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1000 Journals - Documentary



Last Updated: 12/22/2009

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City: Los Angeles
State: CA
Country: US
Signup Date: 9/15/2007

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May 22, 2009 - Friday 

Over at 1001 Journals, Someguy's announcing a call for submissions: Share your journals, share your stories.


We're putting together a 1001 Journals book proposal to shop around to publishers, and need your input. To get the publishers excited, we'd like to share some remarkable journal entries, and stories that go along with them. If you'd like us to consider including your journal / entries / story in the proposal, please email us the following:


• Your Username
• The journal number
• Your city, state, and country
• A brief description of the entries, and why they're amazing (make sure they've been added to the 1001J site, where we can review them)
• If there's a story, please include it with as much detail as you can


The deadline is June 9th. Email submissions to someguy@1001journals.com

Don't have anything to submit? You've got time, create something unique and interesting. This is your chance to get published. Not on 1001journals.com? Sign up and start sharing journals.


Journal Contributions could range from amazing art or writing to controversial entries, humor, raw emotion, confessions, interaction between contributors, conflicts, rants, oddities, and so on.


Journal Stories might be something interesting that happened with the journal, or in your life involving the journal. Was the journal left in a library? Taken on spring break? Was it used as a marriage proposal? Perhaps you discovered it for sale in a thrift store, or shared it with reformed convicts. Let us know.


Thanks, and keep on journaling,

someguy
www.1001journals.com

April 21, 2009 - Tuesday 

It started with our High School visit and the screenings of 1000 Journals during Schools at the Festival of the San Francisco Film Society -- encouraging feedback from students and teachers, and more and more questions how schools, universities, even hospitals can implement the film and begin their own journal exchanges. With the great help of Lil Blume, we created the 1000 Journals Extension, a teachers network, and have been increasingly involved with these educational aspects of collaborative projects.Just recently, Aspen Film has selected 1000 Journals to participate in its Education Outreach Program. Bringing films to remote and underserved communities, the program reaches 5,000 children and adults and nineteen schools annually, with films that are capable of opening windows on the world and building bridges between cultures.Aspen Film's Terry Rigney created a Curriculum Guide for 1000 Journals (available on the Extension), and invited Deb Jones, Creative Program Director at the Wyly Community Arts Center, to present our film. Deb has taught several journaling classes and serves as an amazing resource for anyone interested in the process and journey of journaling.So far, Aspen Film screened 1000 Journals on April 16, 17 and 20, 2009, and will program the film again in May.



Deb Jones and Marti Cyrus leading the discussion at the Aspen High School screening.



I asked Terry Rigney a few questions...

How did you get involved with Aspen Film's Education Program?

I started volunteering for Aspen Film in the Spring of 2003, then began working with Aspen Film in November 2003 as the Program Coordinator. After being with the company over two years, the Education Coordinator left and I transitioned into the position.

What are your criteria, and how do you determine the appropriate age group?
When selecting films for educational purposes (for the classroom), it should always be in the back of a programmer’s mind, “what is the curriculum enrichment piece of this presentation”? When you find a film that speaks on so many levels to a variety of curricula and you can build a “lesson plan” if you will around the topic - it’s an easy choice to include in an education screening series. Then, it’s just a matter of getting the filmmaker’s permission to screen.

I appropriate a specific age level by content. Bringing films into elementary and middle schools can be tricky because you want to expose students to a film that has a lesson to be learned or addresses a common theme our young students deal with on a daily basis such as peer pressure, bullying, self esteem, individuality etc. It is important to avoid programming films simply to entertain students. Films can be fun and educational, but if there is no educational component, it is not an ideal candidate to bring into classrooms. Films with heavier or more mature content, are reserved for high school screenings – and if the content is remotely questionable, it is best to give the film to the teacher to decide if he/she wants to share with students. I try to push edgier films for teachers with whom I have a rapport. If I do not have a relationship or history with a teacher, I stick to basic and straight forward material.

What kind of feed-back do you receive from students?
I am always impressed with how observant and receptive students are to film. Aside from the basic “yea it’s movie day” mentality, I found that students, regardless of age, are grateful for the opportunity to see a film they likely would not have the opportunity to see otherwise. Whether it is a stylistically unique animation, or a documentary about medical workers on the Thai/Burma border, the majority of the times, students give their utmost attention – something which I know is particularly hard to do! The reaction also depends on the film. I’m screening three other documentary films in the Making Movies Matter series 1000 Journals is included. One of the films is about a doctor who practices street medicine, another is about Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan woman who began planting trees to revive her country, the other is about a community of Lost Boys of Sudan living in the Boulder area who travel back to Sudan for the first time since leaving their country years ago. Socially conscious documentaries typically receive the response “What can I do?”. 1000 Journals stirred the response today – “I Can Do This!” And generally, what is also part of our mission is to show people that filmmaking is completely within someone’s grasp. Specific to this area, many comments are gracious for Aspen Film showing students the world outside the Aspen bubble.





Students with journals at Rifle High School.

How can filmmakers support educational efforts such as yours?
Simply by allowing educators to use their material to support their curriculum. More than half the battle of setting up education screenings is the red tape of getting permission to screen the film. At least where I am coming from, anyone that uses film to visually support topics explored in the classroom is only looking to share the content, not duplicate the film or make money off of screenings. I think what you’ve done in terms of linking people up with your film is terrific! Thank you for being so supportive of our project.

Can you share a story which could encourage schools to reach out to organizations such as Aspen Film?
I had to work at it, but it has been my experience that once a teacher took a chance on one of our programs, they typically found that the students really reacted to the film, beyond the immediate excitement of seeing a film. I can’t tell you how many times I have heard from a teacher that months down the line after I’ve brought a film into the classroom that the students still talk about the experience. That warms my heart, because whether it was a good or bad reaction to a film Aspen Film screened, it was a reaction, and something students remember Aspen Film brought to them.

With all the crap that is on television these days, I don’t blame teachers for being hesitant to bring films into the classroom. For the most part, organizations that use film as a vehicle to educate people are not interested simply in entertaining, we genuinely want people to know about the content highlighted in the film. Another angle - I know myself, I was much more of a visual learner. I understood concepts and they stuck with me when it was visually explained to me. I have to believe that students tend to do well and be interested in school when all learning styles (visual, auditory, tactile) are catered to.



Terry Rigney, Aspen Film, aspenfilm.org

April 19, 2009 - Sunday 


This will help you to get through any boring phone call or meeting: The Scribble Project was started by the Australian artist Lisa Currie, and grew from a zine project to a blog, now archive, to the current club on Flickr. Doodlers are invited to complete a sketch-friendly "questionnaire" and upload it to the club. The original Scribble sheet that got it all started:



Here are a couple of the filled-in sheets:



More are on the archive blog. New "blank" sheets are on Flickr. And if you like this, see also  Doodlers Anonymous.

April 10, 2009 - Friday 

Belén just sent me these pictures from the screening at Fnac Alicante yesterday evening:

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

Belén hosting the screening and handing out Fnac's 1001 Journals.

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain

1000 Journals at Fnac Alicante, Spain


April 8, 2009 - Wednesday 

Fnac's 1001 Journals

The initial demand was so high, Fnac Bulevar in Alicante, Spain, launched four journals on 1001journals.com. The journals will go live at the 1000 Journals documentary screening, tomorrow night, at 7:00 PM. Two will travel from hand to hand, two will stay on location. Belén posted a sweet note on Facebook, "Si no te gustan los experimentos, no sigas leyendo...," - if you don't like experiments, don't read on - and recommended carrots for dinner, to get creative juices flowing. Ah, that's how they do it in Spain - carrots!
April 4, 2009 - Saturday 


Blanket Magazine Nr. 15

1000 Journals
and Someguy makes an appearance in Blanket Magazine, a collaborative PDF publication which is
uncovering artists, designers and photographers from around the world. A few days ago, Blanket launched a redesigned website, and put out Number 15, The Communication Issue.

Editor and Art Director Bec Brown writes, "It's all about that thing we have to do everyday asartists/designers/photographers/crafters… TALK to our audience in ourown personal medium to communicate our feelings, our thoughts, ourideas. It's all about being open and unafraid: in art AND in life."

The Art of Communication: how do you communicate with an audience you might never meet? features Jonathan Hulme's interview with Someguy, a story about Post Secret, Blanket's own Pass It On project, a section about Crafter-Bloggers, and many interviews punctuated by great art and photography. There's also a call for contributions to the next issue, whose theme is "Portrait." Deadline: May 15th.

1000 Journals Interview


April 3, 2009 - Friday 




For six month, the Spanish television network Telecinco published an innovative blog, the Nautilus. Its Captain Nemo is José Alberto García Avilés, a media analyst in search of audiovisual trends. The blog was so successful on Telecinco's website, it is now continued as a wordpress blog.



Today's post
is about our beautiful collaboration with Belén Torregrosa, the film, its upcoming screenings and various journals projects that are now starting in Spain. It features a beautiful collage of pages from 1001 Journals.

For kicks, check out Google's translation.

March 29, 2009 - Sunday 

Just a few days before the start of Artfest, Teesha and Tracy Moore opened the virtual doors to Journalfest, a workshop weekend to be held at Fort Worden in Port Townsend, October 21 to 25, 2009. If you have seen our Artfest Special on the 1000 Journals DVD, you know what to expect: loads of inspiration, support, love, great teachers and great fun in a spectacular setting. In other words - highly recommended.



On the cute Journalfest website, which is worth a visit even if you can't attend, are infos and links to download registration, workshop, and schedule PDFs.
March 19, 2009 - Thursday 

It's simple: You pick up to ten colors, and the idée multicolr search lab pulls small squares from ten million "interesting" pictures on Flickr.



I tried with gray scale and shades of red and pink... The multicolr search lab is synonymous with everything I LOVE about the internet… and now I can color this love in all shades of pink! Or green, or blue... On top of the addictive fun, this is a cool tool to try out color combos.

There's more at idée labs... check it out: labs.ideeinc.com

March 13, 2009 - Friday 




If you haven't yet, try to catch the 1000 Journals exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)  soon, because the show is going to be taken down in 24 days.

Nothing beats the chance to handle the journals in person, but if you're too far away, there's great blog coverage. Just a few examples: our dear friend Adda Dada, who came to all screenings at the San Francisco International Film Festival, put up a set of pictures on his Flickr site.

Nick, of the Worldli Blog, wrote about discovering Janice's pages in Journal 751, which "included an email and phone number at the end of the 3-page entry; the phone number had a 732 area code which is the same area code that my parents live in back in Jersey. So I took out my BlackBerry and I emailed her right there, standing above this book that had changed hands multiple times all over the world."  Nick and Janice became pen pals, Facebook friends, and may meet when Janice is in California on the AIDS/Lifecycle tour. Janice's story in our film: her journal was quarantined in the Anthrax scare of 2001.

Here's an upclose look at the card Someguy created for the exhibition, along with tips on successful promotion.

Artquiltmaker Jaye and her friend Julie each posted about the show they visited together, and made some interesting (if not critical) notes about what people put in the journals on exhibition.

I love this blog post, from In The Pine: "walls of journals that people. strangers. sisters. brothers. write in.telling anything. drawing something. cutting and pasting everything.they were filled with secrets. confessions. stories. art. george bush.it was powerful to read and look at. i could have stayed hours reading."

Laura Mappin (who is in the film) wrote about her entry, "I riffed off of someone else's offering -- what if the hokey pokey is what it's all about?" Engineer's Daughter wrote, "I found an empty spot in one of the journals and added a little bit ofmy own writing, making it extra-personal just for good measure.  It's both wonderful and terrifying that I'll never know who will read it."

In an earlier post, I mentioned blog stories in "Adoption & Fire," Sean Woolsey's blog, and Steve Rhodes' flickr set, all with great pictures.

The film will screen again on Free Thursday, April 2nd. Leave a comment if you're planning to come to the screening, please... I may come, too.



Picture by Steve Rhodes



Picture from the In The Pine blog