of the Amazon rainforest and the deadly world of international espionage. It takes the reader on a colourful and thrill-packed journey, as Rosa and her young friends battle to thwart the bad guys. The book pays fitting homage to the late Eva Ibbotson, whose own work and life inspired this story.

8/10

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Books: From fantastical children's books to heart-rending memoirs, take a look at what's new this week... - HeraldScotland

‘Youth: The Balakandam of Kampans Ramayana’ book review: Beyond kings and sages – The New Indian Express

Express News Service

In the Tamil epic Ramavataram, the 12th-century poet Kampan lists the various emperors attending Rama and Sitas weddings. Along with the Cholas, Marathas, and Sindhis, there are also Chinese and Muslim kings! This is one of the many instances where Kampans work diverges from Valmikis Ramayana, on which it is based.

Blake Wentworth, who has translated the epics first section Balakandam into English as Youth, writes: Kampan was the first to compose a Ramayana in an Indian vernacular... If the poem is not read with the Tamil political landscape in mind, we cannot appreciate all that Kampan achieved.

He notes that the text was so influential that it transcended religious lines, serving as a model for Muslim poet Umaruppulavars 17th-century epic Cirappuranam (The Prophets Holy Life). While stories from the Ramayana have permeated pop-culture through folk retellings, plays, TV, schoolbooks, etc., reading source texts is a remarkably different experience. Besides, as a North Indian, I have mostly encountered Valmiki and Tulsidas versions of the epic, so Kampans rendition is a revelation.

The epics first section is as much about the common folk and landscapes as the Ramayanas protagonists or mythological tales. It begins with a rhapsody on Kosala kingdoms rural idyll, where fertile fields, fresh produce, ponds, vegetation, and animals abound.

An account of Ayodhyas grandeur follows: its soaring mansions and turrets that scrape the clouds, golden walls higher than a snowy mountain range, firm as the truth, and residents with blooming smiles and endless joy. Reading between these hyperbolic lines gives insights into how people lived, the land they inhabited, what they ate, and what they idealised.

Kampans utopia is remarkably egalitarian. Since no one is singled out as unlearned, he writes, there are no masters of knowledge, and no one there to judge them. Since everyone possesses every treasured wealth no one goes without, and there is no class of owners. Yet, this egalitarianism does not extend to women. Is there anything more foolish than a woman, sweet words like ambrosia, long eyes like poison? he declares. He does not laud Ayodhyas citizens as brave and truthful.

Instead, he says, No enemies challenge the land in war, so bravery is never clear, lies are never told, so the value of truth is never plain. Kampans metaphors are equally elaborate and interesting. He claims that in the land of Videha, womens eyes resemble fish, prompting herons to peck at their reflections as they pluck weeds in flooded rice fields. His descriptions are often lush with sexuality. He compares dancers breasts to soaring peaks which press so close together they could crush a single thread and womens love-mounds to cobras hoods and chariot daises.

There are elaborate accounts of lovers courting, making love, fighting, drinking toddy, and having a good time getting high. Amid the sundry descriptions, plot points like the wedding of Rama and Sita, slaying of the demon Tataka, Rama turning the cursed Ahalya from stone to flesh, and Parashu Rama testing Ramas strength seem like interludes. But these are no less evocative. In the Balakandam, there is barely a hint of the exile, wars, and tribulations that Rama and his family will eventually endure. Wentworths introduction to the translation contextualises the work, its influence, and the socio-political dimensions of Kampans world well. However, it can be academic and dry at times. In contrast, his translation is accessible and engaging. The endnotes, rich with annotations and context, helped me better appreciate the poem and its nuances.

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'Youth: The Balakandam of Kampans Ramayana' book review: Beyond kings and sages - The New Indian Express

Sherwood viewers all say the same thing about new BBC thrillers cast… – The Sun

FANS are all saying the same thing after watching the first two episodes of Sherwood - they cant get enough of the shows truly stellar cast.

Gosh. #Sherwood. What a cast! So many familiar faces! one keen viewer tweeted.

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Wow, #Sherwood is brilliant multi-layered, thoughtful, mature, and such a great cast. Best thing Ive seen in ages, another gushed.

A third viewer commented that the show is brilliantly cast and gripping and full of dread.

Great first episode of #Sherwood and the cast is a whos who of the cream of British talent, should be a good few weeks! a fourth fan added.

Another viewer praised the shows impressive cast while also pointing out the shows Notts County blunder in the first episode.

The BBC thriller began airing on Monday this week. It took the prime 9pm slot with the second episode following suit on Tuesday.

The six-part series follows a small-town constabulary in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, which has been tasked with solving two unexpected and seemingly unconnected killings. The deaths rock the local community and soon lead to a large-scale manhunt.

The thrillers large ensemble cast includes David Morrissey, who leads the series as Detective Chief Superintendent Ian St Clair. Viewers might recognise him from Doctor Who and The Walking Dead.

Off to a great start; almost anyone Ive seen so far could lead the cast, but thrilled to see David Morrissey. #Sherwood, one fan tweeted in support of the actors casting.

Spooks actor Robert Glenister plays Detective Inspector Kevin Salisbury from the Metropolitan Police, and hes leading the investigation alongside Ian St Clair. However, the pair must put aside their decades-long rivalry to uncover the truth about these deaths.

The detective duo is joined on screen by The Crowns Leslie Ann Manville, Utopia star Adeel Akhtar, New Tricks alum Alun Armstrong and Lewis actor Clare Holman.

Wow, thats a lot of British talent, but its not all.

Rounding out Sherwoods star-studded cast are two Downton Abbey main-stays: Joanne Froggatt and Kevin Doyle. The duo were most recently seen on the big screen in Downton Abbey: A New Era.

Sherwoods plot is a fictionalised retelling of a true story and comes from the award-winning playwright and dramatist James Graham.

It means the world to have this opportunity to bring the voices of a community I grew up in to BBC One, James said.

He continued: So much is spoken about the divisions and difficulties in these Red Wall towns, but theyre not always understood.

I feel so honoured to be able to tell a fictionalised story about a very real trauma, but with the humour and heart and resilience of the people I know and love there.

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Sherwood viewers all say the same thing about new BBC thrillers cast... - The Sun

Spontaneous And Fleeting Moments: The Independent Photographer Has Announced The Winners Of Its Street Photography Contest, 2022 (10 Pics) – Bored…

The Independent Photographer, an international network of photography enthusiasts and photographers, has announced the winners of its Street Photography Contest, which took place in May 2022.

Whether the subject was the photographers own urban environment or as they explored other territories and cultures, we were looking for those spontaneous and fleeting moments and it is our great pleasure to present the work of these incredibly talented artists!

The competition judge: Bruce Gilden. A member of Magnum Photos since 1998, Bruce Gilden is one of the most iconic street photographers of our time. Known for his graphic and often confrontational close-ups made using flash, Gilden has received many awards and grants for his work, including National Endowments for the Arts fellowships and in 2013, a Guggenheim Foundation fellowship. Since the seventies, his work has been exhibited in museums and galleries all over the world.

We are delighted to present the images of 10 artists whose work shows an exceptional level of talent. All full captions can be found on The Independent Photographers winners page, as well as the feedback from the competition judge, Bruce Gilden.

Congratulations to all winners and finalists!

More info: independent-photo.com | Instagram | twitter.com | Facebook

Oktoberfest Munich, Germany.

The shot is taken during the world-famous beer festival, the Oktoberfest.

Boy Scouts Paris, France.

I was walking around Paris when I heard from far away some kids chatting and laughing. I saw that it was a group of scout kids and I knew that there was an interesting shot there. So, I placed myself in the middle of the street so that they were facing me. All of a sudden, one kid takes his friend by the shoulder and shouts look over there! and I quickly took the shot as he was raising his arm to point at something behind me.

Hand and Cigarette Leicester Square, London, UK.

A Fragile Utopia 72

I began A Fragile Utopia with the belief that I was creating a project where I would document my daily life in Brooklyn. Understanding at the time that this city was a refuge for me culturally and politically as I grew up in a rural small town. Ive come to realize that A Fragile Utopia is instead a construction of a world that I want to see in my mind.

People of Paris Paris, France.

I imagine hes lived in Paris most of his life. How many times has he been photographed?! I want to guess not many. But now theres at least one.

Look to the Future India.

I was at the bus station, and this girl on her way to school caught my attention. She had a very intriguing personality, a form of pride and modernity, which is in direct contrast to the reality of living in India.

Gel Doy Berlin, Germany.

A night shot was taken on a snowy winter night on the streets of Berlin, Germany.

Coffee and Cigarette Manhattan, New york City, USA.

Candid photograph taken on 47th Street, NYC.

Street scene Chittagong, Bangladesh.

Young boys looking for dropped fishes at the fish market in Chittagong, Bangladesh.

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Spontaneous And Fleeting Moments: The Independent Photographer Has Announced The Winners Of Its Street Photography Contest, 2022 (10 Pics) - Bored...

The Obamas’ new TV series is about to start filming in Ireland. Brace yourself for the diddley-dee worst – The Irish Times

West Cork and unsolved crimes have become international televisions hot new trend. In 2021 there was a head to head between two true-crime documentaries about the murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier, Jim Sheridans Murder at the Cottage: The Search for Justice for Sophie and Netflixs Sophie: A Murder in West Cork. And this year ITV aired its adaptation of Graham Nortons Holding, about a fictional cold-case killing in the 1990s.

Now the Obamas are getting in on the action. Cameras start rolling next week in the fishing village of Union Hall and around Glandore on their latest production, Bodkin. Described as a darkly comedic thriller, it will chronicle the adventures of a motley crew of podcasters investigating the disappearance of three strangers in an idyllic Irish coastal town.

With West Cork Noir a well-trodden genre, the concept does not sound particularly originalbut it represents new ground for Barack and Michelle Obama and their Higher Ground production company. Since striking a multimillion-dollar deal with Netflix, the former US president and first lady have focused on nonfiction. Barack was last seen channelling his inner David Attenborough with the natural-history documentary Our Great National Parks; Michelle has popped up hosting Waffles + Mochi, where she shared the screen with a sentient Japanese rice cake and a talking waffle. (This is in contrast to the Trump presidency, when the talking waffle was in the White House.)

Bodkin sounds like a lot of things. A Hobbit on the sex offenders register. A forthcoming Nintendo Switch platform game. A brand of English cider. What it doesnt suggest is a village in west Co Cork

But Bodkin is something different: a scripted series that might struggle to feel any better designed to cash in on the global craze for west Cork and true(ish) crime. It stars Will Forte, the Saturday Night Live comedian, as Gilbert Power, an American podcaster on the hunt for his next big story. Gilberts family emigrated from Cork, we learn, and he is hoping to discover his Irish roots.

The cast also features Siobhn Cullen, last seen in as a truth-seeking Dublin journalist in The Dry, Element Pictures rip-roaring comedy about an alcoholic Irish woman from a family of typically Irish heavy drinkers, which for some reason has yet to air in Ireland, and Chris Walley, of Young Offenders, who plays a typical Irish country lad feckless, up for a laugh.

Wait. What? Feckless and up for a laugh? The more you read about Bodkin, the less it sounds like west Cork true-crime redux and the more it sounds like Amy Adamss Leap Year, aka Darby OGill: The Relationship Years. Alarm bells clang further as we discover that Bodkin is the name of the village in which the show is set.

Which leads you to wonder if the closest anyone involved in the series has been to Cork is a true-crime-podcast feed. (The credits of Bodkins co-show runner Alex Metcalf include Amazons dreadful reboot of the conspiracy thriller Utopia.) Bodkin sounds like a lot of things. A Hobbit on the sex offenders register. A forthcoming Nintendo Switch platform game. A brand of English cider. What it doesnt suggest is a village in west Co Cork.

We've been here before: Johnny Depp in Ireland in 1995. Photograph: INM/Getty

Weve been here before, of course. Or at least some of us have. When I was a student living at home in Midleton, the nearby village of Ballycotton received the Hollywood treatment after the news that Marlon Brando and Johnny Depp were to shoot a movie there.

One late afternoon my friends and I went down to see the set for ourselves (having first driven around on the lookout for Depp, whom wed heard was drinking in a local boozer). Ballycotton had been turned into a twee Neverland, with toe-curling signposts and shopfronts that made the town look as if it had come straight from the 1890s rather than the 1990s.

Divine Rapture was, notoriously, derailed by funding issues. That wont be a problem in the case of Netflix and the Obamas. Still, you have to wonder, will Bodkin be a love letter to west Cork, or will the Obamas instead be party to the pumping into the world of more OBlarney? Perhaps we should hope for the bestand brace ourselves for the diddley-dee worst.

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The Obamas' new TV series is about to start filming in Ireland. Brace yourself for the diddley-dee worst - The Irish Times

RED BANK: DONUTS, TOYS AND MORE IN CHURN – redbankgreen

Luis Hurta at the newly opened Once Bitten Donuts on Broad Street.(Photo by John T. Ward. Click to enlarge)

By JOHN T. WARD

Need donuts? A vintage camera? Soul-soothing crystals, toys or housewares? Late spring has brought a bouquet of new businesses offering these goodies and more in downtown Red Bank.

Read all about them in this cusp-of-summer edition of redbankgreens Retail Churn.

Jeff Gross and Amanda Snell have opened Camera Culture at 24 Monmouth Street. (Photo by John T. Ward. Click to enlarge.)

Earth Spirit New Age Center, betting a pandemic-triggered boom in sales of crystals, candles and more will continue, has relocated to 18 Broad Street.

The 31-year-old business, owned by Chris Midose, had been at 25 Monmouth for the past 17 years. Earth Spirits new home is a massive room that features 14-foot-high ceilings and a rear entrance directly from the English Plaza parking lot, as well as a front door on the busiest block of Broad Street.

Last occupied by:Haute Maven, but for more than 130 years was home to a series of shoe stores, culminating withIf the Shoe Fits, which closed in 2014.

Once Bitten Donuts has opened at 86 Broad Street. The shop shares a name with one on Long Island, but this one is solely owned by the married couple Luis and Jim Hurta, and its their first retail venture together.

Last occupied by:Alfonsos Pastry Shoppe, which closed in June, 2020, and before that, Carlos Bake Shop.

Toy Utopia, at 19 East Front Street.

Mira and Bruce Brach created the business after Bruce retired from the landscaping business. An avid toy collector since childhood, Bruce has put some of his most treasured pieces on display for sale, along with new products.

Last occupied by: Currant, a coffee and clothing store.

Amanda Snell and Jeff Gross have opened Camera Culture opened at 24 Monmouth Street.

Cameras? When every cellphone now has one built in? Yes. The market remains strong, said Snell and Gross, a married couple.

We have actually seen a change where people want to try things out before they buy them, said Snell.

Grosss family has owned the Photo Center in Brick Township, one of the shores largest camera business, for decades.

Camera Culture offers cameras and accessories. The shop also buys vintage cameras, does print-to-digital conversions and more image-related services.

Last occupied by: Carbones, a clothing shop.

Washington General Store, has openedat 35 Broad Street.

Based in Hoboken, the shop sells home decor and gifts.

Last occupied by: Jay and Silent Bobs Secret Stash, the Kevin Smith-owned comic book seller, which relocated to 65 Broad Street.

Two non-retail businesses have also opened in the downtown district:

Pilates Plus, owned by serial entrepreneurs Donald Clarkin and Jason Daniels, has debuted at 23 West Front Street.

Daniels and Clarkin, of Staten Island, own multiple businesses individually, and Pilates Plus is their first venture together, Daniels said.

Somewhat ironically, when they went looking for space in Red Bank, they quickly found an appealing storefront, and were surprised to learn that it was being vacated by a similar business, Danielle BuccellatosRenaissance Pilates. They wound up buying Buccellatos equipment as well as taking the space, Daniels said.

Soul Focus, a wellness center, has relocated from Eatontown to73 Broad Street.

Last occupied by: OceanFirst Financial.

Coming soon:

Tatum Gallery, opening in the formerChetkin Galleryspace at 9 Wharf Avenue.

Tracy Hagger acquired the business from Carol Lynn and Don Chetkinand rebranded it with her maiden name.

An immigrant from England who now lives in Colts Neck, Hagger tells Churn she frequently shopped at Chetkin Gallery, and was quite upset when she leaned the owners were retiring and planning to close the business. So she bought it, launching her first gallery venture.

Hagger said she plans to rehang the Chetkins extensive collection of traditional paintings, which she acquired, and supplement it with contemporary works.

As previouslyreportedbyredbankgreen, Denholtz Properties, the towns busiest buyer of real estate, acquired the building from the Chetkins in December.

Shedhead Vintage, offering vintage clothes, shoes and accessories from the 1960s through the 1990s, plans to open at 93 Broad Street.

Fired by a passion for environmental sustainability and keeping clothing out of landfills, Hallie Endresen and Hailey Grillo started the business online in 2017, when they were still in high school, Endresen tells Churn.

Now, theyre relocating their brick-and-mortar to Red Bank from Avon-by-the-Sea.

Last occupied by: Mike Quons pop-up Quon Art Gallery 93, and before that,Midtown Authentic.

Paris Baguette, a bakery franchise with stores nationally, has plans to open a shop at 128 Broad Street. (Perhaps by opening day theyll realize that Red Bank is two words, not one.)

Last occupied by:Caf Loret.

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RED BANK: DONUTS, TOYS AND MORE IN CHURN - redbankgreen

The Organization | [Deck Recipes] June 16th, 2022 – YGOrganization

A Psychic Deck in Rush Duels that makes full use of Fusion! An Ogdoadic Deck that makes full use of a new Magikey Ace! And Dinomoprhia uses Dyna Base and Duel Academy!

[RUSH DUEL] Psychic Fusion Summon Deck

2 CANReD1 CANMeloD1 CANSpD2 Prima Guitarna the Shining Superstar1 Esperade the Smashing Superstar1 Folder Blitz the Infinite Dream3 Psyphickupper3 A.I. Bear Can3 Romanpick2 Progress Potter3 CAND3 Ama Lilith3 Amazing Dealer2 Priestess of Star Salvation

3 Fusion2 Star Restart3 Ship of Seven Treasures1 JAMP1 Graceful Charity (LEGEND)

3 CAND LIVE3 CAND ALL3 Omega Guitarna the Supreme Shining Superstar3 Princess Omega the Supreme Shining Superstar3 Endless Romance Blitz

New Product Deck: Ogdoadic Deck Featuring Magikey Avatar Astartu

1 Aron, the Ogdoadic King1 Aleirtt, the Ogdoadic Dark1 Keurse, the Ogdoadic Light1 Amunessia, the Ogdoadic Queen3 Nunu, the Ogdoadic Remnant3 Nauya, the Ogdoadic Remnant2 Flogos, the Ogdoadic Boundless2 Zohah, the Ogdoadic Boundless3 Ahrima, the Wicked Warden1 Ogdoabyss, the Ogdoadic Overlord1 Pharonic Advent1 Darkest Diabolos, Lord of the Lair

3 Ogdoadic Water Lily1 Ogdoadic Origin1 Ogdoadic Serpent Strike2 Raigeki3 Snake Rain3 Lair of Darkness1 Galaxy Cyclone1 Foolish Burial1 Monster Reborn

1 Metaverse1 Ogdoadic Hollow1 Call of the Haunted1 Crackdown

2 Magikey Avatar Astartu1 The Zombie Vampire1 Number 90: Galaxy-Eyes Photon Lord1 Galaxy-Eyes Full Armor Photon Dragon1 Galaxy-Eyes Cipher Dragon1 Galaxy-Eyes Cipher X Dragon1 King of the Feral Imps1 Number 60: Dugares the Timeless1 Drill Driver Vespenato1 Reptilianne Echidna1 Alien Shocktrooper M-Frame1 Knightmare Phoenix1 Barricadeborg Blocker1 Beat Cop from the Underworld

New Product Deck: Dinomorphia Deck Featuring Dyna Tank

3 Dyna Base3 Dinomorphia Therizia3 Dinomorphia Diplos1 Souleating Oviraptor1 Dinowrestler Pankratops1 Overtex Qoatlus1 Ultimate Conductor Tyranno3 Lord of the Heavenly Prison

2 Duel Academy2 Double Evolution Pill3 Fossil Dig3 Forbidden Droplet1 Foolish Burial1 Harpies Feather Duster

3 Dinomorphia Frenzy3 Dinomorphia Domain1 Dinomorphia Sonic3 Gravediggers Trap Hole2 Trap Trick

2 Dyna Tank3 Dinomorphia Kentregina3 Dinomorphia Stealthbergia3 Dinomorphia Rexterm1 Number 39: Utopia1 Number C39: Utopia Ray1 Number S39: Utopia Prime1 Number S39: Utopia the Lightning

Master Duel (Limit 1 Festival):

Traptrix Deck

Insect Deck

Heraldic Beast + Time Thief Deck

Swordsoul + Tenyi Deck

Shaddoll + Despia + Invoked Deck

Lightsworn + Danger! Deck

Destiny Board + Witchcrafter Deck

WATER Deck

Instructor Event Deck:

HERO Deck

Rokket Deck

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The Organization | [Deck Recipes] June 16th, 2022 - YGOrganization

India’s increasingly violent young cohort is its biggest national security problem – ThePrint

The revolution began with an argument over a crate of bananas and two crates of pears. Like each morning, local authorities had arrived at the market in the small Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid, telling unlicensed vendors to vacate the street. Like most mornings, some had responded with arguments and taunts. The municipal police responded by confiscating one young mans fruit and weighing scales. Now what should I do, the man shouted, should I weigh my fruit with your breasts?

Fayda Hamdi, the officer at whom the taunt was directed, wasnt intimidated: She was long used to dealing with aggressive men, and responded with a slap to his face.

Later that day, the fruit vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, doused himself with paint thinner and set himself alight. He would die eighteen days later, in a military hospital. The fire he lit that day in 2009, though, still rages across the region.

This week, Indians watched as mobs of young menenraged by the Narendra Modi governments decision to recruit soldiers on four-year contracts, with sharply-reduced benefitsburned down buses, trains and public buildings. Earlier this year, riots broke out over recruitment to the Indian Railways.

Economic conflict is just part of a larger mosaic of youth violence: ethnic-religious extremism, organised crime and sexual assault are all growing parts of Indias political landscape.

Little is needed to see whats driving the conflict. Less than one in four Indians aged 15-24, World Bank data shows, now participate in the labour force, and twenty-five per cent of youth job-seekers cant find work. The situations been getting steadily worse for decades, in a country where over half the population is now below 25. India needs to be creating a million jobs a month; its economy has never come close to meeting that demand.

The main occupation of many young Indians, as anthropologist Craig Jeffrey put it, has been waitingfor life to happen.

Also read: BJPs divide-and-rule plan is working Hate is now fully automated, led by youth

Like India today, the Middle East, on the cusp of the Arab Spring, was also in the midst of a demographic crisis. Throughout much of this century, policy expert Nader Kabbani has recorded that youth unemployment in the Middle East was the highest in the world, touching 30 per cent. Even though educational access improved dramatically, the jobs on offer didnt. Large numbers of those seeking work, economist Ragui Assaad and Ghada Barsoun observed in Egypt, could find only low-wage opportunities in the informal sector.

Anthropologist M Chloe Mulderig has perceptively pointed out: The most basic of societal contractsthat children will one day grow up, begin to contribute productively to society, and then raise families of their ownhas been broken for an entire generation of youth in the Arab world. Instead, Mulderig notes, their generation was living in an undignified, liminal state of pre-adulthood.

In many societies, the state of pre-adulthood has helped grow a toxic culture of gender aggression. Hamdi, the Tunisian police officer, made this insightful observation: Had a man hit him, none of this would have happened.

Large-scale ethnic violence in Kenya from 1991 to 1993, scholar Colin Kahl noted, was similarly rooted in demographic pressures. The ability of the economy to absorb a rapidly growing labour force, Kahl has observed, declined as the private sector slumped and the number of jobs in the public sector, Kenyas largest source of employment, stopped growing.

Political scientist Ted Gurr observed, in a 1981 study, that cities with high youth populations had crime rates higher than in times and places where the population is older. The coming of age of the post-war generation of youths, Gurr recorded is closely related to the onset of major increases in personal and property crime in the United States and Britain.

In a 2005 paper examining violent conflict in India, researcher Henrik Urdhal concluded that the risk of armed conflicts and riots had a significant statistical association with youth bulges. The risk of armed conflict, he noted, is particularly pronounced when youth bulges go together with great male surpluses. A review of the global evidence assessed that relatively large youth cohorts are associated with a significantly increased risk of domestic armed conflict, terrorism and riots.

Also read: Armys Agnipath plan is ambitious but has flaws. Heres how it can be made more attractive

Economic historians have long noted that demographic shifts underpin crises in history. The collapse of the English state in 1640-1641 came because of factional feuds amongst the lite, fiscal crisis, and economic distress. Each of these, sociologist and political scientist Jack Goldstone has proposed, was precipitated by a surge in population. Indeed, similar demographic pressures underpinned multiple European crises through to the revolutions of 1848from which the Arab Spring got its name.

Youth have played a prominent role in political violence throughout recorded history, Goldstone has written, and the existence of a youth bulgean unusually high proportion of youths 15 to 24 relative to the total adult populationhas historically been associated with times of political crisis.

Academic and historian Norm Cohns work has shown that young people were, through history, drawn to millenarian movements, which promised a post-apocalypse utopia. Social histories of the First Crusadeduring which large-scale pogroms against Jews were conductedaccord young people a central role in shaping events.

That was also true for many of the crises that shaped the modern world. The high proportion of young adults in pre-Nazi Germany, Herbert Moller has suggested, helped lay the foundations for the rise of fascism. Fascisms rise in Germany came about just as the historically-unprecedented cohort born between 1900 and 1914 came on the job market. The Great Depression, and the closure of immigration opportunities to the United States, sealed their fateand that of the world.

Also read: Voters can be convinced China is defeated, but how do you convince jobless theyre earning?

Even when nation-states succeed in crushing youth-led violence, experience shows it finds new languages in which to express itself. Tunisia was hailed as a model of democratic reform after the Arab Spring but proved to be the largest single provider of jihadists to the Islamic State, as well as of illegal immigrants to Europe. In countries like Syria and Libya, the Arab Spring led to a searing civil warfuelled, just like the revolutions themselvesby a youth cohort easily seduced by violence.

For many in India, the prospect of large-scale, Middle-East style uprisings might seem implausible: the Indian State structure, after all, has survived protracted insurgencies and civil conflicts.

Theres no shortage of examples, though, where the State has been swept aside by violent youth mobilisations. Former police officer Prakash Singhs official investigation of the Haryana violence of 2016 showed the police force itself disintegrated along caste lines. Largely under-resourced, Indias police system already struggles to enforce the law in large swathes of the country. The ability of the system to withstand new challenges is open to question.

From the work of social scientists Raheel Dhattiwala and Michael Biggs, there are suggestions that youth cohorts might be feeding the growth of Hindu nationalist violence. In Kashmir and the North-East, youth mobilisation has played a key role in precipitating ethnic-religious violence. There has also been a growth in youth-related gang culture, as well as violent crime.

Engaging with Indias youth crisis should be the biggest single task of Indias national security systembecause the alternatives, history shows, are murderous coercion or chaos.

The author is National Security Editor, ThePrint. He tweets @praveenswami. Views are personal.

(Edited by Srinjoy Dey)

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India's increasingly violent young cohort is its biggest national security problem - ThePrint

CBC, BIPOC TV & FILM AND CFC ANNOUNCE NEW SHOWRUNNER CATALYST TO SUPPORT THE ADVANCEMENT OF DIVERSE CANADIAN CREATORS – CBC.ca

Inaugural participants are Andrew Burrows-Trotman, MOTION and Ian Iqbal Rashid

CBC, BIPOC TV & Film and the Canadian Film Centre (CFC) today announced at the Banff World Media Festival the creation of a new accelerator program, the CBC-BIPOC TV & FILM SHOWRUNNER CATALYST, which will support the career advancement of senior writers who identify as Indigenous, Black or People of Colour through hands-on and personally tailored on-set experience. The Catalyst offers a high-level professional coaching opportunity, designed through an anti-racist and equity-focused lens, and provides participants with additional tools and support systems necessary to reach a showrunner level in the Canadian film and television industry. CBC, BIPOC TV & Film and the CFC have made an initial commitment of three years to the program, with the opportunity to renew.

It is imperative that while we are opening doors at entry-level for BIPOC creatives, we are simultaneously creating pathways for mid-level and senior BIPOC writers to have the opportunities to bring their careers to the next level, said Kadon Douglas, Executive Director, BIPOC TV & Film. The Canadian industry needs to see BIPOC writers as showrunners leaders who can helm the vision of a show, from both the creative and business standpoint.

Within our industry, there are limited opportunities for equity-deserving senior writers to take on a leadership role, and we are honoured to work with Kadon and the dedicated team at BIPOC TV & Film in partnership with the CFC to help bridge that gap with the Showrunner Catalyst, said Sally Catto, General Manager, Entertainment, Factual and Sports, CBC. By launching this tailored and practical program, we help to ensure that the future of Canadian storytelling reflects the changing face of our country. We offer our sincere congratulations to this years talented participants, who have already made great strides in their careers.

Were thrilled to work with BIPOC TV & Film and CBC on this new initiative to help catalyze change inthe Canadian film and television industry by including and growing Black, Indigenous and racializedcreators in leadership positions, added maxine bailey, Executive Director, CFC. This shift is required totruly reflect todays Canada, and the CFC is excited to be part of this change.

The first part of the Catalyst will consist of a series of substantive and hands-on masterclasses covering topics related to the role and responsibilities of a showrunner, including anti-oppressive leadership, people management, mental health, building relationships with network, studios, creative and crew, and all facets of bringing a show to life, from the writing room to prep, production, post and delivery.

Through the context of a senior writing and producing role on a CBC series, the second part of the Catalyst will see each participant building upon their foundational skills in showrunning by working with an experienced showrunner and participating in all key elements of production: from prep meetings to running the floor, managing set, taking a block of episodes through to post. Throughout the process, each participant will also be paired with an external showrunner, who will serve as a mentor. The program will be highly tailored for the needs of each writer and participating production, offering wellness and advocacy support through an anti-racism, anti-oppression lens. The inaugural year will run through the summer and fall of 2022.

The 2022 inaugural participants are as follows:

*Participant headshots can be found here.*

Andrew Burrows-Trotman (ABT) earned a Double Honours degree in English and History at the University of Toronto before attending the American Film Institute's Screenwriting MFA programme. Upon graduation, ABT wrote a feature screenplay based on the Valley Manor Retirement Home scandal entitled, If We Left. It was shortlisted for the prestigious San Francisco Film Society's Hearst Grant. ABT subsequently joined the writing staff of Frankie Drake Mysteries, writing episodes for the first three seasons of the popular CBC series. His other TVcredits include Diggstown (CBC/BET+), Utopia Falls (Hulu/CBC Gem) and ThePorter (CBC/BET+).

Television production is more than a profession, it is how I share my soul with the world and let them know I was here. No matter how the rest of my career pans out, I have already lived the dream. Every day I wake up brimming with gratitude that I get to tell stories for a living. I am dedicated to a life of service and mentorship, dutifully holding whatever doors are opened for me so others can enter. - Andrew Burrows-Trotman

MOTION is a screenwriter, playwright, poet and emcee, fusing word, sound & drama for the screen and stage. She is co-writer of the award-winning feature Akillas Escape with director Charles Officer, which debuted at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival, and garnered five Canadian Screen Awards, including Best Original Screenplay. An alumna of the Canadian Film Centre, she is also the writer of A Mans Story, which won the Impact Award for Best Short Film at the ReelWorld Film Festival, going on to screen in London, Ghana, Belgium, and Zanzibar. In television, MOTION is a CSA-nominated writer and supervising producer on hit drama series Coroner (CBC/CW), The Porter (CBC/BET+) and Diggstown (CBC/FOX). She is also a writer and co-executive producer on the new digital series Revenge of the Black Best Friend (CBC Gem). Her most recent productions for stage and screen include the Dora-nominated Oraltorio: A Theatrical Mixtape with DJ L'Oqenz (Riser/Obsidian/Soulpepper), and Rebirth of the Afronauts in the award-winning anthology series 21 Black Futures (Obsidian/CBC Gem).

I am passionate about the creative process of developing unique, often unseen and impactfulstories, opening a stage for diverse talents in front of and behind the camera, to reach bothnew and diverse audiences nationally and worldwide. I also am passionate about initiatingopportunities for BIPOC and new generations of writers, as well as other creatives and crew.By bringing new voices to the writers rooms, spearheading creative projects and creatingseries that resonate and reflect those that still need to be heard, Im excited by the chance towork with others to amplify, collaborate, create, and change. - MOTION

Ian Iqbal Rashid is a creator, writer, director and producer known for the series Sort Of (CBC/HBO Max) and This Life (BBC) as well as the feature films Touch of Pink (Mongrel/Sony Picture Classics) and How She Move (Mongrel/Paramount). Born in Tanzania of Muslim Indian ancestry, Ian holds dual British/Canadian nationality. His awards include the Writers Guild Award of Great Britain for Series Writing and the Aga Khan Award for Excellence in the Arts. He is the author of three books of poetry, has curated exhibitions and film programmes, and was the founder and first director of Desh Pardesh, Canadas seminal festival of South Asian diasporic culture.

"In recent years I have led development rooms and created series for Sienna, CBC, Lionsgate, Showtime, and Mark Gordon Productions. And while I have yet to run a produced show, I think my experience and expertise reveal that I have exactly the right skill set and sensibility for that role." - Ian Iqbal Rashid

Catalyst participants are nominated by showrunners, producers, production companies or broadcasters, in consultation with BIPOC TV & Film and the CFC, based on their experience and readiness to further progress in their career. In order to qualify for participation, each potential candidate must be a Canadian Citizen or permanent resident of Canada (as recognized by CAVCO), and a Writers Guild of Canada member in good standing with a minimum of three episodes of written by credits on 30 or 60-minute prime time television or streaming platform productions in the last seven years, and at least one co-producer credit in the last three years, or equivalent experience. For more information on the qualification and nomination process, visit bipoctvandfilm.com/showrunner-catalyst.

-30-

About CBC/Radio-Canada

CBC/Radio-Canada is Canadas national public broadcaster. Through our mandate to inform, enlighten and entertain, we play a central role in strengthening Canadian culture. As Canadas trusted news source, we offer a uniquely Canadian perspective on news, current affairs and world affairs. Our distinctively homegrown entertainment programming draws audiences from across the country. Deeply rooted in communities, CBC/Radio-Canada offers diverse content in English, French and eight Indigenous languages. We also deliver content in Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Punjabi and Tagalog, as well as both official languages, through Radio Canada International (RCI). We are leading the transformation to meet the needs of Canadians in a digital world.

About BIPOC TV & Film

BIPOC TV & FILM is a national nonprofit organization advocating for racial equity and justice for Black, Indigenous and Persons of Colour in Canadas screen media industry. From professional development training to mentorship to wellness support and community engagement initiatives, we ensure that BIPOC creative professionals have the necessary resources, access and opportunities to fully participate in our industryat all levels in front of and behind the camera. BIPOC TV & Film also operates HireBIPOC.ca, a bilingual online database of above and below-the-line crew and creative professionals in Canada. Launched in October 2020, the digital database hosts over 7,500 usersincluding crew, creative talent, and employersand more than 200 production roles.

About the CFC

The Canadian Film Centre (CFC) is a charitable cultural organization that drives the future of Canadianstorytelling. Our intensive, hands-on programs in film, television and entertainment technologiesempower, shape and advance opportunities for Canadian creators and entrepreneurs working in screen-based industries. Learn more at cfccreates.com.

Media Contact:Tanya Koivusalo, CBC PR

tanya.koivusalo@cbc.ca

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CBC, BIPOC TV & FILM AND CFC ANNOUNCE NEW SHOWRUNNER CATALYST TO SUPPORT THE ADVANCEMENT OF DIVERSE CANADIAN CREATORS - CBC.ca

Freedom: The History of an Idea – Foreign Policy Research Institute

We live in a moment that is as critical for freedom as the American Revolution, the American Civil War, or the days following Pearl Harbor. In each of those moments, America moved the cause of freedom forward. In the Revolution, we declared our independence from the greatest empire of the day, fought for and won that independence, and then went on to establish a constitution that still gives us liberty under law more than two hundred years later. In the Civil War, we removed the great moral wrong of slavery. After Pearl Harbor, we shouldered the burden of World War II and the subsequent Cold War.

Sept. 11 represents a time just as critical in the history of the freedom. As we judge the generations of the American Revolution, the Civil War, or Pearl Harbor by their heroic response, so we shall be judged. We are engaged in what I believe is a noble crusade to bring freedom to the world. But that crusade is faltering now, in part because we have failed to ask some very fundamental questions.

This essay is intended to ask the most fundamental of those questions: Is freedom a universal human value, which all people in all times and places desire?

Our foreign policy since the time of Woodrow Wilson has been based in the belief that freedom is a universal value, one that is wanted by all people in all times. But why, if freedom is a universal value, has the history of the world been one of tyranny, misery, and oppression?

Socrates taught that our first task in any discussion is to define our terms. Thus, the starting point here is identifying what we mean by freedom. We never disagree, Socrates tells us, about empirical questions; it is about values that we disagree. No value is more charged with meaning than that of freedom.

If we carefully examine the ideal and reality of freedom throughout the ages, we come to the conclusion that what we call freedom is, in fact, an ideal that consists of three component ideals: (1) national freedom; (2) political freedom; and (3) individual freedom.

National freedom is freedom from foreign control. This is the most basic concept of freedom. It is the desire of a nation, ethnic group, or a tribe to rule itself. It is national self-determination.

Political freedom is the freedom to vote, hold office, and pass laws. It is the ideal of consent of the governed.

Individual freedom is a complex of values. In its most basic form individual freedom is the freedom to live as you choose as long as you harm no one else, Each nation, each epoch in history, perhaps each individual, may define this ideal of individual freedom in different terms. In its noblest of expressions, individual freedom is enshrined in our Bill of Rights. It is freedom of conscience, freedom of speech, economic freedom, and freedom to choose your life style.

In the United States, we tend to assume that these three ideals of freedom always go together. That is wrong. History proves that these three component ideals of freedom in no way must be mutually inclusive.

You can have national freedom without political or individual freedom; Iraq under Saddam Hussein and North Korea are examples. In fact, this national freedom, this desire for independence, is the most basic of all human freedoms. It has frequently been the justification for some of the most terrible tyrannies in history: Nazi Germany had national freedom but denied individual and political freedom in the name of this national freedom.

It is quite possible to have political and national freedom but not individual freedom. Ancient Sparta had national and political freedom, but none of the individual freedoms we expect today.

The Roman Empire represents two centuries that brought peace and prosperity to the world by extinguishing national and political freedom, but in which individual freedom flourished as it never had.

From the Declaration of Independence to the First World War, the history of our own country provides a dramatic example of the separation of these three component ideals of freedom. After 1776, the United States had national freedom. Adult white males also had political and individual freedom. White women had a considerable degree of individual freedom but no political liberty until 1920 and the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. Until after the Civil War, African-Americans possessed neither political nor individual freedom. In 1857 the Supreme Court formally ruled that African-Americans did not have the right to individual or political freedom. The soldiers of the Confederacy fought valiantly for their political, individual, and national freedom while defending their right to deny individual and political liberty to a considerable proportion of their population.

Thus, clearly, throughout history, these three components ideals of freedom have not been mutually inclusive.

Had we learned this lesson of history, Americans might have avoided crucial mistakes in our recent foreign policy in the Middle East.

History demonstrates that one of the most basic human feelings is the desire for national freedom. You may hate your government, but if someone invades you, you may very well fight in defense of your country. Napoleon learned this in Spain. History should have taught us to be skeptical of the claim that we would be welcomed as liberators in Iraq.

A second lesson of history we should have pondered is that freedom is not a universal value. Great civilizations have risen and fallen without any clear concept of freedom. Egyptthe civilization that built the pyramids, that created astronomy and medicine, did not even have a word for freedom. Everything was under the power of the pharaoh, who was god on earth. Ancient Mesopotamia had a word for freedom, but that word had the connotation of liberties. It was something that the all-powerful king gave to you, like exemption from taxes, and that he could also capriciously take away from you.

In fact, it can be argued that the Middle East, from the time of the pyramids down until today, has had no real concept of freedom.

Russia from the time of Rurik, the first Viking chieftain of Russia in the ninth century, down to Vladimir Putin, has never developed clear ideas of political and individual freedom. Thus we should not have been surprised when the Russian Revolution led not to freedom but to Stalin and one of the bloodiest despotisms in history.

China has no tradition of political or individual freedom. The noble teachings of Confucius are all about order, not freedom.

In fact, the very beginning of civilizations in the Middle East around 3000 BCE and in China around 1700 BCE represented the choice of security over freedom. Civilization began with the decision to give up any freedom in order to have the security of a well regulated economy under a king. Time and again throughout history people have chosen the perceived benefits of security over the awesome responsibilities of freedom.

History thus teaches that freedom is not a universal value. Our Founders knew and acted upon the lessons of history. The Founders, unlike us, thought historically. They used the lessons of the past to make decisions in the present and to plan for the future. They understood that tyranny and the lust for power, not freedom, is the great motivating force of human action and of history. But the Founders also believed that the United States could chart a unique course in history

Our country does have a unique legacy of freedom. That is both a cause for hope and a caution as to whether our unique ideals of freedom can be transplanted to the rest of the world. For in the U.S. we have achieved a unique balance of national, political, and individual freedom.

We have never been conquered; we simply cannot imagine what it would be to be under the rule of a foreigner. Our experience is very different from that of France, for example, or Germany.

We take political freedom for granted. We have regular elections no matter what the circumstances. In 1864, in the midst of the greatest war in our history, we held elections. The Europeans wondered after 9/11 what would happen to America; we went ahead with another election. In a way it is a good thing we are so secure in this freedom that we take it for granted. With that comes our deep love of the Constitution. Of course, Americans may not know what is in the Constitution, but they know it is good and resent any effort to tamper with it.

As to individual freedom, where could one have so much of it, including the basic freedom to create a better life for yourself and your children? People clamor to get into America, because individual freedom opens up a whole new world.

So how did we come to this unique legacy of freedom? Again, history is our guide. Our American legacy of freedom is the product of a unique confluence of five historical currents.

First, there is the legacy of the Old Testament, the idea that we are a nation chosen by God to bear the ark of the liberties to the world. Our Founders believed that deeply. Abraham Lincoln believed it deeply. Franklin Roosevelt believed it.

The second current comes from classical Greece and Rome. The legacy of Greece and Rome is the very basic one of self-government, consent of the governed. The kings of Babylon were chosen by God, Saul was chosen by God. The pharaoh was God on earth. But in Greece and Rome, men said We are free to govern ourselves under laws that we give ourselves.

Thirdly, Christianity took the idea of Natural Law from Greece and Rome and turned it into the belief that all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. The freedom that for the Greeks and Romans had been limited to the citizens of Athens or Rome now became a universal proclamation under Christianity.

Fourthly, England gave us the notion that government is under the law, no matter how powerful that government is. In the Watergate hearings, Sen. Herman Talmadge (D-Ga.) quoted the old saying that the wind and rain might enter the cottage of a poor Englishman, but the king in all his majesty may not. The law governs the king himself, and our Congress, senators, and president. As Harry Truman said, any time an American president gets too big for his britches, the people put him back in his place.

Fifthly, there is the contribution of the frontier. From the very beginning, America has been about the frontier. It is what led men and women to Jamestown and Plymouth. The frontier was the vast, seemingly endless land stretching before us. The frontier meant equality of opportunity. Even the best ideals of Greece or Rome or England could never flourish, because they were always cramped. But here there was land and the ability to start over again. This mattered more than all the ancient hatreds and class frictions that had existed under the old world. We cannot understand why Bosnians, Serbs, and Croats speak the same language but kill each other. Their hatreds have been festering for centuries, but here they pass away. That has been the unique gift of the frontier.

The existence of these elements in other nations and civilizations only underscores the uniqueness of the American experience of freedom. Russia has the tradition of Greece and Rome, Christianity, the tradition of the Old Testament; and it has a frontier. But it lacks that English sense of government under the law. So the frontier in Russia becomes the home of the gulag. Latin America has the tradition of Christianity and the Old Testament, and of Greece and Rome, and of the frontier. But Spain lacked the powerful English concept that government is under the law. Thus Latin America, despite its industrious and intelligent population and its natural resources, has never developed a stable basis for political and individual freedom.

Our heritage of freedom has been forged in war and hardship as well as in prosperity. Our national independence was proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence. Name another nation in history founded on principles. An Italian or German will say you are an Italian or German because you speak Italian or German. Traditionally, you were born an Englishman; you were geographical accident. But in America we have said from the start that everyone can come here from wherever they wish. They can speak whatever language is their mother tongue and practice whatever religion they want. They become an American by adopting our principles.

The principles proclaimed in 1776 are the noblest of all principles: we hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with the unalienable right of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

The proclamation of these ideals in the Declaration of Independence is based on the belief in absolute right and absolute wrong. You can deny that today. We seem to have a society that believes there is no such thing as truth. Ethics is all a matter of circumstances. But the Founders believed in eternal truths, valid in all places and all times. And they believed that governments are instituted among men to achieve those goals. That is the purpose of government. And if a government does not fulfill those goals, you have not only the right but the duty to overthrow it.

The absolute truths of the Declaration of Independence are founded on a belief in God. God appears four times in the Declaration of Independence: Natures God, the Creator, Supreme Judge of the world, Divine Providence.

Thus our national freedom is founded on absolute truth and upon a belief in God.

As the Declaration of Independence is the charter of our national freedom, so the Constitution is our charter of political freedom.

When that constitution was brought forth in Philadelphia, we were thirteen straggling republics along the eastern seaboard. If Benjamin Franklin or George Washington wanted to go somewhere, they went in the same way Cicero or Caesar did: they walked, rode, or sailed. If they wanted to communicate, they did it the same way Caesar or Cicero did. George Washington received inferior medical care to what a Roman gladiator got in the first century CE. And yet that same constitution gives us liberty under law and prosperity in a world of technology that Benjamin Franklin could not even have imagined and when we are superpower of the world. We should never take this extraordinary achievement for granted.

The American people in their wisdom would not ratify this constitution without the promise of a bill of rights. It seems to us extraordinary today that the first Congress kept its promise; and in short order set down and produced the Bill of Rights, which still guarantees these fundamental freedoms of individual liberty.

But there was still slavery, written into the Constitution. God is not mentioned once in the Constitution, but slavery was made the law of the land. To remove that wrong of slavery we fought the bloodiest war in our history, in which 623,026 Americans died. It produced men of great honor and integrity on both sides. It was finally resolved at Gettysburg.

When Abraham Lincoln went to Gettysburg to redefine our mission, he started with the Declaration of Independence. Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. It was unique because it was dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. In one sentence he told Americans why they were fighting the war, to see whether any nation so conceived and dedicated could long endure. In all the rhetoric we had about Vietnam and all that we have heard about Iraq, we have not been told so simply why we were at war.

Lincoln then went on to state that this civil war was a challenge laid upon this nation by God. The more Lincoln grappled with why this terrible war had come, the more convinced he had become that it was sent by God to punish us for the fundamental wrong of slavery. He told Americans that we must resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain and that this nation under God should have a new birth of freedom. And that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth.

So this war that had cost so many lives was resolved in a way that no other nation would have. The Confederates simply pledged their word not to take up arms and to go home. The reconciliation began. I think that too is unique in history.

With the Civil War we see the growth of democracy, the move towards extending the franchise to women, 18 year olds. They all become part of this political freedom.

This nation has continued in a unique course of freedom. In World War II we fought and won the war in the name of democratic freedom. We could have withdrawn the way we did after World War I. But we recognized that isolationism had been a mistake. So we shouldered the burden of the Cold War.

Now we have been called again, and the question is, will we find the leadership to tell us why this great challenge is there? Will we find the will to resolve this struggle? Will we find the understanding among ourselves to see the great task that, as Lincoln said, is still before us?

I speak to you not only the legacy of America, but of destiny. I believe that no people in history have ever been more magnanimous, generous, courageous, willing to forgive and forget, and willing to help the world than have the Americans. So after World War II, we raised Germany and Japan up. This remains our greatest foreign policy triumph. We took those two nations that had no long tradition of freedom and made them into viable, prosperous democracies.

Today, because of the United States, more people throughout the world live in freedom than any time in history. If we are willing to accept the challenge, it may yet be our destiny to change the course of history and to establish freedom as a universal value.

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Freedom: The History of an Idea - Foreign Policy Research Institute

Town Of Freedom Official Site

In betweenthe Lakes Region and the White Mountain Region of NH, Freedom is a small town surrounding a little village. Take a walk through the village on a Saturday evening and youll encounter few cars, but enjoy the white picket fences, well-kept homes and large barns that hint of the towns history.

Freedom? In 1831 the village of North Effingham voted to secede from Effingham, and in 1832, the new town celebrated its independence by changing its name to Freedom.

For a tangible taste of Freedom history, visit The Historical Societys charming museum where lemonade and cookies are served to visitors on summer afternoons. Members can also provide a quick sketch of the history of Freedom as seen in the houses standing along the quiet village streets.

Every year in August the community of Freedom celebrates Old Home Week, a New Hampshire tradition that was officially recognized by Proclamation in the New Hampshire State Legislature in 1913.

In the Village youll find the Town Hall, a Protestant church, Masonic Lodge and the Freedom Village Store: a non-profit, volunteer run store where you can get a cup of coffee, buy a newspaper and catch up with your neighbors. Just around the corner,the Public Library is open several days a week.

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Town Of Freedom Official Site

Pence skips Faith & Freedom conference. Is attacked by Trump anyways. – POLITICO

This year, Pence has taken on a new persona among the crowda Trump era castoff who is probably better off not showing his face. And he seems to know it. The former veep was invited to the conference but decided not to attend. It was the first time Pence had missed the conference in five years.

I was such a big fan of his but that part of the Republican Party is the educational elites the old horses are on their way out, said Mary Obersteadt, the immediate past president of Nashville Republican Women. She wore rhinestone Trump and DeSantis pins on her conference lanyard. I respect him for what he did and how he served this nation but hes so disappointing when he - he should have communicated and stayed with Trump with Jan. 6, they should have been on the same level.

Pences absence from this years conference was due to a scheduling conflict, according to the conference organizers and Pences team. On Thursday, he attended a roundtable with Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine.

But while he still is rooted in the Christian conservative community, having attended an event with the Coalition in North Carolina to engage Chrisitan voters in the Charlotte area, his decision to skip the Faith & Freedom gathering underscores the crossroads he currently finds himself in politically.

I think hes seeking Gods direction for his decision on what to do next, said Dr. Robert Jeffress, pastor at First Baptist Dallas, who is close to both Pence and Trump, and sits on the advisory board for Pences political group, Advancing American Freedom.

At a time when Pences main ideological causes are on the cusp of historic successwith the Supreme Court set to overturn the landmark abortion rights case, Roe v. Wade he finds himself in the thick of intra-party drama. This week, the House select committee investigating the riots on Capitol Hill zeroed in on Pences decision to resist Donald Trumps pressure for him to block certification of the Electoral College vote count.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump points to the crowd after giving the keynote address at the Faith & Freedom Coalition during their annual "Road To Majority Policy Conference" on June 17, 2022 in Nashville, Tennessee.|Seth Herald/Getty Images

While Pence has, so far, dodged discussing the committees proceedings, Trump used his own appearance at the Faith & Freedom conference to attack his veep.

Mike Pence had a chance to be great, he had a chance to be frankly historic, Trump said. But Mike did not have the courage to act.

It was a remarkable moment for a conference that in past years served as a celebration for the former vice president as a top conservative Christian leader. But things have changed since Trump left office. Last year, in the shadow of Jan. 6, Pence was jeered by the crowd and called a traitor while on stage. Now, when asked about what they think of Pence or how they view his political future, attendees sighed or visibly shrugged.

Thats a good question, said Sandi McGuire, a Christian minister from Raleigh, North Carolina. I havent seen him much. I dont like speaking adverse toward anyone, he did great work. He came here last year and a percentage booed him. Im not sure in fairness where he is. I wish him the best but he hasnt been anywhere to be found.

Its kind of hard, its a hard one, said Emily Hinojos from Rutherford, N.C. when asked about Pences political future. I dont know where hes at since Jan 6. Its hard to tell youre not in their shoes but we would have liked him to support Trump better.

The mood of the crowd at Faith & Freedom reflected the degree to which Republican politicians are judged not so much by their ideologies but by their relationship to Trump. Ralph Reed, a Republican strategist and founder of the Faith & Freedom Coalition, is close with both Trump and Pence. But when asked if he was surprised by Trumps attacks, he would only say he consulted with Trumps speechwriters yesterday.

If Mike Pence wanted to come and wanted to offer a rejoinder to these folks, he could have done it. Im not saying he should have done it. I told him when I saw him a couple weeks ago, no harm no foul, but I said I want you here next year and hell be there, Reed said to a small group of reporters after Trumps speech.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump exits the stage after giving the keynote address at the Faith & Freedom Coalition during their annual "Road To Majority Policy Conference" on June 17, 2022 in Nashville, Tennessee.|Seth Herald/Getty Images

Pences own relationship with Trump is deeply complicated. For a few months after leaving the White House, the two would occasionally speak. But they havent talked for a year now even though their paths have occasionally crossed, including when both men addressed top Republican donors at a retreat in New Orleans in March. Trump continues to admonish his former vice president in public, while Pence has remained firm in his decision to certify the election.

In recent months, Pence has turned his focus to the midterms. Hes offered endorsements in key midterm races like Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and held a fundraiser for incumbent Rep. Steve Chabot on Thursday. On Monday, he is set to deliver a speech on the economy at the University Club of Chicago.

Our path is a little bit different than everybody else is at this point, said a person close to Pences political operation, who defended Pences decision to not go to the Nashville cattle call. And whether he decided to do this thing or not, he doesnt have to go there to get coverage.

But its unclear how Pence can build up a national profile if he were to lose the full support of his bedrock constituency: Evangelicals. Not everyone in his camp is worried. Aides to Pence say he holds appeal across the Republican party.

Vice President Pence checks the hawk lane. He checks the traditional GOP lane. And obviously probably the biggest one is the Evangelical lane, said the Pence ally.

And Bob Vander Plaats, president and CEO of The Family Leader, a conservative Christian parent organization for the Iowa Family Policy Center, said Pences support remains strong among social conservatives and Evangelicals in Iowa, especially as support of Trump wanes.

Not to play Bob Seger on you, but I think theyre looking to turn the page, Vander Plaats said of Iowa voters he talks to. Take the best of Trump, and lets see if Ron DeSantis can carry on that fightor Mike Pence or Mike Pompeo or Ted Cruz or whoever you throw into that match.

But among those in Nashville this weekend, Pence seemed more a relic of the past than an element of the future. None of the merchandise stalls that lined the entrance to the conference ballroom featured Pences name, while there were piles of red, white, and blue Trump and Trump 2024 t-shirts and hats for sale.

I feel like he was mistreated so long he wanted to give his soul a break and his family. I dont think its political, its personal he doesnt want to get attacked right now, said Krista Kiepke from Clarksville, Tenn. Jesus himself removed from the disciples to refresh so he could do his job so I look at it as that.

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Pence skips Faith & Freedom conference. Is attacked by Trump anyways. - POLITICO

Juneteenth 2022: Freedom Songs on Apple Music

Juneteenth, also known as Freedom Day, takes its name from June 19, 1865, the day General Gordon Granger and Union troops finally arrived in Galveston, Texas, and announced to slaves in the state that they were freean entire two-and-a-half years after Abraham Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation, the executive order outlawing slavery in the United States. Though Juneteenth has been observed by many Black Americans since 1866, often with parades, picnics, and other celebrations, its declaration as a federal holiday in 2021 has highlighted both the continued tragic effects of chattel slavery and the irreplaceable contributions of Black Americans and the descendants of slaves. In observance of that ideal, Apple Music celebrates Juneteenth 2022 with Freedom Songs, a collection of exclusively commissioned new songs from Black creatives like Elena Pinderhughes, Kranium, Lupe Fiasco, Alex Isley, 6LACK, and Brittney Spencer, to name a few. Some have contributed original compositions, while others have chosen to cover existing songs that speak to the spirit of the holiday. Listen to the stories their selections tell as we celebrate Juneteenth and the invaluable legacy of Black music.

*Bun B, This Is What We Do* If you didnt know me and you heard this song, at the very least you would see that Im about family, Im about tradition, Im about legacy and heritage, Bun B says of This Is What We Do, his contribution to Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022. And that you should be, too. Because Juneteenth is not justobviously, its an African American historical event, but its also just American. Juneteenth is a way of acknowledging, Yes, this happened in America. Yes, we started the process of dissolving it, but it was a very slow and steady process that is still not fully formed. We always have to be aware of that.

*Elena Pinderhughes, Get Away*For Juneteenth 2022, California-born singer and flautist Elena Pinderhughes wrote Get Away, which speaks to the gratitude she has for being able to free her mind. Ive been celebrating how people are breaking out of boundaries, creating new ways of being and making, Pinderhughes says. Ive been celebrating the increased conversation around the importance of Black mental health and self-care and the ways that we are demanding our rights to it. I continue to celebrate the power of Black women and the change that we make. I also think of the words of the poet Lucille Clifton: Come celebrate with me that everyday something has tried to kill me and has failed.

*Alex Isley, We Are One*R&B singer-songwriter Alex Isley chose to take on We Are One by Maze Featuring Frankie Beverly, because their music is just so celebratory and filled with so much joy. Juneteenth, in particular, is a holiday on which Isley says she can look inward and appreciate her journey as a Black creative. Theres power in my authenticity, and Im just grateful for life, Isley says. I am a daughter, Im a mother, Im a friend. So, just practicing gratitude, I think thats a big part of Juneteenth: the gratitude and celebration of who we are and the pride of that and the beauty and the richness of our culture and our power.

*Lupe Fiasco, Galveston*I try to make things that establish emotion and utility so that not only can people feel it, but they can actually do something with it, Lupe Fiasco says. Theres only so much utility you can have in music, but it all boils back down to education and instruction. For Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022, Fiasco created Galveston, a song that forces us to reckon with the unimaginably high cost of freedom. Galveston is about taking Juneteenth, which is normally a celebration of a very specific set of eventsthe manumission from slavery of Black folksand approaching it from a different angle, Fiasco says. Looking at it as the impact of it, versus the event. And one of the impacts of Juneteenth was that the abolition of slaveryit introduced all of this other extra tension and new realities, and some of those new realities werent that good. So, 1865, you get abolition of slavery, Emancipation Proclamation, all that good stuff, end of the Civil War. But that same year, you also get the birth of the Ku Klux Klan. So, to me, it was a life-and-death type thing where death was brought to one thing, but then it created lifeit gave birth to another thing.

*Eladio Carrion, El Sol Va a Salir*For his contribution to Freedom Songs 2022, Puerto Rican MC Eladio Carrin created El Sol Va a Salir, a song inspired by one of the greatest hip-hop storytelling tracks of all-time. I did this song with [producer] Vinylz, and the second I heard the beat, it gave me a vibe of the Eminem Stan song that he writes to a fan, Carrin says. I thought it would be a cool ideasince I have a few friends that are in jail right nowto make a song as if someone was in jail writing to their family members. It could be an innocent person or someone that regrets what they did. And its just the person saying, I know things are bad right now, but I know that the suns going to come up, and theyre going to be good days.

*Jlin, I Am*If I Am was the only song that someone ever heard from me, I would just want them to feel my vulnerability, Indiana-hailing DJ and producer Jlin says. Its a percussion conversation. In African culture, drums are a form of communication. They were before and after colonization, so I just wanted to hone in on that and just have a conversation with percussion.

*SEB, Paranoia*For Chicagoans of a certain age, the influence of Chance the Rapper was inescapable. LA-based singer and producer SEB, who spent some of his formative years in Chicago, chose to cover Chance and Nosaj Things Paranoia for Freedom Songs 2022 for that very reason. I picked Paranoia because it just brings me back to Chicago, SEB says. I first heard that song when I started traveling to the South Side for school, so that really made it hit hard. It was two very different environments going from the North Side to the South Side every day. I decided to totally reproduce the song to paint a better picture of what I was seeing.

*Kranium, Revolution*For his contribution to Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022, Kranium covered Dennis Browns Revolution, a 1983 song the Jamaican singer notes is as relevant today as it ever was. A lot of stuff that is being said in that song is actually something that we are living with until this day, he says. The choice to cover Brown was also a means of bridging the gap between the dancehall of today and the reggae Kranium was raised on. Growing up, Dennis Brown was one of our favorite singers, he says. Thats the Crown Prince of Reggae. Were considered the new-school singers, so I wanted to make sure that I keep it 100 percent pure and real, showing respect to the great Dennis Brown but still putting my own Kranium swing into it.

*Cautious Clay, Been in the Way*I was really trying to capture the many things that can be in the way of allowing us to relate to each other and the people that we care about, Cautious Clay says of Been in the Way." "I kind of come in hot with religion, [with] wrist blood being sort of a signifier of Jesus and how organized religion can sort of have its negatives in some cases and is sometimes used for power rather than for actual spirituality. And then I move on to rose gold, which in many ways signifies wealth and beauty and how that can get in the way of relationships with depth. So, its all things that we face in our lives that I find super important.

*Denzel Curry, 1st Quarter*For his contribution to Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022, Florida MC Denzel Curry created 1st Quarter, a song he says is about celebrating how far hes already come in his young life. Its an accomplishment to make it through the first quarter of my life, Curry says. Especially as a Black man in America. When it comes to the type of legacy hed like to leave behind and even how his supporters can ensure their own, his advice is simple: Do what you do, do whats right, and be legendary.

*6LACK, Umi Says*When I hear the word legacy, I think of purpose, I think of what you leave on this earth when youre no longer physically here, the impact you make, the lives you change, the stories that youve created, 6LACK says. For Freedom Songs 2022, the Atlanta crooner covered Mos Defs 1999 classic Umi Says, a choice he claims was a no-brainer when a manager suggested it to him and his team. My brother Forward Slash led the way with the soundscape, 6LACK says, and I just came through and did my best cover.

*Brittney Spencer, More Than Perfect*Growing up, I didnt see a lot of peoplein fact, anybodydoing what Im doing today, country singer Brittney Spencer says, commenting on the traditional lack of Black faces in country. I didnt realize until my adult years that that sort of image has shaped what I thought I could do in the world, who I could be in the world, and knowing that if maybe even one person is seeing what Im doing today, they might decide a lot quicker than I did that they can actually go for something thats really on their heart. For Juneteenth 2022, Spencer cooked up More Than Perfect, a song focused on inner beauty. Its about not putting so much weight and stock into appearance as if it could ever tell the full story of who a person is, she says. An artful display of fashion and tattooswhich I haveand makeup and filters and all these things, it will never tell you about someones character, their dreams, their aspirations, the things they care about, the people they care for. Itll never tell you the whole story because it just simply cant.

*Moliy, The Place*I love being appreciated for what I do and how far Ive come, Moliy says. Theres so much that Im yet to see and do, but just knowing anything can happen at any moment of my journey as an artist is really exciting. In my world, every song I create is literally a stepping-stone to building my legacy. For Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022, the Ghanaian American singer created The Place, a song about the kind of society we all dream about living in. The Place is about hope and wanting to belong somewhere safe, Moliy says. Somewhere that love and light reigns, where everyone can thrive without the need to do evil and knowing theres like-minded people out there who all want the same.

*WSTRN, Free Your Mind*UK collective WSTRN delivered Free Your Mind, a song they say is about overcoming adversity. Its about acknowledging the power of unity and being free, vocalist Haile says. Accepting that obstacles will cross your path but knowing that holding onto faith can always get you through anything. Louis Rei adds that he wanted to speak to people destined for bigger things but who might not yet understand their own potential. My verse, especially, is targeting those that have a light within them, but they come from a dark place, he says. And its very much reflective of that and asking oneself questions to attain greatness and overcoming and becoming the higher vibration of yourself.

*Damien Sneed, Sequestered Thoughts*Juneteenth is observed as a celebration, Damien Sneed says. For me, its also a moment to understand and recognize the plight of my ancestors and all of those from the African diaspora and the African American diasporaI am celebrating the moment in time to use my art, my creativity, my musical voice, to give voice to those who dont have a voice. For his contribution to Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022, the pianist and composer wrote Sequestered Thoughts, a piece he says was born of isolation but that might bring people together in its expression of everyones need to have their humanity recognized. The pandemic was a jolt for me, Sneed says. I had just finished a 40-city tour, and I was at home alone in New York City, sequestered in place. This composition is meant to evoke confinement, hope, and the will to survive. Also, it represents something that was birthed out of the untimely murder of George Floyd. So, the piece also resonates with protests against all types of violence, racism, and oppression.

*Koryn Hawthorne, I Need You Now*Anytime I record a cover, I always do my best to try to make sure I put a little bit of myself into it, Koryn Hawthorne says. I feel like weve done a good job of that on this record. It has slight R&B vibes, but it still has the true heart of worship in it. Hawthorne, a gospel vocalist who can also boast having once earned a spot as a finalist on The Voice, chose Smokie Norfuls I Need You Now for her contribution to Apple Musics Freedom Songs 2022. The song, she says, will only ever bring her good memories: I am a huge Smokie Norful fan. This song, in particular, has been a staple throughout my entire life. I feel like, at any given moment, I could play this song and be taken back to a special place.

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Juneteenth 2022: Freedom Songs on Apple Music

Freedom to Read Celebration, Supporting the Merritt Fund, and Featuring Banned Author David Levithan – ala.org

Join the ALA Intellectual Freedom Round Table (IFRT) and the Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF) along with banned author David Levithan, library professionals, authors, and friends for this 2022 Freedom to Read Celebration, Merritt Fund fundraiser, and reception. The organizations will honor the recipients of the FTRF Roll of Honor Award, John Phillip Immroth Memorial Award, Gerald Hodges Intellectual Freedom Chapter Relations Award, and Eli M. Oboler Memorial Award.

Were excited to have author David Levithan launch the evening by sharing his remarks, and experience, with intellectual freedom and censorship. David is a childrens book editor and the author of several books for young adults, including Lambda Literary Award winner Two Boys Kissing; Nick & Norahs Infinite Playlist, Naomi and Elys No Kiss List, and Dash & Lilys Book of Dares (co-authored with Rachel Cohn); Will Grayson, Will Grayson (co-authored with John Green); and Every You, Every Me (with photographs from Jonathan Farmer). David was named the recipient of the Margaret A. Edwards Award for his contribution to YA literature. His newest book, Answers in the Pages, was released through Penguin Random House in May. This title has a timely topic as it addresses speaking up and coming out as parents lobby to ban a beloved book from the school curriculum.

The following 2022 intellectual freedom award recipients will be honored at the event.

Add the celebration to your Conference Scheduler.RSVP to attendEvent Date: Friday, June 24th at 7pm - 8:30pm ET.Location: Marriott Marquis, Univ of DC & Catholic UnivCost: Suggested Donation: $20.00 (checks and cash preferred) to benefit the Leroy C. Merritt Humanitarian Fund (one free drink ticket included)

FTRF and IFRT wish to thank Penguin Random House for their generous sponsorship of the Freedom to Read Celebration.

About the Freedom to Read FoundationThe Freedom to Read Foundation has been working on behalf of librarians and others to protect the First Amendment for over 50 years. Because FTRF is a non-profit, the staff and trustees may also litigate on behalf of First Amendment issues, as well as educate and advocate. The FTRF board of trustees includes representatives from each of ALAs roundtables. This ensures that librarians representing all forms of library work can bring their voices and concerns to FTRF and carry back valuable information.

About the Intellectual Freedom Round TableThe Intellectual Freedom Round Table of the American Library Association provides a forum for the discussion of activities, programs and problems in intellectual freedom of libraries and librarians; serves as a channel of communications on intellectual freedom matters; promotes a greater opportunity for involvement among the members of the ALA in defense of intellectual freedom; and promotes a greater feeling of responsibility in the implementation of ALA policies on intellectual freedom.

About the Office for Intellectual FreedomEstablished December 1, 1967, the Office for Intellectual Freedom is charged with implementing ALA policies concerning the concept of intellectual freedom as embodied in the Library Bill of Rights, the Associations basic policy on free access to libraries and library materials. The goal of the office is to educate librarians and the general public about the nature and importance of intellectual freedom in libraries.

About the Merritt FundThe LeRoy C. Merritt Humanitarian Fund was established in 1970 as a special trust in memory of Dr. LeRoy C. Merritt. It is devoted to the support, maintenance, medical care, and welfare of librarians who, in the Trustees opinion, are: Denied employment rights or discriminated against on the basis of gender, sexual orientation, race, color, creed, religion, age, disability, or place of national origin; or Denied employment rights because of defense of intellectual freedom; that is, threatened with loss of employment or discharged because of their stand for the cause of intellectual freedom, including promotion of freedom of the press, freedom of speech, the freedom of librarians to select items for their collections from all the worlds written and recorded information, and defense of privacy rights.

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Freedom to Read Celebration, Supporting the Merritt Fund, and Featuring Banned Author David Levithan - ala.org

There’s no freedom without reparations – The Connecticut Mirror

This story was originally published June 15, 2022, as part of aspecial Juneteenth projectby Capital B News and Vox which explores the ongoing struggle for freedom for Black Americans.

Born into slavery, Henrietta Wood was legally freed in 1848 in Ohio when she was about 30. She only basked in that freedom for five years.

In 1853, a white sheriff empowered by the Fugitive Slave Act abducted Wood and sold her back into bondage, taking her on a journey from Kentucky to Mississippi and finally to Texas, where shed toil on a plantation through the Civil War. Though President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, Wood did not regain her freedom until 1866, months after Union soldiers traveled to Texas on June 19, 1865 Juneteenth to enforce emancipation.

Wood whose pathbreaking storywas only recently surfaced returned to Ohio and sued her abductor for $20,000 (worth more than $440,000 today). In the lawsuit, she claimed that because she had been abducted, sold back into slavery, and lost wages (about $500 per year), she was entitled to payment.

After eight years of meandering litigation, 12 white jurors in a federal courtroom in Cincinnati found Woods claim valid and assessed her damages at $2,500. The final decision was just a pittance compared with what Wood demanded, but 144 years later, it remains the largest known payment ordered by an American institution in restitution for slavery.

Woods story was widely covered at the time for its singularity, but fell out of the news as white Americans tried to distance themselves from slavery and its aftermath. Yet the questions that Woods victory raised then are the same ones hanging sullenly over America today.

Who will recompense the millions of men and women for the years of liberty of which they have been defrauded? an 1878 New York Timesarticleabout the courts decision asked. Who will make good to the thousands of kidnapped freemen the agony, distress, and bondage of a lifetime?

What the writer recognized was the growing call for reparations that began at the close of the Civil War and continues to this day. When slavery ended, the federal government promised to provide 40 acres and a mule an idea proposed by Black leaders at the time to nearly 4 million recently freed men and women. The effort would have redistributed land previously owned by the Confederates, giving the formerly enslaved a chance to own their own land and become economically self-sufficient until the government, after Lincolns assassination,reneged.

That early proposal helped establish the concept of reparations as compensation to be paid to Black Americans for slavery. When it was overturned, the struggle for reparations only grew. Activists such asCallie Houseled a movement after Reconstruction and into the early 20th century to demand pensions for poor and aging formerly enslaved people, suing the federal government and arguing that it owed ex-slaves $68 million. HR 40, afederal billnamed after the federal promise more than 150 years ago for 40 acres of land, was introduced in Congress to task a commission to study and develop reparations proposals, but it hasfloundered in the Housefor more than three decades, leaving advocates wondering why America is still keeping freedom out of reach.

At the beginning of May, a coalition of organizers, including the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (NCOBRA), Color of Change, and the Black Voters Matter Fund, sent aletterto President Joe Biden to demand that he create a federal commission by Juneteenth to study and develop reparations proposals for Black Americans. (The administration had not responded to the coalition by the time this article was published.)

The demand, the continued organizing for racial justice, and therecent recognitionof Juneteenth as a day of national importance calling for solemnity as well as celebration, have all brought a new wave of urgency to the centuries-long reparations debate.

We need something much more substantive than the Juneteenth federal holiday. We need reparatory justice, and we need it now, said Nkechi Taifa, the director of the Reparation Education Project, a nonprofit organization that teaches about reparations, and one of the signatories of the letter. Our communities are crying out for it. Our communities are demanding it.

Over time, a more comprehensive reparationsframework has emerged. In addition to cash payments, true reparations would be a program of acknowledgement, redress and closure for a grievous injustice including slavery, legal segregation (Jim Crow), and ongoing discrimination and stigmatization, economist William A. Darity and folklorist A. Kirsten Mullen argued in their 2020 bookFrom Here to Equality: Reparations for Black Americans in the Twenty-First Century.

Decades of demands on the federal government to atone for the harm it inflicted on enslaved people and the resultant racism, discrimination, and segregation that cripple the Black community today havent moved federal leaders to act, not toward acknowledgement nor apology, nor toward the kind of redress that economists say would be necessary to level the field for Black Americans.

Darity and Mullen estimate that restitution in the form of direct cash payments would cost the American government$10 trillion to $12 trillion, or about $800,000 for each eligible Black household. The payments could eradicate long-standingracial disparities in wealth, health, income, education, incarceration rates, and overall quality of life, experts have argued.

We dont have reparations right now because America isnt sorry. We have not had an adequate apology for slavery, said Edgar Villanueva, founder of the philanthropic organization Decolonizing Wealth Project, which funds reparative giving efforts. Theres a deep-seated fear of even the word reparations and a related scarcity mindset around Americas unwillingness to grapple with its history that connects back to colonization. So instead, were experiencing the rewriting of history, the banning of books, and a fear of truth-telling.

If the federal governments commitment to reparations is doubtful, at the local level, a movement is gathering.

Asheville, North Carolinas City Council established a Community Reparations Commission in 2020. That year, Providence, Rhode Islands mayorsigned an executive orderto pursue a truth-telling and reparations process in the city; Burlington, Vermont,establisheda reparations task force; and Wilmington, North Carolina,considered doing the same. The following year also saw momentum: California launched its reparations task force in 2021, while separately, a group of mayors, Mayors Organized for Reparations and Equity, pledged to pay reparations to small groups of Black residents in their cities to show the federal government what is possible. Greenbelt, Maryland, votersapproveda commission to study reparations, as didDetroit votersand the New York State Assembly.

Other forms of repayment that some have called reparations are worth noting. This year, in Evanston, Illinois, 16 Black families were selected at random from a pool of applicants to receive up to $25,000 in tax-free grants that can be used to pay for a home, pay off a mortgage or make home improvements. Almost 100 years after California seized a Black familys Bruces Beach property via eminent domain, the state agreed to return it to the descendants of the family who owned it. Finally, a judge last monthruled that the three known living survivorsof the1921 Tulsa white mob massacrecould move forward with their lawsuit seeking reparations, despite motions by the defendants, including the city of Tulsa, to dismiss the case.

If local leaders can find the space to grapplewith reparations, why cant the federal government?

At a federal level, President Bidens evolving stance on reparations illustrates the countrys glacial pace of change and glaring unwillingness to engage in the reconciliation that would bring healing and closure to the people it has harmed.

In a1975 interview, he criticized the idea: I do not buy the concept, popular in the 60s, which said, We have suppressed the black man for 300 years and the white man is now far ahead in the race for everything our society offers. In order to even the score, we must now give the Black man a head start, or even hold the white man back, to even the race.

As Biden campaigned for the presidency in 2020, however, the nation saw what may bethe largest uprising against systemic injusticeafter a white police officer murdered George Floyd in daylight, and he embraced the idea of studying reparations. But in the past two years, as he navigated his priorities and failed to garner enough congressional support to pass some of his biggest agenda items, his administration has put the idea out of view.

Beyond the few local lawmakers and federal officials who already back HR 40, support for reparations in general remains low. In 2014, 68 percent of Americans polled by YouGovopposed financial paymentsto Black Americans as compensation for slavery, Jim Crow, and redlining, while only 15 percent supported them. Recent polling found similar results. In 2020,63 percentof Americans polled by ABC News and the Washington Post opposed cash payments, while61 percentwere opposed in 2021. Yet in 2020, at the height of the Black Lives Matter protests, more people than ever (76 percent of Americans surveyed)agreedthat racial discrimination is a big problem in the United States.

Smaller-scale local programs help keep the reparations dialogue going and may bring the country closer to a wider-scale reparations program but they fall short of the countrys national imperative.

No amount of material resources can ever compensate for what Black folks went through. Whatever ends up happening is going to be a negotiated settlement, Taifa said. Whether [reparations make] a material difference or not, the fact is theres a debt that is owed and a debt that is due. If I choose to just keep the money under my pillow and never do anything with it, thats my right.

Major questions motivate the activists and thinkers pushingfor reparations. Where would the descendants of enslaved Americans be if it werent for the more than 200 years of forced labor? Does the United States want to live up to the ideals and exceptionalism it has touted for centuries?

More than any logistical quandary about reparations, these questions lie at the heart of the fight. They get to the center of what America represents and whether it has the power to truly change. Our national debt is already now up to around $26-27 trillion given the money were spending on Covid, Michael Tanner, a senior fellow at the conservative Cato Institute,told CNBCin 2020 about paying reparations. And were losing more money because were not picking up the revenue because economic growth is so slow right now. This hardly seems the time to burden the economy with more debt, more taxes. Essentially what you want to do is stimulate economic growth for all our benefits.

But most reparations advocates agree that stimulus plans that stand to boost all Americans wont close the Black-white wealth gap. They note that the formation of the republic after slavery intentionally excluded the formerly enslaved and their descendants in the decades after. During the Reconstruction era, Blacks were routinely disenfranchised, while the New Deal and GI Bill later also failed to fully include Black people. Even the passage of civil rights legislation didnt open the door for America to fully grapple with racism.

Questions about who should be eligible for reparations and how much ought to be paid remain.

Some believe that only descendants of people enslaved in the United States who can prove their lineage that at least one ancestor was enslaved can be eligible. (Californias task force, for example, decided that only residents with direct lineage to people formerly enslaved in America should be eligible for reparations.) The plan mapped out by Darity and Mullen adds that eligible recipients must pass an identity standard they must be able to prove that they self-identified as Black or African American for 12 years prior to the enactment of a reparations plan.

Others believe that eligibility must be more inclusive, arguing that Black people who are third, fourth, and fifth generation in the United States could be part of the global network of enslavement that saw their ancestors enslaved in the Caribbean or South America. They, too, have suffered under American racism and discrimination. The system of enslavement was intertwined to the point that we do not know and could never know for certain if ones ancestor was not harmed by US enslavers and the US government based on a geographical North American residence of enslavement, NCOBRA activists wrote in a memo.

Theres also discussion about the window for the reparations claim. Should 1619, the year enslaved people landed in Jamestown, Virginia, be the beginning date for the claim, or the year 1776, when America was founded?

What would constitute reparations? Some have argued that reparations dont have to be direct cash payments but can take the form of programs like housing vouchers, as in the case of Evanston, Illinois, or educational grants, as in the case of Georgetown University. The university has said it would help the descendants of enslaved people pay off school debts, an effort to contend with the fact that its founding relied on stolen Black labor. Some warn, however, that these limited programs can muddy efforts to secure federal cash payments. Reparations seems to be all over right now, but as we have these discussions, we have to be cautious [to not] water it down or let [reparations] be co-opted, Villanueva said.

Many also believe that there is a graveneed for a truth-telling effortthat makes way for an apology: Without acknowledgment and a formal apology from the federal government, there can be no closure. Though Henrietta Wood got money that helped her raise her son at the turn of the century, she never received an apology from the man who re-enslaved her. Nor did she get an apology for being born into a system that reduced her to bondage. Instead, Woods abductor tried to deny his crime and even boasted about growing famous for having bought one of the last slaves before the end of slavery.

He cannot escape the law, which will follow him and his property into the remotest nook of the Republic, the New York Timeswroteof Woods captor. Why should America?

Fabiola Cineas is areporter for Voxcovering voting rights, education, race, and policy.

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There's no freedom without reparations - The Connecticut Mirror

Is Technology in Photography Lowering the Bar or Increasing Freedom? – Fstoppers

The craft of photography has arguably changed more in the last 20 years than in the century before it. With each improvement to the equipment comes the inevitable groans of many photographers who believe the technology takes away from the craft. Is that well-founded or mistaken?

I own a Fujifilm GFX 50R, a digital medium format body. On that body is a very fast manual focus lens that gives an ethereal, razor-thin depth of field on images taken with it, if you manage to nail the focus. Since getting this combination, I have become a little obsessed with shooting medium format images wide open. This isn't a unique enjoyment, and I'm sure many would criticize how much I choose to shoot wide open, although it's always just for fun, not for clients. There are a few reasons I like shooting this way. The first is obvious: I love the aesthetic created by a medium format sensor and f/1.4 on said sensor. Then, I also like the manual focus element when paired with the narrow depth of field. To get the style of image I want, I have to work rather hard; it's far too easy to miss focus entirely.

A friend of mine, an enthusiastic but rank-amateur photographer, has commented how much they like these shots on a number of occasions. We've discussed how I create the look and what goes into the shot. Then something happened that threw me through a loop. I took a snap on my iPhone of my girlfriend and son, and when my friend saw it, they commented how great the medium format look makes the shot. Now, this is an amateur (self-described), so no value in putting too much weight in the mistake, but I had edited the shot to look a bit like a medium format image, and it did look similar.

To create the same shot on my medium format body and manual focus lens would have been significantly more finicky and, in all likelihood, wouldn't have looked much different. It isn't news that phone cameras are tremendously powerful now and perpetually encroaching on dedicated camera territory. With a blend of AI and clever design, they can recreate many effects that used to be a bonafide skill in photography. The most recent example that has now reached a level where it is almost indistinguishable is long exposures.

Yes, there are still differences in the final result, particularly to the trained eye. Also, the file size and how malleable it is in post-processing are usually some way apart from dedicated cameras. But, on all of those charges, it almost never matters. Most people can't tell the difference, and most applications of an image will not show the image anywhere near its true dimensions. The more interesting question here is how all this technology impacts the photographer.

The dedicated camera versus a phone is a tired discussion. What is a more interesting discussion, to me at least, is how all of this technology changes the craft. After all, while phone cameras have been improving at a rate of knots, dedicated cameras have too. Modern bodies now have some superb, quality-of-life-improving features, from Eye AF to real-time generating long exposures and compositing. These all make capturing the desired shot easier in a way that wasn't possible some years back, and typically, they replace a skill within photography.

When digital photography more or less superseded film photography, there was the inevitable backlash of photographers who felt as if the skills necessary to be a good photographer were lessened. They were undoubtedly right in that there was no need to be hanging film in your bath anymore, but were they right with regards to the use of the camera too? If you can check your images as you go, you can adjust exposure and composition until it's perfect, something that wasn't possible with know-how and experience beforehand.

Now, digital photography hasn't quite had a pivotal moment of change like the transition from analog to digital, but it has had myriad smaller events. The most obvious and impactful for me is the aforementioned Eye AF. I assigned it to a back-button on my Sony and never missed nailing a portrait's focus on the subject's eye ever again. They even added it to work on animals! I used to have to work hard to nail focus, even with autofocus (in which there is another, similar discussion), but now, it's more or less free. You can get even more obscure with this line of questioning too: I used to have to exercise a marksman-taught breathing technique to take handheld shots in low light, but now, in-body image stabilization (IBIS) is so good I can get the shot while dancing if I fancied.

What does this mean for the photographer? Is photography easier? Well, yes, unambiguously in some regards. As a father and uncle of small children, I can confirm that Eye AF increased the number of keepers by a decent margin, though the shots, if taken without Eye AF and if successful, would have been identical. There are many examples of this, and so, there's no denying that capturing certain shots is objectively easier to do and requires less skill on the photographer's part. The argument that results is that photography is easier to do, and the bar has been lowered. This is where I disagree.

With the fundamentals easier in photography, the bar hasn't been lowered at all. The learning curve has been smoothed out, and beginners can get shots properly exposed and in-focus almost immediately, but that, in fact, raises the bar. The average becomes so much higher than it was just a few decades ago, as what was a skill and a hallmark of a good photographer is now simply the bare minimum. As a result, we expect more, particularly when not only are we taking more photographs than ever before by an enormous factor, but also viewing more photographs at the same increased rate. To have your photographs enjoyed by a good number of people has always been tricky, but now, it's tricky in a way that can feel insurmountable; you are a grain of sand in the Sahara.

Nevertheless, there are upsides to the many quality-of-life improvements for photographers. Whether you're shooting in auto mode on the highest-spec camera or in manual on an aging medium format body, the crutches (for want of a better word) allow you to concentrate on what really matters: capturing a memorable image. For the majority of photographers, the love of the craft isn't the mastery of the settings, but the results of them. There's satisfaction in becoming proficient at any skill, certainly, but knowing what settings to use is a vehicle to the destination. By having your mind untethered from desperately trying to focus on a moving eye, control the awkwardly wide dynamic range of a scene, or keep the camera still enough to shoot in low but beautifully ambient light, you can concentrate on everything else that goes into a great image: the composition, the light, the feel of the final photograph.

To me, the technology while admittedly making the creation of images properly exposed and in focus easier is liberating as a creative. I thoroughly enjoy the process of shooting on film and using manual focus and manual settings on digital bodies, but the modern conveniences of contemporary photography allow for that to be a choice. You can concentrate on getting the shot and being creative whenever you choose, and it's hard to imagine that could be a negative for the craft.

What do you think? Is the lowering of the barrier of entry to photography eroding the skill of our discipline or raising the standard? Is it doing both simultaneously? Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

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Is Technology in Photography Lowering the Bar or Increasing Freedom? - Fstoppers

Ewan McGregor Once Nearly Broke His Hand Acting With Former ‘Mandalorian’ Star Gina Carano – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Star Wars actor Ewan McGregor and Gina Carano once worked together before they were a part of the same franchise. As some may know, Carano and McGregor collaborated on the 2011 spy thriller Haywire, where Carano portrayed a secret agent. At one point McGregor accidentally struck Carano while filming a scene. But it did more damage to McGregor than Carano.

Carano had a prolific career as an MMA fighter before she transitioned over to Hollywood. Her first leading role was in the 2011 film Haywire, in which Oceans 11 director Steven Soderbergh cast her. Carano once explained that it was her last MMA fight with Cris Cyborg that caught Soderberghs attention. Even though shed lost the match, she left enough of an impression on the Oscar-nominated filmmaker to star in his spy thriller.

After I lost my fight to Cyborg he came out on a train from LA to San Diego and had a little lunch with me, she once told Den of Geek. We had talked and then at the end of the lunch he was like look, I wanna do a film with you. Theres no actors and theres no script, theres no studio attached to it, I just wanted to meet with you and see if youd be interested in anything like that and I was just likeI said yes!

The ex-Mandalorian star admitted she didnt know who the director was at the time, but she knew his films.

Yeah, I was with his films, I just didnt know who he was. Really I didnt know what it was that was involved with making films. I didnt know that the director is the guy with the vision. I just never thought about it, I guess. But it was definitely a Film 101 school for me, all of Haywire, she said.

Haywire was rounded out by a cast that consisted of Ewan McGregor, Channing Tatum, Michael Fassbender and Bill Paxton. McGregor in particular ended up doing a very physical scene with Carano that resulted in him accidentally striking the former fighter.

The only time I got hurt was when I punched Gina Carano in the head by accident, McGregor once told E-News.

But the Trainspotting actor revealed that he hurt himself more than he did his co-star.

I had a series of three punches, but the third onefor one reason or another I connected really hard on the side of her head, he continued. She was the one who got straight up and said, Are you OK? She was asking me if I was OK! But she was right because I almost broke my friggin hand!

Meanwhile, McGregor informed that Carano was absolutely fine.

Carano may have already had the physical requirements Soderbergh was looking for in his Haywire star. But he still went the extra mile to make sure Carano was psychologically prepared for the role. To do this, The Informant filmmaker had a real-life secret agent follow Carano around, and even considered kidnapping her.

Like method acting They put me with an ex-Mossad, thats like a solider and hed never done a movie either. So hes all excited, putting me through this training. So he puts a Gps (Global Positioning System) on my car and jumps me outside a hair salon, Carano once said according to Contact Music. He wanted to kidnap me but Steven Soderbergh said that would have been a little excessive. Is this how movies are made? Im quite paranoid now.

RELATED: The Mandalorian Cast Has Opinions About Gina Caranos return

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Ewan McGregor Once Nearly Broke His Hand Acting With Former 'Mandalorian' Star Gina Carano - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Ronda Rousey Will Only Return To MMA For Gina Carano Fight – The Source Magazine

Never say never, right.

It has been seven years since the last time iconic MMA fighter Ronda Rousey (12-2-0) stepped into the octagon. When asked about a possible return to MMA during the Kurt Angle Show last Sunday (June 12), Rousey revealed theres only one fight shed be interested in returning to competition for Gina Carano.

MORE: SOURCE SPORTS: Ronda Rousey Says Ungrateful Fans is Why She Left WWE

Theres only one person theres only one person I would come back for, Rousey told Kurt Angle.I mean, Ive said it a million times. Its not like its something new. (Id come back) for Gina, man Gina Carano. Shes the reason why I got into fighting. Shes the reason why I knew it was a possibility. I will always be forever grateful. If she ever was like, Ronda, I want to fight you tomorrow at 205 pounds like, whatever the hell shed want. Im not saying shes 205 pounds; shes very svelte.

Rousey continued: If she wanted to come into my backyard and do the Rocky thing, you know, Ding-ding, and we just do it in the backyard, I dont care. I will fight Gina wherever she wants. And if she doesnt want to, forever, I will leave that offer there. Its a respect thing, not like a, F*ck you, Im coming to get you. Its just like, Hey, if you ever want to pull that card out, its there. I love her. Thank you, Gina, for everything youve done.

Gina Carano, 40, retired from MMA in 2009 after her first loss against current Bellator MMA champ Cristiane Cyborg Justino at Strikeforce: Carano vs. Cyborg in August 2009. Transitioning to acting shortly after defeat, Carano is recognized as the pioneer of womens MMA.

Rousey has had no interest in returning to MMA for a final bout since her loss to Amanda Nunes at UFC 207 in December 2016. In her prime, Rousey was the face of the womens UFC division. A reigning champion from 2013 to 2015, she headlined five UFC events with her first against Liz Carmouche at UFC 157 in February 2013.

In 2019, Carano shared with ESPN that a potential super fight with Rousey was presented to her a fight Rousey always wanted with a million-dollar offer to fight a then-undefeated Rousey; however, didnt materialize because of Dana White according to Carano.

Carano told ESPNs Ariel Helwani: When Ronda Rousey became popular, I remember they (Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta) had finally called for a meeting, and I walked in this restaurant, and they looked like these two big muscly guys at the table in like the middle of Hollywood. I remember thinking, What took you guys so long? Ive been what took you so long? So they were like, OK, wed love to offer you a million dollars. Wed love to have that fight. And I was like, Well, that sounds great, but Im going to need you to do me a favor, then, because Ive been acting, Im not active in any gym. So its going to take me, you know, youre going to have to give me some time to build a team or join a team.

Its no secret that the idea of Rousey versus Carano would easily be one of the biggest fights in MMA history and draw record-breaking Pay-Per-Views buy. Unfortunately in combat sports, super fights often fall through due to a variety of reasons, ranging from money to politics to proper preparation.

And its not an easy thing, as Im sure all the fighters know, Carano continued. You have to find a team or build one thats going to be into what youre doing, and if you havent actively been a part of anything, you can walk in as Gina Carano or whoever, but youre still going to have to find the people who are really going to be there for you, and that takes time. So I told them, You got to be able to just sit on this for about six months, Dana. You cant say anything and let me get situated with that, because that sounds great and Id love to do it. So it was a nice dinner, and we all left positive. I left stoked, and I was like, OK, well this makes sense. This is my moment to come and be back in there.

MORE: SOURCE SPORTS: Ronda Rousey Knows Shes The GOAT So MMA Isnt Her Priority

Fans of the two icons have created dream fight simulations that showcased possible outcomes in support of the UFCs UFC 2 video game. You may watch the full womens bantamweight dream bout above via EA Sports.

Since the UFC, Rousey has become a WWE Superstar and the current Smackdown Womens Champion, alongside a flourishing acting career with roles in blockbuster film franchises Fast and Furious and Expandables.

Gina Carano has established herself as an action star with high-profile roles in blockbuster franchises like Fast and Furious also, Marvels Deadpool and Star Wars.

Watch the full Kurt Angle Show interview above.

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Ronda Rousey Will Only Return To MMA For Gina Carano Fight - The Source Magazine