All posts by Cheryl T Furjanic

THE HAND THAT FEEDS to screen in NYC – Thursday 11/6

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Filmmaker Rachel Lears (an alumna of our Culture & Media Program) will screen clips from her new film next week in NYC:
Thursday, November 6, 2014
7-9 pm
Hemispheric Institute of Performance & Politics
20 Cooper Square, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10003

Wine reception to follow. This event is free and open to the public. A photo ID is required to enter NYU buildings. 20 Cooper is a wheelchair accessible venue.
This event will be livestreamed. To view the live video feed starting at 7pm (EST), click here.
ABOUT THE FILM: At a popular bakery café, residents of New York’s Upper East Side get bagels and coffee served with a smile 24 hours a day. But behind the scenes, undocumented immigrant workers face sub-legal wages, dangerous machinery, and abusive managers who will fire them for calling in sick. Mild-mannered sandwich maker Mahoma López has never been interested in politics, but in January 2012, he convinces a small group of his co-workers to fight back. Risking deportation and the loss of their livelihood, the workers team up with a diverse crew of innovative young organizers and take the unusual step of forming their own independent union, launching themselves on a journey that will test the limits of their resolve.
ABOUT THE EVENT: Mahoma López and Vergilio Arán of the Laundry Workers Center, the main subjects of the film and organizers of the Hot and Crusty campaign, will join filmmakers Rachel Lears and Robin Blotnick in a simultaneously translated discussion. They will relate the strategies it took to overcome a two-month lockout, back door legal battles, and a picket line that divided a neighborhood and the soul it took to ensure they will never be exploited again.
The Hand that Feeds is directed and produced by Rachel Lears and Robin Blotnick.
The Critical Tactics Lab (CTL) is the Hemispheric Institute’s permanent forum for discussion and research on the practices and methods of contemporary and historical political action. Drawing on the work of Yes Lab and the Creative Activism Series and the Institute’s ongoing work with political artists and activists from the Americas, the CTL’s mission is to promote and strengthen critical reflection about the tactics and strategies of political movements as well as the multiple processes and modes of analysis through which these are arrived at. Through lectures, workshops, courses, and other modes of assembly—and with an emphasis on laughter and embodied practice—the CTL seek to provide a space in which the expansive affinities of critical practice and action can be made visible and strengthened.

Culture & Media Program at DOC NYC

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The NYU Culture & Media Program is well represented at the upcoming DOC NYC Film Festival! Congratulations to all!

9-MAN
Associate Produced by Bing Wang (C&M alumna)
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Played since the 1930s, 9-Man, a variant of volleyball, was developed by Chinese immigrants to America as both an athletic pastime and a social outlet in a time of widespread anti-Chinese sentiment, discrimination and segregation. Ursula Liang’s film traces the game’s fascinating history as a backdrop to the present-day national championship, in which Asian-American players, now fully integrated into mainstream North American culture, defy stereotypes about Asian masculinity and athleticism even as they connect to their heritage.
2:00 PM, Sat Nov 15 | SVA Theatre

THE HAND THAT FEEDS
Directed by Rachel Lears (C&M alumna) and Robin Blotnick
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NYC PREMIERE An Upper East Side Hot & Crusty bakery serves as the unlikely setting for an old-fashioned David vs. Goliath story in Rachel Lears and Robin Blotnick’s rousing film. After years of exploitation, Mahoma López, an unassuming sandwich maker, leads his fellow service workers as they demand better working conditions and wages. Risking their livelihood—and, for some, deportation—they take to the streets to plead their case to their regular customers, partnering with impassioned young Occupy activists in a hard-fought battle to prove the power of labor organizing.
2:30 PM, Sun Nov 16 | IFC Center

BACK ON BOARD: GREG LOUGANIS
Directed by Cheryl Furjanic (C&M’s Media Production Specialist)
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NYC PREMIERE This strikingly candid profile explores the triumphs and tragedies of Greg Louganis, considered by many the greatest diver of all time. A four-time Olympian, Louganis became a household name and an inspiration to countless athletes, but after he publicly revealed his sexuality and HIV status, the backlash cost him dearly. Back on Board follows Louganis as he simultaneously faces the loss of his home and the possibility of redemption, returning to the diving board to mentor the 2012 US Olympic diving team. This screening is co-presented by NewFest.
6:45 PM, Sun Nov 16 | SVA Theatre

CAST IN INDIA
Directed by Natasha Raheja (C&M alumna)
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Iconic and ubiquitous, thousands of manhole covers dot the streets of New York City. Enlivening the everyday objects around us, this short film is a glimpse of the working lives of the men behind the manhole covers in New York City. This is playing part of the SHORTS PROGRAM: PARTS + LABOR
9:00 PM, Sun Nov 16 | Bow Tie Chelsea Cinemas

C&M Films to screen at Margaret Mead Film Festival

Congratulations to our Culture & Media students! Four of their recently completed films were chosen to screen at the Margaret Mead Film Festival this October! This prestigious festival is the longest running international documentary film festival in the United States.
Cast in India
By Natasha Raheja
Friday, October 24, 2014 at 9:30 pm (Program F31)
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Living Quechua
By Christine Mladic Janney
Saturday, October 25, 2014 at noon (Program F12)
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Neither Here Nor There (Ni Aquí, Ni Allá)
By Gabriela Bortolamedi
Saturday, October 25, 2014 at noon (Program F12)
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A Correspondence
By Leili Sreberny-Mohammadi
Saturday, October 25, 2014 at 7pm (Program F20)
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Pegi Vail’s GRINGO TRAILS at Cinema Village

Congratulations to Pegi Vail, associate director of the Center for Media Culture & History (and a C&M alumna)! Her film Gringo Trails will make its NYC theatrical debut from September 4-11 at Cinema Village!
Catch these exciting Q&As after the 7pm screenings:
Thurs Sept 4th: Costas Christ (Nat Geo Traveler), Peter Greenberg (CBS)
Friday 5th: Seth Kugel (NY Times Frugal Traveler), La Francis Hui (Asia Society)
Sat 6th: George Green (The Moth), Connelly LaMar (VICE video producer)
Watch the trailer for the film HERE and
get your tickets today!
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Early Humans’ Adaptability to Changing Environment Offers New Insights into Evolution

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The current issue of the journal Science features a new paper co-authored by New York University anthropologist Susan Antón, Richard Potts of the Smithsonian Institution, and Leslie Aiello of the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. The analysis concludes that the ability of early humans to adjust to changing conditions ultimately enabled the earliest species of Homo to vary, survive, and begin spreading from Africa to Eurasia, marking a reconsideration of the evolutionary factors that drove these changes.
Read the NYU Press Release about the analysis here.
Or click here to see the full article in the current issue of Science.

DOCS ON THE EDGE: FRIDAY, MAY 9th @ 6pm

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Join us for our annual DOCS ON THE EDGE screening!
A Student Documentary Showcase from the 2013-2014 Graduate Video Production Seminar
Presented by the Department of Anthropology, the Department of Cinema Studies, and the Program in Culture and Media at New York University
Friday, May 9 @ 6:00 pm
(doors open at 5:30pm)
Cantor Film Center
36 East 8th Street
Theater 200
New York City
NEW DOCUMENTARIES:
Brooklyn Slice
by Anna Green (Cinema Studies)
Pizza is a quintessential, even iconic New York food, and John Minaci Jr. is a quintessential New Yorker. His Italian immigrant father founded Johnny’s Pizza in Sunset Park, Brooklyn in 1968, and John Jr. grew up working at the shop. As customers and family members circulate through the shop, this film paints a portrait of a small, rapidly changing section of Brooklyn.
The Cancer Mirror
by Sophie Tuttleman (Cinema Studies)
After losing her father to Hodgkin’s lymphoma, filmmaker Sophie Tuttleman reflects on her mother’s battle with terminal brain cancer. The Cancer Mirror explores one daughter’s experience navigating her mother’s illness while coming to terms with the possibility of losing a second parent to cancer.
Ni Aquí, Ni Allá (Neither Here, Nor There)
by Gabriela Bortolamedi (Anthropology)
An undocumented young woman from Mexico navigates the challenges of college as her parents struggle to make ends meet and support her in the pursuit of her dreams.
A Correspondence
by Leili Sreberny-Mohammadi (Anthropology)
A Correspondence film brings to life the year-long correspondence between the filmmaker’s grandparents during the post-war years. Constructed through photographs, letters, telegrams and archival footage from the era, their story is one of love across distance and the search for a partner during troubled times.
Cast in India
by Natasha Suresh Raheja (Anthropology)
Iconic and ubiquitous, thousands of manhole covers dot the streets of New York City. Enlivening the everyday objects around us, this short film is a glimpse of the working lives of the men behind the manhole covers in New York City.
Living Quechua
by Christine Mladic Janney (Anthropology)
Elva Ambía’s first language is Quechua — a language indigenous to South America. But when she left her town in Peru as a young woman to find work in the United States, speaking Spanish and English became critical for her to survive. Now in her seventies, Elva decides to help cultivate a Quechua-speaking community in New York City. Living Quechua follows Elva through the challenges and successes of trying to keep Quechua alive.
The Regulars
by Zoe Graham (Cinema Studies)
The Manhattan Three Decker diner has been a favorite neighborhood eatery for sixty years. One of the few remaining diners in Greenpoint, every day it draws in old-timers, families and Polish locals, as well as a recent influx of hipsters. JoAnn, a middle-aged waitress who has lived in Greenpoint all her life, shares her stories about family and community as she keeps her regulars smiling, fed and in check!
Food for the Gods
by Scott Alves Barton (Food Studies)
Sacred leaves and food are essential to many Afro-Brazilian religious practices. This film observes rituals dedicated to the deity, Ossain, ‘King of the trees/sacred leaves.’ Ossain, a medicinal earth god, is one of the most significant deities in a pantheon of more than four hundred and fifty gods and goddesses.
Player 1, Player 2: Gamers in Love
by Lina M. De Jesús Golderos (Cinema Studies)
Couples grow closer to each other through their shared passion for video and computer games. Through humor and a competitive spirit, these gamer couples learn to navigate not only the games they play together, but also their relationships.
*a short intermission will follow the fifth film*