Archive for February, 2010

The Eyes Of Me Finishes February on A Strong Note: Colorado

Producing Partners are local community organizations that co-present Community Cinema screenings across the country. In Grand Junction, Colorado, Penny Mitchell describes a recent free event for the film The Eyes of Me by Keith Maitland.

“I know what it’s like to be sighted, and I know what it’s like to be blind. And I do think going blind has given me a different point of view.” Isaac, a subject in The Eyes Of Me

“I know what it’s like to be sighted, and I know what it’s like to be blind. And I do think going blind has given me a different point of view.” Isaac, a subject in The Eyes Of Me

The film screening went quite well and was followed by a thoughtful panel. There was considerable discussion about, Isaac, the young man who lost his vision when the hospital would not operate because the family had no health insurance coverage. Several people thought that couldnt happen in Colorado because hospitals would have a mandate to operate in that situation. But one of our panelists gave several examples of similar problems she knew about in Colorado. She said that although he would be blind without the operation, it was not a life threatening situation and that may be one of the criteria.

The panelists also wanted to note that it was difficult to distinguish in the film which issues were rooted in socioeconomic problems and which were due to visual handicaps. The families in the film were from poorer communities and may not have access to advocates. That brought us to the advocacy groups available in our valley and the blind woman on our panel said that its incredibly hard to find these groups when they are generally only advertised in newspapers and she can’t read! The panelists noted that its been very hard to engage ophthalmology and optometry staff in a process to provide these resources to patients.

Read on for the details of our event in Steamboat Springs. › Continue reading

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The Eyes Of Me Finishes February on A Strong Note: St. Louis

Producing Partners are local community organizations that co-present Community Cinema screenings across the country. In St. Louis, MO from KETC9 in partnership with Missouri History Museum. KETC9′s Sydney Meyer reports on the free event.

Denise, one of the film's teenage subjects preparing for her prom.

Denise, one of the film's teenage subjects preparing for her prom.

The Missouri History Museum was ready and equipped with special earpieces so blind film goers could get a better idea of the picture The Eyes of Me was really painting. Actually, having the earpieces available was exactly what panelist, Pastor Dave Andrus -who runs the Lutheran Blind Mission and who has been blind since age 11- said society needs to move toward. The city of Austin, Texas featured in the film is very equipped to handle its blind residents, and although St. Louis still has a ways to go, the panelists agreed the city is making progress in supporting persons with disabilities especially in the area of transportation services.

Panelist Joy Waddel, Assistant Superintendent of the Missouri School for the Blind, said she and her staff loved the film. She said, “Teens are teens and they all have similar problems growing up. It’s just that these teens have an extra handicap to deal with.” She especially loved the film because as she put it, “It was so great in the film to see the teens put into words how they feel. That is an issue that we often have to work with in school.” Other than that she said, “I could have put St. Louis faces on each of the characters in the film I really have seen those students right in my own school.”

Read on for more details from the event in St. Louis. › Continue reading

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Community Cinema Screens The Eyes of Me in Philadelphia

Just the other night, Community Cinema hosted a screening of the Independent Lens film The Eyes of Me at the Overbrook School for the Blind in Philadelphia, Pa. The film follows four visually impaired teenagers in Texas as they face the usual challenges of adolescence while simultaneously learning to navigate a world designed for the sighted. Regional Outreach Coordinator Cindy Burstein gives an overview of what happened and discusses the local impact.

A panel answers questions from the audience.

The panel –– organized to represent an intergenerational view on being blind –– shared personal experiences as compared to those in the film.

The lobby of the Overbrook School for the Blind in Philadelphia was bustling with activity, as volunteers gathered for the Community Cinema screening of
The Eyes of Me.

Fran Fulton, a staff person with Liberty Resources, Inc. (a partner in presenting the event) was busy training a Villanova University sorority on how to serve as sighted guides. Fulton, who is blind, reminded the volunteers that some of the most basic things that sighted people take for granted are important to remember when assisting blind people, such as telling them which direction the seat is facing, and placing the hand of the blind person on the seat in front of them as a way to guide them into an available chair, which may be four or five seats down the row.

Audio describers from Amaryllis Theatre Company were setting up equipment for live audio description, and American Sign Language (ASL) interpreters from the Deaf-Hearing Communication Center were getting acquainted with the space and ready to provide sign language interpretation for the panel discussion taking place after the film.

› Continue reading

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The Eyes Of Me Finishes February on A Strong Note: Idaho and Arizona

Isaac, featured in The Eyes Of Me, with his horses at home in Paris, TX

Isaac, featured in The Eyes Of Me, with his horses at home in Paris, TX

Producing Partners are local community organizations that co-present Community Cinema screenings across the country. Here are highlights from two recent events. One event was way up in the northeast and another way down in the southwest.

In Tucson we partner with the Pima County Public Library system. At the Miller-Golf Links Branch Library we recently featured two panelists who were currently working with blind students in Arizona, and that made for an interesting conversation after the documentary. The film showed the difference between attending TSBVI High vs. mainstreaming in local schools as having a place/community vs. being isolated and odd man out. Our Tucson discussion observed the higher independent living skills displayed by the mainstream students vs. the transition difficulties of blind kids who had attended the Arizona School for the Deaf & Blind.

Lynn Allen, our Regional Outreach Coordinator for all of Idaho held one of her many monthly events at Boise State University. The event drew the attention of the local college press with a feature article in the ARBITER, the campus newspaper. Our speaker did a good job of keeping the conversation going. She was blind from birth and related some of her experiences to those of the teens in the film, but mostly focused on what they were experiencing and how – in so many ways – it was what every teenager experiences. What struck me most about the film is how isolated the blind teens’ lives were when they are mainstreamed. Others in the audience shared my observation. And our discussion left us feeling that there has to be a balance between separation from family and living your own life.

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The Eyes Of Me Finishes February on A Strong Note: Rochester

Our Audience at WXXI in Rochester, NY

Our Audience at WXXI in Rochester, NY for The Eyes Of Me

Producing Partners are local community organizations that co-present Community Cinema screenings across the country. New producing partner WXXI in Rochester, NY recently screened The Eyes of Me by Keith Maitland, followed by a panel discussion about the issues of blindness demonstrated in the film. The screening was fully audio described so that all audience members could fully experience the film. Here are some highlights from the event.

We were fortunate to have a number of community partners for the event. ABVI-Goodwill has evolved into one of the most dynamic not-for-profit organizations in the Greater Rochester and Finger Lakes region that provides improved quality of life for people with disabilities and other disadvantages. The service that extends to nine counties, including Monroe, Wayne, Ontario, Livingston, Steuben, Yates, Seneca, Schulyer and Chemung. The New York State Commission for the Blind and Visually Handicapped has a mission to enhance employability, to maximize independence and to assist in the development of the capacities and strengths of people who are legally blind. New York School for the Blind ­ provides integrated residential programming in a safe and nurturing environment, provides a foundation of  learning to enable each student to become a contributing member in a diverse society, to achieve their highest level of independence and to afford them the ability to live in a least restrictive environment.

More of our audience featuring discussion facilitator, Ruth Phinney, WXXI-FM AND Reachout Radio Program Director

More of our audience featuring discussion facilitator, Ruth Phinney, WXXI-FM AND Reachout Radio Program Director

Many of our audience members were from the blind community. Resource materials were made available to participants in print and Braille. Thanks to support from the following companies: ABVI-Goodwill, American Council of the Blind, AudioFile Magazine, Freedom Scientific, Humanware, Independent Living Aids, MaxiAids, The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Touch and Explore, New York State Office of Children¹s and Family Services/CBVH, New York State School for the Blind, Optelec/ ShopLowVision, Perkins School for the Blind, Simon and Schuster Audio Books, WGBH Media Access Group/MoPix, and WXXI. That’s a lot of support! Thanks again.

Featured guest expert panelists (l to r) Erin Fairben, Superintendent of the New York State School for the Blind in Batavia, Linda Voigt from OCFS/Commission for the Blind and Visually Handicapped, Cynthia Baker with BOCES, and Nikki Llewellyn, Orientation & Mobility Speciality from ABVI-Goodwill

Featured guest expert panelists (l to r) Erin Fairben, Superintendent of the New York State School for the Blind in Batavia, Linda Voigt from OCFS/Commission for the Blind and Visually Handicapped, Cynthia Baker with BOCES, and Nikki Llewellyn, Orientation & Mobility Speciality from ABVI-Goodwill

And, thanks to producer Keith Maitland, the full audio of the program and the recorded discussion is being aired on WXXI Reachout Radio (radio reading service) on Thursday, 2/25 from 8:00-10:00 p.m. and repeated on Sunday, 2/28 from 5:00-7:00 p.m. ET

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A Sneak Peek at FUTURESTATES: A New Online Fictional Series

What will become of America in five, 25, or even 50 years from today?

Beginning March 8, ITVS will launch a new online fictional series called FUTURESTATES, which will explore many of today’s complex social issues by imagining how they play out in the world of tomorrow.

The series will be accessible exclusively online and be available for free. ITVS worked with over 20 of today’s best and emerging indie filmmakers to complete the 11 films for the series. Contributors include acclaimed director Ramin Bahrani, whose mini-feature entitled Plastic Bag is narrated by the legendary Werner Herzog, Greg Pak’s Mister Green and Tze Chun’s Silver Sling.

Can’t wait until March 8? Watch the video preview below. Also be sure to join the brand new FUTURESTATES Facebook Fan Page to watch more video previews and to get the latest news on the series.

Join the FUTURESTATES Facebook Fan Page and watch other clips >>

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Monday, February 22nd, 2010 Online Connections, Special Events View Comments

Community Cinema Screens The Eyes of Me in Houston

This past week, Community Cinema hosted a screening of the Independent Lens film The Eyes of Me at HoustonPBS. The film follows four visually impaired teenagers in Texas as they face the usual challenges of adolescence while simultaneously learning to navigate a world designed for the sighted. Filmmaker Keith Maitland attended the screening and gives an overview of what happened and the impact the event below.

Patrick Floyd, the producer of The Eyes of Me, and Keith Maitland, the director, at the HoustonPBS Community Cinema Screening of their film.

Patrick Floyd (left), the producer of The Eyes of Me, and Keith Maitland (right), the director, at the HoustonPBS Community Cinema Screening of their film.

Bernice Klepac, with the Houston Council for the Blind, talks about her experience as a student at Texas School for the Blind back in the 1950s.

Bernice Klepac, with the Houston Council for the Blind, talks about her experience as a student at Texas School for the Blind back in the 1950s.

With more than 125 audience members in attendance –– many of them blind or visually-impaired –– HoustonPBS hosted a wonderful Community Cinema screening of The Eyes of Me. It’s always exciting for me to be able to sit in a crowded theater and share the film with a new audience but there was something very special about this particular screening. Along with producer Patrick Floyd, I was happy to travel to Houston from Austin, Texas, to experience Community Cinema firsthand. Meagan McComic (one of the main characters from the film) and Bill Daugherty, superintendent of the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired (TSBVI), joined Patrick and I on the panel after the film, to share their reflections and perspectives with the Houston community –– many of whom had ties to TTSBVI directly. Two of the audience members were alumni of TSBVI –– Michael Garrett, class of ’69, and Bernice Klepak, class of ’55. It was exciting to hear Michael and Bernice’s response to the film, and the contrasts between their days at the school and the stories of Chas, Meagan, Denise, and Isaac represented in the film. Bernice was impressed with how honest and natural today’s students were compared to her days when she feels that they were all “pretty straight-laced.” › Continue reading

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The Eyes of Me: Reflecting on Disability Rights

Our Community Cinema Regional Outreach Coordinator (pro tem) partner Sara Zia Ebrahimi shares her thoughts about the upcoming free screening of The Eyes of Me.

ADAPT Philadelphia (Photo by Harvey Finkle harveyfinkle.com)

ADAPT Philadelphia (Photo by Harvey Finkle harveyfinkle.com)

The Community Cinema Philadelphia program is excited to announce a new venue for our February screening of director Keith Maitland’s film The Eyes of Me at the Overbrook School for the Blind (OSB). Overbrook has been providing schooling opportunities to young people with visual impairments for over 100 years, similar to the school featured in Maitlin’s film.

While I’m incredibly grateful that places like OSB exist, an unfortunate result of separate schooling means that most of us who are able-bodied and have full vision and hearing end up almost never interacting with a person with a disability for the majority of our lives. The Eyes of Me screening provides an opportunity to bridge the gap in bringing these communities together

In Philadelphia, we’re also lucky to have a vibrant chapter of ADAPT that is part of Liberty Resources, one of the community partners for our screening. Over the past twenty years they have won several successful campaigns to create more autonomy and freedom for people with disabilities by creating more accessible housing, transportation and employment options for people in the Philadelphia region. They continually remind people in this area that people with disabilities are not some heroic stories that should be pitied or used as inspirational fodder for the able-bodied, but people who want full vibrant lives like anyone else. They also remind us that if you truly want to be an ally to a person with a disability, occasional charity will not do. Real change will come about through policy changes that consciously integrate deaf, blind, and physically impaired people into all aspects of daily life alongside able-bodied, seeing and hearing people.

Maitland’s film is part of a growing body of work that gives the rest of us an intimate look into the lives of blind teenagers, giving an honest look into the challenges and desires these young people grapple with, normalizing them while also pointing to ways in which changes can be made that would allow these teenagers to integrate into the “real world” easier once finishing school.

I’m excited to be a regional coordinator for ITVS and create an opportunity for seeing and nonseeing people to gather together hear the conversations that will emerge after the film. The event is Wednesday, February 24, 2010 at 7:00 PM at Overbrook School for the Blind, 6333 Malvern Ave. I look forward to meeting you there.

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Tuesday, February 16th, 2010 Partnerships and Supporters, events View Comments

Local Free Events For The Eyes Of Me Entertain and Educate

Isaac with his horses in Paris, TX

Isaac with his horses in Paris, TX

Zoe Nousiainen, our producing partner in Saratoga Springs shared the following thoughts about our recent event for The Eyes Of Me.

We have several library patrons who consistently attend and others who are interested in the particular subject of each film. My co-sponsor for this film was the CEO for the Glens Falls Association for the Blind and Visually Impaired, which is part of a coalition of organizations in New York State.

He discussed what his agency does, how it is funded, and what he got out of the film. He was particularly impressed that the teenagers in the film who originally had some sight were able to articulate their experience so well and didn’t blame their shortcomings on their sight issues.

The audience included several teens and tweens who responded very positively to the film. One girl was especially happy that the young people in the film had friends with sight and were not totally isolated in a blind world.

Our Producing Partner in Colorado Springs, Chris Loud, shared the following thoughts about our recent screening of The Eyes of Me.

Meagan dons her graduation cap.

Meagan dons her graduation cap.

The screening of The Eyes of Me in Colorado Springs, co-presented by the Independent Film Society of Colorado, began with an attentive reading of the directors statement and ended with a surprise guest.

I began the screening by reading the statement from the filmmaker to the audience. This introduction caused the audience to be very engaged when we started the film.  You could hear the reactions from the crowd during the reading and they applauded when it ended, similar to what you would see at a film festival.  Really, this is what the Community Cinema screenings are like, attending a film screening at a film festival; an introduction with a statement from the filmmaker, a screening of the film, ending with a panel, speaker and/or a Q & A.

The night got even better when our discussion after the film led to the discovery of a surprise guest attending the screening; a woman who used to teach at the Texas School for the Blind while the film was being made.  She knew three of the students featured in the film and was even in two scenes.  This led to more questions and discussion ranging from blind sports to the details of how blind people take notes in class.  We are setting up a second screening of The Eyes of Me for the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind, where she teaches now.

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Special Community Screening of P-Star Rising

A special community screening of the Independent Lens film P-Star Rising was recently held in Chicago. The film, which airs Tuesday night at 10:00 PM on Independent Lens on PBS, looks at nine-year-old Pricilla who wants to be the youngest female rap star ever and her single father who is determined to help her make it big. Find out what happened from Chicago-based National Outreach Coordinator Naomi Walker.

P-Star (aka Priscilla Diaz) and her father Jesse Diaz visited Chicago to participate in the 2nd Annual Winter Block Party for Chicago Hip-Hop Arts, presented by Chicago Public Radio and hosted by hip-hop poet Kevin Coval.

The morning began with a screening of  P-Star Rising followed by a Q&A with Priscilla and Jesse. The audience at the Victory Gardens Theatre was full of families eager to hear about the struggles of navigating the often cut-throat music industry. After the Q&A, Jesse and Priscilla were treated to a performance by the Half Pint Poetics team, made up of 5th to 8th graders from Kuumba Lynx. Priscilla was deeply moved by the young talent and asked for some beat-box assistance from one of the young performers and showed her own skills with the mike.

The director of P-Star Rising –– Gabriel Noble –– joined Jesse and Priscilla during their week in Chicago for two screenings of the film for Chicago public high school and middle school students, courtesy of Cinema/Chicago’s Education Program.  Schools participating included Curie High School, Dumas Technical Academy, Lincoln Park High School, Chicago Vocational Career Academy, Austin Career Academy, and King College Prep.

After the film, host Kevin Coval introduced the guests while the students greeted them with an enthusiastic reception. Several students in the audience spoke about their own ambitions for careers in the entertainment industry. Priscilla and Jesse gave sage advice on learning the business, honing your craft and not giving up despite the many setbacks that aspiring performers always encounter. And Jesse added that you should ALWAYS have a demo on you because you never know what opportunities might come along. For instance, Jesse is starting a label and looking for talent and said that if anyone had a CD they wanted to pass along, he’d be happy to check it out.

Check out these clips from the Chicago screening:

› Continue reading

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