Documentary Shangri-la

an evolving and blissful hideaway for seeking and exploring documentary media culture(s)

Its a new look… August 8, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — smartypants @ 3:09 am

a new time…
a new job…
a new season…
a new place…
and a new name.

You have now entered the documentary shangri-la…

Now, here is a kinks song.

 

Moving Images and Feminism March 22, 2008

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grassroots video, parody and mainstream politics February 12, 2008

Filed under: grassroots video,mainstream politics — smartypants @ 5:35 pm

The masses–armed with their sense of humor and video cameras–are going to make this election season glorious. I can feel it already:

 

You go girl! February 11, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — smartypants @ 2:34 pm

Here is to Amy Winehouse… you can’t keep a scappy puppy down! I look forward to hearing all of her good music in the years to come.

 

This is what I have been up to… February 9, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — smartypants @ 5:05 pm

I have always wanted to start a film festival:

titel.jpg

Please help us transport festival culture and great creative work to the cornfields of Illinois!

Central Illinois Feminist Film Festival
March 27-30, 2008
Call for Submissions
Deadline: February 29, 2008

We are looking for films of high artistic quality that satisfy at least two of the following criteria:
1. Films created with an eye for gender and/or social justice issues
2. Films that link local and global issues
3. Films created by people underrepresented in the media field (women, people of color, queer/transgendered, the
disabled)
4. Films made by people from the Central Illinois area

How to submit:
Send a DVD or digital videotape of your film and a cover letter addressing the film festival criteria to:

Central Illinois Feminist Film Festival
Christopher Mitchell
Theatre Arts Department
600 Lincoln Ave
Eastern Illinois University
Charleston, IL 61920

Guidelines:
1. Films should be short: under 60 minutes in length.
2. Film DVD or digital videotape should be labeled with 1) your name, address, and email address and 2) the title of your
film.
3. You should email us at cjmitchell@eiu.edu to confirm the submission.
4. In your cover letter, explain how you and your film fit our criteria and include a two-three sentence synopsis.

Note: There is no submission fee for this film festival.This film festival promotes the mission of our Women’s Studies Program at Eastern Illinois University: to promote an understanding of how issues related to gender, age, race, economic status, sexual identity, and nationality affect women’s lives and the communities in which they live. In order to promote an equitable and sensitive environment for all persons, the Council also responds to issues affecting women on campus and in the community.

 

Si, Se Puede!

Filed under: music,Pop Culture,social justice,Uncategorized,visual communication — smartypants @ 2:14 pm

A little music…some moving images and you have magic!

Finally, some vision about the future that doesn’t involve killing people!

 

Readings on Argumentation February 3, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — smartypants @ 5:53 am

We are in the home stretch of finishing our book project:
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And just a small observation for all those aspiring authors out there…indexing sucks!

 

We are not all special snowflakes…I am not that innocent January 7, 2008

Filed under: confessions,Mainstream Media,Pop Culture,Uncategorized — smartypants @ 4:56 am

Britney

When I first took in this picture, my heart when out to her. As an avid US Weekly reader, I always refer to “Britney” as my favorite train wreck. She was the sugary-sweet teen sensation who is a good part of a decade younger than me and reminiscent of a tarty-girl next door. At the peak of her pop-princess reign, I remember routinely trying to persuade my 14 year-old niece into looking up to someone…cooler…edgy-er…maybe just a tad bit more artistically talented. Britney has some catchy music and in my estimation, she is a solid and good second-rate performance artist…but that has never been my issue with her. From early on in her career Britney seem to find her value…her worth as a brand pivoted around titillation (much like her pop culture momma, Madonna). My issue with Britney, in regards to my adolescent niece, was her tendency to reach out for a shorter shirt or naughty stockings with a subtle desperation for affirmation (very un-Madonna-like). Until, of course, take this road to its natural conclusion and you have a mother of two flashing her naked va-jay jay all over Los Angeles.

brit and mad

Unlike Madonna, Britney’s titillation never grew up and just got kind of sad…

Brit VMA

Today was the first time I witnessed the visual raw emotion of her very public pain and thought I recognized something about it. There is some part of me that identifies with the expression on her face. I have been there, maybe not to the same depths or on such a visible stage but growing up is hard to do (especially with a mental illness, an unfortunate drug problem, under the microscope of public scrutiny, and rich enough to not have benefited from the experience of being told “no” ).

 

A blog year-in review December 29, 2007

Filed under: meta blogging — smartypants @ 5:10 pm

year-in-review as seen at See Jane Compute:

The rule: post the first sentence of the first post for each month. Here are the ones that appear at docublog.

March: Crime shows are one of my dirty pleasures.
April: I am shocked…a little. A little stupefied…but more importantly I don’t even know how to respond to Brorape
May: So many of my concerns about not having things to do, people to see and archives to discover was a much ado about nothing.
June: Well, I am not in Charleston yet… I leave Los Angeles on Saturday and re-enter the cornfields of central Illinois in the early evening.
July: Back from Hawaii and brother’s wedding was beautiful….
August-November: I went silent like the Buddha
December: It has been a while since my last post…approximately 22 days and 4 months.

 

Paranormal TV December 22, 2007

Filed under: confessions,documentary film and video,television life — smartypants @ 6:38 pm

Of all my television peccadilloes, my unusual appetite for paranormal TV is perhaps, my biggest sin.

I am so exited every Wednesday when I get to watch my newest paranormal TV crush. Recently, I stumbled upon a new-ish show on Court TV that I think is the most intriguing deployment of the ghost hunting arts meets reality TV that I have seen in a while. Before you go passing judgment, you have to understand that paranormal TV has always been an essential part of my entertainment pallet. Every since my dad use to put me on his lap on Sundays when we would watch Leonard Neymoy in the groundbreaking television show “In Search of…” and the time my mother and aunt took me to the drive-in to see Amityville horror (the first one), I have been intrigued by the media representation of paranormal phenomenon.

So, every Wednesday there is a new episode of Haunting Evidence. The series “takes the paranormal/crime-solving phenomenon one step further by following psychic profiler Carla Baron, medium John J. Oliver, and paranormal investigator Patrick Burns as they visit “haunted” crime scenes.” Working together, this unconventional team of experts finds clues that will provide new insights into real-life cases that have gone cold. The show is like a cross between Cold Case Files and Ghost Hunters. Deploying some of the tactics of my favorite plumbers by day, ghost hunters by night friends on the show Ghost Hunters, the Haunting Evidence crew takes it to a whole new level. The focus is less on proving a paranormal plane exists and more on helping police catch the bad folks who have murdered the spirits lingering in the world beyond.

Recently a dear friend and out of town house guest had the opportunity to experience with me, the joy of Haunting Evidence. He had a slightly different take. He was concerned with the families of these involved, being lead astray and given hope by these paranormal charlatans. I admit, the very construction of Haunting Evidence encourages and condones spectacle. Of course my favorite Medium, John J. Oliver, could do his paranormal “thang” outside of the TV frame. There is no real reason to record and broadcast his psychic insights while he wears fabulous designer sunglasses BUT the camera allows me to be there with him. The framing and composition encourages me to see the world through his sunglass covered eyes…. it encourages me to meditate on the very same evidence and use my own psychic ability to solve the case (By the way, I went to the show’s website and took their psychic ability test and scored unusually high).

In the last two weeks, a new paranormal TV show has made a splash on the re-run saturated screen. Paranormal State follows a spiritual team of students out of Penn State University who investigate haunting phenomenon currently terrorizing folks in the material plane. I am fascinated by Paranormal State because it is like a cross between Ghost Hunters, Dr. Phil and the Exorcist with a tad more emphasis on spiritual warfare (demons vs. angels) than most of the shows in this genre. The paranormal team descends on a family with the usual investigating team and equipment but also brings along priests, occult experts, family therapists, and the folks you call when one needs an exorcist. The camera functions as evidence of the omnipresent battle of good and evil ranging around us, including a reoccurring guest spot of a demon (whose name we will not speak) that seems to be chasing the lead investigator.

The Camera As A Tool of Spiritual Upheaval: My primary preoccupation with this genre of television is the varied ways in which the camera functions to construct a spiritual world. The use of inferred heat cameras to record moving spiritual energy, the deployment of sound recording to capture Electronic Voice Phenomenon and the inclusion of people who have heightened psychic ability to register the kind of paranormal activity in the air all rests upon the assumption that there is a world in play beyond our reason and sense perception. In the TV show Ghost Hunters, the images captured with the camera function as proof to affirm or deny the existence of paranormal phenomenon. On the other hand, the Haunting Evidence camera encourages the audience to play along with the investigation, the images function to affirm actions taken in a police investigation where psychic phenomena is legitimized as an important tool of knowledge production. Finally, Paranormal State uses the camera as evidence of spiritual warfare, a soldier in the Army of good (so to speak). We are encouraged to mediate on a spiritual battle around us. Like we don’t have enough to worry about in terms of a real war on the material plane?

 

 
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