Critique Class at MassArt
This fall I'll be teaching The Filmmaker's Project at MassArt's Continuing Education program. It's an advanced critique class for filmmakers who are working on a piece and are looking for some structure (i.e. deadlines!) and feedback from a consistent teacher/classmate group. We will discuss structural, thematic, and fine editing issues, and engage in more philosophical conversations about what it means to make a film. I will also lead occasional workshops on the technical and professional aspects of post-production.
JP Youth Gather for Health Equity
I enjoyed filming a gathering of young people in Jamaica Plain to talk about what they can do to help close the gap in health outcomes between different ethnic and socioeconomic groups. The meeting was organized by Jamaica Plain Youth Health Equity Collaborative, a dynamic grassroots group run out of the Southern Jamaica Plain Health Center.
The Collaborative is working on several fronts to address the structural roots of health inequality. They are currently focusing on youth employment - both on the policy level to preserve funding for youth jobs, and in developing a youth-run business. They also published a great report to educate young people in Jamaica Plain about the complex causes of health disparities.
It's been fun meeting several articulate new leaders in JP, and the health center's Manager of Community Health Programs, Abigail Ortiz (pictured above, leading a role play). She knows how to keep a room full of young people engaged and cooperating on ambitious projects for their community's future.
Tom Wolff wrote a nice article in his newsletter about the Youth Collaborative's work, and that of one of their funders, the Center for Health Equity and Social Justice at Boston Public Health Commission (who has hired me to document some of their grantees).
100 Days Post-Spill
It's now been 100 days since BP's oil rig exploded, killing 11 rig workers and setting off a massive crude oil leak. Thankfully, the cap on the well seems to be holding, and if all goes according to plan (a big IF), a relief well will soon enable a permanent end to the spill. Of course, the estimated 92 million gallons of oil that have already leaked into the Gulf of Mexico will continue to affect the area's wildlife, vegetation, and economy for years.
The oil spill also threatens to end indigenous people's ability to live off Louisiana's land and water, as they have for hundreds of years. I am co-producing and editing a film called Under Water's Mercy that follows one Native American family's struggle to maintain their traditional way of life alongside oil and gas industries in Southeast Louisiana. The film is directed by Sharon Linezo Hong, and shot by her and Monique Verdin (who also made the photo above on the Pointe au Chien Bayou). In the film, Monique returns to her Houma community as they face a series of manmade environmental disasters, and gradually finds a sense of purpose as a photographer and storyteller for her people.
This fall, we'll be meeting with potential funders, broadcasters, and distributors who could help us get the film out into the world.
Alcohol Prevention Front and Center
Earlier this week I found myself immersed in the research and strategies for preventing high-risk drinking at colleges. Outside the Classroom asked me to film their Alcohol Prevention Coalition's second Annual Research Summit at Babson College. It's a gathering of top administrators, health educators, and student affairs directors who work to minimize binge drinking and its ramifications such as sexual assault, poor academic performance, and damaged town-gown relationships.
I am excited to be working with Outside the Classroom because I find them to be not only a top-notch research and strategy organization, but a great example of social entrepreneurship. They seem to be a for-profit business that operates with a non-profit mission. Their website says they aim to "Run Like a Business ~ Act Like a Nonprofit ~ Feel Like a Family ~ Care to Be Better."
Founder and CEO Brandon Busteed (pictured above) described the complexity of their approach to alcohol prevention, which brings together a diverse range of partners - deans, athletic directors, student affairs officers, health educators, student groups, faculty, and Greek organizations - and uses the Coalition's rich data on student attitudes and behavior to design policy.
Mattapan Moving for Life
Springtime Shoot in Paris
I just got back from a nice shoot in Paris for my Lalitafilm. I have now filmed in all three cities Lalita has lived: Mumbai, Paris, and Montréal. My film partly has to do with the ways our bodies are shaped or affected by the places we live. So I was looking for images that feel in some ways quintessentially Paris - and yet are not cliché... for some reason, I found that shooting on my cheap little Flip camera yielded some interesting results.
On the sightseeing part of the trip, I also enjoyed visiting the Mosquée de Paris, where in addition to seeing the beautiful tilework and gardens, you can get a full hammamtreatment with steam baths, black soap, and muscular old ladies massaging you down with scented oil...