Media is a controlled substance
03-19-2019

Immersion in Immigrant Life

Aggie Ebrahimi Bazaz and her team shed light on immigrant life through two 360º videos that profile the experiences of an upstate New York community, Saratoga Springs, which is a hotspot for ICE raids. The films, which take the shape of immersive metaphoric ICE interrogations, help viewers understand the experience of strengthening one’s own identity and building community bonds within systems that foster isolation and othering. The project aims to weave a tapestry of voices and experiences, delving into the complex lives of the minority community members who have been involved every step of the way.

This project is produced in collaboration with the Economic Opportunity Council of Saratoga County; The Public VR Lab of Brookline Interactive Group; and the MDOCS Community Partnerships Program at Skidmore College. They are supported by The Philadelphia Independent Media Finishing Fund administered by Scribe Video Center with funds provided by the Wyncote Foundation. The films will be presented at the Visible Evidence conference in the summer of 2019.

03-19-2019

City Harvest: the Next Decade

In 2005, filmmaker Deb Rudman began a process to document Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s (PHS) City Harvest program.

Through this program, inmates of the Philadelphia Prison System grow seedlings at a prison greenhouse, and thousands more seedlings are started at neighborhood-based greenhouses run by nonprofit partners. The inmates receive training in gardening and basic landscaping along with valuable life-skills lessons. Participating growers then distribute the fresh produce in their communities, through food cupboard donations and at farmers markets. Students can also get involved with the project through the newly introduced Roots to Reentry internship program.

This program is remarkable in that it provides working solutions for several seemingly intractable problems. This project and film suggest that overcoming food insecurity can be an avenue for addressing immigration, inmate reentry, environmental damage, teen education, jobs training, belonging, and community building. The connections fostered through growing food, sharing recipes, and revitalizing urban environments not only feed bodies but also personal growth and community health. In short, this film offers an example of effective and actionable local solutions to local problems.

Deb’s film about the program was used as training for those who are inside prison. PHS has also shown the film at the gardens, numbers of which have grown considerably.

Production Supervisors:

Deborah Rudman

Aggie Bazaz

by Nicole Gieselman | Posted in Termite Timeline | No Comments » | Tags: , ,













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