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Broadband Breakfast Live Online Event Series on ‘Tools for Broadband Deployment’ on Enhancing Rural America – BroadbandBreakfast.com
Posted: November 26, 2020 at 10:44 pm
Our Broadband Breakfast Live Online events take place every Wednesday at 12 Noon ET. You can find links to the posts for a particular event in the Tools for Broadband Deployment series on this post. You can also PARTICIPATE in the current Broadband Breakfast Live Online event. REGISTER HERE.
WASHINGTON, November 22, 2020 Broadband Breakfast detailed its updated agenda and timeline for its newest Broadband Breakfast Live Online webcast series, Tools for Broadband Deployment.
This series explores the way that geospatial data and asset management are shaping the future of rural network delivery and performance. In simple and concrete terms, the series will teach how market-leading fiber builders are using digital tools to map, analyze, manage and deploy new networks with a focus on rural success stories.
See At Launch of #BroadbandLive Series on Tools for Broadband Deployment, Panelists Tout Symmetrical Fiber, Broadband Breakfast, November 4, 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated just how important high-speed symmetrical broadband is to Americas education, telemedicine, economic prospects and civic connectedness, said Broadband Breakfast Editor and Publisher Drew Clark. Rural America needs better broadband now more than ever, and there continues to be a strong prospect for broadband as a component of infrastructure deployment in the next Congress.
This new Tools for Broadband Deployment series will probe what fiber-builders need to know to get their projects planned, prepped, deployed and built in record time, said Clark.Broadband Breakfast Live Onlines Tools for Broadband Deployment is sponsored by Render Networks and ADTRAN.
As with all Broadband Breakfast Live Online events, the FREE webcasts will take place at 12 Noon ET on Wednesday. The schedule and registration pages are itemized below.
Broadband Breakfast has been runningBroadband Breakfast Live Onlinesince March 13, 2020. The high-quality programming is available for FREE and takes place every Wednesday at 12 Noon ET.
Spurred on by the coronavirus virus, the Washington-based Broadband Breakfast media community launched the series to address the impact of broadband on solving the problems caused by the pandemic, including discussions about thedigital divide, teleworking, distance learning, telemedicine, and network capacity.
Broadband Breakfast has also hosted additional Broadband Breakfast Live Online events focusing onSection 230: Separating Fact From Fictionin sponsorship with the Computer & Communications Industry Association, a series of events onDigital Infrastructure Investment in sponsorship with SiFi Networks and UTOPIA Fiber, its Champions of Broadband series featuring conversations with individuals who have devoted their careers to better broadband, and A No-Nonsense Guide to 5G sponsored by Samsung Electronics America.
Events inTools for Broadband Deploymentseries, which is sponsored byADTRANandRender Networks, include:
Tools for Broadband Deployment is sponsored by:
Render Networks
ADTRAN
SUBSCRIBE to the Broadband Breakfast YouTubechannel. That way, you will be notified when events go live. Watch onYouTube,TwitterandFacebook.
See a complete list ofupcoming and past Broadband Breakfast Live Onlineevents.
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Wake Up With BWW 11/25: GRAMMY Nominations, THE PROM Posters, and More! – Broadway World
Posted: at 10:44 pm
Good morning, BroadwayWorld!
Yesterday, the nominations for the Grammy Awards were announced. The awards honored six musicals from Broadway, Off-Broadway, and the West End - 'Jagged Little Pill,' 'American Utopia,' 'Little Shop of Horrors,' 'The Prince of Egypt,' 'Soft Power,' and Amlie.'
'The Prom' is on its way to Netflix! Ryan Murphy's film adaptation of the beloved Broadway musical will bow on December 4th. Check out the character posters below!
Read more about these and other top stories below!
Want our morning reports delivered via email? Subscribe here!
1) VIDEO: Michael Ball & Alfie Boe Visit Backstage LIVE with Richard Ridge- Watch Now!by Backstage With Richard Ridge
Richard Ridge chats with Broadway and West End superstars Michael Ball and Alfie Boe, who just released a new album 'Together at Christmas,' available now!. (more...)
2) How to Watch the 2020 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade - Your All-Inclusive Guide!
While many prepare to celebrate Thanksgiving differently this year, so does The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, one of the nation's most cherished holiday traditions. . (more...)
3) Photo Flash: See Meryl Streep, Ariana DeBose, Nicole Kidman & More in THE PROM Character Posters
'The Prom' is on its way to Netflix! Ryan Murphy's film adaptation of the beloved Broadway musical will bow on December 4th. . (more...)
4) JAGGED LITTLE PILL, AMERICAN UTOPIA & More Nominated for Best Musical Theatre Album at the GRAMMY AWARDSby TV News Desk
The awards honored six musicals from Broadway, Off-Broadway, and the West End - 'Jagged Little Pill,' 'American Utopia,' 'Little Shop of Horrors,' 'The Prince of Egypt,' 'Soft Power,' and Amlie.' . (more...)
5) VIDEO: Kaitlyn Bristowe Dances to 'Sparkling Diamonds' from MOULIN ROUGE! on DANCING WITH THE STARSby Stage Tube
Kaitlyn Bristowe and Artem Chigvintsev dance Freestyle to "Sparkling Diamonds" From "Moulin Rouge" on the Dancing with the Stars Finale! . (more...)
Today's Call Sheet - Upcoming Online Events:
- Today at 2pm and 8pm, Seth Rudetsky will continue his Stars in the House series, featuring new Broadway stars performing and answering questions! Watch live on YouTube here!
- BroadwayWorld's Richard Ridge chats with Patti Murin & Colin Donnell on Backstage LIVE today at 2pm! Tune in here!
- The Met continues its Live in HD broadcast series with Thomas's Hamlet, tonight at 7:30pm. Watch here!
Learn about more online streaming events happening today, and in the future, on our streaming calendar at /streaming-schedule/.
What we're watching: Josh Groban Performs 'The World We Knew' on THE TONIGHT SHOW
Musical guest Josh Groban performs "The World We Knew (Over and Over)" for The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.
Social Butterfly: Watch Andrew Lloyd Webber and Carrie Hope Fletcher Have a CINDERELLA Bake-Off!
How would a bad Cinderella make a cupcake? Watch as star the future star of Cinderella, Carrie Hope Fletcher, and creator Andrew Lloyd Webber make some show-stopping cupcakes in honor of the Great British Bake Off. Who would you crown as Star Baker?
And a Happy Birthday shout-out to John Larroquette, who turns 73 today!
Larroquette last starred on Broadway in GORE VIDAL'S THE BEST MAN, and before that in HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING opposite Daniel Radcliffe, for which he won a 2011 Tony, Drama Desk and Theatre World Award for his portrayal of 'J.B. Biggley'. The actor also appeared off-Broadway in OLIVER PARKER! and made his stage musical debut in Dr. Seuss' HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS as 'Old Max' in Los Angeles in 2009. He is well known for his Emmy-winning role as 'Dan Fielding' in the TV series NIGHT COURT, 'Mike McBride' in Hallmark's MCBRIDE, 'John Hemingway' on THE JOHN LARROQUETTE SHOW, 'Lionel Tribbey' on THE WEST WING and 'Carl Sack' in BOSTON LEGAL.
See you bright and early tomorrow, BroadwayWorld!
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Smoller and Moodian: Four Takeaways From the 2020 General Election – Voice of OC
Posted: at 10:44 pm
By Fred Smoller and Michael A. Moodian | November 25, 2020
Here are four takeaways pertaining to Orange County from the historic 2020 general election.
Orange County is fortunate to have Neal Kelley as its registrar of voters. Several years ago, Kelley devised the vote center model, but because of resistance from the board of supervisors, he was not able to fully implement it until this year.
The registrar of voters mailed ballots to all voters about a month before the election. Voters could mail them back or drop them off in one of the countys 116 ballot drop boxes. Starting four days before Election Day, people could also vote at one of the 168 vote centers scattered throughout the county.
The vote-center model was an overwhelming success: Turnout shot up from an average of 73% of eligible voters for the four previous presidential elections to 87%one of the highest in county history, in the middle of a pandemic. Additionally, there was no systematic voter fraud. State turnout was 80%, and national turnout was 65%, the highest it has been since 1908. Increased mail voting and the higher turnout it engenders, ironically, is one of the good things that has come from the tragic coronavirus pandemic.
The vote-center model saves hundreds of thousands of dollars each voting cycle because there is no need to set up and hire staff for more than a thousand polling centers. Because the state adopted the OC vote-center model, taxpayers will save millions, perhaps billions of dollars, given how many elections are held in California.
Also, because the state allows mail ballots to be processed as they come in, we did not have the backlogs that caused reporting delays in places such as Pennsylvania.
Make it easier to vote and turnout surges. What a concept.
Vote by mail and early voting will be how Californiaand the nationwill vote. Our county, which has a national reputation for retrograde politics and one of the largest municipal bankruptcies in history, is the go-to county for early voting and vote by mail, the future of elections.
Many people have an emotional attachment to in-person voting. That the registrar of voters could make such a smooth transition to the vote-center model is impressive.
Hats off to Neal Kelley and his great staff. They and election workers across the nation are democracys heroes.
The results also show that Orange County, CA, is no longer the ultraconservative Red county that it once was. However, the county is not as liberal Blue as other coastal regions. Instead, Orange County is increasingly Purple, with more competitive races than in the pre-2016 election, when local Republicans were more worried about the Republican they would face in the primary than who their Democratic opponent would be in the Fall election. Politically, Orange County is looking more like the rest of the state and country.
Democrats have had lots to celebrate in the last few years. For the first time in 80 years, Orange County voted for the Democratic candidate for president in 2016 (Hillary Clinton). Then, in 2018, the Blue Wavewhich had been rising for yearswashed over the county. Democrats won all Orange County congressional seats that year. For the first time in modern history, Orange County Republicans had no representation in the House.
In 2019, Democrats overtook Republicans in party registration. The Democrats enjoy a nearly 40,000 registrant lead, which continues to grow as older white conservatives exit the electorate and younger voters and people of color replace them.
Democrats also had lots to crow about November 3 when Joe Biden beat Donald Trump by nearly twice as many percentage points (9%) as the amount Hillary Clinton beat Donald Trump by in 2016 (5%).
However, rumors of the OC GOPs demise are greatly exaggerated: Michelle Steel and Young Kim defeated Harley Rouda (48th) and Gil Cisneros (39th), respectively. Rouda and Cisneros were part of that 2018 congressional Blue Wave.
Steel survived a bumpy road en route to her victory. As chair of the board of supervisors, she failed to convey clear and consistent messaging about the importance of wearing masks, even as COVID-19 numbers in the county spiked. (Remember her infamous and bizarre species discrimination remarks?) She also drew controversy when a past speech she gave surfaced about pulling her daughter from college because her daughter believed in gay marriage. Even the conservative Orange County Register Editorial Board endorsed Rouda, the Democratic incumbent.
Despite this, Steel was a countywide voice calling for the reopening of the economy. Perhaps her messaging resonated with voters experiencing COVID-19 restriction fatigue. Her district, the 48th, is also the most Republican district in the county.
The GOPs incumbent assembly members also retained their seats, including Steven Choi, who received a stiff challenge from Irvine Councilmember Melissa Fox. Democratic incumbent Cottie Petrie-Norris was able to fend off Newport Beach Councilmember Diane Dixons challenge in the 74th assembly district.
However, local Democrats made gains in Californias upper house. UC Irvine law professor and political newbie Dave Min solidly beat state Senator and longtime Republican stalwart John Moorlach (SD 37).
The 29th Senate District seat has seesawed between the parties. Josh Newman (D) first defeated Ling Ling Chang (R) in 2016. Republicans saw his seat as vulnerable for a pickup, so they ran a successful recall against Newman for ostensibly voting for a gas tax and Chang won the Senate seat. Newman beat Chang again this year.
Increased partisan competition is also in officially nonpartisan races. Republican Andrew Do beat Sergio Contreras to retain his seat on the county board of supervisors in a district in which registration favors Democrats by nearly 16 points.
Orange Countys eight largest citiesAnaheim, Santa Ana, Irvine, Huntington Beach, Orange, Garden Grove, Fullerton and Costa Mesaaccount for more than half (54%) of the countys population. Orange, Anaheim and Garden Grove have Republican majorities. Santa Ana, Irvine, Fullerton and Costa Mesa have Democratic majorities. Huntington Beach is split among three Democrats, three Republicans, and an independent. One of those newly elected Republicans is former UFC light heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz, who channels Donald Trump and hopes to become mayor.
Irvine voters replaced multitermer Christina Shea (R) with Farrah Khan (D) for mayor. Khan crushed the developer-friendly and very Republican Shea by nearly 12 points.
Democrats enjoy a 15-point registration advantage over Republicans in Irvine. The citys Democratic majority on the council includes veteran Larry Agran, the Energizer Bunny of Orange County politics who takes a lickin and keeps on tickin.
Democrats also retained their majority in Costa Mesa, with its Democratic Mayor Katrina Foley earning a solid victory. Costa Mesas council shifted from being a majority Republican council to Democratic in 2018.
Jesse Unruhs dictum Money is the mothers milk of politics was on full display in Anaheim. Disney spent more than $1 million backing resort-friendly candidates who won their respective races. This means that, along with Mayor Harry Sidhu, councilmembers backed by the resort industry will have a voting majority on the council.
The Democratic party says that as a result of the 2020 elections there will be more Democrats on school boards than Republicans or independents. That bodes well for the future of the party: City councils and school boards can be springboards for higher office.
Orange County has the largest Vietnamese enclave in the world outside Vietnam, and the broader Asian American community is a potent force in OC politics. Our elected officials increasingly represent OCs ethnic and partisan diversity. According to the latest Census data, individuals classified as Asian compose 22% of the countys population, and OCs Asian American community continues to gain political clout. Republican candidates such as Phillip Chen, Steven Choi, Andrew Do, Young Kim, Janet Nguyen and Michelle Steel; Democratic candidates such as Tammy Kim and Dave Min; and others were victorious November 3.
Young Kim and Steel are two of three Korean American women elected to Congress this year. The national GOPs Growth and Opportunity Project in 2013 set forth a multimillion dollar effort to connect better with minority communities. An original report from this endeavor specifically stated The RNC must actively engage Asian and Pacific Islander American (APA) communities to help welcome in new members of our Party.
The outgoing U.S. presidents racially polarizing rhetoric hurt efforts for Republicans to connect with minority communities during the past few years, but if former RNC Chair Reince Priebus were to look into a crystal ball seven years ago, he would likely be impressed with the gains Republican Asian American candidates made in Orange County in 2020.
Earlier this year, Jeff LeTourneau, who was the OC Democratic party vice chair at the time, shared a Facebook post on his personal page that praised Communist revolutionary Ho Chi Minh. This outraged the countys Vietnamese American community (many of whom fled Communist Vietnam or are the ancestors of those who fled), drawing sharp rebukes from both parties and leading to LeTourneaus resignation. The 48th congressional district encompasses Little Saigon, and it is possible that this controversy made the difference in Roudas slim defeat (2%) to Steel.
California is a liberal state, but its residents voted down most of the progressive propositions on the ballot this year, perhaps as a result of the pandemic and the economic disruption it has caused.
OC voted with the state on all but three (14, 17, 19) of the 12 propositions. Again, once an outlier among coastal counties, Orange County, although still fiscally and socially conservative, is looking more and more like the rest of the Golden State.
Unlike the state, the fiscally conservative county said no to Proposition 14, which will provide $5 billion in bonds for stem cell research. State voters approved the sale of these bonds.
Also, OC voted narrowly (50.2%) against Proposition 17, which allows people who are on parole to vote. Fifty-eight percent of the state said yes, so it passed.
OC also parted company with the state on Proposition 19, which narrowly passed. It makes it easier for people older than 55 and others to take their property tax bills to other counties. OC voters turned it downperhaps because it removed Proposition 13 (what has been called the third rail of California politics) protections on inherited property. Folks who inherit property and who rent it out will pay property taxes based on the current market value of the property.
County voters sided with the state on other propositions. They rejected rent control, and they voted in favor of Uber and Lyft drivers remaining contract employees, in both cases by bigger margins than the state.
On social issues, OC voted down proposals that would have reinstated affirmative action and allowed 17 year olds to vote, again, by greater percentages than the state. They also voted down Proposition 20, which would have toughened parole eligibility, increasing the prison population, and increasing state and local correctional costs by millions per year. Fifty-eight percent of OC voters rejected this.
Orange County, which has an airport named after John Wayne and was once a thriving far right utopia, has changed dramatically. We are Purple County.
Fred Smoller is an associate professor of political science at Chapman University, where he has been on the faculty since 1983. He received his Ph.D. from Indiana University. His major areas of interest are American politics, with an emphasis on local government and public administration. Smoller directs Chapmans annual local government conference and is the author of the 2018 book From Kleptocracy to Democracy: How Citizens Can Take Back Local Government. Contact Smoller at[emailprotected].
Michael A. (Mike) Moodian teaches for Chapman Universitys leadership studies program and is a professor of social science at Chapman-affiliated Brandman University. He is the editor of the textbook Contemporary Leadership and Intercultural Competence (Sage, 2008). Moodian is the former chairman of the World Affairs Council of Orange County. His website iswww.moodian.com, and you can contact him at[emailprotected]or via Twitter (@mikemoodian).
Smoller and Moodian direct the Orange County Annual Survey. Read their latest report here.
Opinions expressed in community opinion pieces belong to the authors and not Voice of OC.
Voice of OC is interested in hearing different perspectives and voices. If you want to weigh in on this issue or others please email[emailprotected]
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Speculative Architecture: Where are the Contemporary Equivalents of the 60s and 70s Radical Visions? – ArchDaily
Posted: at 10:44 pm
Speculative Architecture: Where are the Contemporary Equivalents of the 60s and 70s Radical Visions?
Or
As the forces shaping our built environment have shifted, engaging technology, networks, and complex systems, architects need to envision more than the physical space but produce narratives on how to best operate within this new societal landscape. In this context, speculative architecture seems to have never been more critical; therefore this article takes a closer look at the mediums that currently question the existing conditions of the built environment and explore new architectural possibilities.
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Speculative architecture investigates scenarios for the future, creating narratives around how different forms of agency shape space and culture. It relates, overlaps with or is synonym to several other concepts from architecture fiction, design futures, to radical architecture. Nonetheless, it is a discursive activity rooted in critical thinking, questioning the practice and different aspects of society and the built environment. When looking at the works of practices such as OMA, MVRDV, Diller Scofidio+Renfro, FOA, it is clear that the influence of radical architecture and its capacity to imagine different futures can generate architectural innovation. However, there is a historical transformation of speculative architecture discourse, with sustainability and technology as the main subjects for contemporary radical explorations.
It seems that in the conditions of contemporary society, utopian, speculative thinking has become more formalized. Explaining what speculative architecture can contribute to the practice, architect Liam Young references how Archigram has been a trigger for a significant cultural shift in architecture thinking, all through ideas expressed in a thought-provoking manner. He also argues that the Masters program he initiated at Sci-Arc is a form of establishing speculative architecture as a genre and career path, which is telling for why modern-day equivalents of architecture collectives like Archigram or Superstudio have now moved to academia. Young stresses the invaluable role of storytelling, saying A speculative architect should know how to tell stories about cities and spaces to launch these narratives into the world with such force that they find traction. In Liam Youngs work, the narratives transcend architectural design thinking and work within the realm of fiction, engaging with frameworks that operate at a global scale.
Further proof of the inclusion of speculative thinking into the formal structures of academia is the New Normal Speculative Urbanism think tank at Strelka Institute. Led by design theorist and author Benjamin Bratton, the scope of the program is to advance architecture so that it operates within a new paradigm, in tune with the new context set in motion by global computation, data analytics and algorithmic governance.
The proliferation of biennales and exhibitions created an outlet for architectural speculations outside of the day to day practice. However, architecture competitions and calls to imagine the future gather a myriad of visions that often get lost in this abundance of designs and submissions. It is perhaps a question of finding the right medium to disseminate ideas to a broader audience, escaping the echo chamber of the architecture profession. What is radical in contemporary architecture, what are the conventions architects try to unseat in todays rapidly changing world? This is precisely the set of questions that 40 emerging and established architects were invited to answer within the What is Radical Today exhibition organized by the Architecture Studio of the Royal Academy of Arts last year. Looking at the works presented in the exhibition, radical architecture today seems to be about raising awareness on certain topics like climate change as well as a redefinition of the role of the architect, alongside the apparent interest in techno-utopia.
What can be seen across all these contemporary manifestations of speculative architecture is that more than their historical precedents, they come accompanied by an array of evidence, data, and additional findings to back-up and validate the proposed scenario, no matter how feasible. As Lola Sheppard from Lateral Office revealed, the speculative architecture process begins with expansive research with the intent of uncovering hidden truths[]and much of (our) initial research originates outside the field. The Canadian experimental practice operates at the intersection of architecture, landscape, and urbanism using design as a research vehicle to pose and respond to complex, urgent questions in the built environment. The projects and subjects the studio chooses to pursue outside of commissions entail a different kind of operation and have the purpose of expanding the agency of the profession, as well as the spectrum of issues architecture engages with. Sheppard, one of the studios founders, admits that decision-makers and society at large undervalue the transformative role of architecture and explains their work as a fearless questioning of the mechanisms of todays world.
Other architecture firms have further developed parallel research branches, to satisfy the need for investigating new architectural paradigms. Running alongside the conventional architecture practice, OMA has developed its own research unit, AMO, an outlet for advancing architectural knowledge and interacting with other disciplines. The think tank has also produced commercial work, but it has generally served as a means to define a personal agenda and pursue different interests independently. Capturing the array of forces shaping society and investigating responses to certain conditions, AMO develops what Koolhaas and Reinier de Graaf refer to as fieldwork, embodying the studios concern with facts, statistics, and data. The work of AMO usually culminates with a somewhat ironic visual and textual output, as the office is recognized for producing strong narratives.
As recent events have underlined the need for architecture to expand its agency, it is worth looking at speculative architecture as a means to embrace broader issues. The proposals that flirt with the utopian traditions of the past century, drawing from strong speculative resources represent a step towards reinventing urban environments and everyday life.
This article is part of the ArchDaily Topic: Young Practices. Every month we explore a topic in-depth through articles, interviews, news, and projects. Learn more about our monthly topics. As always, at ArchDaily we welcome the contributions of our readers; if you want to submit an article or project, contact us.
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New Movies to Watch This Week: Honest Thief, American Utopia and Venice Fest Winner Martin Eden – Variety
Posted: October 20, 2020 at 6:40 pm
The sheer range of genres represented by this weeks new releases from Liam Neeson thriller Honest Thief to romantic weepie 2 Hearts suggests that distributors of all kinds are doing their best to give audiences the kind of selection they enjoyed before the lockdown.
Well, nearly all kinds of distributors.
The major studios are still playing it safe and holding their tentpoles for a time when they can pack the megaplexes, although Paramount has stepped in with a fun post-apocalyptic adventure, Love and Monsters, which goes straight to PVOD, and Sony picked up an unconventional neo-noir called The Kid Detective out of the Toronto Film Festival that sneaks into theaters today. Pre-Halloween horror offerings continue, asAmazon Prime releases two more titles in its Welcome to the Blumhouse series: Evil Eye and Nocturne.
Art-houses land a major title in 2019 Venice Film Festival winner Martin Eden, an Italian adaptation of the Jack London novel. Comedy fans can laugh along with Jimmy O. Yang in The Opening Act, in which the Silicon Valley star plays a standup struggling to find his feet. And Edward James Olmos makes his directorial debut an ambitious if wildly overreaching satire about oil-company malfeasance with The Devil Has a Name.
As much as some audiences miss the cinema experience, the feelings even more acute for live theater. Broadway has gone entirely dark during the shutdown, so its a special kind of thrill that this week brings filmed versions of two hit shows. Debuting on HBO Saturday night, Spike Lee directs David Byrnes American Utopia, an ebullient, immersive concert in the vein of the Talking Heads Stop Making Sense, while A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood helmer Marielle Heller brings Heidi Schrecks Tony-nominated What the Constitution Means to Me to Amazon.
The latter seems perfectly timed to the looming election, which continues to motivate various doc makers to weigh in with politically engaged offerings such as The Atlantics White Noise, which profiles three alt-right influencers, and White Riot, about Eric Claptons late-70s Rock Against Racism initiative, a music-driven response to National Front marches and anti-immigrant sentiment. Its a concert movie with conscience. Likewise, musical bio Harry Chapin: When In Doubt celebrates the late folk singers career, as well as his dedication to ending world hunger.
On the less serious musical front, Netflix offers some cotton-candy diversion in the form of K-pop doc Blackpink: Light Up the Sky, while Disney Plus delivers Clouds, an emotional tribute to the late Zach Sobiech, adapted from his moms memoir, Fly a Little Higher: How God Answered a Moms Small Prayer in a Big Way.
Heres a rundown of those films opening this week that Variety has covered, along with links to where you can watch them. Find more movies and TV shows to stream here.
The Kid DetectiveCourtesy of Stage 6 Films
2 Hearts (Lance Hool)Distributor: Freestyle ReleasingWhere to Find It: In theaters now2 Hearst is a softheaded piece of morbid romantic treacle two parallel cloying love stories for the price of one. But it all builds to them merging together, and the film tips its hand within 10 minutes that its spiritual linchpin will be a cataclysmic medical trauma. It takes no great deduction to look at these couples, put two and two together, and realize that what were watching is going to turn into a faith-based organ-transplant movie. 2 Hearts is based on a true story, but what its selling is sanctimonious charity disaster porn. The big message is: Even the most devastating trauma is all part of Gods plan. Owen GleibermanRead the full review
Honest Thief (Mark Williams)Distributor: Open RoadWhere to Find It: In theaters nowDirected by the co-creator of Ozark, this is a serviceably energized and routine action crime movie, with a few slammin fistfights and gun battles, and it proves once again that Liam Neeson is an actor who will take a paycheck gig without treating it like one. The idea of a super-criminal turning himself in is intriguing, but once the plan gets blown apart, Honest Thief becomes a glumly standard piece of B-movie Tinkertoy, with no surprises. And yet the corniest thing about it Toms drive to save his love for Annie (Kate Walsh) is also the most convincing. Owen GleibermanRead the full review
The Kid Detective (Evan Morgan)Distributor: Sony Pictures, Stage 6 FilmsWhere to Find It: In theaters nowDont be fooled by the cheery ring of the Disney-esque title The Kid Detective. Splendidly summoning film noir-esque vibes, classically ghastly bad guys and femme fatale types out of a whimsical small town full of grotesque mysteries, this bold and often surprisingly humorous film think of it as a more mainstream version of Rian Johnsons Brick grapples with themes related to murder and abuse, as well as the existential dread of its central recluse, who fell grossly short of the promising life he thought he was meant to have in his younger days. Tomris LafflyRead the full review
Martin EdenVenice Film Festival
The Devil Has a Name (Edward James Olmos)Distributor: Momentum PicturesWhere to Find It: In theaters, on demand and through digital providersRob McEveety overwrites the heck out of this dark comedy, cramming it full of fancy language and over-the-top caricatures, like Shore Oil regional director Gigi Cutler (a wicked Kate Bosworth), who saunters into a board room, slams back a few whiskey shots and explains, in a cockeyed Texas drawl, There are 53 different types of nuts in the world. He was one of them. Shes referring to Fred Stern, whose almond crop has been compromised by radioactive microparticles, but a line like that tells you weve left planet earth and are operating in the carnival-like realm of the imagination. Peter DebrugeRead the full review
Love and Monsters (Michael Matthews)Distributor: Paramount PicturesWhere to Find It: Available for $19.99 via premium video on demandIts the end of the world as Joel (Dylan OBrien) knows it and, despite living in an underground bunker for seven years to evade the gigantic mutant reptiles, insects and amphibians that now roam the earths surface, he feels surprisingly fine. Michael Matthews cheerfully PG-13 adventure comedy quickly dispenses with any notional topicality threatened by its premise, but thats all for the best. It leaves Love and Monsters free to get on with its splattery creature effects and silly but satisfying heros journey entirely unencumbered by importance. Jessica KiangRead the full review
Martin Eden (Pietro Marcello)Distributor: Kino LorberWhere to Find It: In select theaters and virtual cinemasThough best known in the States for his wilderness novels, Jack Londons key novel is Martin Eden, a semi-autobiographical work tracing his background from unschooled sailor to celebrated writer, encompassing all his class anger, political musings and intense dissatisfaction with the life he created. Now Marcello (The Mouth of the Wolf) has made it the subject of his sprawling first full-fiction film, sticking close to the narrative while setting it in an undefinable 20th-century moment to make his own statements about the creative process, class hypocrisy and the disappointment of most political theories. Jay WeissbergRead the full review
The Opening Act (Steve Byrne)Distributor: RJLEWhere to Find It: In theaters, on demand and through digital providersImagine, for a moment, that a stand-up comic is just like a superhero. On stage, hes a master of the universe, armored and impervious, slinging jokes like lightning bolts. He defeats all adversaries, from hecklers to the potential indifference of the audience; laughter, of course, is his way of killing. If thats what a stand-up comic is, then The Opening Act, Steve Byrnes wryly likable shoestring indie comedy about a young man trying to make it in the world of stand-up, might be described as a stand-up-comedy origin story. Owen GleibermanRead the full review
S---house (Cooper Raiff)Distributor: IFC FilmsWhere to Find It: In select theaters and on demandRaiff plays Alex Malmquist, an college freshman whos been having trouble adjusting to the idea of being a self-sufficient 19-year-old so far away from his family back in Texas. Alex cant stand his roommate (Logan Miller), isnt serious about classes and has no idea where to find the parties or the girls, for that matter. Then he meets Maggie (Dylan Gelula), a sophomore with a much more casual idea of hooking up. Cooper brings enough honesty to this different-pages dynamic she rushes into sex, hes looking for romance that one can easily imagine him going on to write projects that connect with his generation. Peter DebrugeRead the full review
White Noise (Daniel Lombroso)Distributor: The AtlanticWhere to Find It: Available via Laemmle virtual cinemas, expanding to VOD on Oct. 23The subject of White Noise is racist white nationalism and the people in America who believe in it, but the characters at the films center arent neo-Klan knuckle-draggers from the heartland. Theyre hip, attractive, relatively young social-media-friendly self-promoters who have turned their hate into a brand. They are also, as the film reveals, deeply shallow and self-deluded hypocrites. In addition to Richard Spencer, this lively and disturbing documentary portrait also follows the activities of Lauren Southern and Mike Cernovich. Owen GleibermanRead the full review
What the Constitution Means to MeJoan Marcus
What the Constitution Means to Me (Marielle Heller)Where to Find It: Amazon PrimeIn high school, 15-year-old Heidi Schreck won enough prize money giving Constitution-themed speeches at American Legion halls to pay her way through college. A quarter-century later, Schreck spun her memories of all that youthful idealism into a hit Broadway show. No doubt, in planning to release a filmed version of her show on Oct. 16, she hoped that her words might impact the 2020 presidential election. What Schreck couldnt have imagined is that the same week the special dropped on Amazon Prime, Senate lawmakers would be posing that very question to Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. Peter DebrugeRead the full review
Evil Eye (Elan Dassani, Rajeev Dassani)Where to Find It: Amazon Prime
Nocturne (Zu Quirke)Where to Find It: Amazon Prime
Clouds (Justin Baldoni)Where to Find It: Disney PlusAs likably played by actor-musician Fin Argus in his first credited feature role, Zach Sobiech is stoic but not dour, headlining this sweet, smoothed-over biopic of the teenage singer-songwriter, who died aged 18 of cancer, shortly after scoring the viral folk-pop hit that lends the film its title. Christianity is a neutral background presence in Baldonis and screenwriter Kara Holdens interpretation of the Sobiechs story. Instead, Clouds pushes a less specific, more inclusive faith in the human spirit not to achieve miracles but, in the words of its hero, to make people happy, as much as I can for as long as I can. Guy LodgeRead the full review
David Byrnes American UtopiaDavid Lee/HBO
David Byrnes American Utopia (Spike Lee) CRITICS PICKWhere to Find It: Available Oct. 17 on HBO MaxByrnes spiky and exuberant 21st-century rock-concert-on-Broadway jamboree consisted of the former Talking Head and 11 fellow musicians, all barefoot and dressed in silver-blue suits, dancing and marching and prancing and bopping around a bare stage as they performed 21 songs. Any screen version of a Broadway show will take you closer to the action than most theater seats do. But in American Utopia, Lee turns the stage into a diorama he keeps breaking apart and pushing back together. Its just us, and you, says Byrne, speaking to the audience, and the movie nudges that you into a place beyond the fourth wall. Owen GleibermanRead the full review
A Babysitters Guide to Monster HuntingCourtesy of Netflix
A Babysitters Guide to Monster Hunting(Rachel Talalay)Where to Find It: NetflixIts either an in-joke or an irony that the not-terribly-terrifying villain is named The Grand Guignol, for this perky, clean-cut kiddie-horror steers as far clear as possible of the macabre gore that moniker implies. In this tale of an underground babysitter syndicate dedicated to fighting the things that go bump in the night, even the monsters are cute. Yet cuteness supplants genuine charm in this Netflix-released adaptation of screenwriter Joe Ballarinis YA book series, which may adequately distract very young ones on a socially distanced Halloween night, but offers ample room for improvement in the franchise it seeks to start. Guy LodgeRead the full review
Blackpink: Light Up the Sky(Caroline Suh)Where to Find It: Netflix
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A new urban utopia? How the pandemic is shaping the future of cities. – Fast Company
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The COVID-19 pandemic has upended American cities. Downtowns have become ghost towns thanks to new work-from-anywhere policies. Food delivery and e-commerce are booming (though supply chains are being pushed to the max). Now that their residents no longer need to commute to work or to the mall, how are cities reinventing themselves? Some have taken this opportunity to close streets to car traffic in favor of outdoor dining, recreation, and retaila new urban model hailed as the 15-minute city. Others are exploring how to build much-needed new housing through relaxed zoning and new technology, and still others are developing plans to convert office towers into a new generation of live-work-play buildings. Cities have survived all manner of unexpected challenges, only to rise again using a mix of creativity and innovation. What will cities of the future look like? Fast Company and Honeywell took a fascinating look at the new urban landscape at the 2020 Fast Company Innovation Festival.
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Fresh Air Weekend: 2 Broadway Stars Grapple With COVID And ALS; ‘Nice White Parents’ – NPR
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HBO's David Byrne's American Utopia captures a live performance of Byrne's acclaimed Broadway show. David Lee/HBO hide caption
HBO's David Byrne's American Utopia captures a live performance of Byrne's acclaimed Broadway show.
Fresh Air Weekend highlights some of the best interviews and reviews from past weeks, and new program elements specially paced for weekends. Our weekend show emphasizes interviews with writers, filmmakers, actors and musicians, and often includes excerpts from live in-studio concerts. This week:
2 Broadway Stars Grapple With COVID And ALS: 'We're Adapting To A New Reality': Married Broadway stars Danny Burstein and Rebecca Luker both contracted COVID in the spring. Burstein was hospitalized. Luker's case was less severe, but it came soon after she was diagnosed with ALS.
David Byrne And Spike Lee Conjure Up A Joyous Vision Of 'American Utopia': Lee's new film for HBO captures a live performance of Byrne's acclaimed Broadway show. David Byrne's American Utopia is a rousing blend of song, dance and revival meeting.
Podcast Examines How 'Nice White Parents' Become Obstacles In Integrated Schools: Serial reporter Chana Joffe-Walt says progressive white parents may say they want their kids to go to diverse schools but the reality tells a different story. Her new podcast is Nice White Parents.
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2 Broadway Stars Grapple With COVID And ALS: 'We're Adapting To A New Reality'
David Byrne And Spike Lee Conjure Up A Joyous Vision Of 'American Utopia'
Podcast Examines How 'Nice White Parents' Become Obstacles In Integrated Schools
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Fresh Air Weekend: 2 Broadway Stars Grapple With COVID And ALS; 'Nice White Parents' - NPR
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The West Wing and David Byrne Stage America – The New York Times
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The episode Hartsfields Landing, from the third season of The West Wing, first aired in February 2002, which was approximately 200 years ago.
Donald Trump was still two years from joining The West Wing on NBC with The Apprentice his main TV gig at the time was co-starring with Grimace in a commercial for the McDonalds Big N Tasty burger. Mark Zuckerberg had yet to start classes at Harvard. Elections played out at the relatively staid tempo of network TV news. And an idealistic network drama about politics could still be a Top 10 show, averaging over 17 million viewers an episode.
On Thursday, HBO Max premiered a stage performance of Hartsfields Landing. Its ostensible purpose was to benefit the nonprofit group When We All Vote. But it couldnt help seeming like the prying open of a time capsule.
Its not alone, however, in trying to fit in one last civics lesson before the polls close. It joins several stage works arriving on TV a hip-hop musical, a furious feminist read of the constitution, a quirkily political theatrical concert that are framing the anxieties of 2020 within the pop culture of the last two decades.
As TV series go, The West Wing was a relative no-brainer to adapt for the stage. Its creator, Aaron Sorkin (To Kill a Mockingbird), always sounds as if he were writing for the theater even when he isnt.
Recorded under coronavirus protocols at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles, the performance instantly recalls why the series was such an intoxicating entertainment and seductive ideal. The original cast members are grayer, but their interactions still sparkle. (Sterling K. Brown fills in for John Spencer, who died in 2005.)
But the format also underscores the distance between then and now, as if the politics and cultural tempo of the early aughts themselves were now period-piece revival material.
Premiering in 1999 after a run of relative 20th-century institutional stability, The West Wing believed that the system worked, even if the people in it could always be better.
President Josiah Bartlet (Martin Sheen) was an aspirational Gallant to realitys Goofuses. In the late Bill Clinton era, he was a fantasy of morally upstanding, unapologetic liberalism. In the Bush years, he was a fantasy of a proudly intellectual president. Today well, take your pick. Wanting better leaders never goes out of style, but the seriess reverent institutionalism now seems much more remote.
Hartsfields Landing takes its title from a subplot in which the aide Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford) frets over the results from the first small town to vote in the New Hampshire primary. Its an odd story because Bartlet is running for renomination essentially unopposed. But for a show enamored with retail democracy in all its absurdity, its too much to resist. (One does wonder, if the episode had been written in 2020, whether someone might at least note the inordinate power that the quaint tradition gives a handful of white voters.)
This affection for civic ritual, in norms-trampling Trumpian times, now seems star-crossed and nave. As the actor Samuel L. Jackson put it during an act break, Our politics today are a far cry from the romantic notion of The West Wing. Even the central metaphor of the episode, Bartlets playing his advisers at chess, seems sadly nostalgic in an era dominated by players who prefer to kick over the board.
The West Wing was always a palliative fantasy. The election arc eventually led Bartlet to run against the Republican governor of Florida, Robert Ritchie (James Brolin), a proud anti-intellectual who shared political DNA with George W. Bush. Bartlet decided to own his erudition rather than run from it, sarcastically shredded his opponent in a debate and won re-election in a landslide.
Two years later, George W. Bush became what is now the only Republican since his father won in 1988 to earn a majority of the popular vote.
Well, fantasy is part of what TV is for. And fantasy can be a strong motivator: Arguably, part of what fuels Joseph R. Biden Jr.s campaign against the Twitter president today is the promise, however improbable, of returning to a time of relative comity, reverence and quiet.
But the show fed a lot of fantasies that have smashed hard and ugly against reality. The West Wing was smitten with the power of words. But in the real world, there is no speech so masterly that it stuns your rivals into awed silence, no debate argument so irrefutable that your opponent cant just bark Wrong! over it a hundred times.
Its nice to think that going high always beats going low, but we know now what The West Wing learned as it steadily lost audience to the likes of The Bachelor. What works in scripted drama does not necessarily fly in a reality-TV world.
Connoisseurs of a different form of political idealism got it in July when Disney+ streamed the filmed performance of Lin-Manuel Mirandas founding-father musical, Hamilton.
If The West Wing was the progressive pop-cultural fantasy of the Clinton-Bush years, Hamilton was its Obama-era answer. (Miranda previewed a snippet at a White House poetry jam in 2009.) Its hip-hop score and its pointed casting of actors of color to play white dollar-bill figures embodied an America resolved to expand its political and cultural range of portraiture.
At its Broadway premiere in 2015, and through the campaign of 2016, there was a kind of triumphalism in the discourse around it. Americas first Black president was finishing his second term; his female former secretary of state was, surely, about to replace him. Inclusion had won.
There were still people outside the Hamilton spirit, of course. But a candidate who ran on building walls and demonizing immigrants they get the job done! would surely fail. The day after the Access Hollywood tape came out in October 2016, Miranda hosted Saturday Night Live and sang Donald Trumps epitaph with his own lyrics: Hes never gonna be president now.
But hubris was never really the spirit of Mirandas musical. Its music and casting spoke backward in time to a country that talked the talk of liberty and equality but would take centuries to attempt to walk the walk. It was a story of leaders compromising their ideals, of setback and backlash; of planting seeds of hope that you would never live to see grow.
It took the shock of 2016 the world turned upside down to bring that aspect of Hamilton to the fore. The film premiered on Disney+ the same Independence Day weekend that the president gave a vicious speech at Mount Rushmore that accused antiracism protesters of attacking American history itself.
Watched in that moment, the musical suddenly felt more defiant, combative and urgent. (As it did after the 2016 election, when the cast called out the Vice President-Elect, Mike Pence, in the audience of a performance.)
It was engaged in an argument, not in the past but right now, over whose faces get carved into stone and whom history belongs to. Fittingly for a show about underdogs, it was playing from the standpoint not of the regime but of the rebellion.
The Hamilton that came to Disney+ was the same one that played on Broadway in June 2016, when the film was shot. And it was entirely different. Not a single line had changed. Reality provided the rewrite.
A celebration and a requiem
Two more politically minded stage shows airing on TV this weekend originated during the current administration, yet they already find themselves reframed by current events. Amazons What the Constitution Means to Me, Heidi Schrecks fact-filled feminist lament of how womens bodies have been left out of this document from the beginning, is more plangent and vivid after the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who has an audio cameo in the show.
One of the seasons most stirring statements comes from a concert movie. David Byrnes American Utopia, on HBO and HBO Max starting Saturday, looks superficially like a sequel to the art-pop of Stop Making Sense, the Jonathan Demme film of Byrnes heyday with Talking Heads. (Even the natty gray outfits he and his band wear recall his absurdist 80s big suit.) And the film, directed by Spike Lee, is kinetic, visually playful fun.
But a message slips in elliptically, the only way Byrne knows how to travel. He begins alone onstage, serenading a model of a brain. Were born, he says, with more neural connections than we end life with. Does that make us dumber as we age, or better?
Utopia dances to the answer by skipping through Byrnes catalog, synthesizing a worldview. Hes always had a fascination with homes and houses (burning down the, this is not my beautiful, etc.). Now he builds those blocks into an argument: that a full life means starting from your brain your first, hermetic home and then building connections with other people and inviting them in.
This might be a cornball message coming from someone other Byrne, who, as he describes himself, has always been skittish of guests and gregariousness. (That big suit looked like a kind of armor.) Nor has he been politically didactic, preferring the approach of Dadaists like Hugo Ball, who provided the lyrics for I Zimbra, using nonsense to make sense of a world that didnt make sense.
But time changes everyone. As American Utopia goes on, its politics become more explicit, addressing voting and immigration, building to Janelle Mones racial-justice anthem Hell You Talmbout which, Byrne adds self-consciously, he called Mone about to make sure she was OK with having a white man of a certain age perform it.
Finally, Byrne and company bike the streets of Manhattan to the tune of his Everybodys Coming to My House. It feels like a light ending until you recall that the stage production of Utopia closed in February, just before the pandemic shut down Broadway and nobody was coming to anybodys house anymore.
Viewed today, the shows quirky communitarianism its idea of America as a polymorphous, all-welcoming dance party feels like both celebration and requiem for the irreplaceable delight dancing together on a stage. (In all these staged-film productions, the shut-ins medium of TV is filling in now for the community of Broadway and the multiplex.)
But it also plays like a call to action. Weve had to close up our houses for now. We might as well take advantage of the pause, American Utopia says, to think about what kind of home we want to live in once we get to open up again.
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Sbastien Cuvelier’s photos contrast utopia and reality in Iran – Creative Review
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Nearly 50 years ago, Sbastien Cuveliers late uncle travelled from Namur in Belgium to visit Persepolis, located in Iran a journey he documented through diary entries and photographs he gathered while there. Inspired by his uncles manuscript, Luxembourg-based Cuvelier traced his steps by making the journey all these years later, and discovered a stark contrast between the pre-revolution Iran his uncle detailed, and the present-day Iran that he himself encountered.
Cuvelier likewise documented his time in Iran, and the resulting photographs have been incorporated into a new photo book, Paradise City, published by Gost Books. The series taps into the resistance, particularly among young people, to restrictions in Iran that range from social media censorship to surveillance of artistic expression.
Iran as described in my uncles journal sounded like a country in the midst of change, with the economy picking up and young people influenced by Western fashion, Cuvelier tells us. My uncle was a history buff, so the journal he wrote also had a lot of historical references to the Persian Empire and the remains from that era that were visible then (and still are). The photographs he took focused mostly either on those historical elements or on the various landscapes he and his friends encountered during their journey to Persepolis.
These historical connections are brought to the fore by the book design: extracts from his uncles journal are used as a base layer to illustrate how this quest for an elusive paradise is a universal, timeless pursuit. Even though my uncles journal is written in French and will not be understood by everyone, I felt that its sheer visual value was interesting in how I wanted the images to be seen, the photographer explains.
Cuvelier created the photo series across three trips to Iran, where he couch-surfed his way through the country. He mostly stayed with young Iranians who responded positively to the idea behind the trip and his undertaking of the project.
Overall, these many encounters helped me define the scope of the project, as it was obvious that most of the youth I met felt that they could not accomplish their dreams in a restricted country like Iran, he explains. He aimed to reflect this in the photographs through particular colours, symbols and metaphors as a way of showing glimpses of what goes through their minds.
The series contains somewhat fantastical elements as a way of channelling nostalgic, romanticised, and even utopian perspectives. Some images use subtle tools like framing and lighting to hint at the tension between could-be paradise and present-day reality. Others are more obviously dreamlike, such as an enclosed outdoor space bathed in dramatic pink, which nods to the old Persian roots of word paradise denoting a walled garden.
Scattered throughout Paradise City are floral references, which Cuvelier feels evoke the garden connotations tied to the idea of paradise, while also reinforcing a sense of romanticism. Yet the flowers also feature organically, since they are simply what he encountered while in Iran, whether in peoples clothes or in the sights he saw. I was fascinated by how much flowers were part of the landscape, either as real flowers or representations, be it drawings on walls, carpets, peoples clothes, headscarves, he says. Most graffiti I saw had the same recurring themes, mostly revolving around war martyrs and floral motifs.
Based on his visits, Cuvelier describes Iran as a country where history is full of nostalgia, people are deeply romantic and flowers are everywhere. Contemporary Iranian youth have also developed their own notions of paradise, and for most it is anchored in Persia. Its existence is linked to hope, the quest for change, the desire for a new beginning. These feelings bring with them an ever-present hint of nostalgia, seen in family tales, photo albums or through the fading memory of distant cousins who emigrated to find their own paradise city.
Paradise City by Sbastien Cuvelier is published by Gost Books; gostbooks.com
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[Herald Design Forum 2020] Finding balanced symbiosis by connecting art, natural sciences – The Korea Herald
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Tomas Saraceno
Sometimes you have nightmares and sometimes you have dreams. It means you can think about dystopia and utopia as a nightmare or a dream, he said in an interview.
Saraceno, who will join the Herald Design Forum 2020 slated for Thursday as one of keynote speakers, said that utopia, though as changeable as a dream, is something that is supposed to be better.
Saraceno said he wants to dream with other people because he believes people need to better understand habitat and non-human life in order to fully grasp and think about a whole utopia.
When we think about the utopia of a certain society, or for humans, it might really be a dystopia for others, he said.
Saraceno seeks a way to embrace a larger way of thinking so that people do not destroy the utopia of other species as a means to achieve a certain utopia for human society. For instance, he tries to stay aware of the other forms of life he shares his house with, such as bacteria and spiders.
Saraceno studied and majored in architecture at Stadel Institute of Art in Frankfurt, Germany. He freely explores in the fields of art, architecture and natural sciences to create artwork depicting the idea of utopia. He dreams of a utopia that encompasses the well-being of various species, including the humans, where they can coexist and prosper.
Tomas Saraceno, Our Interplanetary Bodies (2017) on display at the Asia Culture Center in South Korea (Herald DB)
He shone light on spiders which reacted to the frequencies. The webs they made while doing this caught dust particles, which turned those webs into three-dimensional sculptures.
These sculptures were then put on display. Saraceno incorporates the works of other organisms as a part of art and thus captures the value of his interpretation of symbiosis through these projects.
He emphasized the importance of solidarity during the pandemic period. When you are in an airplane flying and there is a message that tells you, in the case of an accident, first help yourself and put the mask on you and then help the kid next to you, he said, connecting this idea with dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. But for me its always first I need to help the person who is next to me because it is my responsibility. But if you cannot breathe, you will not be able to help the other. Saraceno believes that this view can help us survive together through the pandemic era.
The Aerocene Pacha project expresses his value of solidarity. It was launched in January this year and took place in a salt desert near Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Twenty-two contemporary artists and curators from five different cities around the world -- London, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Seoul and New York -- came together to express the philosophy that BTS pursues. The philosophy revolves around diversity, connection and communication through modern art.
Saraceno portrayed Aerocene Pacha in the form of giant hot-air balloons that functioned solely on solar and wind power, without the use of any fossil fuel or helium gas.
The name of the project Aerocene Pacha is derived from the concept Pacha that comes from the worldview of the Inca Empire. This concept combines the idea of time and space from the depths of the earth and to the furthest reaches of the universe. Saraceno shared the message that life on earth not only consists of humans but it also interacts and connects with the universe. The flight records of Aerocene Pacha was livestreamed for a month via satellite broadcasting.
On the Connect, BTS project, Saraceno said, Connect, BTS allowed me to connect with other people. Im happy to connect and extend and to have more friends around the world, which is very simple but at the same time its very important.
He found it fascinating that such a young generation could be so politically engaged and said that it provided an opportunity to break out of comfort zones and provide to those who would have never been to a museum to see artworks by displaying projects in fields rather than inside museums.
Saraceno said that If we manage to have 7 billion people, each of us, to have one friend more, and each of us are connected to a circle of friends, circle of animals, circle of plants and if each of us extend and connect a little bit more we can better tackle the challenges such as the climate change and global warming through what he calls a higher connection for the world.
Tomas Saraceno, On the Disappearance of Clouds (2019) shown at the Venice Biennale (Herald DB)
By Song Donna (donnadsong@heraldcorp.com)
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