Posts Tagged ‘Documentary’

Urban Gardens to the Rescue and Coming to the Rescue of Urban Gardens

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

With a 21 percent jobless rate in Motown, many people have taken advantage of empty lots to build community gardens. This AP article reports that within the city of Detroit, hundreds of urban vegetable gardens have popped up on abandoned properties. This kind of land grab has become common in the city where a house was famously purchased for 1 dollar.

In Los Angeles, a much more contentious story played out in the ashes of the 1992 Riots. The Garden Movie documents the story of an urban farm in South Central and the fight to preserve it from development. Here is a preview:



Flow The Film

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

The Beastie Boys’ production company Oscilloscope Laboratories has put out a documentary about water privatization. Irena Salina’s film, which was an official selection at Sundance, builds the case against corporate ownership of water resources. The website for Flow has a link to a petition to add a 31st amendment to the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights establishing access to clean water as a fundamental human right.

Check out the preview:


Documentary: Where There Is No Water

Friday, January 25th, 2008

As a Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic, I used to take bucket baths and pour a bucket of water into the toilet to flush in lieu of running water. I had to chase down cistern trucks just like everyone else and then carry buckets of water indoors. Various government aqueduct projects came and went, and after two years passed, I really wanted to do something about the problem. Though I had neither the resources nor the time to build an aqueduct, I was able to borrow a video camera from a fellow volunteer and shoot a documentary to raise awareness.

My goal was to spread word about the precarious water situation in the community where I lived. After returning to the states, I edited the documentary, sent it around, and posted it to Google Video. Later, a friend of mine in Oviedo, D.R informed me that the water situation had improved. I don’t believe my documentary had much effect, but it was screened at several film festivals and perhaps helped some Americans become aware of their water use. Here is the video: