Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Three Thats, Caterpillar Liquefaction, The Electrician, And Impeachment Banter

1.  This first one has me in mild awe of this sentence that has three 'that's in a row, correctly.  

From New Republic article on Frosh* Member** of Congress Katie Porter:
"She discovered as much during her teaching days, when students declared the subjects she taught to be “too hard”—“my classes were like, ‘oh my God, what even is that that that lady teaches?!’”—but she remains devoted to breaking the concepts down."
The article is worth reading to get to know this interesting young Congress member.

*Frosh is a gender neutral substitute for Freshman
**Member of Congress is gender neutral for Congressman or Congresswoman (Just plain Rep. can work too, but it could be confused with a state rep)
And while I'm at it, I'll mention a term that many people still use - "to man (ie a booth)" when a non-sexist alternative for most cases exists:  "to staff".


2.  Under, "whoa, I didn't know that!"

From an LA Times article about Art Shapiro,  a 73 year old professor of evolution and ecology at UC Davis  who has been tracking butterflies in ten locations in California every two weeks as long as the weather permits.  He's been doing that for 47 years.

"Butterflies are not the only insects that go through a dramatic metamorphosis, but they may be the most well-studied.
Even so, as recently as 50 years ago scientists weren’t sure how this transformation occurred, but in the last few decades researchers learned that between the caterpillar and adult stage the animal’s body liquefies inside the pupa and then reorganizes itself to form the butterfly. Only the nervous system stays intact."

3.  We had the electricians out to convert light to LED's,  work on our out-of-date electrical panel, and other things around the house - including dealing with the wire cut accidentally by the floor guy.  So here's a picture I couldn't resist of one electrician and his shadow.



4.  Impeachment Quotes

After Rep. Jim Jordan said he wanted to question "the person who started all this"  Rep. Welch replied:  (from Talking Points Memo)
“I say to my colleague, I’d be glad to have the person who started it all come in and testify,” Welch said.
“President Trump is welcome to take a seat right there,” 
This was a rare bit of snark from the Democrats today.  There was one more spot where I was hoping for one more.   Here's part of Rep. Maloney's questioning: (from Rev.com's transcript)

Patrick Maloney: (00:25)
So when you’re top 1% of your class at West Point, you probably get your pick of assignments, but you picked the infantry didn’t you, sir?
Bill Taylor: (00:35)
I did, sir. Yes, sir.
Patrick Maloney: (00:36)
You were a rifle company commander?
Bill Taylor: (00:38)
Sir.
Patrick Maloney: (00:39)
Where’d you serve?
Bill Taylor: (00:41)
In Vietnam.
Patrick Maloney: (00:41)
Did you see combat in Vietnam, sir?
Bill Taylor: (00:44)
I did. 

I was hoping he'd ask one more question:

Patrick Maloney:  Did you have bone spurs?

But he didn't, and it's probably just as well he didn't.  

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Lunch With Rich Curtner (AIFF) And Visit to Seward Highway Planning Meeting

I had lunch with the chair of the Anchorage International Film Festival to catch up on change to how things are being done this year.  Here he's checking films on his phone.  There have been some significant changes with a non-local Festival Programer who is also a film maker who lives in Norway.  Some of that has to do with which films got selected into the festival.  There still were local programmers, but the last word went to the Ida.

Also there were no 'films in competition.'  All films that were selected are eligible for prizes.  But
the juries this year are only partially local.  There are also international jurists and the final decisions rest outside of Anchorage.

And Festival Genius is out and GOELevent is in.  Those are film festival websites for managing the schedules and online ticketing.  I'm just starting to play with GOELevent and there have been some glitches - films that didn't show up when searched and things like that.

Will there be Audience Awards this year?  Stay tuned.  The board meets Saturday to work out remaining decisions.  I did a short video, but I'm having trouble between iMovie and Youtube.  Good thing I tried today so I can get this cleared up before the festival starts.

I'll catch up more on this later.  It was a beautiful sunny day.  A little cooler this morning, but no snow at all and the only ice I saw riding over to lunch was in puddles.

Later I went to Loussac to check out the public meeting on the midtown transportation project.  Basically it's focused on the Seward Highway between Tudor and Fireweed.  They've been working with some community councils and it's a big, long term project.  36th would go under the Seward Highway, then the highway would go below ground under Benson and Northern Lights.

The more I think about this, the more I think there are better ways to spend half a billion dollars.

The bottom/left is going north, the toplight  is going south.  The white box on the right side is Midtown Mall (old Sears Mall) and the white boxes on the upper left are Fred Meyer.  Seward Highway goes underground just before Benson and comes back up after Northern Lights.  They don't have any plans for the large space between the north and south lanes.  


This is another view.



But they also said that most of the traffic coming from the south is going to midtown, so there will still be a lot of traffic crossing Tudor, 36th,  Benson,  Northern Lights, and Fireweed.  There were some predictions of increased traffic in the next 20 years, but even with the long light at 36th and Seward Highway, I can still get most places in Anchorage in 15 minutes (except at 5pm when it might take 20 or 25 minutes.

90% of the 1/2 billion dollar price tag would be paid for by the Federal government, or at least that's the plan.  I can't help but think that the construction industry is going to be the big winners here and folks in Anchorage will get years of torn up roads and then some marginally improved traffic at the end.

Pedestrians and bikes should come out better with wider trails and easier crossings of the Seward Highway.  I don't enjoy crossing the highway on my bike, but I've learned how the lights work and just relax as I wait for them to change.  And I watch out for people making right turns when I have the walk sign.

The only part that I endorse 100% is a fix for the tunnel along Chester Creek at Seward Highway.  Here's a picture of the tunnel and the pipe for the creek now from the east side.  Riding on a bright day, you get into the tunnel and it's hard to see.  Even on a gray day.  And the creek is reduced to a pipe going under the highway.


This is significantly better for bikes, walkers, joggers, and fish.



The biggest benefit is for people driving north and south through midtown.  They won't have to stop for lights.  But people going into midtown will have to stop for lights and people on the east-west streets will still have to cope with lights and traffic coming off the highway.  Pedestrians get shorter streets to cross (going east and west) but it will now take two lights to get across both directions because the median between north and south lanes will be significantly wider.

I want to see clear estimates for how much time people will save.  They mentioned pedestrians who have died in this area crossing streets in the last ten years or so.  The speaker (not the slides) went on to say, "That's just non-motorized deaths."  Really?  These are deaths of pedestrians running into each other?  I'm guessing a motorized vehicle was involved in all the pedestrian deaths.  How many deaths would prevented if we spent $500 million on Medicaid including much better mental health treatment?  A lot more than six I'm sure.

Those are my initial thoughts.  More trees along the Midtown mall parking lot would improve things for a lot less, and fixing some sidewalks.  I think about the Tudor bridge with the very narrow sidewalks.  Why didn't that get reasonable sidewalks from the beginning?  Or when they widened the highway more recently?

What corners are they going to cut when funding doesn't match their current dreams?  Non-motorized transportation will get shortchanged yet again?

I need to be convinced with more details that show this will
a)  indeed improve the flow of traffic significantly
b)  make things much easier for pedestrians, bikes, runners, etc.
c)  give us more bang for our buck (or more benefit for the cost) than spending money on health care and education.

I do recognize that this money is tied to Federal highway monies, so we can get it for the roads, but not the other areas that probably would see much greater benefits.

Monday, November 11, 2019

Been Busy - New Kitchen Floor, Not Yet Winter, Fog


It's November 11, 2019.  We haven't had any snow in town.   Friday when I went to my OLÉ Homeless class, it was sunny and comfy and the snow was disappearing on the mountains.


















And this yarrow flower is hanging in there outside in the yard.



A few times things have gotten frosty,





like Saturday when I rode over to UAA for the Citizens Climate Lobby meeting.







It was also foggy that day.



Our delayed winter has me not wanting to stop biking and Saturday didn't offer any problems, but I decided to break down and get studded tires for my old mountain bike that I've used for winters.
 I didn't realize how speedy [spendy] studded tires are.  It cost more than the old bike, which I'd gotten at a YMCA auction maybe ten years ago.  But if they keep me from breaking an arm, they'll be worth it.  This bike's old wheels were perfectly fine in packed snow, but as winters have gotten warmer, there are a lot more icy days.  We'll see how often I actually use the bike and how well the studs work.









This morning was probably the coldest this fall - about 27˚F outside.












Meanwhile, inside has been rather chaotic.  Our old carpet is wearing out, very noticeably in spots.
And the linoleum in the kitchen was getting yellow, so we went for a new floor there too.  But they said to do the kitche/dining area first.  And that had to be shipped up from Outside.  We've been waiting for a few months now,  It looked pretty bad from time to time as TK determined that the old floor had to go so the kitchen wouldn't be higher than the carpet with the new bamboo panels.  








But he cleaned everything up pretty well each evening.  But there are tools all over the place.









But we're almost done.  This was actually Saturday night when we put up a temporary folding table up.





This side was finished today, but there's a little more on the kitchen side where a wire to two outlets got cut.  Fortunately, the electrician is scheduled for Wednesday to do some work on our old fixtures and putting in LED fixtures and other trickier jobs.

So we've juggling things a bit this last week.  And I'm working on more film festival posts.  The documentaries look great.  I'm just going through the features and they look interesting too.  My enthusiasm has been renewed and I'm looking forward to the festival which begins Dec. 6.  There's a new AIFF 2019 tab under the header.  Good night.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Thoughts On Pebble Mine After 6 Classes

I've been to six of the planned eight OLÉ classes on Pebble Mine. Here's my sense of this mega project to extract copper, gold, molybdenum, and other metals in a remote area adjacent to the world's largest salmon fishery.


1.  Obsession:   Anyone who wants to undertake a project of this scope in the United States has to be an obsessive gambler. The amount of time and effort it takes to get all the permits, to get to the site, to put in infrastructure, to put in all the safety procedures, to woo the local communities, and to so raw mining and then to clean up everything is enormous.   I suspect that for some people this is a challenge, like climbing the peaks of the world's highest mountains.  I imagine for all who undertake such projects, the promise of great riches is a key factor.  And apparently, getting a project along a certain part of the way, means the project can then be sold to someone else.  And I'm not exactly sure who's money is at risk and what sort of tax benefits some may get out of losses in a project like this.
For example here are some of the Pebble Mine presentation slides that show a sense of the enormous scope of the project without getting into minutiae:


They have to process such enormous amounts of ore because the amount of valuable minerals is a tiny fraction.


This is just the site for the current 20 year planned mine.  There's a much richer ore deposit to the east of this, but it's buried under bedrock and harder to get at.  No one seems to believe that this project is going to end after 20 years.  That's just the point where they will begin this process over again to then go after the rest of the ore.





2. Complexity.  There is no one person who has the knowledge and experience to be able to assimilate all the data in order to make a yes or no decision on a project like this.  There's way too much technical data from too many different areas.  We've been told about tests of chemical reactions, groundwater studies, surface water studies, acidity, toxicity, bulk tailings and pyritic tailings,  porphyry intrusions, how copper affects salmon's ability to smell, the many federal and state regulations, and  growing demand for copper in green economy,

Here's an overview of the Baseline Study - an attempt to document the existing conditions.  Who is really going to read 30,000 pages?




3.  Many Decisions.   There isn't just one decision.  There are many permits and approvals to get - some of which can stop the project.

On the left are the US Army Corps of Engineers authorities.  On the right are other federal laws. (clicking on any of the images will enlarge and focus them)



And there are approvals and permits needed from Alaska.


And here are all the groups involved in the Army Corps of Engineers Environmental Impact.


Although we got charts showing the decision making process, no one ever said who exactly makes the final decision.  Is it just one person?  Or several people?  We still have two more sessions so I can ask next week.  (I'll miss the last session, unfortunately.)

4. Risk.   In fact, this is NOT a technical decision. Ultimately it's a decision about risk.  How much risk is there and is that risk worth the possible consequences?  It's about the level of comfort with risk the decision maker has.  There isn't just one risk, but many.  At the extreme is the potentially catastrophic consequence of destroying the salmon in Bristol Bay.  McNeil River bears are also nearby.  Then there are the possibilities of lesser impacts on the salmon and other parts of the environment around the mine site.  On the other side are the benefits, which the Pebble folks identified as employment for local people and the importance of copper in the new green environment.  And, of course, the hundreds of millions of potential profit.

Here are some slides from the presentation of Bristol Bay Native Corporation which opposes the mine:

And this slide from the Pebble Mine folks:



5.  Ultimately It's A Values Based Decision.  Aside from the decision maker(s) comfort with and exposure to risk in this situation, this all boils down to two opposing world views:

  1. The United States is based on individual freedom and capitalism which allow, even encourage, individuals and corporations to go out and exploit the world's God given natural resources to become rich and make the general economy better
  2. Human beings are part of nature, not APART from nature.  Humans have been exploiting the planet and now it has reached the point that human caused climate change will make life and survival for humans and most other species of life much harder.


6.  The Decision.   The decision on Pebble will probably be determined not so much by all the technical details that are being presented, but by where on the spectrum between World Views #1 and #2  the decision maker(s) sit.


7.  Money.  As I review all this, I realize that one important aspect* of the Pebble Mine project has not been discussed in the class - how the project is being financed.  I made the assumption in #1 above that this was a gamble.  But bits of conversation after class with presenters makes me question that.  At one point I made a comment about Northern Dynasty (the company that has been at the lead in this project) and someone said, they won't be the ones who actually carry all this out.  They will be sold out.  So I have questions about how a deal like this is put together.    Who actually has money at risk?  Who is investing in this?  What are their motives?  How much of the expenses of doing all the preparation costs are only paper losses?

These all boil down to who is actually risking how much money and what do they stand to gain?  To what extent do tax payers end up underwriting this because of tax deductions for business expenses or tax offsets for losses?

*Of course there are other important aspects that haven't been discussed that I haven't yet thought of, I'm sure.

Friday, November 08, 2019

NO, NO, NO - They're Using Vaclav Havel To Sell Guns

Here's the email I got yesterday:

Hey Steve,
Vaclav Havel isn’t just the one man perhaps most personally responsible for bringing down Communism -- he was also cool and with a compelling personal story.
I noticed on your website that you’ve talked about Vaclav Havel in the past, http://whatdoino-steve.blogspot.com/2009/07/open-letter-to-obama-from-central-and.html so I assume you’re still interested in the topic, and what better time to re-address his life than the day the Berlin Wall fell -- November 9, 1989.
We recently published Vaclav Havel: The Forgotten History of the Political Dissident Who Founded the Czech Republic which chronicles the life of one of the men who did tireless and often dangerous work to tear down Communism.
When you get a minute do you think you could give it a look-see and let us know how we could make it better?
https://ammo.com/articles/vaclav-havel-forgotten-history-founder-czech-republic-political-dissident
Stay free,
- Alex Horsman
My post that Alex links to just mentions Havel as part of a long list of Central and Eastern European statesmen asking the President Obama not to forget them because there are other pressing issues like Iraq and Afghanistan. Another post focuses much more on his ideas.  Havel's resistance was much more sophisticated than guns.  He developed theoretical models of how authoritarianism worked, so that people could find ways to fight it - not by shooting at it, but by taking it apart.  Using Havel to sell guns is like using the Joker to raise funds to help hungry refugee children.  Bizarre.

I realize SEO (Search Engine Optimization) folks spend their time trying to get links to their material.  I get comments daily from people in places like India, Vietnam, Ghana, who write glowing praise of a post  in slightly odd English that has some vague connection to a subject in a link they leave. The most persistent topic lately is on my posts that mention vampires, telling people how to become a vampire.

But this one is a little different.  It was an email.  I've gotten things like this before, often asking me to let them do a guest post on my blog.  But this is just asking me for a comment.  So I checked out the article.  What struck me first was that this is a site that sells weapons and ammunition!

That's why I left the url, for the really curious, but didn't put in a link.

The article is about Vaclav Havel and starts:
"Our historical unsung heroes are generally impressive figures. But there are very few one might accurately call “cool.” This is an exception. Václav Havel, the founder of the modern-day Czech Republic (also known as Czechia) is undoubtedly cool by any definition of the word. A political dissident under the Soviet-backed regime, he served hard time in Communist prisons rather than bend the knee to their authority. His moral courage acted as a beacon of hope for the entire resistance movement behind the Iron Curtain."
I never thought of Havel as a hero for the gun set, but reading that paragraph, I can see it.  But, of course, Havel was an intellectual, a playwright, not a gun packing survivalist.  But here he's being repackaged for the rabid right, who would take up arms to overthrow the coming.  From the Atlantic:
"Havel's revolutionary message -- which helped oust the world's second strongest power from his country, but which Americans and in that moment the American Congress have not always been ready to hear -- is that peace does not come by defeating enemies, it comes by making people free, governments democratic, and societies just. "The idea of human rights and freedoms must be an integral part of any meaningful world order. Yet, I think it must be anchored in a different place, and in a different way, than has been the case so far. If it is to be more than just a slogan mocked by half the world, it cannot be expressed in the language of a departing era, and it must not be mere froth floating on the subsiding waters of faith in a purely scientific relationship to the world," he said in a 1994 speech."
But as I read the gun seller's post on Havel, it's relatively accurate.  It talks about his upper class background and his literary career.  It does seem wrong to me, even like appropriation, for a gun seller to use Havel to sell guns and ammo.  And Havel is only one of a nine other "Unsung Heroes" in their Resistance Library.  Others:


  • S.B. Fuller: The Forgotten History of a Legendary Black American Entrepreneur
  • Annie Oakley: The Forgotten History of the Most Iconic American Woman Sharpshooter
  • Edward Snowden: The Untold Story of How One Patriotic American Exposed NSA Surveillance
  • Sam Colt: The Forgotten History of America's Legendary Firearms Inventor and Manufacturer
  • Davy Crockett: The Forgotten History of the King of the Wild Frontier & the Battle of the Alamo
  • Susan B. Anthony: The Forgotten History of the Woman Who Inspired the 19th Amendment
  • Milton Friedman: The Forgotten History of the Godfather of Conservative Libertarianism
  • Vaclav Havel: The Forgotten History of the Political Dissident Who Founded the Czech Republic
  • Charlton Heston: The Forgotten History of America's Favorite Actor and Gun Rights Advocate

Not sure how many of these could be considered "Unsung" heroes.  Havel is pretty sung.  So is Davy Crockett and Susan B. Anthony.  How would Snowden feel if he knew he was being used to sell guns?  I guess he'd say his name had been used in worse ways.  I get Annie Oakley, Sam Colt, Davy Crockett, and Charlton Heston.  They all have connections with guns.

And I guess it's legitimate counting the others as freedom fighters.  But is putting them here simply recognizing them as heroes of freedom or is it a way to coop them and their legacy to promote guns and in the fight against any form of gun control?

I've long believed that if you go far enough to the right and far enough to the left, there is a lot of overlap and anti-authority similarity.  But the anti-government wing of the Republicans tends to be more for a libertarian individual's freedom to do whatever he wants, while on the left it's for more to get the government to respect the rights of everyone, not just the individual protesting.

Maybe that's my biased view.  Or maybe there's ground here for the left and right to discuss some common ground.  I don't know.  My gut reacts strongly to Vaclav Havel being used to sell guns, which is ultimately what this website is about.

Thursday, November 07, 2019

AIFF 2019: Feature Docs -Survival (Peoples, Rhinos), War & Protest, Siberia to Alaska, Growing Up [UPDATED 11/11/19]

This looks like strong group of films.  Many link directly or indirectly to Alaska, They'll take you to Siberia,  to visit Canadian and South American Indigenous Peoples and Sami in Finland, to Kenya, Scotland and Chile, Alaska, Germany, and Vietnam.  This is all the feature docs.  You can see the list of films from all the categories in my previous AIFF2019 post.  I'll try to do something similar for the narrative features (fictional feature length films).  There are simply way too many shorts in all the categories to cover them like this, but I'm thinking of ways to help film buffs find out about them as easily as possible.

To help people plan their viewing schedules, I've put the documentaries up in the order that they will be show (I'll put up the time for The Power of Yoik as soon as I find it.  Also, a couple of cases I'm not sure of country.)


DOCUMENTARY FEATURES

 SATURDAY, Dec 07, 2019

ALS ICH MAL GROSS WAR  (Back When I Was Big)
Directors:  Philipp Fleischmann & Lilly Engel
Germany
82 minutes
Showing:  SATURDAY, Dec 07, 2019 3:00 pm  Alaska Experience Theatre - Small

I'm having trouble finding much about this film in English, but never fear. ]Google Translate is has gotten really good.  First, for those literate in German from the film's website:
"Können Sie sich noch daran erinnern, wie es war, als Sie ein Kind waren? Als das ganze Leben noch vor einem lag, aufregend, verheißungsvoll, voller Abenteuer und Träume... Was wird eigentlich aus diesen Träumen, wohin verschwinden sie beim Erwachsenwerden? Das sind die Fragen, die ALS ICH MAL GROSS WAR stellt. Und mit Humor, Herz und Poesie beantwortet.

Fünf Jahre haben die Filmemacher Lilly Engel und Philipp Fleischmann die drei Kinder Lucas, Marius und Renée dokumentarisch begleitet. Der Zuschauer kann sie auf dem Weg vom Kind zum Teenager erleben – und gleichzeitig die Veränderungen ihrer Träume. Für die Alter Egos der Kinder in der Zukunft konnte mit Isabell Polak („Vaterfreuden“), Constantin von Jascheroff („Picco“) und Sebastian Schwarz („Ballon“) ein prominenter Hauptcast gewonnen werden.

ALS ICH MAL GROSS WAR ist eine so noch nie gesehene Mischung aus Dokumentar- und Spielfilm, ein kindlicher Blick in die Zukunft und ein erwachsener Blick zurück in die eigene Vergangenheit. Eine berührende und humorvolle Geschichte, die von großer Freundschaft erzählt, vom Erwachsenwerden, und die uns mit Leichtigkeit und Witz zum Lachen und Nachdenken bringt."
While this is in the documentary category, the description says it's a mix of documentary and fiction.




"Can you still remember what it was like when you were a child? When the whole life was still ahead of you, exciting, auspicious, full of adventure and dreams ... What will become of these dreams, where do they go when they grow up? These are the questions that once I asked WHY. And answered with humor, heart and poetry.

Filmmakers Lilly Engel and Philipp Fleischmann accompanied the three children Lucas, Marius and Renée documentary for five years. The viewer can experience it on the way from the child to the teenager - and at the same time the changes of their dreams. For the future alter egos of children in the future, a prominent main cast could be won with Isabell Polak ("Vaterfreuden"), Constantin von Jascheroff ("Picco") and Sebastian Schwarz ("Balloon").

WHEN I'VE BEEN GREAT is an unprecedented mix of documentary and feature film, a childlike look into the future and a mature look back into your own past. A touching and humorous story that tells of great friendship, about growing up, and that makes us laugh and think with ease and wit."


Nae Pasaran
Directed by:  Felipe Bustos Sierra
Scotland
2018
Showing:  SATURDAY, Dec 07, 2019 6:00 pm   Bear Tooth Theatrepub

This looks like a great movie, and not just because this summer I was at La Moneda, the building that was bombed in this clip.  But having recently visited Santiago, I have a little more connection to the story of the director and the story he tells in this film.  Felipe Bustos Sierra's father is a journalist who was exiled from Chile to Belgium during Pinochet's rule.  The director grew up in Belgium and now, lives in Scotland.


The film is about factory workers who realize that the engines they are supposed to repair are from the Chilean air force that has been bombing its own capital.  They manage to not work on the engines for years.  They info I've found on the film doesn't tell impact of 'losing' those engines, but it hints that the film will.



SUNDAY, Dec 08, 2019


Follow the River - Searching for freedom in Alaska
Director:  Tilo Mahn
Germany
67 minutes
Showing:  SUNDAY, Dec 08, 2019 12:00 pm   Alaska Experience Theatre - Large

From German Documentaries:
Mike and Nate Turner believe in a life consistent with nature. Father and son have decided to quit their old life and go back in time to start a new life in the wilderness of Alaska. Surrounded by vast forests, mountains and rivers they follow the roots of the early trappers and hunters. Mike and Nate want to leave everything behind that had determined their former life. Getting away from civilization is a way for them to live their ideals and dreams: to live off the land just like the early trappers and hunters did. Their story tells a story of people who want to break away from the rest of the world.

FOLLOW THE RIVER_ALASKA_Trailer 2018 from Salomé Lou Römer on Vimeo.



Northern Travelogues
Director:  Kira Jääskeläinen
Finland
58 minutes
Showing:  SUNDAY, Dec 08, 2019 2:00 pm    Alaska Experience Theatre - Large

From the film director's website:
In 1917 Finnish explorer Sakari Pälsi travelled to north-eastern Siberia carrying a cinematograph and 13,000 feet of film with him. The journey birthed a unique documentary film and a travelogue.

A hundred years later director Kira Jääskeläinen returns to the Bering strait in Pälsi's footsteps. By combining old and new film footage, Pälsi's notes and the stories of the local Indigenous peoples, the film tells the story of the Chukchi and Siberian Eskimos from the days gone by till today. 

Northern travelogues TRAILER from Illume Ltd on Vimeo.


Also from the website, about the director:
Kira Jääskeläinen was born in Warsaw into a Finnish-Polish family.  She moved to Finland as a child, and the first part of her life she studied classical cello under the supervision of professor Seppo Laamanen in Helsinki.

Wanting to explore other countries, Kira moved to Copenhagen at the age of 19. She studied Russian studies at the University of Copenhagen. During several expeditions to north-eastern Siberia, Kira's interest in documentary filmmaking grew. She has studied at the All Russian State Institute of Cinematography in Moscow and in several international documentary workshops, including Eurodoc and Nipkow Program.

Since 2010 Kira has worked in different aspects of filmmaking for companies in Finland, Denmark and Germany.  Her debut film Tagikaks - Once Were Hunters (2012) has been screened & awarded on festivals all over the world. Kira was the artistic director of Polish Film Weeks in Finland during 12 years. She is a regular guest curator and jury member at international film festivals.

Currently Kira lives and works in her country house in Southern Finland. She has just finished a new documentary film Northern Travelogues, which will premiere in the beginning of 2019. 

MONDAY Dec 09, 2019

Kifaru
Director:  David Hambridge
USA - Kenya
79 minutes
Showing: MONDAY Dec 09, 2019 6:00 pm  Bear Tooth Theatrepub

From the Hollywood Reporter:
Kifaru, David Hambridge’s account of efforts to protect the only surviving northern white rhinos in the wild, arrives at a critical stage in the preservation of the species. Confronting the possibility of extinction through the eyes of a dedicated team assigned as Sudan’s caretakers adds another layer of urgency, transforming the film from competent conservation documentary into compelling real-life drama.
Relocated from a conflict area in his namesake country as a juvenile, Sudan ended up in a Czech zoo for years, before he was transferred to the Ol Pejeta wildlife conservancy in central Kenya, along with his captive-raised daughter Najin and granddaughter Fatu. Besides sheltering a variety of other dislocated species, the refuge’s goal is to protect Sudan from poachers and care for him long enough for wildlife scientists to develop a method to clone his DNA, a completely unprecedented task. Surrounded by armed rangers guarding the reserve’s perimeter, new recruits JoJo and Jacob join the privileged ranks of Sudan’s caretakers under the watchful guidance of veteran keeper James.

This is a film from North Carolina State of the director talking about his work and this film.





 WEDNESDAY,  Dec 11, 2019

The American War
Director:  Dr. Daniel Bernardi
USA/Vietnam (not certain)
Showing:  WEDNESDAY,  Dec 11, 2019 8:00 pm   Alaska Experience Theatre - Large

Excerpt From Veteran Documentary Corps Blog:

SC: How did you come up with the idea for the film?
Daniel Bernandi: After successfully producing roughly 25 short films on 25 different veterans, I knew it was time for Veteran Documentary Corp to begin making feature-length documentaries to tell deeper, more developed stories of the veteran experience. I selected Vietcong veterans as the subject of our first feature for a couple reasons.  First, despite the fact that many Americans have seen stories or read about the Vietnam War, the story of the Vietcong veteran has not been told — at least not for American audiences. Why did the Vietnamese fight? What was their experience of, for example, Agent Orange or South Vietnamese torture? What was it like being Veterans in a county that includes veterans from the “other” side (e.g., South Vietnamese soldiers)? Second and equally important, I wanted to address experiences shared by veterans across time and country. The experience of war is more universal than era or nation might otherwise suggest.



 FRIDAY Dec 13, 2019


Cumhachd a' Yoik/The Power of Yoik
Directed by Paul-Anders Simma
Finland
58 minutes
Showing:  Friday Dec 13, 2019 6:00 pm  Anchorage Museum Auditorium

From IDFA:
Yoiking is the sacred chanting style of Europe’s only indigenous peoples, the Sami’s. Yoiking was a powerful tool for the shamans to reach the spirit world. When Lapland was colonized, the invaders forbade the yolk. Many Shamans where burned as witches, when they refused to stop to Yolk. Young Sami woman Inga Gaup- Juuso belongs to a nomadic family. Tourists are invading their lands, and the herds are driven out of the best grazing grounds. When the family reindeer herd is struck by starvation, Inga decides to test the power of Yoik.
The closest I can find to any video of The Power of Yoik is embedded in this Tweet from last year. The video is no longer up at the BBC link.






SATURDAY  Dec 14, 2019

The Condor & the Eagle
Directors:  Clement Guerra & Sophie Guerra
90 minutes
Canada
Showing:  SATURDAY  Dec 14, 2019 12:00 pm   Anchorage Museum Auditorium
Video from the film's Indiegogo campaign.


From Indigenous Again:

Four Indigenous leaders embark on an extraordinary trans-continental adventure from the Canadian plains to deep into the heart of the Amazonian jungle to unite the peoples of North and South America and deepen the meaning of “Climate Justice”.
This film documents the stories of these four well-known Native environmental spokespeople who are at the forefront of a perspective shift in the identity of their people, from forgotten voices to strong shared communities with the power to bring change to the entire world. Their path through the jungle takes them on an unexpectedly challenging and liberating journey, which will forever change their attachment to the Earth and one another.



Wednesday, November 06, 2019

Wondering Why Planes Flying Are Over Anchorage Again Today?

The summer of planes flying over the city ended October 1, 2019, when the two summer long work to upgrade the North-South runway was completed.

But there have been a few times since then that they've been back rumbling overhead, including today.

I checked with the airport and Teri Lindseth told me:

  1. Today, FAA is doing a scheduled check on Instrument Approach and Landing instruments and it should be completed by 5:30 this afternoon if all goes right.  
  2. Earlier night closures were due to wind.
  3. Earlier day closures were due to need to work on electrical equipment on the North-South runway

Tuesday, November 05, 2019

Thanks To Kathy and Her Friends

At least one of my readers is a Kentucky voter, so thanks Kathy.


I went to a fundraiser for Alyse Galvin tonight.  She's going to replace our head hunting member of Congress after the elections two days less than a year from now.   (At first I wrote 'head butting' but Liz Ruskin said it was more like a nudge, but if you go in his office, the walls are lined with the heads of dead animals.

Picture from FB via Open Secrets

Monday, November 04, 2019

AIFF 2019 - Films Selected For This Year's Anchorage International Film Festival

The AIFF 2019 website is undergoing a serious makeover I'm told.  Right now it's still out of date.   The Facebook page is also not really active yet.  I've set up an AIFF 2019 Tab above that offers and overview of the festival, some tips about how 'to do' the festival, as well as daily alerts once the festival begins.  It will also index my festival posts.

Festival is Friday Dec. 6 through Sunday Dec. 15, 2019.

But I'm excited that this year's Program Director is Ida Theresa Mycklebost.  Her short film about a 6 year old Syrian refugee in Greece won an award in 2017,   To give you a sense of who she is, here's a short video I did with her then:




She sent me this list of the selections for this year's festival.  I'd note that there is no category "Films in Competition" this year, so I'm going to have to be creative about how I pick some films in different categories to highlight.

This is the first appetizer for the festival.  At this point all the films are just names.  Soon we'll get some samplings here, and December 6 we can start seeing the films and meeting the film makers.  No earthquakes this year!

FEATURES

DOCUMENTARY FEATURES
Nae Pasaran by Felipe Bustos Sierra
Northern Travelogues by Kira Jääskeläinen
Kifaru by David Hambridge
Back When I Was Big by Philipp Fleischmann & Lilly Engel
The Condor & the Eagle by Clement Guerra & Sophie Guerra
Follow the River - Searching for freedom in Alaska by Tilo Mahn
Power of Yoik by Paul-Anders Simma
The American War by Dr. Daniel Bernardi
*
*
*
NARRATIVE FEATURES
The Body Remembers When The World Broke Open by Kathleen Hepburn & Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
Banana Split by Benjamin Ben Kasulke
Feral by Andrew Wonder
From The Vine by Sean Cisterna
GUTTERBUG by Andrew Gibson
Inside The Rain by Aaron Fisher
Laugh or Die by Heikki Kujanpää
Straight Up by James Sweeney
Team Marco by Julio Vincent Gambuto
The Ghost Who Walks by Cody Stokes
Those Who Remained (Someone To Live For) by Barnabás Tóth
Vanilla by Will Dennis
*
*
*
MADE IN ALASKA FEATURES
Attla by Catharine Axley
Immigrant Outpost by John D. Hay Jr.
Felix Pedro - If One Could Only Imagine by Paolo Muran
*
SHORTS
NARRATIVE SHORTS
(t)here by Snigdha Kapoor
Clown by Mitchell Hahn & Keeley Giblin
Consent by Sabatier Florent
Cornhusk by Jaiden Mitchell
Dios Nunca Muere (God Never Dies) by Barbara Cigarroa
Eternity by Anna Sobolevksa
Fairy Tail by Justin & Kristin Schaack
Glasgow by Greg Ivan Smith
Hearth by Sophie B Jacques
Helping Hands by Alexander Ray Gustaveson
Just Me and You by Sandrine Brodeur-Desrosiers
Lolo by Paulo Menezes, Leandro Goddinho
Madame by Garth Jennings
Moon Made by Caleb Haydock
Mr. Sam by Zeus Kontoyannis
Road To Her by Jee-hoon Cho
Showan by Bijan Zarin
Sin Cielo by Jianna Maarten
Tank Man by Robert Anthony Peters
The Christmas Bull by Rosie Jones
The Dig by Gerardo Antonio de Leon
The Orchestra by Curtis Matzke
The Proposal by Det Sporadiske Filmkollektivet
The Seahorse Trainer by Babak Bina & Ricardo Bonisoli
The Swimmer by Pablo Barce Orellana
To College by Quinn Halleck
Touchscreen by Arthur Halpern
Zero One by Kirsten Russell
*
*
*
DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (26)
Ài Bàba (Love Dad) by Connie Huang
American Made: Union Built by Jacinta Filiaci, Spencer Santini & Peng Wang
Asma by Ryan Musto & Aidan Reilly
Carving Space by Annie Dean-Ganek
Class Act: Dance Hall Divas by Michael Holbrook Moss
Getting Off The Streets by Jamila Paksima
Jalil and Khalil by Roholla Akbari
Katie and the Black Robin Hood by Alessandra Giordano & John Richie
Knocking Down The Fences by Meg Shutzer
Love Birds by Ashley Mosher
Res-urgency by Desirée Wallace
The Family Farm by Kim Jansson
The Man of the Trees by Andrea Trivero
The Trolls & I by Charlotte Madvig Schmidt
Tungrus by Rishi Chandna
Wandering in the White by Otto Heikola
When Pride Came to Town by Julie Lunde Lillesæter & Julia Dahr
Without A Scratch by Samantha Farinella
*
*
*
MADE IN ALASKA SHORTS
12:34 by Quinton Oliver Smith
Alaskan Furry Friends by Garrett Wilson
Dasher by James Kendall
Eskimo Inc. by Mr M M Baring
Games of Survival: A Culture Preserved in Ice by Nicholas
Natale
How to Say Goodbye by Ryan Cortes Perez & Christy NaMee Eriksen
Kevin, Dear by Joshua Albeza Branstetter
Let the Blonde Sing by Rachel Knoll
Mythomanes by John Kendall
The Naughty List by Alex Popov
The Sacred Place Where Life Begins by Jeremy Là Zelle &
Kristin Gates
The Dying Of The Light by Benjamin Walter
Trampoline On Flattop by Ian Borowski
Welcome to Gwichyaa Zhee by Len Necefer & Greg Balkin
Wolf Trackz by Stefan Wanigatunga
*
*
*
ANIMATED SHORTS
A Recipe for Tofu Scramble by Alex Fink
Armor del Amor by Kirk Kelley
Black or White by Mohammad-Ali Soleymanzadeh
Feedback by Michal Zadok
Gum and Sauce Go to Skill School by Chadwick
Whitehead
Heliocentric by Mike McCraw
Maintain Yourself by Ellie LaCourt
Monsters in the Dark by Apollonia Thomaier
Mountain Valley Episode 3 – The Earthquake by Ruby Thain, John Thain
Museum by Pedram Habib Piran
Nothing to Say by Aubry Mintz
Oh Baby! by Meghann Artes
Preheated by Sarah Heinz, Luke Snedecor
The Earthquake by Gavin Jones
The Phantom 52 by Geoff Marslett
Tiffany by Christina Christie