Categories
Truly Free Film

Save NY Film & TV Nexo Group

I have been wanting to explore Nexo, and now have the perfect reason to do so — thanks to Derek Yip.  Derek’s started a “Save NY Film & TV” social network on Nexo.  To join, go here:

http://savenewyorkfilmandtv.nexo.com/

This group was established to be a resource for updates on the latest developments and organizational efforts to save the production tax incentives for motion picture industry in New York State and New York City. Now that we understand how vital the incentives are to our livelihood, hopefully this group can be a unified front to call for transparency and accountability in the incentive programs and to further educate ourselves about them.

01. Although not mandatory, we hope all new members will briefly introduce themselves. This is so we can understand what kind of a stake you have in the future of New York’s economy.

02. Posts here should be on the topic of the New York production incentives and how it relates to New York’s economy. Although it’s fine to reference your projects in relation to this, please refrain from blatant promotion of your projects, your company, job offers, job requests, or links to such. Links to articles covering the latest news on the production incentives are encouraged.

03. Lively discussion and intelligent debate is welcome, but please refrain from ad hominem attacks. Please carefully proof and re-read what you are about to send before posting out to the group.

04. If you haven’t done so, you are encouraged to go to the following link and sign: http://www.petitiononline.com/Zablocki/

05. Write and mail letters to your elected officials for an additional impact:

• Download a template for your letter:
http://trevanna.com/nypa/images/misc/crew_letter_2009.doc

• Write to Governor Paterson:
http://www.ny.gov/governor/contact/index.html

• Write to your Assemblyperson:
http://assembly.state.ny.us/mem/

• Write to your Senator:
http://www.senate.state.ny.us/senatehomepage.nsf/senators?OpenForm

Categories
The Next Good Idea

Use Your Voice

Categories
Bowl Of Noses

NYC Loves Paper Airplanes

People go to college just so they can get a job with an office on a really high floor.  It’s not the view they are after, it’s the launch pad.  This man Sam was on the 31st floor where the ride is one loooong glide.


Flying from Sam Fuller on Vimeo.

Categories
These Are Those Things

Carson Mell: 1 pt C. Burns, 1 pt. P.K.Dick, 1 pt. just him

David Lowery’s HammerToNail review of Carson’s Field Notes From Dimension X created that hunger that couldn’t be filled.  Dimension X was no longer on the Sundance iTunes sight.  

Luckily, the man’s got some of his other work up to be dug.  Monsters, rock, and loneliness has always been cocktail to tickle my tuesday.  I can’t wait to see Mell’s feature debut.  Dang, I may have to go buy his book just to tide me over.


The Writer from Carson Mell on Vimeo.

Definitely check out The Devil In Denim too
Categories
The Next Good Idea

No Forest Should Be Used To Make Toilet Paper

Greenpeace has come out with a handy dandy guide to see what is the most environmentally friendly toilet, bathroom, and kitchen paper.  Come on, save a tree.  It won’t be so rough on you will it?

Categories
Bowl Of Noses

Jump To Work! Jump To School?

What if today was a holiday and that instead of wearing a costume or giving a gift, we just jumped, hopped, skipped EVERYWHERE!  If we ran for President on the hopping platform, would you elect The Bowl?

Categories
Truly Free Film

Facebook Killed TV

Why TV Lost” is an excellent article by Paul Graham on why broadcast lost to the internet and computers.

What decided the contest for computers? Four forces, three of which one could have predicted, and one that would have been harder to.

Graham captures the appeal of piracy, which is not because it is free:

The third reason computers won is piracy. Users prefer it not just because it’s free, but because it’s more convenient. Bittorrent and YouTube have already trained a new generation of viewers that the place to watch shows is on a computer screen.

He states in very simple terms what misconceptions industry leaders have long held about their industry and what the internet offers as an alternative:

Whether they (the television industry) like it or not, big changes are coming, because the Internet dissolves the two cornerstones of broadcast media: synchronicity and locality. On the Internet, you don’t have to send everyone the same signal, and you don’t have to send it to them from a local source. People will watch what they want when they want it, and group themselves according to whatever shared interest they feel most strongly.

Give it read.  It’s worth the visit.