Shining A Light Episode 8: What Greta Thunberg has ACTUALLY Done

Shining A Light Episode 8: What Greta Thunberg has ACTUALLY Done

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What Has Greta Thunberg Actually Done?

 

By Sean Conrad

“We are living in the beginning of a mass extinction. Our climate is breaking down. Children like

me and giving up their education to protest. But we can still fix this. You can still fix this.”

 – Greta Thunberg

 You’ve probably heard of Greta Thunberg, but you may not know what she’s actually done. Turns out, she’s done a lot. Check out this week’s episode of Shining A Light for a quick recap video, and be sure to subscribe!

 PS: Did you know that if you donate as little as $10 to Shine Global you’ll be featured in the credits of our next film!? If you’d like your name in the credits of an Academy Award-winning nonprofit film production company, donate here!

 

Subscribing to Shine Global on YouTube is one of the easiest, most helpful ways to support us in our mission of making films about underserved youth and their families. Thank you so much for your support!

Shining A Light Episode 6: The Digital Divide

Shining A Light Episode 6: The Digital Divide

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Shining A Light Episode 6: The Digital Divide

 

By Sean Conrad

This week Sean interviewed a 2nd grade teacher in Iowa about how their classroom has been impacted by covid-19 and the digital divide. The shift to online education has left millions of students unable to complete their work. It’s clear that access to broadband is an issue of equality, equity, and prosperity for the 12 million kids in America who are being left behind.

 

Subscribing to Shine Global on YouTube is one of the easiest, most helpful ways to support us in our mission of making films about underserved youth and their families. Thank you so much for your support!

Notes from Susan: Covid-19 Reveals The “Weathering” Of African-Americans

Notes from Susan: Covid-19 Reveals The “Weathering” Of African-Americans

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Notes from Susan: Covid-19 Reveals The “Weathering” Of African-Americans

By Susan MacLaury

By now we’ve all undoubtedly learned that African-Americans, particularly males – are dying at disproportionately higher rates from COVID-19 than any other segment of the US population.

Chicago Mayor, Lori Lightfoot, recently proclaimed this fact a “call to action moment” for her city in which Black citizens comprise more than half of all diagnosed cases of the corona virus and 72% of its deaths, while being less than 1/3 the total population. Statewide, African-Americans represent 15% of Illinois’ total population yet account for 28% of those testing positive and 43% of all deaths. Most states have not released their figures but one has to assume similar disparities may well be revealed throughout the US.

Arline Geronimus, Professor of Public Health at the University of Michigan, studies what is called “weathering,” the cumulative effect of stress resulting from racial discrimination, long-term exposure to environmental toxins, redlining that limits essential services, disproportionate victimization by crime… the list continues… on persons of color. All these factors, increase the vulnerability of African- Americans, particularly males, to develop underlying problems like asthma, diabetes, and heart disease ,which as we now understand increases the likelihood of dying from this virus. Is anyone reading this surprised?

Shine Global promotes social change for kids and families by bringing their stories to the screen and then to classrooms around the world. Many of our film subjects have experienced the “weathering” Dr. Geronimus describes.

Our second film, released in 2011, was The Harvest (La Cosecha), which documented the lives of three American migrant child workers of Hispanic descent and their families, who were unprotected by federal laws as they picked much of the produce Americans eat. They suffered physically, educationally and financially to feed American families. Ironically, after years of discrimination and even threatened deportation, these workers are now deemed “essential” to the American economy even as they continue to live in substandard housing and can’t afford to buy the produce they have picked.

This year, we completed a short documentary, Virtually Free, that explores another aspect of institutional racism in the US – its juvenile justice system. African-American youths make up 14% of the US population under 18 yet 42% of males detained are Black, as are 35% of females.1 The product of substandard housing, education, and racial discrimination, 78% will go on to reoffend and the majority will never graduate from high school.

There is great good that can come from this period of uncertainty, including the https://klonopinshop.com sincere profession by so many that: “We’re all in this together.” Let’s make sure we extend this heartfelt compassion to all young Americans who deserve safe, supportive childhoods.

 

  1. https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/youth2019.html

Shining A Light Episode 5: Coronavirus, TikTok, and #StayHome

Shining A Light Episode 5: Coronavirus, TikTok, and #StayHome

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Shining A Light Episode 5: Coronavirus, TikTok, and #StayHome

 

By Sean Conrad

This week I made my first ever tiktok to see what the hype is all about, and to better understand how teens across America are coping with #stayhome. Check out our most recent YouTube video to see the results!

Subscribing to Shine Global on YouTube is one of the easiest, most helpful ways to support us in our mission of making films about underserved youth and their families. Thank you so much for your support!

Notes from Susan: Covid-19 Reveals The “Weathering” Of African-Americans

Notes from Susan: Proud to Live in Jersey

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Notes from Susan: Proud to Live in Jersey

By Susan MacLaury

I grew up on the other side of the Hudson River, in Huntington, NY. I’ve always loved NYS and indeed my husband and I still own a home on Long Island. But 27 years ago we left our Manhattan apartment to move to New Jersey, days after our oldest child, Kay, graduated from Bronx High School of Science, and 3 months before Alex, twelve years younger than his sister, began kindergarten.

We moved to Montclair, a town I love dearly. Learning to love New Jersey came more slowly. Although I appreciate the Jersey shore and have come to truly admire Bruce Springsteen, my state sympathies have always been divided. (The beaches I grew up with were Long Island’s north shore’s harbors and the LI sound. For several years my family also co-owned a tiny cottage on the bay side of Dune Road in Westhampton, across the street from the ocean. That, to me, was the best of all possible worlds.) It’s all what you know, I guess.

This month, though, I am very proud to be a New Jerseyan as it is March 2020 that the bill Governor Murphy signed in December, A8523, comes into effect making New Jersey the 17th state, along with the District of Columbia, to enable formerly incarcerated people on probation or parole to vote. Governor Murphy also introduced another law that creates an automatic expungement process for those convicted of less serious effects with a clean slate for 10 years.

Having recently completed Shine Global’s forthcoming short documentary, Virtually Free, about three Richmond, VA teens in detention who work with artists to create art used to educate law enforcement about the impact of incarceration on kids, I’ve come to understand much better what Michelle Alexander described in her 2010 book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the age of Colorblindness, recently re-released with a new introduction by the author.

She states eloquently how badly the decks are stacked against those who’ve been incarcerated. – from the jobs they can take, to where they can live, to whether they can get motor vehicle licenses… the list goes on. What’s miraculous is that any survive, let alone thrive, upon release. I learned from Ms. Alexander that those released from jail and prison are saddled with horrendous – and dubious – debts that many simply can never pay off, that effectively short-circuit any serious efforts to rejoin society.

I’m proud to live in New Jersey where the playing field has been leveled in a significant manner and I’ll watch eagerly as the other 33 remaining states hopefully move to join this movement.

Shining A Light Episode 4: Olivia Wilde, Women in Film, and Why Representation Matters

Shining A Light Episode 4: Olivia Wilde, Women in Film, and Why Representation Matters

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Shining A Light Episode 4: Olivia Wilde, Women in Film, and Why Representation Matters

 

By Sean Conrad

Before covid-19 took over, we filmed episode 4 of Shining A Light celebrating Women’s History Month. This week we look at representation in media and how it affects real world change, specifically through our films Inocente and The Eagle Huntress.

 

Subscribing to Shine Global on YouTube is one of the easiest, most helpful ways to support us in our mission of making films about underserved youth and their families. Thank you so much for your support!