Showing posts sorted by date for query Confucius Institute. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Confucius Institute. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Tuesday, August 06, 2024

Erkek or Adam?

Bear with me for a bit. (Or don't and just scroll down to JUMP TO HERE below.) I've been learning Turkish on Duolingo for a while.  It's good for vocabulary and some grammar.  There is a listening component that is helpful.  But this is language learning like I had in Jr. high and high school.  It's aimed at teaching through vocabulary and grammar.  For Peace Corps training (and later with the Confucius Institute) we were taught by memorizing dialogues.  

This latter method was much more effective for learning to speak.  We just repeated the dialogues, over and over and over, mimicking native speakers until the sentences were imbedded in our heads. This is how children learn a language.  By mimicking what they hear.  And only later when they instinctively know the grammar, do they learn the rules that explain why they say it the way they do.  There were also substitution drills - where the instructor would say a word and we had to use it to replace a word in the sentence.  For example:

I am going to the store.  

"office"

I am going to the office.  

When I arrived in my town, I had lots of useful sentences that I would roll off my tongue without thinking.  But when I learn the Duolingo way, with grammar and vocabulary memorization, I struggle to remember the rules so I can put a sentence together correctly. 

Today as I was doing my Turkish lesson, I was wondering why they sometimes used the word üzürinde to mean 'on' and sometimes used üstünde.  Googling got me to a Quora page which had several explanations.  Basically they are used interchangeably said one responder.  Another agreed that practically, that is the case, though üstünde means more 'above'.

JUMP TO HERE

Below the explanation of two Turkish words that mean 'on' there was another explanation of two words for 'man' - erkek and adam.  These are also words I've learned and never asked why one or the other. One is longer and uses a story.  One is short and to the point.  

Profile photo for Emre Sermutlu

Let me put it that way, only a small percentage of all “erkek”s are also “adam”s.

Here's a famous story about the concept of “adam”ness. Once there was a boy who was good for nothing. His father, after seeing his attempts for reforming the youth frustrated, said finally “You will never be adam! “

(This is the part that is difficult to translate. The father means “upright man” when he says “adam”, but the boy in his ignorance perceives it as “great man”)

Later, the boy leaves his village and after a lot of adventures, becomes the grand vizier of the Sultan. One day he remembers his father (whom he never visited) and his harsh words. He sends a group of soldiers to fetch him, without ever telling them he is his father. So they bring the old guy in terrible condition, as if he is a criminal.

In the palace, the son proclaims “You said I would never be a man. As you can see, I am the vizier now! “

Which the father responds:

“But I never said you will not be vizier. I said you will not be “adam”. Seeing how you treat your father, I can say you still haven't become an adam!”



Erkek is how you are called when you are born with a dick while adam is how you are called when you are not a dick. 


The second answer cleverly gets right to the point.  Though I'm sure having read the first explanation, helped me appreciate the second.  

And I immediately thought that this would be a great way to differentiate between Kamala Harris' newly announced vice presidential running mate and Trump's.  

Now I need someone who knows Yiddish and Turkish to tell me whether my guess that adam is akin to mensch

Thursday, April 07, 2022

Redistricting - Some History To Consider What Could Happen Next

Because I blogged the 2011 Redistricting Board and have a tab at the top of this blog with an index of all the posts, it's easy to see what happened back then to compare to now.  I'd note there is also an index of all the posts I've done this round at AKRedistricting 2020-2022, under the banner above.   That 2011 process dragged out until 2014.  And there were a number of new plans that were written and rejected before the final plan was approved.  

This time round, the problems were much more focused:  

  • Cantwell, which I think they have satisfactorily addressed, and
  •  Senate Seat K.  Here, they are currently down to two choices.  One which will easily be approved by the Judge.  The other, which seems to be favored by the majority of the Board, stands a chance of getting rejected for the same reasons the first one did - political gerrymandering.  


That 2011 Board got its Census data on March 15, 2011 and had 90 days to approve its proclamation.  They got it done on June 13 and not two weeks later there was a legal challenge from Fairbanks.  By July 14 there were two more. 


Tuesday, June 13, 2011
Board Approves Proclamation and Other Documents, Then Goes Into Executive Session
The board members congratulate themselves on doing a great job and approve their work.  


Sunday, June 26, 2011
Fairbanks to Sue Over Redistricting  - I comment on a Fairbanks News Miner article.

July 14, 2011

Three Challenges To Redistricting Plan Arrived By Deadline - Cases Attached-Brief overview of the three challenges, one from the Fairbanks North Star Borough, one from a resident of Goldstream and a resident of Ester, and one from the City of Petersburg.  Copies of the cases are embedded in the post.  


The Board wanted the trial moved to Anchorage, but the judge denied that.  There was something of a gap and staff took other jobs while waiting for the trial.  As I recall it was in Fairbanks in January and I was glad I was listening in by phone.  

The results of the trial didn't come until January 2012.  

Monday, January 9, 2012
Four Districts Found Unconstititional  - quick look at court documents

Sounds of Silence - The court proceedings are on audio teleconference, but can't hear anything.

Paskvan Testifies - Sen Paskvan, one of two Democratic Fairbanks Senators put in the same district testifies.

Plaintiffs Trying to Show Gerrymandering - Sen. Thomas (who is paired with Paskvan) is describing strange loops moving legislators in or out of a district.

Senator Thomas Continues - More of the same.
While blog posts are still up ten years later, the pages that held the documents are no longer working.  In fact all the material from the 2011 Board's website and other state links that had documents are gone.  Peter Torkelson, the Board's Executive Director this time, says he's doing all he can to make sure that doesn't happened again with the current Board's website.  

In 2011 it took from June until February to go from Proclamation Plan to trial outcome. And then to the Supreme Court which sent the plan back to the Board for repairs on March 15 - NINE months after their proclamation and ONE YEAR after they got their Census data.    

In 2022 it took from November 10, 2021 to February  16, 2022 to go from Proclamation to trial outcome.  And it was March 25, 2022 when the Supreme Court ruled. 
This time the gap was just a little over FOUR months.  But remember, the Census data was delayed in 2020 because of the Trump administration's attempt to ask citizenship questions and because of the pandemic.  So the current Board didn't start mapping until August.  =

Here's a bit more on what happened.  Not expecting anyone to read it all, but it's there for your perusal.  You'll find some similarities to this decade's process.  
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Saturday, February 4, 2012
    Tuesday, February 7, 2012 

      Tuesday, March 13, 2012

      Wednesday, March 14, 2012

      Thursday, March 15, 2012
        Saturday, March 17, 2012
        Tuesday, March 20, 2012
        • Alaska Redistricting Process - What Happens Next? - Looks at the questions:
          • The Board will have to make a new plan and that has lots of possibilities.
            • What are the parts they have to change?
            • Can they be fixed without messing with the rest of the districts?
            • Do they start completely fresh or leave most of the existing plan intact? 
            • Are there any candidates obviously affected?
        Then they come up with a new plan April 5, 2012.  I'd note that the previous Board still had to get pre-clearance from the federal Department of Justice to be sure they complied with the Voting Rights Act.  That pre-clearance requirement was gutted by the Supreme Court until the next year, when, as you'll see, the Board was still working on another plan.  

        Thursday, April 5, 2012 

         Friday, April 20, 2012  

        They come up with more options;

        May 1, 2012

        • Redistricting Board's Supreme Court Appeal - First I wonder out loud why the board didn't tell us how they were able to come to agreement so easily without discussing many details at the public meeting.  Second, I try to explain what I think the court had asked for and what the board needed to do.  

        May 7, 2012 

        May 11, 2012 

        May 14, 2012 

        The Supreme Court doesn't like them.  

        May 22, 2012

         

        Things drag on.

        Dec. 29, 2012   

         

        Feb 1, 2013
        What's At Stake If Redistrict Board Has To Start Over? - Looks at:

        • Form over Substance
          • The Board's Task
          • The Court's Task
          • What Happened?
          • Form Over Substance?
          • My Conclusion 
        • Impact Of Redoing The Plan From Scratch
          • A Lot of Work
          • Should the job be given back to the Board?
          • Impact on the balance of Democrats and Republicans in the legislature
          • Impact on voters' connection to their legislators  

        I'm going to skip on ahead.

        Wednesday, June 19, 2013

        Monday July 8, 2013

        Sunday, July 14 , 2013


        Notes from the Last Alaska Redistricting Meeting.  Everyone Hopes So 
        - My very rough notes of, what many hope, was the last Alaska Redistricting Board (unless there are legal challenges)  meeting, where they approve the Proclamation and the findings and the metes and bounds.   

        Photos of the Last Redistricting Board Meeting - The Board, some of the audience, AFFER and CALISTA folks, Board's signatures.  


        Such hopes!  Quickly dashed.


        Thursday, August 29, 2013

        But the end is in sight.

        Monday, Nov 18, 2013 

        Dec 20, 2013

         

        Wednesday, September 13, 2017

        Vietnam War, Fiber Infrastructure, Chinese Language, Community Engagement

        I was in meetings most of today and then went to see the Alaska Humanity Forum's preview of Ken Burns documentary on the Vietnam War.  We saw excerpts of each episode.  As someone who lived through that period, I didn't hear anything new.  There was discussion afterward.  But first AKHF director asked audience members who were veterans to stand.  Then those who were Vietnam veterans to stand.  Then those who had family members of friends who were veterans.  Then questions were asked - "Why did you come here tonight?" was the first one - and we were asked to discuss them with people nearby.  

        I was struck, after watching the excerpts that covered soldiers from both sides as well as protesters, that people who protested the war weren't asked to stand.  And one of the audience did make that comment to the whole group.

        The series will be worth watching when it comes on - not only for people who lived those years, but more so for those who only know the historical myths of that period.

        But that's all excuse for why I haven't posted today and to explain why I'm taking the easy way out and letting you know about some talks coming up in the next few days at the UAA bookstore.
        They are all free.
        (There's free parking for these events in the parking lot near the bookstore.  And for people who can't make them, the videos will eventually be online, probably here.)


        Thursday, September 14 from 5:00 pm-7:00 pm
        Darrel Hess presents Leave It To Beaver, Cocaine & God: My Journey to Community Engagement

        In  Leave It To Beaver, Cocaine & God: My Journey to Community Engagement Darrel Hess talks about growing up in the shadow of domestic violence, his arrest for selling cocaine to an undercover Alaska State Trooper, coming to terms with his sexual orientation, his relationship with God, and his struggles to find himself and his place in the world.
        Today, Darrel Hess works as Anchorage’s Municipal Ombudsman and is a member of the Advisory Council for UAA’s Center for Community Engagement and Learning.   A pillar in the Anchorage community, Darrel Hess has served as Anchorage’s first Homeless Coordinator and was a member of the Anchorage Equal Rights Commission.  He has served on the board of Identity, Inc.  and is the recipient of the 2014 Alaska First Lady’s Volunteer of the Year Award.
        Everyone is encouraged to welcome and meet the dedicated and amazing Darrel Hess. 
         
        There is free parking for this event in the South Lot, Sports Complex NW Lot, West Campus Central Lot, and Sports Campus West Lot.

        Friday, September 15 from 3:00 pm-5:00 pm
        Dr. Shinian Wu presents Linguistic Challenges in Learning Chinese
        Dr. Shinian Wu presents linguistic challenges and cultural congruence in learning Chinese as a second language. His talk will discuss contrasts between Chinese and English, how languages create socio-cognitive processes in language socialization.

         Dr. Shinian Wu. Professor of English and director of the graduate program in Applied Linguistics, English Department, Grand Valley State University, Michigan.
        This event is sponsored with the UAA Confucius Institute. Everyone is welcomed to attend. There is free parking at UAA on Fridays.

         Saturday, September 16 from 1:00 pm-3:00 pm
        Dr. Sebastian Neumayer presents Fiber Infrastructure and Natural Disasters
        Dr. Sebastian Neumayer, Department of Computer Science & Engineering, UAA, shares his research on the effects of natural disasters on fiber infrastructure. While investigating the survivability of networks in the face of geographically correlated failures, he will discuss algorithms that identify the most vulnerable parts of real-world networks to large-scale disasters.
        In addition to his academic research, Sebastian Neumayer will discuss The BTC Ring, an open-source Bitcoin project that integrates jewelry and digital assets. The BTC Ring can mitigate the risk that traditional jewelry has to loss and theft as well as can be used as an alternative to diamond engagement rings.
        Everyone is invited to attend this fascinating event and learn how we can better prepare for "natural" environmental and emotional disasters.
        There is free parking at UAA on Saturdays.  

        Tuesday, March 17, 2015

        "Facing Human Vulnerability in a Dangerous World"

        I'd love to do an in depth post on this, probably starting with something about how human behavior and moral dilemmas and the debates about what is the right ethical path has been hotly and insightfully debated for over 2000 years.   Professor Aaron Stalnaker is going to be here tomorrow (Wednesday March 18) to talk about what ancient Chinese philosophers said about the same kinds of issues we face today.   I'd like to write about how easy it is for us to think that people living today are so much smarter than those who lived in the distant past.  But that there were people living then who whose abilities to think through complex human issues were as powerful as anyone alive today. 

        But I've got lots of other things to do and this talk is tomorrow evening, so I'll just send this on for people who might wish to gain some perspective on our current ethical debates. 


        Here's the official announcement: 


        Confucius Institute invites you and your family to join our next academic Lecture, to be held in the UAA/APU Consortium Library, Lewis E. Haines Meeting Room, Room 307, on Wednesday, March 18, from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m.
         
        Facing Human Vulnerability in a Dangerous World: 
        Two Chinese Responses.
         
        This lecture will address Mengzi’s (and perhaps Xunzi’s) defense of ritual as an appropriate response to human desires and aspirations, given our nature and the nature of the world as a whole; and then turn to Zhuangzi’s criticism of received ritual forms, in favor of a more radical acceptance of unstoppable change.  

        Our speaker Dr. Aaron Stalnaker is a distinguished scholar and philosopher. He is an associate professor of Religious Studies, Philosophy, and East Asian Languages and Cultures at Indiana University. He is a core faculty member in the Department of Religious Studies, serves as the Dean of Graduate Studies, and has made tremendous contribution to the Department of Religious Studies in building its strong academics. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Stanford, and obtained his PhD from Brown. He is an expert in ethics and philosophy of religion, giving serious attention to both Chinese and Western theories and practices.

        He is the author of Overcoming Our Evil: Human Nature and Spiritual Exercises in Xunzi and Augustine (Georgetown University Press, 2006), a comparative study of different models of moral and religious personal formation. He recently co-edited Religious Ethics in a Time of Globalism: Shaping a Third Wave of Comparative Analysis (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012). He has lectured at many leading universities, including Harvard Divinity School, Princeton University, University of Michigan, Georgetown University, etc.


        And for those who want to do a little homework first, here's an excerpt from a review of Stalnaker's book Overcoming Our Evil:
        Having made these points about Stalnaker's interpretation and analysis of Xunzi's theory of self-transformation, let me turn to a lingering concern about the overarching goal of comparative analyses. Stalnaker makes a very strong case for needing forms of spiritual exercises to accomplish self-transformation toward better, moral forms of life. Furthermore, he, like I, wants to be able to retrieve some of these practices for contemporary purposes, to be used to transform lives today. Yet our desire to retrieve these spiritual exercises must confront the problem of whether or not they can be divorced from their conceptual and cultural context and still remain effective practices for self-transformation. Stalnaker believes it may be possible to retrieve some practices once we untangle the complex web of relations between the context and the practices themselves, the kind of work he undertakes in this book. 
         I picked this paragraph because it raises questions about the extent to which the ancient Chinese practices are applicable, as I suggested above.  

        Events like this are just one of the many benefits of having a good university in our city. 

        Sunday, December 14, 2014

        AIFF 2014: Sunday. The Last Day. Turkey, China, Florida, Then Awards

        This is the last day of the festival.  Sort of.  Tuesday and Wednesday will have Best of the Fest, where they will show some of the winning films again for those who missed them or want to see them again.

        So here's Sunday:



        I've heard good things about Come To My Voice from different folks, so that's where I'm headed first.  It's a film that focuses on a Kurdish family in Turkey.  I suspect I'll then go see the Chinese films.  Husband, Wife, and the Other Man, then the shorts.  They are sponsored by the Confucius Institute at UAA and should be good.  Though, they will have been approved by the Chinese government.    I saw Last Stop, Flamingo.  It's a quirky little film that had lots of nice touches about the director's road trip to Florida.  (Quirky isn't a put down.  I mean here that it creates its own conventions and doesn't worry about how a film is supposed to be.)

        The Awards Galas I've attended in past years have been very casual events with good food and a chance to talk with the different film makers.

        Sunday, November 30, 2014

        AIFF 2014: Short Narratives In Competition: A Box of Chocolates


        This category is like a box of chocolates - lots of little delicious bites of films.  So many choices, which should you pick?  Which will be best?  I haven't seen any of these films, but I've gathered crumbs from each, but not enough to spoil the surprise.


        The Short Narratives in competition are spread over three different short narrative programs.  Plus there are several other Short Narrative programs.  I've color coded the programs - the reds are in Global Village, the greens are in Love and Pain, and the purple is in Mixed Bag.

        OVERVIEW
        1. THE LIST OF SHORT NARRATIVES IN COMPETITION
        2. DESCRIPTIONS OF EACH GROUPED BY THE PROGRAMS THEY'RE IN
        3. LISTS OF THE OTHER SHORT NARRATIVE PROGRAMS

        1.  THE LIST OF SHORT NARRATIVES IN COMPETITION


        Narrative Shorts In Competition √
        Film Director Country Length Program
        Arena Martin RathPoland 23m Global Village
        Given Your History Molly McGlynn Canada 15m Global Village
        How Hipólito Vázquez Found Magic Where He Never Expected To Find It 
        [De cómo Hipólito Vázquez encontró magia donde no buscaba]
        Matias Rubio Argentina 15m Global Village
        Till Then [Bis Gleich] BenjaminWolff Germany 20m Global Village
        Tom in America Flavio Alves Brazil 17m Mixed Bag
        Universal Language Kirsten Russell USA 35m Love & Pain
        What Cheer? Michael Slavens USA 17m Love & Pain

        [UPDATE, Dec. 6, 2014:  It turns out I left out Full Windsor - a super short narrative in competition.  It plays in the Love and Pain program.]

        2.  DESCRIPTIONS OF THEM GROUPED BY THE PROGRAMS THEY'RE IN

        There are four films in competition in the Global Village program.

        Global Village - Shorts Program
        Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
        Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
        Into The Silent Sea | Andrej Landin 2013 
        **How Hipolito Vazquez Found Magic Where He Never Expected | Matias Rubio 2013   
        Intermission | Marielle Gautier 2014 
        **Arena | Martin Rath 2013  
        **Given Your History | Molly McGlynn 2014   
        **Till Then | Benjamin Wolff 2014  
         **= films in competition



        Screenshot from trailer - "shot in a perpetual twilight"
        Arena
        Martin Rath   
        Poland
        23m √

        Culture.Pl lists this Polish film, with a German director,  among The Most Interesting Debut Films of 2013

        It won what appears to be the main international prize at the Cork Film Festival where they posted this brief assessment:

        "Grand Prix International (€1,000)
        Martin Rath, Poland
        Jury Statement: From the first to the final frame, Arena maintains a threatening ambiguity. Shot in a perpetual twilight, things are always about to get dark, and Rath’s immense skill is to hold the tension as the film oscillates between machismo and sensitivity.
        Cork Short Film Nominee for the European Film Awards 2014
        ARENA"
        From the Krakow Film Festival:
        "A hitchhiker is taken in by an remote Polish mountain community. Absorbed by the charismatic locals and unforgiving harshness of his new environment he constitutes his presence in the mountains. But to whom do we have to prove of what we're made?"
        Part of Global Village Program that plays:
        Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
        Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
        ***********************************************************


        Given Your History
        Image from  National Screen Institute Canada:
        Canada
        15m √

        This is the US premiere of this film.  It's only been publicly shown once so far - in Hamilton, Canada

        From the National Screen Institute Canada:
        NSI Drama Prize short Given Your History, from writer/director Molly McGlynn and producer Laura Perlmutter, is getting even more festival exposure.
        Next month it screens at the Hamilton Film Festival on Saturday, November 8 at 9 p.m. as part of the drama shorts 2 programme at the Staircase Theatre.
        The short also screens in Alaska in December at the Anchorage International Film Festival as part of their short film selections.
        Given Your History is an honest look at two sisters trying to move on after their mother’s death from breast cancer.
        This means, Anchorage audiences will be among the first to see this film, and it's possibly an US premiere.  There apparently has been a shorter (4 minutes) version that's played in fesitivals Seattle and elsewhere.

        Part of Global Village Program that plays:
        Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
        Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
        ***********************************************************

        How Hipólito Vázquez Found Magic Where He Never Expected To Find It  [De cómo Hipólito Vázquez encontró magia donde no buscaba]
        Matias Rubio
        Argentina
        15m √

        From Two Short Nights Film Festival website:

        "Hipólito Vázquez is a talent scout. With his loyal partner Cholo, he is looking for a little child whose supposed to “do magic with the football”. Therefore they go on a long journey to the distant Club “La Camelia” following the advices of a mystery man. But as the trip goes along, not everything goes as planned and maybe what he ends up discovering was not exactly what he expected to find."
        Based on a map on the films Facebook page, this appears to be only the third US showing.  It got the Grand Jury Prize at the Indiana Short Film Festival in October this year.

        Part of Global Village Program that plays:
        Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
        Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
        ***********************************************************


        Image from Spiffest

        Till Then [Bis Gleich]
        Benjamin Wolff
        Germany
        20m √

        From a review by Beth Groundwater at the Breckenridge Film Festival:

        "A man and a woman sit at their respective windows across from each other on a busy street in Berlin, Germany, and observe the interesting minor dramas unfolding on the street below them. They never speak, but they acknowledge each others presence. But then one day the man does not appear. What should the woman do?
        Instead of relying on on a preponderance of dialogue to express emotion and move the story forward, the scriptwriter, Tara Lynn Orr, and director, Benjamin Wolff, expertly use the characters' actions to tenderly reveal the story to the viewer, the courage it takes for the woman to act, and the bittersweet result. This nineteen minute smile awaits you!"


        Part of Global Village Program that plays:
        Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
        Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
        ***********************************************************
        ***********************************************************


        Two films in competition in the Love & Pain program.


        Love & Pain - Shorts Program
        Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
        Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
        Four Brothers. Or Three. Wait ... Three. | Philip Buiser 2013
        The Mourning Hour | Susan Cohen 2013
        **Universal Language | Kirsten Russell 2014
        Beneath the Trees | Kitty Mahoney 2014
        Reaching Home | Kenneth Murphy 2013
        Full-Windsor | Faraday Okoro 2014
        **What Cheer? | Michael Slavens 2014
        **= films in competition

        [UPDATED 12/6:}  Full Windsor
        Image from Ari Fulton Design for Stage and Film

        Faraday Okoror
        USA
        6m

        A 10 year old boy battles his mother in order to wear his father's tie to school.



        Part of Love & Pain Program that plays:
        Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
        Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
        ***********************************************************

        Universal Language
        Kirsten Russell
        USA
        35m √

        Excerpt from Universal Language's Kickstarter page:  (It got more than its $3500 goal)

        "In the spring of 2013 I had plans to be in Austria for two weeks.  I got a call from a long-time friend (and gifted actress), Frederique Nahmani who had moved back to France.  And she threw and idea at me.
        "If you're going to be in the neighborhood, why not swing over to Paris...and shoot a little film."Now what normal person, let alone filmmaker, is gonna turn that down?
        the scriptI just had to write a script. So I started with the most obvious thing…the language. Or for me the language barrier since I'd be shooting a film as a stranger in a strange land.  I knew who my lead actress would be (clearly Frederique) and since I like to write for specific actors, like dysfunctional muses, I approached Marcel Simoneau, another long-time friend and filmmaking buddy.  And with these two, I made up Dan and Sophie... "

        The film she did for Kickstarter probably gives us a good introduction to the film:




        There's a long interview at FilmCourage if you want to know more.

        Part of Love & Pain Program that plays:
        Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
        Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
        ***********************************************************



        What Cheer?
        Michael Slavens
        USA
        17m √

        It's hard to find something about a lot of these movies that isn't just a copy of the official description of the movie.  I want you to get a sense of the movie without giving anything away that might spoil it.  So, here's what a film maker Patrick Longstreth wrote on his blog 
        "One of my favorites was “What Cheer?” starring Richard Kind. We shared a Q&A with director Michael Slavens, who is a thoughtful filmmaker and really nice guy. I was very happy to see his film win the “Filmmaker’s Favorite” award."

        What Cheer?  won the The Black Bear Award for Best Use of Sound at the Athens (Ohio) International Film Festival.



        Part of Love & Pain Program that plays:
        Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
        Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
        ***********************************************************
        ***********************************************************


        And one film in competition in the Mixed Bag Shorts Program:

        Mixed Bag  - Shorts Program
        Thu, Dec 11 8:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
        One Armed Man | Tim Guinee 2014
        Samantha '66 | Dan Wainio 2014
        **Tom in America | Flavio Alves 2014
        The Ladder | Pete Fitz 2013

        Zugwang | Yolanda Centeno 2014
        **in competition


        Tom in America
        Flavio Alves
        Brazil
        17m √

        This one only plays once as far as I can tell.  And although its director is a Brazilian and this is categorized as a Brazilian film, it takes place in New York, with a couple who celebrate their 50th anniversary, and then . . .  It stars two academy award nominees - Sally Kirkland who was nominated according to Wikipedia
        "1987 for Anna, for which she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Drama"
        and Burt Young, who, again according to Wikipedia, was also nominated for his role
        "as Sylvester Stallone's brother-in-law Paulie in Rocky (1976), for which he received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor."
        He's also been in a lot of other well-known movies television shows from Chinatown to M*A*S*H and the Sopranos.

        The clip below is NOT the official trailer, but the opening theme scored by Walter Schick.





        Part of Mixed Bag that plays:
        Thu, Dec 11 8:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large Unfortunately at the same time as Global Village Program with four other Short Narrative films in competition.   So see Global Village on Sunday Dec. 7 at 3pm
        ***********************************************************
        ***********************************************************


        3.  LISTS OF THE OTHER SHORT NARRATIVE PROGRAMS


        Three More Narrative Shorts Programs:

        • Alaska Grown (Thursday 8pm), 
        • Mexican (Friday Dec 12)  and 
        • Chinese Short Film Programs (Sun Dec. 14)


        Plus fifteen, mostly 2 minute, shorts from kids in the Iditarod School District.


        Alaska Grown
        Sat, Dec 13  5:00 PM   Alaska Experience Large
        Russian Jack | Jonathan Lang 2014
        Speak No Evil | James Elden 2014
        Wrong Side Up | Henry McComas 2014
        STORYTELLING | the movie | Stefanie Black 2013
        Six Dead Bodies Duct-Taped to a Merry-Go-Round | Kevin T. Bennett 2014
        Look What You Did | Eirin Strickland 2014
        Beneath the Trees | Kitty Mahoney 2014


        Short Films From the Guanajuato International Film Festival
        7:00 PM     Fri, Dec 12  Alaska Experience Theater - Large
        Under The Sun [Bajo el sol] | Arcadi Palerm 2012 
        Fifteen Years [Quince Años] | Liliana Torres 2012 
        An Eye [Un ojo] | Lorenza Manrique 2012 
        No Brakes [Sin Frenos] | Pancho Ortega 
        Eskimo [Eskimal] | Homero Ramírez 2011



        UAA Confucius Institute 
        Short Films from China
        Sun, Dec 14  2:30 PM  Alaska Experience Large
        Return to Prairie | Liqi Yi
        Can’t Piss | Xinqi Song
        Summer Secret | Zeng Zeng
        Grandfather’s Wishes | Yu We



        There are also feature films as part of the Mexican films and the Chinese Films.