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Tag Archives: multimedia monday

multimedia monday: earth days

24 Monday May 2010

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holidays, multimedia monday, politics, thesis

Back in April, Hanna was kind enough to set up the mystical VCR to tape the PBS American Experience documentary on Earth Day, eponymously titled Earth Days so I could watch it as sociopolitical background for my thesis.

You can watch the entire film online at the American Experience website, where they have also made a full transcript available.

I thought they did a particularly thoughtful job selecting the requisite talking heads, choosing a wide range of folks involve in environmental policy and activism from the 1960s through to the present. What I found most fascinating was the way in which environmental activism in the early days (prior to the Reagan administration) was not a strictly partisan issue — controversial in some aspects, yes, but not seen as a Democratic cause (or a Republican cause for that matter).

The most striking part of the film, for me, was the section in which they discuss the commitment brought by the Carter administration to environmental sustainability in the late Seventies, galvanized in part by stagflation and the fuel crisis — and then the Reagan administration’s reversal of all, and more, of the previous decade’s worth of progress toward a more environmentally-friendly America.

Denis Hayes, The Organizer: [Carter] had solar water heaters installed on the White House roof.

President Jimmy Carter (archival): A generation from now, this solar water heater can either be a curiosity, a museum piece, an example of a road not taken, or it can be a small part of one of the greatest ventures ever undertaken by the American people.

Denis Hayes, The Organizer: He gave me the best job of my life running the Federal Solar Energy Research Institute and a budget that increased and doubled every year that I was there and the opportunity to really do some important things.

President Jimmy Carter (archival): The energy crisis has not yet overwhelmed us, but it will if we do not act quickly. It is a problem that we will not be able to solve in the next few years; it is likely to get progressively worse through the rest of this century. We must not be selfish or timid, if we hope to have a decent world for our children and our grandchildren. We simply must balance our demand for energy with our rapidly shrinking resources. By acting now, we can control our future rather than letting the future control us.

Hunter Lovins, The Motivator: Carter, I think, made a fundamental mistake, which was he saw the transition as one of constraint and of one of privation, and of giving up, and of lowered lifestyle.

Denis Hayes, The Organizer: In a period from 1973 to 1980 the price of oil went from $4 a barrel to $30 a barrel. And that clearly was enough to cause the public to support things like fuel efficiency standards for automobiles and other things that would have been inconceivable unless you’d had a crisis.

* * *

Ronald Reagan, Presidential Candidate (archival): They tell us we must learn to live with less, and teach our children that their lives will be less full and prosperous than ours have been, that the America of the coming years will be a place where because of our past excesses, it will be impossible to dream and make those dreams come true. I don’t believe that and I don’t believe you do either. That’s why I am seeking the Presidency. I cannot and will not stand by and see this great country destroy itself. Our leaders attempt to blame their failures on circumstances beyond their control, on false estimates by unknown, unidentifiable experts, who rewrite modern history in an attempt to convince us our high standard of living, a result of thrift and hard work, is somehow selfish extravagance, which we must renounce as we join in sharing scarcity.

* * *

Denis Hayes, The Organizer: For reasons that I just cannot even begin to comprehend, Reagan did his very best to completely shut down the renewable energy effort. In the instance of the institute that I led, he reduced our budget by more the 80%, fired half of the staff and fired all of our contractors, two of whom subsequently went on to win Nobel Prizes. It was just devastating, but for one year we did have within an element a very good energy policy.

Ronald Reagan, Public Service Announcement (archival): It’s morning again in America. And under the leadership of President Reagan our country is prouder, and stronger and better. Why would we ever want to return to the way we were?

Reporter (voice over, archival): The Reagan White House has finally dismantled the last vestiges of the Carter Administration. Workmen have now taken down the solar water heating system installed on the White House roof in 1979.

I highly recommend watching some or all of Earth Days, since (at least for those of us who barely remember the Reagan era, let alone the 1960s and 70s) it gives us a chance to re-imagine the public discourse surrounding environmental issues in ways that don’t lock us into partisan divides — gives us a chance to imagine a time in the not so distant past (and hopefully in the not so distant future) when there was more emphasis on the fact that we’re all in this together, as human beings on a living planet, and partisanship aside sustainability is really the only way forward if care to have a “forward” to be moving toward at all.

multimedia monday: clean living

10 Monday May 2010

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education, gender and sexuality, multimedia monday, web video

Two videos for you this morning that attempt to teach young people just how narrow a road they must walk in order to survive into adulthood.

First, a health education film for 1950s college students. While it ostensibly targets both men and women, notice how much more time they spend panning the camera up and down the coeds’ bodies, and how clearly the female students are positioned as primarily objects of the male gaze (forget about your homework, girls!). It’s also clear that although the women are supposed to be sexually alluring they are not under any circumstances supposed to cross the line into sexual availability (slut!) or actual sexual activity.

As my friend Rachel put it: “CREEPIEST. DAD. EVAR.”

Enjoy. And then go wash your eyeballs with carbolic soap.

multimedia monday: religion & politics

01 Monday Mar 2010

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history, multimedia monday, npr, politics, thesis, web audio

Welcome to the month of March! This month, I will be taking a two-week research trip to Lincoln, Oregon, in order to conduct oral history interviews with, and read through the personal archives of, faculty at the Oregon Extension. This work (fingers crossed) will provide the backbone of primary source material for my thesis on the early years of the program and its context in American countercultural, religious, and educational history.

Meanwhile, one of the alumni of the OE is a scholar of American religious history and author of numerous books on the subject of Evangelicalism in American life. One of his more recent books, God in the White House, charts the history of faith and the office of the Presidency during the latter half of the twentieth century. Here, you can listen to him discuss faith and politics with Terry Gross on NPR’s Fresh Air.

multimedia monday: 2-for-1 on mental health

22 Monday Feb 2010

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multimedia monday, politics, web audio

This week, I bring you two segments from NPR’s Talk of the Nation and On the Media that I listened to last week while entering metadata at Northeastern. First up, we have author Ethan Watters discussing his book Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche.

Transcript available at NPR.

I really like hearing medical professionals place illness and healing in cultural context: while physical and mental suffering is undeniably real, so often the way distress manifests itself is shaped by the time and place in which those suffering are located (much like, kofkof, sexual orientation and gender identity/expression).

Likewise, Johnathan Metzl, author of the new book The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease charts the evolution of schizophrenia through the latter half of the twentieth century from being a disease of white female passivity to being associated with male aggression (and diagnosed disproportionately in African American men).

Transcript available at On the Media.

Check ’em out. Learn something new today.

multimedia monday: stoned olympics

15 Monday Feb 2010

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humor, multimedia monday, web video

This week, in honor of the Olympics, I bring you the inimitable Eddie Izzard describing the (highly amenable) course of the Olympic games if everyone competed, well, stoned.

multimedia monday: "i can download protection for up to a thousand periods!"

08 Monday Feb 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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feminism, humor, multimedia monday, web video

TECH UPDATE: Reader Saskia Tielens alerted me to the fact that this video is marked “private” and will not play as an embed. I will try to locate a usable video! ~A.

Further tech update: Finally had a chance to find a YouTube version that wasn’t private. The embed should work now ~A.

After Apple announced that it’s latest gadget was going to be named the iPad, a number of my feminist blogs pointed out that “tablet computer” was not the first thing that came to mind when they heard the word. Turns out (hat tip to my friend Rachel for the video link) that MadTV was ahead of them.

I’ve seen critiques of the iPad/period jokes based on the fact that they’re predicated on the idea that periods (and by implication the working of women’s bodies) are gross and icky . . . and Hanna contends the joke is just a “groaner.” Personally, while I recognize the validity of both of these criticisms, I also think the MadTV video is making fun of the cheeriness of menstruation product and Apple product marketing than passing judgment on the inherent value of either.

multimedia monday: 9

01 Monday Feb 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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movies, multimedia monday, web video

As the semester gets underway, I’ve been trying to find ways to organize the links I’d like to share here on the blog and also write smaller posts so the blog stays fresh but I don’t begin to feel burdened by commentary. So in addition to the Sunday Smut list, I’m adding a “multimedia monday” weekly feature that’s going to highlight one of the online audio or video links I’ve listened to or watched during the previous week.

To start us off, then, here’s the trailer for the film 9, which was released last fall and which Hanna and I finally had a chance to watch this past Friday.


I really don’t understand how this film got so little press when it came out, since (along with Coraline) it’s easily the most magical bit of animation I’ve seen since Wall-E. Darker, perhaps. It certainly doesn’t end on a cheerful note. But visually, it’s a glorious piece of imagined reality: from the moment the story opens, you’re sucked into the world of these small created beings who are all of the (humanity? well, we aren’t quite sure) that is left on a post-apocalyptic world after the humans have destroyed themselves. All that’s left, that is, except for malevolent machines.

The only real flaw, I thought, in the film, was its ending, which was surprisingly pat given the inventiveness of the rest of the story (and the storytelling team that’s behind it). The surviving beings are left to make of the world what they will, hopefully doing a better job than those who came before. It’s not a bad message, just a little . . . simplistic? unreflective? I’m not sure. I was not left satisfied. It shoehorned in a sort of adam-and-eve theme that explained the need for the one female voice actor in film otherwise full of male voices — not that I opposed having a female character: I was kinda waiting for one to show up. But I also object to specifically creating one so that the end of the film contains the possibility of some sort of hetero reproductive model of future civilization. Personally? I’d put my money with the librarians.

That small critique aside, it was a gloriously realized world with great heroes and villains, and I heartily recommend it to y’all. Best wishes for the week ahead.

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