Bait and Switch TV: Investigative Satirep
Episode 1
Raging Hormones
For Fun & Profit
What's in YOUR Gullet?
A probing look at the US meat, poultry, and dairy food supply.
Bait and Switch TV examines controversies and cultural landscapes with the comedic force of a backhoe, digging much deeper than the mainstream news while keeping you laughing.
Welcome to Bait and Switch TV! An entertaining, eye-opening new internet TV channel and Activist TV series
Each TV episode is a deep-dive investigation of a serious, controversial, or hot-button issue in the American landscape, dipped and steeped and drizzled with comedy. Why examine serious topics with comedy? Because, as you'll see, so many of these life and death topics lend themselves perfectly to theater of the absurd.
Starring Becky Washo, Dave Burleigh, Larry "Bubbles" Brown (from the David Letterman show, Johnny Steele, Ellsworth Hall, and Joe Klocek!
Watch the Shows! <> Listen to the comedian pundits! <> Question experts during our Live Online Debates
Bait and Switch TV: Investigative Satirep
Episode 1
Raging Hormones
For Fun & Profit
What's in YOUR Gullet?
A probing look at the US meat, poultry, and dairy food supply.
Bait and Switch TV examines controversies and cultural landscapes with the comedic force of a backhoe, digging much deeper than the mainstream news while keeping you laughing.
Welcome to Bait and Switch TV! An entertaining, eye-opening new internet TV channel and Activist TV series
Each TV episode is a deep-dive investigation of a serious, controversial, or hot-button issue in the American landscape, dipped and steeped and drizzled with comedy. Why examine serious topics with comedy? Because, as you'll see, so many of these life and death topics lend themselves perfectly to theater of the absurd.
Starring Becky Washo, Dave Burleigh, Larry "Bubbles" Brown (from the David Letterman show, Johnny Steele, Ellsworth Hall, and Joe Klocek!
Watch the Shows! <> Listen to the comedian pundits! <> Question experts during our Live Online Debates
Bait and Switch TV: Investigative Satirep
Episode 1
Raging Hormones
For Fun & Profit
What's in YOUR Gullet?
A probing look at the US meat, poultry, and dairy food supply.
Bait and Switch TV examines controversies and cultural landscapes with the comedic force of a backhoe, digging much deeper than the mainstream news while keeping you laughing.
Welcome to Bait and Switch TV! An entertaining, eye-opening new internet TV channel and Activist TV series
Each TV episode is a deep-dive investigation of a serious, controversial, or hot-button issue in the American landscape, dipped and steeped and drizzled with comedy. Why examine serious topics with comedy? Because, as you'll see, so many of these life and death topics lend themselves perfectly to theater of the absurd.
Starring Becky Washo, Dave Burleigh, Larry "Bubbles" Brown (from the David Letterman show, Johnny Steele, Ellsworth Hall, and Joe Klocek!
Watch the Shows! <> Listen to the comedian pundits! <> Question experts during our Live Online Debates
Bait and Switch TV: Investigative Satirep
Episode 1
Raging Hormones
For Fun & Profit
What's in YOUR Gullet?
A probing look at the US meat, poultry, and dairy food supply.
Bait and Switch TV examines controversies and cultural landscapes with the comedic force of a backhoe, digging much deeper than the mainstream news while keeping you laughing.
Welcome to Bait and Switch TV! An entertaining, eye-opening new internet TV channel and Activist TV series
Each TV episode is a deep-dive investigation of a serious, controversial, or hot-button issue in the American landscape, dipped and steeped and drizzled with comedy. Why examine serious topics with comedy? Because, as you'll see, so many of these life and death topics lend themselves perfectly to theater of the absurd.
Starring Becky Washo, Dave Burleigh, Larry "Bubbles" Brown (from the David Letterman show, Johnny Steele, Ellsworth Hall, and Joe Klocek!
Watch the Shows! <> Listen to the comedian pundits! <> Question experts during our Live Online Debates
“La Clave,” a documentary by Mariella Sosa, is about the similarities between two types of music genres known today as Salsa and Reggaeton.
Sosa, a Venezuelan born photographer/director, traveled to Puerto Rico and New York to interview some of the biggest musical geniuses in the Latin music industry including Gilberto Santa Rosa, Willie Colon, Cheo Feliciano, Tego Calderon, Julio Voltio, Hector “El Father”, and more.
“La Clave” is being shown for the first time in Los Angeles. The documentary won the award for Best Documentary at the El Rincon Film Festival in Puerto Rico this year, and was also shown at the Rhode Island Film Festival in 2008 and at the New York Latino Film Festival in 2009.
The name for the documentary comes from La Clave, which is the five-note two bar rhythm pattern that generates rhythmic measurement. It’s the foundation and backbone of Salsa and all Afro-Cuban based music.
Based in South Beach, Sosa has been one of the city’s artistic forerunners as its renaissance took place. She has not only made a name for herself by shooting album covers, but also directing music videos for Sony Music, Universal Music, EMI, BMG, Fonovisa, live concerts and an Urban Latino Entertainment show, “Da Click.”
For the last 15 years, Sosa has been compiling a respected portfolio within the industry.
She had photographed personalities such as singer Gloria Estefan and her husband and music producer Emilio Estefan, actor/musician Andy Garcia, Selena, and Juan Gabriel, the master of the romantic song in Spanish.
Sosa’s background is in photography – she’s been called a miracle worker of the lens – but the transition into film work was easy, especially for this documentary because of the subject.
“I've always felt that nature and music were my early inspirations, and I still feel that today,” says Sosa.
www.laclavedocumentary.com
For more information, contact:
Director Mariella Sosa 305-924-6574, mariellasosa@aol.com
Producer Jenny Suarez 786-270-6533, msfilms@aol.com
October 15th at 6PM is your last chance to see this Award Winning documentary in Los Angeles.
For more info go;
http://www.ButterfliesTheMovie.com
What on Earth? -- "Inside the crop circle mystery," which won the 2009 EBE Award for Best Feature Documentary from the UFO Congress Film Festival, will be screened as part of the LA FEMME FILM FESTIVAL on Thursday, October 15, at 10 am at the Davidson/Valentini Theatre, 1125 N. McCadden Place, Los Angeles, CA 90038.
What on Earth? tracks Producer/Director Suzanne Taylor’s interactions, in England, as part of an international community of visionary artists, scientists, philosophers, mathematicians, educators, writers, and farmers who marvel at crop circles, the unexplained global phenomenon that has puzzled humanity for centuries.
Circle enthusiasts, who converge in England every summer to go circle-chasing and indulge in circle analysis, talk about they have become so fascinated by this phenomenon. Evidence is presented that challenges the idea that all the glyphs are made by people, and the motives of the hoaxers, who make some of them, is a subject for speculation. So is the question about what is delivering the circles and why they are being created.
“The most startling revelations we get from crop circles come from their shapes,” says Taylor. “We are being given a virtual curriculum in number and geometry.” The film also looks at the circles as art and as instigations to reexamine ancient knowledge lost to a culture separated from nature.
In the film, interviewees speculate about what the effect would be if it were ascertained that the circles aren't being made by us. “If we knew we were not the only advanced intelligence in the cosmos,” says Taylor, “we would be one humanity in relation to ‘the other,’ and, as someone in the film says, ‘That could be what saves this civilization.’”
"La Clave" is a fascinating musical documentary film about the similarities between two types of music genres known today as Salsa and Reggaeton. In this film, we were fortunate enough to have gathered the hottest stars of reggaeton as well as the old school greats of salsa. We have interviewed salsa icons such as Wilie Colon, Ruben Blades, Ismael Miranda, Gilberto Santa Rosa, Oscar D’Leon and on the reggaeton; and on the reggaeton side we interviewed billboard chart topping artists: Julio Voltio, Tego Calderon, Vico C and Hector "El Father" just to name a few.
These artist all came together with the same purpose to discuss how two different styles of music can have so much in common and how their music is all composed under "La Clave".
La Clave is the five-note two bar rhythm pattern which generates rhythmic measurement and is the foundation and backbone of Salsa(and all Afro-Cuban based music).
They also take you on an extraordinary journey back in time to the roots that influence all of these different types of music, which is Africa and its rhythm of "drums and percussion".
You can watch the teaser at www.laclavedocumentary.com or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RXMZAGF6YA
La Clave Will be screening October 17 8:00pm at the Davidson/Valentini Theatre
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Lives of YouTube “Weblebrities” Chronicled in Upcoming Documentary
Meet six folks in the feature documentary “Butterflies” who share the common goal of becoming internet sensations via YouTube. Each real-life character in the documentary has made a presence online with thousands of subscribers following their daily lives and video blogs.
“Butterflies” is being presented by La Femme Film Festival on October 15th, 2009 at 6PM at the Davidson/Valentini Theatre, 1125 N McCadden Place in
Los Angeles.
Ester Brym, producer, director and editor of the documentary, is thrilled to showcase her work at La Femme
“This opportunity to showcase YouTube on a big screen means that the traditional and new media are slowly merging” Brym said. “Each character in the film represents each one of you. The girl next door, the talented musician, the up and coming actress or the regular guy who always makes you laugh.”
The film has won the Alan J. Bailey Excellence Award at AOF and has been nominated for Best Social Commentary at AOF and Best Director and Feature Documentary 2009 at Montana IFF.
For more information about Butterflies,” visit www.butterfliesthemovie.com
Having arrived fresh from a long haul flight from the UK to Australia some 26 hours of travel, I checked my emails to discover the most wonderful news in the world, I WOULD LIKE TO CONGRATULATE YOU! A selection email from LA Femme Film Festival for my first on my ownsome documentary filmmaking project. It was a fantastic experience to make it, let alone to now know that it will be screened in a place I've never even had the good fortune to visit myself. This seems as good a reason as I'll ever get to visit LA. So here I come!
Thank you thank you thank you LA Femme Film Festival for doing what you do and for including 'A Day in the Dirt'!
Free Swim is an award winning documentary film about the paradox of coastal people not knowing how to swim. Taking place on the island of Eleuthera in the Bahamas we follow a group of kids as they overcome their fears, gain confidence and reconnect with their environment by learning to swim in open waters. With fresh memories of a friend drowning and the conflicts of growing tourism, for these kids it’s not just about floating, but gaining new skills for their future.
Eleuthera, which means ‘freedom’ in Greek, is so long and narrow (approximately 110 miles long and on average 1 mile wide) that it’s like walking a tightrope between two bodies of water. In close proximity to the US, the tourism industry thrives in the Bahamas, but Eleuthera has experienced a cyclical rise and fall of tourism, which coincided with the crash of pineapple and cattle farming and increased stress on local seafood stocks. With its particularly thin geography, bucolic landscape and stunning water, its culture is rooted in a rural fishing vibe that holds family traditions dear in the face of growing social-environmental conflicts. Free Swim uses the topic of learning to swim as a way to explore more complicated aspects of life on Eleuthera, such as influences on community function by the media, drowning, tourism, overfishing, and education. This multifaceted approach is essential to the development of the film’s theme of paradox in paradise all the while using swimming as the anchor, literally and metaphorically. The story thread is woven with footage of children learning to swim in their backyard sea. Underwater footage shows the challenges of learning to breathe in a new environment and the powers of discovering a beautiful, new world. We see the Swim to Empower program in action. Swim to Empower was founded by two young American women who traveled to South Eleuthera, the most economically challenged part of the island, to teach people of all ages to swim and moreover, to empower locals to teach one another.
The documentary is shot in verite style following kids into the water classroom for swimming lessons and empowerment. The behavioral and emotional dimensions of the swimming students in/out and above/below the water are presented together with elements of community dynamics, the island’s natural resources, and socio-economic perspectives. The audience meets many characters including teachers, artists, parents, and fishermen. All of the storylines combined present a portrait of the social, environmental and economic issues on the island and the impact it holds for the world at large. Through the power of learning to swim the story promotes discussion about the swimming gap and ignites broader questions about health and conservation: What might be the unexpected power of learning to swim? What is at stake when people are unable to connect with their environment beyond purely using it for utilitarian gain? And, when we come to better understand our environment will we value it, and ourselves, more? For many, swimming translates into a new perspective – a “sink or swim” mixed with a “there’s no place like home” sentiment – bringing a greater sense of freedom with the knowledge that the underwater world exists and can be survived, and even enjoyed.
Recognizing that drowning is a leading cause of death for children globally and that many questions exist about minorities and the swimming gap, Free Swim is an empowering film that is relevant for a wide, international audience and will be made available through film festivals, commercial distribution, educational outreach programs, and television. It documents the essence of daily life in a coastal world, avoiding both a romantic vision of island lifestyle and an overly academic approach to environmental and public health topics. While the documentary’s emotional trajectory unfolds in a new island destination for many audience members, the process of learning to swim allows viewers to tap into personal fears and have an experience with the ocean. Learning to swim is a personal thing, which is passed on from adult to child and is at the core of one’s identity and development. The film appeals to swimmers and non-swimmers alike because all humans have a relationship with water, and in particular to adults and children who have memories of vacationing in coastal places. Despite the different, immediate realities of life on Eleuthera, the characters express similar concerns to people living in more developed locations. Free Swim engages through the process of discovery, in and out of the water, and aims to inspire viewers to question their own relationships with the world, even in places located far from the ocean.