Sunday, April 24, 2011

Film: Haevnen/In A Better World (2010, dir by Susanne Bier, written by Anders Thomas Jensen, Sony Pictures Classics)


In A Better World (Wikipedia, IMDB, Trailer) is a fabulous film. Danish director Susanne Bier (known for After the Wedding, and Brothers) won the Best Foreign Language Oscar in 2010 for this tightly-wound, emotional, family drama about forgiveness and revenge. The film is set in two very different locations - a refugee camp in an unnamed African country and a small town in Denmark. The lives of two families, each in their own period of crisis, cross each other. US film lovers can check the Sony Pictures Classics website to find theater venues.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Film: The Tillman Story by Amir Bar-Lev

The Tillman Story (A&E Indie Films, The Weinstein Company, Passion Pictures; directed by Amir Bar-Lev), is the story of Pat Tillman, a football player, an American soldier, his family, his army buddies, and much more. Highly recommended!

Thomas Friedman: We're Number 1(1)!

We're Number 1(1)! was Thomas Friedman's Op-Ed for September 12, 2010, and I recommend it.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

The New Rove-Cheney Assault on Reality by Frank Rich (NY Times, March 13)

The New Rove-Cheney Assault on Reality, Frank Rich's column on March 13th in the New York Times, shows how propoganda and self-deception work among leaders of the George W Bush wing of the Republican Party. Recommended.

Monday, February 22, 2010

NYTimes.com: Thomas Friedman "The Fat Lady Has Sung"




Thomas Friedman's February 21, 2010 opinion piece for the New York Times, entitled The Fat Lady Has Sung, is an excellent summary of where the United States currently is, and what we need to expect and demand from the political class, including our President, and from taxpayers, workers, citizens, small business owners.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Pete Seeger's 90th Birthday at Madison Square Garden Benefiting Clearwater (May 3, 2009)



PBS' Great Performance has a wonderful website with videos giving the flavor of the Fabulous event held in New York's Madison Square Garden in honor of Peter Seeger's 90th birthday and his contributions to social justice, the environment and folk music.


The 2-disc DVD recording of the concert is available for purchase here.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Photographing World Leaders in 1 minute sitting at the UN: Platon (for The New Yorker)



You can listen to or download a 10-minute interview of The New Yorker's staff photographer Platon, as he talks about spending 5 days without a break taking 60-second portrait photos of world leaders just before or after their addresses to the UN General Assembly.

Sunday, December 20, 2009



Anna Daevere Smith's Let Me Down Easy in New York City is pretty timely, now that the US Congress is trying to address health care.

Lauretta Jones (Artist, Nature Lover)



The website of my friend Lauretta Jones, is, not surprising, one of the most attractive ones I've seen, and gives you a good flavor of her work teaching, exhibiting, and preserving plants and natural spaces.

Young People Need Progress on Climate Protection - Photos

Photos of Young People whose safety is at risk if human-accelerated Climate Change is not slowed.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

MIT's Bicycle Wheel Announced in Copenhagen



Copenhagen Wheel for bicycles, designed at MIT's SENSEable City Lab, was premiered in Copenhagen Denmark on December 15th. I think you'll like the video at the bottom of MIT's Press Release.

The Analytic Mode by David Brooks (NY Times, 2009 Dec 03)

David Brooks' column about President Obama, titled The Analytic Mode, is a sober assessment of why decision-making in the White House is pretty far removed from the visionary rhetoric of the 2008 Presidential Campaign.

YouTube: The Web is Us/ing Us by Michael Wesch

The Web is Us/ing Us by Michael Wesch is a 4-minute and 31 second statement about the cultural transformation which has just started as a result of Web 2.0 .

Bob Herbert: In Search of Education Leaders (NY Times, 2009 Dec 5)

In Search of Education Leaders, Bob Herbert's column in the New York Times, is well worth a read.

Daily Video Program: MOSAIC from LinkTV




MOSAIC: World News from the Middle East provides, 5 days per week, 30 minutes of translated television news from Israel, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Arab nations, and the Arabic Services of the BBC and of Russia. This is an absolutely wonderful service.



Also from the same producers, is the less regular but very high-quality program Earth Focus.


Saturday, October 24, 2009

Film: A Sea Change (dir by Barbara Ettinger, Niijii Films, 2009, 86 min)



Films about Environmental degregadation can be boring, technical or depressing... but sometimes they are uplifting and inspiring, and this is such a film.



A Sea Change follows the journey of retired history teacher Sven Huseby on his quest to discover what is happening to the world’s oceans.



After reading Elizabeth Kolbert’s November 2006 article The Darkening Sea in The New Yorker magazine, Sven becomes obsessed with the rising acidity of the oceans and what this “sea change” bodes for mankind. His quest takes him to Alaska, California, Washington, and Norway as he uncovers a worldwide crisis that most people are unaware of. Speaking with oceanographers, marine biologists, climatologists, artists and policy experts, Sven discovers that global warming is only half the story of the environmental catastrophe that awaits us. Excess carbon dioxide is dissolving in our oceans, changing seawater chemistry. The increasing acidity of the water makes it difficult for tiny creatures at the bottom of the food web – such as the pteropods in the films – to form their shells. The effects could work their way up to the fish one billion people depend upon for their source of protein.



A Sea Change is also a touching portrait of Sven’s relationship with his grandchild Elias. As Sven keeps a correspondence with the little boy, he mulls over the world that he is leaving for future generations. A disturbing and essential companion piece to films such as Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, A Sea Change brings home the indisputable fact that our lifestyle is changing the earth, despite our rhetoric or wishful thinking.



A Sea Change is the first documentary about ocean acidification, directed by Barbara Ettinger and co-produced by Sven Huseby of Niijii Films. While emphasizing new scientific information, the film is also a beautiful paen to the ocean world and an intimate story of a Norwegian-American family whose heritage is bound up with the sea.



More information can be found on the film's website.


“There are massive unrecognized changes of geologic scale taking place in the ocean. Ocean chemistry is being altered on a scale not seen for millions of years. And we don’t know what the consequences will be.”
- Dr. Edward L. Miles, Virginia & Prentice Bloedel Professor of Marine & Public
Affairs, University of Washington

“We put the equivalent of 118 billion VW Bugs’ worth of CO2 into the ocean for the last 200 years and 43% of that has happened just in the last 20 years and it’s growing exponentially. You as we start to project out to the future it really gets scary.” - Dr. Chris Sabine, oceanographer, Natl. Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

A Sea Change could not be more timely. I believe acidification of our oceans is actually a greater threat to our survival than is temperature or sea level rise, the conventional ‘global warming’ threats. Acidification is confusing and difficult to even imagine for most people — we need your film.” - Rob Moir, PhD., Executive Director, Ocean River Institute


"A Sea Change offers a searching, emotionally powerful look at ocean acidification. This problem is sometimes called the "evil twin" of climate change, and many of us regard it as an existential threat to the future of fishing. The story is full of heart, scientifically accurate, and lyrical. It also offers good reason for hope, which is indispensable in the face of such a huge challenge." - Brad Warren, Sustainable Fisheries Partnership

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Film: Earth Days: The Seeds of a Revolution (Robert Stone, 2008, Zeitgeist Films, 102 min)


Director Robert Stone interviews 9 of the key thought leaders behind the emergence of the late 20th century United States branch of the modern Environmental Movement, showing how a sequence of events initially, primarily using new laws passed in the 1970s, reversed the upward trend in industrial pollution. But now the movement has plateaued and is not keeping pace with global population growth and consumption growth, once again causing grave concern that industrial civilization could lead to dangerous undermining of the ecosystem during the next 30 years. Some of these thinkers now advocate advanced design for comfortable lower-impact living, others advocate transformation of lifestyles away from materialism and towards bio-regionalism.

A thoughtful film.

Friday, October 02, 2009

Film: The Most Dangerous Man In America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers (dir by Judih Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith, ITVS, 2009)

Daniel Ellsberg

I just saw a magnificent documentary. It's about how a pro-military decision-analyst at the RAND Corporation had a series of experiences (first as a child, then at the Pentagon, in Vietnam, and at meetings of activist groups) that made him decide that the U.S. Congress and the American Public had no true idea of the real policy of war-making the United States had pursued in Vietnam for decades, and that he would chage that. His photocopying of a Pentagon study eventually set in motion events that brought down a U.S. President (the impeachment and resignation of Richard Nixon), led to a critical U.S. Supreme Court decision on Freedom of the Press, and contributed to ending a major debacle and military quagmire. If you want to see a film about a true patriot, who risked life-in-prison and gave up his career to serve the higher values this country should be about, see this documentary by Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith.

The Most Dangerous Man in America Website

Saturday, September 26, 2009

The New Sputnik (Thomas Friedman, 9/26/2009, New York Times)

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman entitled his piece about Green Energy Research, Manufacturing and Deployment in China "The New Sputnik".

He indicates that in China, where the percentage of engineers among political leaders and among business leaders is far higher than it is in the United States, the realization that Green Energy needs are unavoidable was reached rather quickly. Meanwhile, the U.S. political elites, aware of all the Coal plants China has commissioned, still thinks China is committed to low-tech and polluting energy sources.

As usual, U.S. political elites are deceiving themselves. I agree with Friedman and the people he quotes, such as Lester Brown, that China's leap to Green won't be realized immediately, but when it comes, it will be sudden. Should the U.S. compete? Will we have the resources to compete if we continuing pouring large amounts of funds into maintaining a huge military force around the world? Questions that I wish more of my political leaders were carefully pondering....

Monday, August 31, 2009

Andrew Sullivan Blog Entry: The Rotten Core

Andrew Sullivan, on his blog "The Daily Dish" makes a point about The Rotten Core of political innovation leadership stagnation quite apparent in Washington DC thanks to the successful "protect the status quo" activitie of corporate lobbysts and a shallow media. I suggest you read his blog entry.