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The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: February 2017
Russell Westbrook is leading an evolution in NBA rebounding – Washington Post
Posted: February 14, 2017 at 11:28 am
The NBA in recent seasons has undergone a stylistic overhaul, moving to offenses built around three-point shots and inching toward a form of basketball without positions. The forces changing the league have bled into every aspect of the game, and that includes rebounding. Its not a drastic difference, but it is a difference. As teams launch more threes and play smaller lineups, there are more long boardsand fewer big men to grab them. The combination has led to a more egalitarian distribution of rebounds.
Russell Westbrook, the fluorescent Oklahoma City point guard, both epitomizes the changing nature of rebounds and provides the ideal for how to capitalize on it. His quest to become the first player since Oscar Robertson in 1962 to average a triple-double for an entire season depends in large part on his 10.5 rebounds per game, the most by a guard since Robertsons triple-double year.
But Westbrook is far from alone among guards and wings gobbling boards. Giannis Antetokounmpo (8.7), James Harden (8.2), Nicolas Batum (7.2) and Avery Bradley (6.9) all rank among the NBAs top 50 in rebounds per game. This season, 10 of the top 50 rebounders are listed as guards or small forwards. Only six such players ranked in the top 50 last year, up from four each of the previous two seasons. No guard or small forward has finished a season ranked in the top 25 since 2009-2010, and yet four are ranked that high this year.
The game is changing, Wizards shooting guard Bradley Beal said. More threes means a lot of long rebounds, so guards are going to have more rebounds, for sure.
[One of college basketballs best rebounders is a 6-foot-2 guard?]
NBA games see 34.6 missed three-pointers on average, or 37 percent of total misses. Just five years ago, the average NBA game included only 25.6 three-point misses. Longer shots typically produce longer rebounds, and so the shift in shot selection has created more opportunities for guards to swoop for boards without getting out of position.
Because of those long rebounds on three-point shots, theres more rebounds that are clearing the free throw line, where guys who are even at the three-point line can react to, Thunder Coach Billy Donovan said. I always feel this way: Great rebounders are the ones who can read the flight of the ball and can tell where its coming off before it comes off.
No guard is better at it than Westbrook, whose rebounding ability has buoyed his triple-double bid and allowed the Thunder to craft a strategy around his unique skill set. Oklahoma City instructs its big men to box out on defense not with the sole aim of snaring rebounds, but with the intent to create space for Westbrook.
Westbrooks rebounding activates Oklahoma Citys best brand of offense. The Thunder entered Monday as the 21st-ranked offense in the NBA, but had scored the third-most fast-break points per game. When Westbrook snares a defensive rebound, he zips down the floor, a fast break unto himself. Essentially, Westbrook serves as his own outlet pass.
He does a great job whenever he gets the rebound, he has an opportunity to start the break, Wizards point guard John Wall said. Its a tougher matchup. Its hard to stop him when he has the ball and hes coming full speed.
[John Walls between-the-legs pass may have been his best of the season]
Its huge, Thunder reserve forward Nick Collison said. It allows us to get into transition more than a lot of teams. Even just a guy finding him to make the pass, that one second allows them to get back. Some of those that end up in transition shots wouldnt be if we had to find him.
As a rebounder, Westbrook combines aggression which Donovan encourages, rather than asking his point guard to rush back on defense as he might with a typical point guard with rare physical force. Physically, hes able to get to boards above the rim more so than any other guard, Collison said. Underneath his obvious athleticism, Westbrook uses anticipation and careful study.
The reason Russell is such a great rebounder is, he watches the flight of the ball, Donovan said. You see Russell a lot of times, hell shoot a shot, and hell know its short, and hell take off and get there quickly. Thats a skill. Thats an ability. Theres times where maybe a shot goes up, and he can tell where its going, hes already running into that area, and hes able to come up with it. Guys who are guards who are able to rebound the ball like that, theres a skill, theres a talent, theres an intelligence that goes into trying to create those opportunities.
Hes always attacking, Wall said. When he passes, you cant relax, because he always stays around the paint area to try to get offensive rebounds. On the defensive end, hes always crashing the boards to get rebounds.
[Russell Westbrooks dismal night provides another dose of frustration]
On Monday night, in a 120-98 loss to the Wizards, Westbrook grabbed a season-low four rebounds. On the other side of the box score, the overall trend still surfaced. Otto Porter, a small forward frequently asked to play the four in smaller lineups, recorded 11 rebounds.
I remember when I first got in the league, there was almost always two bigs on the court, Collison said. Usually, one of those really wasnt much of an offensive player. He was just a guy you really had to keep off the board.
That kind of player, Collison said, does not really exist any longer. The league has changed too much. Ten years ago, the Golden State Warriors led the NBA by attempting 26.6 threes per game. This season, teams average 26.9, and the league-leading Houston Rockets launch 39.8 per game. The effects trickle down. There are still plenty of rebounds to be had, but a different kind of player is corralling more of them.
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Why evolution may be tech billionaires’ biggest enemy – The Week Magazine
Posted: at 11:28 am
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In late 2016, Facebook's CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan pledged to invest at least $3 billion to "cure, manage, and prevent all disease" through the creation of a Biohub, a fount of non-profit innovation that would retain the exclusive right to commercialize its inventions. Around the same time, Microsoft said it had plans to "solve" cancer by 2026 and Facebook's co-founder Sean Parker promised $250 million (through his tax-exempt non-profit organization, or 501c3) to fight cancer while retaining the right to patents. The philanthropists Eli Broad and Ted Stanley have contributed $1.4 billion in private wealth to fund the Broad Institute research center (another 501c3, involved in a high-stakes patent battle) and its associated Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, to open "schizophrenia's black box" and hack the genetics of psychiatry. Much like Andrew Carnegie and John D Rockefeller of yesteryear, who donated their wealth to build public libraries and establish foundations, today's Silicon Valley billionaires seek a legacy, this time in the realm of health and disease.
But there is a disconnect. Comparing the body to a machine, complete with bugs to be fixed by means of gene modification tools such as Crispr-Cas9, conflicts with Charles Darwin's theory of evolution: machines and computers do not evolve, but organisms do. Evolution matters here because bits of code that compromise one function often enhance a second function, or can be repurposed for a new function when the environment shifts. In evolution, everything is grasping for its purpose. Parts that break down can become the next best thing.
The element of evolutionary time can be lost on technologists who think that more data and money will end disease. For Darwin, evolution of a species depended on natural selection of the individual organism. Discovery of DNA later resulted in what became known as the "modern synthesis," establishing a unifying framework for the influence of tiny things such as genes and large things such as populations, all while preserving Darwin's key principle that selection hinged on the individual. By 1966, the evolutionary biologists Richard Lewontin and John Hubby had proposed the concept of "balancing selection," which suggests that rare versions of genes can stay in a population since they add to genetic diversity. In fact, being heterogeneous, or having a single copy of a rarer form of a gene, even one that is suboptimal or contributes to genetic risk, can often benefit an individual, thus remaining among a species in small frequencies.
The theoretical biologist Stuart Kauffman argued that rare genetic variants are the basis of innovation, and may remain in circulation, not by chance, but because they add a fitness benefit to the system of at least a small number of organisms in a population. "Evolution is not just 'chance caught on a wing.' It is not just a tinkering of the ad hoc, of bricolage, of contraption. It is emergent order honored and honed by selection," he wrote in The Origins of Order (1993).
By contrast, a modern data scientist often assumes the reductionist position: that more data and better analysis in biology will lead to problems solved. As the molecular biologist James Watson said in 1989: "We used to think that our fate was in our stars, but now we know that, in large measure, our fate is in our genes." One reason we might favor this explanation is that our brains are wired to seek answers, simple cause-effect relationships. But we have so few drugs and solutions nearly two decades after sequencing the human genome. This might have less to do with the quality of analysis and more to do with the biological principles of evolution and time. Instead of thinking of humanity as a closed system, we'd do better to look through the open lens of ecology, in which the system itself is subject to influence by input from the outside. In even a single lifetime, our bodies take on an onslaught of genetic mutations, hundreds of trillions of synaptic connections rewire our brains by the moment, and pathogens bombard us, penetrating the organs and blood-brain barrier, and creating an ever-changing microbiome that enhances or erodes health.
In evolution, nothing comes for free. Stress can both trigger creativity and compound a raft of chronic maladies. Genetic variants that cause cystic fibrosis can protect against cholera, and those that contribute to Tay-Sachs can protect against tuberculosis. A variant in the gene PCSK9 can lower your LDL cholesterol, but can increase your risk for ischemic stroke. Gene transfer can effectively treat diseases caused by a single errant gene, but risk variants that influence diseases won't go away because they often provide advantages as time goes on.
Even cancer is less a machine with cell circuits that go haywire than an evolving entity that undergoes evolution and change in real time. Shapeshifting tricks that enable a cancer to escape our treatment can be independent of changes to the permanent genetic code. One of the reasons that the immunotherapeutic approach has been so practical is that it treats cancer in terms of ecology. The cancer evolves, but the immune system, primed for that kind of fight, can sometimes keep pace.
Darwin introduced a viewpoint that was radically unsettling: We don't progress to a more perfect form, but adapt to local environments. If humans are machines, then we can simply repair the broken parts. But if there is something more fundamental to the crisis of life than mere mechanisms of biology, then risk, and an element of danger, will always be with us. I will wager something even more: Since genetic variation is the basis of innovation, and diversity, making ourselves too perfect could mean our doom.
This article was originally published by Aeon, a digital magazine for ideas and culture. Follow them on Twitter at @aeonmag.
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The Evolution of Valentine’s Day – Inside Science News Service
Posted: at 11:28 am
Inside Science News Service | The Evolution of Valentine's Day Inside Science News Service You don't have to be, you know, the president of [the Human Behavior and Evolution Society] to understand, "hey, if I can create a day where I can get you to celebrate this very basal mating ritual, it's likely to work." And guess what? It does. IS ... |
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What Darwinists Don’t Tell You: Valentine’s Day Edition – Discovery Institute
Posted: at 11:28 am
Darwinism is replete with salesmanship, some of it thoroughly deceptive. Pushing the false dichotomy of evolution versus Young Earth Creationism, as if there were no alternative to these two, is one way that evolutionists bully and mislead non-scientists. Sadly, they are joined in this by some creationists.
Tom Bethell, author of Darwin's House of Cards: A Journalist's Odyssey Through the Darwin Debates, points out that from Darwin himself on up to today, advocates of the theory have habitually played down the conflict between their materialism, on one hand, and religious belief on the other.
Similarly, only the most perilously candid evolutionists are in your face about another straightforward inference from materialism: the denial of free will. Bethell again:
This bleak vision, the human being as meat machine, is on vivid display, though mixed with a clumsy childlike enthusiasm, in the writing of emeritus University of Chicago evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne. On Darwin Day, for instance, he chided me for the hope that evidence of design will overcome Darwinian censorship: "I'm sorry to say that, I think, Klinghoffer will go to his Maker (disassociated molecules) before a teleological view of life permeates evolutionary biology."
Imagine trying to sell "disassociated molecules" to the public, with their human intuitions, fears, and longings. Darwinists like Coyne or Dawkins, Bethell observes, are their own worst enemies.
To these thoughts, add our colleague Jonathan Witt's observation for Valentine's Day over at The Stream. From Darwinian materialism, he notes, a denial of the reality of love must follow:
Dissolve those things and there's no room for romantic love to be anything very exalted.
Biologist E.O. Wilson is just as blunt. When Darwinian science conquers all, we will view the human brain as just the "product of genetic evolution by natural selection." And the mind "will be more precisely explained as an epiphenomenon of the neuronal machinery of the brain."
But surely we can rescue things like art, religion and poetry, right? No, Wilson insists. Evolution teaches us that all of it was "produced by the genetic evolution of our nervous and sensory tissues."
Evolving Away Love
So what becomes of Valentine's Day, of all of those romantic longings and pledges to love, honor and protect, maybe even till death do us part? Yes, glands and instincts are involved. Only a gnostic would deny that, and Christianity threw Gnosticism out on its ear at the Incarnation and the Resurrection.
But Darwinian science goes further. It insists the stuff of Valentine's Day is all glands and instincts, and beneath those, all brain chemistry -- a soulless concoction of matter and energy stirred up in the alchemist's lab we call evolution.
Of course, it would have to be that way. A materialist understanding of evolution robs us of virtually everything that makes life rich and worth living, if we're honest about it with ourselves. What, really, is left? Eating? Animal rutting? Pursuing status or dominance in a manner hardly different from the way chimps and chickens do?
But Darwinists, devoted salesmen that they are, often seem freaked out about the implications of their theory, and so try to take those back, sometimes in the space between one paragraph and the next. Dennett, for one, preaches the illusion of consciousness. But just as we know that love is real and not only a matter of glands in action, and as we know that are our will is ultimately free, we also have a strong sense that our inner lives are genuine.
So here is neuroscientist Michael Gazzaniga giving a reverent review to Dennett's new book, From Bacteria to Bach and Back: The Evolution of Minds, in the Wall Street Journal and getting tangled up in the consciousness question. On one hand, says Gazzaniga:
But most Wall Street Journal readers are going to have a hard time with the idea of their "interior experience" as a trick their brain pulls on them. The notion is thus walked back by Dr. Gazzaniga in the very next paragraph:
Consciousness for Dennett is "an illusion," yet "He never doubted consciousness itself." He never doubted an illusion? I haven't read the book, but the review of it makes not sense.
Darwinism asks us to doubt, to deny, our own intuitions and experiences. Intelligent design cheerfully affirms them. The former, says Jonathan Witt, overwhelms resistance "by endlessly recycling evidence long discredited even by scientists in [Darwinists'] own ranks" (referring to the "icons of evolution" made famous by Jonathan Wells).
Meanwhile, intelligent design is not permitted to make its own scientific case. Or when it does so, ID scientists are put down by censors or drowned out by media spokesmen with endless chants of "creationist, creationist, creationist." What a mad world!
Image: smiltena -- stock.adobe.com.
I'm on Twitter. Follow me @d_klinghoffer.
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VWHS Robotics Team wins state title The VW independent – Van Wert independent
Posted: at 11:28 am
VW independent/submitted information
CINCINNATI The Van Wert High School Robotics Team is headed to super-regional competition after capturing the state title over the weekend.
The VWHS Robotics Team poses after winning the state robotics competition in Cincinnati on Saturday. (photo submitted)
The team competed in Cincinnati over the weekend in the First Tech Challenge state championship, overcoming a couple of losses in early rounds, but persevering and eventually landing a partnership with the No. 2 team going into the semifinals.
After sweeping the first best of three semifinals, the team faced the top-seeded team and, after losing the first match of the finals, the VWHS Robotics Team,along with the TBD Robotics Team from Aurora, took the final two matches.
Only five teams from Ohio advance to the next level, according to VWHS Robotics Team Coach Bob Spath. Winning the state championship advances the Van Wert team to the North Super-Regional competition in Iowa at the end of March, where the top teams from 11 states will compete for coveted spots in the World Championship.
Spath and fellow Coach Zane McElroy said they are thrilled to have the opportunity to represent the Van Wert community at the Super-Regional competition.
The team earned a spot in the state competition by winning its own 28-team qualifying competition held in the VWHS gymnasium on January 28.
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AI startup coming to Silicon Valley with robot companion for elderly – Silicon Valley Business Journal
Posted: at 11:28 am
Silicon Valley Business Journal | AI startup coming to Silicon Valley with robot companion for elderly Silicon Valley Business Journal An Israeli startup working on an artificial intelligence-powered elderly companion on Tuesday said it plans to make Silicon Valley its first market and the home of its U.S. headquarters. The ElliQ from Intuition Robotics is like a more animated version ... |
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Kennett Coders to compete in NH State Robotics Championships on Saturday – Conway Daily Sun
Posted: at 11:28 am
By Ron Sandstrom Special to The Conway Daily Sun
Team 5106c, conisting of Chani Mores and Kate Keefe, are one of five Kennett robotics squads. (COURTESY PHOTO)CONWAY The Kennett High Coders are on a roll, with all five Coder robotics teams qualifying for the New England Championships.
Qualifying teams are: Team 5106A sophomore Lucas Glasshart and freshman David Sheehan; Team 5106B juniors Richard Chavez, Tyler James and Carter Stevens; Team 5106C freshmen Chani Mores and Kate Keefe; Team 5106E juniors Matt Ballou, Justin Barrett and Taylor Bouchard; and Team 5106Z seniors Clyne Sullivan and Andrew Belle-Isle.
Kennett has qualified for the VEX World Championships in four out of the last five years. They hope to make it five. This week, the Coders will be competing Saturday at Manchester Community College in the 2017 NH/VT VEX Robotics State Championships.
This year's competition is called Star Struck, and teams compete by guiding their robots to hurl 12-inch stars and 14-inch cubes over a fence into the scoring zone of their opponents. At the same time, opponent alliance teams return the favor by hurling the stars and cubes back over the fence.
A big part of this year's design challenge is to create a robot that can effectively lift these scoring objects and deliver them faster than the opponent robots can deliver them back.
All robots must start the event and measure into an 18-inch-by-18-inch box. After starting, the robots can expand to a larger size, something all the competitive robots do. All robots are limited to a fixed set of motors and equipment, making the design process a critical component of success.
Software makes the robots come alive. At Kennett, the robotics team focuses on making the software smarter and more efficient than any other team. An example of this is the auto-shoot functionality used by multiple Kennett teams. For instance, the auto-shoot code will hunt a scoring object, pick it up and spin toward the fence, and then execute a toss and flick while releasing the scoring object exactly at the right time.
With a goal of returning to the World Championships for the fifth consecutive year, the team must win the state championships or win the design or excellence award at the event. Another way to reach the worlds is to be one of the top 50 teams in the world in skills ranking.
As of now, Coders Team 5106C (Mores and Keefe) is ranked 64th in the world in skills, with two weeks to improve that score. Other Kennett teams are ranked 487th, 1,627th and 3,053th in world rankings.
Over the course of the season, Kennett teams have been in the finals of each of the five events in which they have competed.
Last weekend, Mores and Keefe won the final event before the state championships and moved into third in the state in total skills points. Over the season, they won two judges awards, an excellence award, a design award and two event championships.
Not to mention, with 52 teams voting at the Pembroke competition, the team won the inspire award the team most inspirational to the other teams. Impressive for a freshman team to pull off. The two girls were part of the middle school robotics club last year.
Most Kennett teams have been working on their robots several afternoons a week for the past two months. 5106E started work last spring.
Going into the New Hampshire Wrap-Up Tournament, two Kennett teams had yet to qualify. With the pressure on, both teams arrived ready to compete. Team 5106B (Chavez, James and Stevens) opened their tool kits and began immediate surgery on their robot, working to make last-minute improvements.
Both teams' updates resulted in improved performance in the matches and the robot skills field. It was great to see 5106A and 5106B qualify for the state championships. 5106A also was the top qualifier from the elimination rounds while 5106B who focused on skills made a remarkable jump to score enough points to move to eighth in the state.
At end of the qualifying rounds, all the Kennett Teams at the match were competing in the championship rounds. With five teams in the state championships, Kennett's chances are improved.
Coaches for the 2016-2017 season are Daniel Richardi and Joe Riddensdale, and mentors are Chris Ballou, Laura Glasshart and Ron Sandstrom.
High school robotics programs rely on mentors, volunteers and sponsors such as Big Dave's Bagels, Dunkin' Donuts, Brandli's Pizza, Flatbread Pizza, Kennett High School, the Mt Washington Valley Economic Council, the Masons, Kiwanis Club, Rotary Club, Whitehorse Press, RLSAND Inc and individual contributions.
Donations to support Kennett High School robotics club would be much appreciated. They can be sent to: MWVFirst, c/o MWV Economic Council (Diane Ryan), 53 Technology Lane, Suite 100, Conway, NH 03818. Checks should be made payable to MWVFirst.
Ron Sandstrom of Madison is one of three mentors for the Kennett Coders robotics teams.
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Olly Murs sings Happy Birthday to Robbie Williams with full backing band in sweet video – The Sun
Posted: at 11:27 am
OLLY Murs pulled out all the stops to when he sang Happy Birthday to his pal Robbie Williams with the help of a full backing band.
The X Factor star has been good pals with the Candy singer since he sang with him on the ITV talent show and he made sure to mark his pals 43rd birthday.
In the sweet clip, Olly says: Hi Rob, Olly here, I just wanted to wish you a Happy Birthday mate.
Im in tour rehearsals right now so I wanted to sing you a little song.
The 32-year-old then smiles happily for the camera as he sings along with the help ofhis full tour band including drums, numerous brass instruments, piano and guitar.
He finished it off saying: Happy Birthday mate! Love ya!
Getty Images
Meanwhile, Robbies wife Ayda Field gave her other half the ultimate gift of total boy heaven to mark him getting a year older.
Sharing a picture of a sweet card she gave him, it read: On this special day, I want to give you the gift of the things you love the most (beside us of course).
Getty Images
Please spend your day watching and playing as much football as you like, eating as much chocolate as your heart desires, with all the time in the world you want.
Scratch you b*lls, trump to your merry delight and be in total boy heaven.
This is your day, Happy Birthday to the love of my life, your proud wifey.
Getty Images
Uploading a photo of the card to Instagram, she added: Happy Birthday to my beautiful hubby @robbiewilliams!! May you have the best day today and may this year be the best year yet!! I love you boozy!!
The occasional Loose Women star later shared a photo of some expletive slogan balloons that said old git, Happy f***ing birthday, and old as f**k.
Robs birthday celebrations come just days after he confessed to smoking marijuana in Buckingham Palace during the 2012 Queens Diamond Jubilee Concert.
Getty Images
Robbie said: Threw up in Buckingham Palace? No, before adding: I smoked a spliff in Buckingham Palace.
Robbie, who has daughter Teddy, four, and son Charlie, two, with wife Ayda, has been open about his use of the class B substance.
In 2013 he said he still uses the drug recreationally, despite two trips to rehab.
He said at the time: The last time I got high was two days ago. No big drug sessions, mind, just a small amount, purely to relax.
Got a story? email digishowbiz@the-sun.co.uk or call us direct on 02077824220
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Jefferson schools urged to use cable TV station – Daily Union
Posted: at 11:27 am
JEFFERSON The Jefferson community has two dedicated cable television channels, provided by Charter Communications as part of its service contract. The city channel has regular programming, but the channel dedicated to the school district has gone unused for the past few years.
Its true that people now have many other sources for local news, from the Daily Union to the school district website to social networking sites, but the school district is letting a potential asset go untapped.
So asserted John Foust, a board member with the states community cable association who has been involved with the community cable station on the city side since its inception.
Foust addressed the School District of Jefferson Board of Education Monday. On the agenda as an informational item only, the issue was not up for a vote, but it could come back for consideration at a future meeting.
Im here to remind you of an underused resource that can help the school district show the public what you are doing, Foust said.
He noted that the community has exclusive use of two cable channels via Charter, channels 987 and 988.
The local community cable station started in 2005 as a successful collaboration between the City of Jefferson and the school district, Foust said. When it started, one station was dedicated for use by the school district and one for public access and government.
A committee of the Jefferson Common Council oversees the station, and the school district has a seat on that committee.
However, Foust said, the school district has not used its channel for the last several years.
He encouraged district decisionmakers to reconsider using the districts local cable channel as one more means to get out the word about happenings within the school district and to expand the districts use of video.
To put it simply, the channel is a place where you can freely advertise 24 hours a day, he said, asserting that this would be a good place to provide information on any future referenda, to promote the district as an open enrollment destination, and to inform all taxpayers, not just those with schools in the district, about the good things the Jefferson schools are doing.
How many parents work second shift and cant attend their childs choir concert or team sport? Foust asked. That can change if you start to record and play them on cable and the Internet.
But first, he said, these events need to be recorded. He noted that anything recorded for local cable also could be shared on the Internet.
The local cable channel could help parents of middle-schoolers learn about the opportunities their children will have in high school, he said.
How many times have you spoken to a parent who wished they could have attended a past school board meeting to see how an issue was discussed and decided? Foust asked. They could watch a video if you start to record meetings.
Foust said that around 60 percent of homeowners subscribe to cable, and that programs played in Jefferson actually reach surrounding communities, as well.
A program played on Jeffersons channel reaches more than 15,000 homes, with more than 40,000 viewers in other nearby communities, he said.
This could be a good tool for promoting the district as an open-enrollment destination, as people in surrounding communities learn about the programs, opportunities and achievements of the Jefferson schools.
A lot has changed since the community cable channels got their start in 2005, Foust said.
At their inception, the station equipment was located at the high school. In 2011, the stations equipment moved to city hall as Jefferson High School broke ground on its expansion and remodeling project.
Now, the cable stations have an office in Jefferson City Hall, a part-time station manager position, and two part-time camera operators, as well as upgraded cameras, tripods, microphones and computers for video editing.
The station is positively regarded by the mayor and council, Foust asserted. It is reasonably well-funded, with a budget of just over $20,000 per year.
He said that Mayor Dale Oppermann developed the system that currently prevails, in which half of the cable programs budget comes from the city coffers (via Charter subscriber dollars designated for that purpose) and the other half is raised by the station itself.
If you look in the fine print of your cable bill, the city collects a few percent as a franchise fee, Foust said, giving that amount as around $95,000 per year.
Like many cities, Jefferson uses some of this revenue to support the station, he said. The station also raises money for its budget through underwriting of programs, and by selling DVDs.
The cable program also receives money from Jefferson County since it has begun to tape and play county board meetings, Foust said. The county requires the station to send DVDs of county board meetings to the other community cable stations in the county so its not just shown in Jefferson.
The station also has a reserve fund of $30,000 set aside to buy the next generation of video servers and equipment in the year ahead, he said.
The city channel currently plays recordings of concerts at Rotary Waterfront Park, Gemuetlichkeit Days events and parades.
For several years, we recorded the high school football and basketball games, he said, noting that the station has a library of hundreds of programs from past years.
Many improvements have been made since the station got its start, Foust said.
I remember learning that there was only one video camera at the high school, and it was locked in the principals desk, he said. Today, most people carry a pretty good video camera in their pocket.
Serving as the first station equipment were two spare computers that ran a PowerPoint slideshow of announcements. By 2006, the station had a stack of programmable DVD players, and by 2008, it had a video server.
Up until a few years ago, Foust said, the school station material came from each of the principals, who contributed a few slides of information per month. A teacher put the slides together into a single slideshow and copied it to the station computer.
That slideshow got broadcast when no other program was playing.
In the intervening years, the School District of Jefferson has done a great job of expanding into social media, informing the public through Facebook, upgraded school websites, district promotional videos and more.
Foust encouraged school officials to think of the local cable channel as one more outlet for the material the district is already creating.
He noted that the district has uploaded about 30 videos to its district Facebook page in the past two years. The high school has put up about 150 videos on its Facebook page, and East, West, and the middle school have all put up local video content, too.
The Jefferson High School mass media class has a couple of dozen videos on its YouTube channel, as well as its Facebook page, he said.
Meanwhile, the local schools have uploaded vast quantities of photos, 538 for the district, 683 for the high school, 3,700 for the middle school, 1,000 for East and 500 for West.
Youre already taking the pictures and the videos and deciding what to upload, Foust said. We just need to expand your process to send all this to your channel on Charter.
He said the district should consider recording school board meetings to replay on cable, as do many districts.
Yes, at first, everyone feels a little funny about being on camera, but it soon becomes no more disruptive than someone taking the minutes. You still control when the camera is running and which meetings get recorded.
Foust said the city station could do the recordings itself, as it does for the county board, at the cost of a few hundred dollars per meeting, which would include the equipment, the recording, simple titles (as in 2/13/17 school board meeting,) editing and uploading the videos on the server.
The school district could choose to do this recording itself. It would require a camera, a tripod, a way to connect to the boards sound system and someone to operate the camera, then upload the information to the server.
You can also upload the video to YouTube for people who dont have cable, Foust said.
Again, this is well within the skill set of staff and students who are already uploading videos to Facebook, he said.
No one needs to travel to Jefferson City Hall to make this happen, as a network link still exists over the schools fiber between the city station and the high school. Computers and the video server can be programmed remotely over that network or the Internet, he said.
Through being on the board of the state association of community channels, Ive seen up close how 50 other communities in Wisconsin operate their school and city channels, Foust said, noting that every community is different in terms of how the stations are funded, staffed and operated.
After Fousts presentation, school board members had a few questions.
One wondered where the rest of the $95,000 in station fees that Charter subscribers pay the city goes, beyond the amount that goes toward the community cable programs $20,000 budget.
General revenue, Foust said.
Board member Dick Lovett asked whether programming is run in a continuous loop or whether theres dead air.
Foust said that the Jefferson station is currently in the process of recruiting a new station manager, and how the programming is run is up to that person.
The last station manager, he said, treated the community cable channel like a regular station, running church services and city council meetings at regular and predictable times and putting up community announcements when no other programming was running.
The resource of that channel is there for you 24/7, Foust said, noting that taking advantage of this asset could be as easy as assembling 10 minutes of prerecorded content and re-running it on the hour every hour.
Lovett then asked what kind of viewership a local cable channel would get, expressing doubt that very many people would watch.
The Nielsen Ratings dont percolate down to community channels, Foust said with a smile. The truth is, very few people are watching any given program at any given time, given all the options that are out there.
Even a Disney movie running over the Christmas holidays which came out on top of the Nielsen ratings, would only have around 15 viewers in a city this size, he said.
Youve got to build that process, he said. Let people know its out there.
Board member David Hollenberger asked what it would cost to run the material the district already has produced.
Theres really no cost, Foust said.
Asked what quality of video was required, Foust said that community cable channels still operate on standard definition, not HD. The top stations have commercial quality production, he said, but in his mind, getting the content out there and letting people see them was more important than having flawless images.
Thats what community cable is all about after all: community access.
Scott Buth, school board president, said that Fousts presentation had given him something to think about.
I thought it would be kind of a waste, living out in the hinterlands as I do (with no cable,) he said.
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Jefferson schools urged to use cable TV station - Daily Union
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Morality and Murder Collide in Two New Horror Movies – Film School Rejects
Posted: at 11:27 am
Dont HangUp
Its undeniably impressive just how well Dont Hang Up recovers from its irritatingly obnoxious and terribly-charactered first act to become a thrilling and suspenseful little morality tale that owes a minor debt to the likes of Saw and Scream. But good lord is it a rough beginning.
A woman is woken from a deep sleep by a ringing phone. A voice tells her its the police, that they have her house surrounded, and that multiple intruders are in her home. Shes understandably terrified, but its her fear for her young daughter that forces panic in her mind, especially as the voice says the daughter has been abducted and shotbefore its revealed that the callers are a group of pranksters making funny calls and uploading the clips to YouTube for lolz. They make people believe their loved ones are dead or cheating on them, and its hilarious.
These are not likable young men, and as the montage of calls over a period of months comes to an end we settle on the tightest and most dickish of the bros, Sam (Gregg Sulkin) and Brady (Garrett Clayton). The script (from Joe Johnson, The Skulls III) makes efforts to humanize the pair through their relationships to parents and a girlfriend, but they failthese are irredeemable pricks. So when a stranger calls them warning them not to hang up or face dire consequences, we cant help but root for the stranger.
And we keep doing so right through to the end.
Directors Damien Mac and Alexis Wajsbrot do serviceable work early on, but just as the script picks up during the second act so does the direction. Suspenseful beats are played well through close-ups, smart reveals, and an appreciation of genre expectations that still allows for a surprise or two. We have a vague suspicion of the killers motivations before theyre actually shared, but it doesnt hurt the films execution and momentum as it heads toward a solidly satisfying conclusion.
Both leads do good work despite the handicap of playing obnoxious characters deserving of almost everything heading their way, and the supporting players are equally fine. The killer is a curious one as once he finally appears Im still not entirely sure if hes wearing a mask or not. Its creepy regardless.
Dont Hang Up brings Saw-like judgement to a Scream-like scenario, but it succeeds in being its own creation by delivering some fun thrills, plenty of blood, and a smart turn or two. It touches on tech issues related to computer security too, and while its efforts pale beside the likes of The Den theyre enough to add some real-world scares to the proceedings. Ignore the cheesy title and give this one a shot next time youre home alone and looking for something to watch. Just trust me through the first twenty minutes or soit gets better.
Dont Hang Up opened Friday in limited theatrical release.
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Morality and Murder Collide in Two New Horror Movies - Film School Rejects
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