Entertainment

March 2014 - Posts

  • RED Hearts: Entertainment: An All-Student-Made Magazine

    By Carey Dunne, 24, reporting from Brooklyn, NY, on a publishing project that transforms pages—and lives.

    In high school, it can be all too easy to feel like you don’t have a voice. You’re often at the mercy of grownups who seem to think they know better than you. Outlets for sharing opinions that are truly your own and stories with a community wider than your closest friends (and more thoughtful than Internet trolls) can be hard to come by.

    That’s why Alliance Magazine is so important: It's a magazine, as in a print magazine you can hold in your hands, that's written, edited, designed, and marketed by high school-age students in Fresno, California. They’re members of the Men and Women’s Alliance Program, which aims to identify the most at-risk kids in the city's public high schools and, through workshops and team-building exercises, helps them develop the skills they need for success in the classroom, their careers, and their personal lives.

    Vince Bailey, who teaches in the summer-intensive Columbia Publishing Course (east coast) and is a partner at Impact Publishing (west coast), has been working for years to develop the magazine workshop in the economically hardest-hit areas of Fresno, the second-largest school district in California. The impressive result of their efforts is Alliance Magazine, which lets students shed the pigeon-holing "at-risk youth" label and instead identify as publishing pros. Putting together a magazine to be proud of has led to a serious boost in the kids' belief in themselves and what they can accomplish. Graduates from last year's pilot program are now enrolled in college, some majoring in journalism and graphic design. “The transformation that has taken place in these kids, in the short time I've worked with them, has been remarkable,” Bailey says. “We've taken kids that the school system had given up on and are watching them become confident, assertive, career-driven young men and women.”

    To keep their mission strong and keep publishing, Alliance Magazine is currently raising funds through a Kickstarter campaign. Donate here, watch the video, and just try not to be charmed by—subscribe to—the talented team of next-generation magazine-makers.

  • RED Hearts: Entertainment: Beautiful Rebel Music

    By Zoe Mendelson, 24, reporting from Brooklyn, NY, on a band she loves so much it sounds like she's lying

    The Tuaregs, an ancient nomadic tribe that inhabits the Sahara and North Africa, are known as the fiercest of fighters. You may have seen them in movies—usually as bands of men with scarves around their heads who rob the good guys in the desert.

    They also happen to make the most radically peaceful and elegant music I have ever heard.

    Tinariwen is a Tuareg band that formed in 1979 around campfires in tents at refugee settlements and has recently gained recognition on the world stage. (Their latest album, Emaar, came out last week.) The most accurate description of their sound I’ve found is “a cross between Fela Kuti and the Velvet Underground.” Quite the appealing hybrid, right?

    Scripted into Gadaffi’s mercenary army in 1980, the musicians went on to become leaders of the Tuareg rebel movement in Libya in 1985, and then another rebel movement in Mali in 1990. They would record their “rebel music” for anyone who brought a blank cassette tape to their makeshift studio. Through these homemade tapes, they spread their politically subversive messages about the plight of the Tuareg all over North Africa—eventually attracting international attention.

    As much as their music is important, it’s incredibly calming, too. It lowers my blood pressure but it’s definitely not boring. The only way I can describe it is that it’s shockingly beautiful. Every single person I’ve introduced to them slips into a Tinariwen trance for a while. My first lasted more than a month. And now that there’s a new album, I’m right back there and never want to leave.

    The first album of theirs I heard was Tassili, which they recorded with Tunde Adebimpe, the lead singer of TV on the Radio. It’s a great introduction to their music and their message. These guys are not rock stars—they are rebel fighters and they are musicians. I can’t say too much because it will start to sound like I’m lying. But truly, I’ve never encountered music with such a universal appeal, such a visceral effect on everyone who listens to it. Watching them gives me chills.

  • RED Hearts: Entertainment: Get On the Continuum!

    By Jordyn Turney, 24, reporting from Nampa, Idaho, on a standout of a sci-fi show.

    Talk about wishes for the New Year: Kiera Cameron is a cop from the year 2077 stuck in the present, our present, after getting sent back in time when a terrorist gang sentenced to death escaped by traveling to the past.

    Now the only thing she wants is to get back home to her husband and kid. But if the villains who’re to blame for her wacky time-spanning adventures aren’t stopped now—you knew there would be this kind of catch—she has no idea what she’ll be going back to.

    That’s the Canadian show Continuum in a nutshell. (And here’s a three-minute preview that might or might not make my synopsis make more sense.) Throw in a teenage computer whiz as Kiera’s present-day ally, criminals who aren’t as bad as we’d like to believe and judicious use of some very awesome future-tech elements, and you’ve got one of the best sci-fi shows I’ve seen.

    There’s even an actual super suit.

    Continuum exceeds expectations first and foremost with the fact that it’s a character-driven science fiction world. Kiera is a smart, fierce cop whose number-one priority is getting back to her home. But in spite of her single-mindedness she finds herself caught up in our time, and in the fact that a change in the present could alter—or destroy—the world she’s so set on returning to. With its intelligent plotting of a story that’s so much bigger than you imagine at first and a cast of characters who are all fighting hard for what they believe in, Continuum is a standout of a show, sci-fi or otherwise.

    It’s currently between seasons, which means this is the best time to catch up with the first two seasons on Netflix before the third premieres in March (SyFy in the US, Showcase in Canada) this year. This year, as in 2014 that is.