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#Christopher John Troutman
spawn-universe · 5 months
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Spawnuary
Cover By Waldemer Z Cortes
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Cover By Aditya Chandra
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Cover By Xerx G. Javier
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Cover By Pankaj Naik
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cover By Francesco Biagini
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Cover By Christopher John Troutman
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Cover By Lipwei Chang
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Cover By Miguel Mendonça
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rabbittstewcomics · 3 years
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Episode 277
Comics Reviews:
Batman: Black and White 1 by James Tynion IV, Tradd Moore, J.H. Williams III, Emam Rios, Paul Dini, Andy Kubert, G. Willow Wilson, Greg Smallwood, 
Dark Nights: Death Metal - The Last Stories of the DC Universe by Scott Snyder, Gail Simone, Jeff Lemire, Mark Waid, James Tynion IV, Joshua Williamson, Cecil Castellucci, Christopher Sebela, Mariko Tamaki, Rafael Albuquerque, Daniel Sampere, Mirka Andolfo, Travis Moore, Meghan Hetrick, Christopher Mooneyham, Francis Manapul, Andrew Dalhouse, Adrian Lucas, Ivan Plascencia, Tamra Bonvillain, Marissa Louise, Enrica Eren Angiolini
DC's Very Merry Multiverse by Sholly Fisch, John Layman, Derek Fridolfs, Ivan Cohen, Tom Sniegoski, Tom King, Paul Scheer, David F. Walker, Brittany Holzherr, Nick Giovanetti, Jay Baruchel, Dustin Nguyen, Scott Koblish, Eleonora Carlini, Todd Nauck, Steve Lieber, Dominike Stanton, Vanesa Del Rey, Gustavo Duarte, Dani, Justin Mason, Ulises Arreola, Bryan Valenza, John Kalusz, Marcelo Maiolo, Bryan Valenza, Tamra Bonvillain, Marissa Louise, Chris O'Halloran, Hi-Fi
Superman: Endless Winter Special by Ron Marz, Andy Lanning, Phil Hester, Ande Parks, Hi-Fi
Tales From the Dark Multiverse: Flashpoint by Bryan Hitch, Scott Hanna, Andrew Currie, Jeremiah Skipper, Alex Sinclair
Arkhamaniacs by Art Baltazar, Franco
Heroes At Home by Zeb Wells, Gurihiru
King in Black: Namor 1 by Kurt Busiek, Benjamin Dewey, Jonas Scharf
S.W.O.R.D. 1 by Al Ewing, Valerio Schiti, Marte Gracia
Home Sick Pilots 1 by Dan Watters, Caspar Wijngaard
Postal: Night Shift by Levi Fleming, Stephanie Phillips, Cecilia Lo Valvo, Jesse Elliot
Comic Book History of Animation 1 by Fred Van Lente, Ryan Dunlavey
Locke and Key/Sandman: Hell and Gone 0
Vampirella: The Dark Powers by Dan Abnett, Paul Davidson, Ula Mos, Sebastian Cheng
Red Sonja: The Price of Blood by Luke Lieberman, Walter Geovani, Ula Mos
Piecemeal by Cullen Bunn, Szymon Kudranski
What If We Were... by Axelle Lenoir
Byte-Sized 1 by Cullen Bunn, Nelson Blake II, Snakebite Cortez
Clockwork Girl by Sean O'Reilly, Kevin Hanna, Grant Bond
100 Light Years... of Solitude by Katie Schenkel, Jodie Troutman
Additional Reviews: Alien X-Mas, Mank, Eurovision: Story of Fire Saga, The Prom, Mandalorian
News: Liefeld and Deadpool's 30th Anniversary, new Charles Soule and Joe Henderson comics from Image, GoT prequel casting, delays on Black Widow, Cates/Morrison Atomahawk origin, Marvel delays, Discovery confusion
Trailers: Recipe For a Seduction, Batwoman, Wandavision, Loki, Falcon and Winter Soldier, What If?
Comics Countdown:
Crossover 2 by Donny Cates, Geoff Shaw, Dee Cunniffe, John Hill
Scarenthood 2 by Nick Roche, Chris O'Halloran
Usagi Yojimbo 15 by Stan Sakai
Sweet Tooth: The Return 2 by Jeff Lemire, Jose Villarrubia
Seven Secrets 5 by Tom Taylor, Daniele Di Nicuolo
Avengers 39 by Jason Aaron, Dale Keown, Scott Hanna, Jason Keith
American Vampire 1976 3 by Scott Snyder, Rafael Albuquerque, Dave McCaig
S.W.O.R.D. 1 by Al Ewing, Valerio Schiti, Marte Gracia
Guardians of the Galaxy 9 by Al Ewing, Juann Cabal, Federico Blee
Superman: Endless Winter Special by Ron Marz, Andy Lanning, Phil Hester, Ande Parks, Hi-Fi
Check out this episode!
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Sept. 25, 2019: Obituaries
William Nichols, 73
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William Albert Nichols, age 73, of Millers Creek, passed away Thursday, September 19, 2019 at his home. He was born August 18, 1946 in Wilkes County to J.P. and Josephine Bowlin Nichols. William was a US Navy Veteran and a former Post Commander and lifetime member of VFW Post 1142. He was a member of Journey of Grace Baptist Church. Mr. Nichols was a barber with The Barber Shop and enjoyed fishing, hunting, wood working and auctioneering. He was preceded in death by his parents.
Surviving are his wife, Nadine Miller Nichols; son, Michael Nichols and fiancée Anastasia Waddell of Millers Creek; daughter, Michele Hines and spouse Stephen of Millers Creek; grandchildren, Bradeck Hines and Madison Hines; step daughter, Sherry Braswell and spouse Kent of Cary and sister, Martha Church and spouse Jerry of Wilkesboro; and Uncle, Grady Nichols.
Funeral service was September 21,   at Miller Funeral Chapel with Rev. Tim Pruitt, Rev. George Morgan, Chaplain Larry Reavis and Pastor Dana Hines officiating. Burial with military honors by Veterans of Foreign Wars Honor Guard Post 1142   followed in Mount Lawn Memorial Park and Gardens of Boone.  Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to Wake Forest Hospice, 126 Executive Drive, Suite 110, Wilkesboro, NC 28697.
Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
  Lora Bullin, 101
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Mrs. Lora Johnson Pendry Bullin, age 101 of North Wilkesboro passed away Thursday, September 19, 2019 at her home.
Funeral services were September 22,   at Reins-Sturdivant Chapel with Rev. Glenn Dancy III officiating.  Burial was in Mountlawn Memorial Park.  
Mrs. Bullin was born March 27, 1918 in Wilkes County to Fieldon E. and Ola Cox Johnson.  She retired from Chatham Manufacturing and was a member of Maple Grove Baptist Church.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her first husband; Burr Pendry and her second husband; Fred Bullin, two sons; Bill Pendry and David Pendry and daughter-in-law; Ann Pendry.
She is survived by a son; James F. Pendry, Sr., and wife Margie of Wilkesboro, six grandchildren; Crystal Pendry, Chuck Pendry, Jim Pendry, Beth P. Miller, Scott Pendry and Chad Pendry, six great grandchildren; Ashley Carr, Mary Ann Byrd, Grace Miller, Austin Pendry, Nate Pendry and Abby Pendry and three great-great grandchildren and one sister; Nancy Johnson Duncan of Wilkesboro and a daughter-in-law; Marolyn Pendry of Millers Creek.
Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made the American Heart Association, PO Box  2361, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659.
  Jerry Lovell, 70
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Jerry Buford Lovell, age 70, of Wilkesboro, passed away Thursday, September 19, 2019 at his home. Jerry was born December 9, 1948 in Atlanta, Georgia to Buford Lamar and Patsy Stamey Lovell. He was a US Air Force Veteran and was the owner of Lovell Medical Supplies. He attended Church in the Wildwood and enjoyed fishing in the pond at Greenstreet Campground. Mr. Lovell was preceded in death by his wife, Phyllis Sue Lovell and brother, Darrell Lovell.
Surviving are his son, Roger Lovell and spouse Tabitha of Mulberry; daughter, Tammy Smith and spouse Bobby of Livingston, Tennessee; his parents, Lamar and Patsy Lovell of Bethlehem; grandchildren, Caitlin Lovell and fiancé Matthew Triplett, Zach Lovell all of Mulberry, Kimberly Walker, Brittany Walker and Megan Smith all of Livingston; four great grandchildren; sisters, Rita Teague Carter and husband Jerry, Debbie Cagle and husband J.C.
Funeral service was September 23,   at Miller Funeral Chapel with Rev. Dwayne Byrd and Pastor Matt Jones officiating. Burial with military honors by Veterans of Foreign Wars Honor Guard Post 1142   followed in Mountlawn Memorial Park.  
Flowers will be accepted. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.  
  Robin Nelson, 57
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Mrs. Robin Kiger Nelson, age 57 of North Wilkesboro passed away Tuesday, September 17, 2019 at her home.
Funeral services were September 23,   at Reins-Sturdivant Chapel with Rev. Wiley Boggs officiating.  Burial was in Pilgrim Baptist Church Cemetery.
The family will receive from 12:30 until 1:30 PM prior to the service at Reins-Sturdivant Funeral Home.
Mrs. Nelson was born September 26, 1961 in Forsyth County to Herman Gray Kiger and Stella Mae Rose Kiger. She was a member of Pilgrim Baptist Church.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by a grandson; Carter Weldy.
She is survived by her husband; Harvey Lee Nelson of the home, two daughters; April Weldy of North Wilkesboro and Krystle Royal of State Road, five grandchildren; Jerry Royal, Andrew Royal, Paige Weldy, Brooklyn Weldy and Parker Weldy, one sister; Barbara Moser Tate of Forsyth County, three brothers; Randy Kiger of North Wilkesboro, Johnny Kiger of Traphill and Allen Kiger of Davidson County.
Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to the Donor's Choice.
   Oma Moore
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Oma Ruth Love Moore passed away Wednesday, September 18th, 2019 peacefully surrounded by family at her home in Wilkesboro.  Funeral services were held at Fishing Creek Baptist Church Saturday, September 21st   with her son, Dr. Dennis Love and Reverend Darrell Poole officiating. Burial was at the church cemetery.
Mrs. Moore was born January 22nd, 1935 in Wilkes County to Oma and Jack McLain.  She loved Fishing Creek Baptist Church and enjoyed being an active member.  She loved singing in the choir, organizing food for church events and entertaining large groups at her home.  She loved cooking for her family. Her Sunday lunches were a can't miss family ritual. She enjoyed working in her yard and keeping a nice home.  She loved attending sporting events for her children and grandchildren. She enjoyed doing macramé projects and being active with friends.
In addition to her parents, she was proceeded in death by her husband, Ray Edward Love; a son, Terry Love; two brothers, James David McLain and Robert Sherrill McLain; and two sisters, Louise Staley and Betty Mayberry.
She is survived by her husband, Darryl Moore of the home; a daughter Pam Dancy and husband John, of Wilkesboro, NC; son Dennis Love and wife Vicki, of Marion, NC; son Ray Love Jr. and wife Shannon of North Wilkesboro, NC; a sister Helen Cox of Wilkesboro, NC; nine grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
Flowers will be accepted.
   Donald McGuire, 51
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Donald Jeffery "Donnie" McGuire, age 51, of Millers Creek, passed away Monday, September 16, 2019 at his home. Donnie was born September 21, 1967 in Wilkes County to Floyd Bill and Edna Mae Greene McGuire. He was a member of Oak Grove Baptist Church. He loved golfing and fishing.
Surviving are his parents, Floyd Bill and Edna Mae Greene McGuire of Millers Creek; brothers, Billy Ray McGuire of Millers Creek, Jerry Christopher "Chris" McGuire and spouse Laura of Purlear; nieces and nephew, Shannon Payne of the Mtn. View Community, Christina McGuire of Millers Creek, Corbin Payne of the Mtn. View Community, and Courtney Dakota Shew of Wilkesboro.
Funeral service was September 19,   at Miller Funeral Chapel with Pastor Keith Lyon officiating. Burial  followed at Vision Baptist Church Cemetery on Highway 16. Memorials may be made to the American Heart Association, PO Box 2361, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659.
Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
 William Elledge, 93
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William Edward Elledge, age 93, of North Wilkesboro, passed away Monday, September 16, 2019 at his home. Mr. Elledge was born January 29, 1926 in Forsyth County to H. L. and Pauline Peacock Elledge. He was a member of Fairplains Baptist Church. He loved to play baseball and softball and was a hunter and fisherman. Mr. Elledge was preceded in death by his parents; brother, Douglas L. Elledge; and sister, Victoria Stinson.
Surviving are his siblings, Josephine Pardue of Hamptonville, Jim Elledge and spouse Peggy of North Wilkesboro, Bobby Roger Elledge and spouse LaNelle of North Wilkesboro, Judy Elledge Perkins and spouse Jim of Concord; several nieces and nephews; and brother-in-law, David Stinson of Sanford.
Graveside service was September 21,   at Mountlawn Memorial Park with Rev. Carl Elledge officiating.  
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, Tennessee 38105-9956 or to Meals on Wheels of Wilkes County, 710 Veterans Drive,  North Wilkesboro, NC 28659.
Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
  Loraine Baity, 77
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Loraine Baity, age 77, of Wilkesboro, died Saturday, Sept. 14, 2019, at Wake Forest Baptist Health - Wilkes Regional. She was born March 1, 1942. Memorial service was September 23, 2019, at Miller Funeral Chapel.
  Alvin West Sr., 66
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Mr. Alvin 'Clay' West Sr. began his journey on earth, Sunday, March 1st, 1953 in Iredell County. On Tuesday, September 10th, 2019, he finished his adventure, taking his last breath at home, in Taylorsville, NC.
He always had a joke to share. His memories will be forever carried in the laughter that follows, as his tales are retold.
Preceded in death by: Angela Myriah West, Daughter; Hazel Olamae Wingler, Mother; Carson West, Brother; Linda Greene, Sister; Patsy Sidden, Sister.
Surviving Family Members: Dorothy West, Wife; Son, Alvin West and  wife, Annette;   Son, Darrell Walker; Daughter, Suzanna Chavez,  and husband, Modio; Daughter, Lola Pennington, and husband,  Don;  Betsy Walker; Sister; Brother Lester West  & wife Susan; 11 Grandchildren; and 4 great grandchildren
Clay was laid to rest at Scenic Memorial Gardens on Saturday, September 14th, 2019, with Rev. Alvin West, Jr officiating.
"Well, that's a deep subject." - Alvin Clay West, Sr.
  Oscar Moz, 41
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Mr. Oscar David Comayagua Moz, 41, of Traphill, passed away on Friday, September 6, 2019.
Oscar was born on Tuesday, August 1, 1978 to Jose Maria Comayagua and Rosa Moz Comayagua in El Salvador.
Oscar is survived by his parents; fiancé, Noel Frazier of Traphill, Daughters, Tania Comayagua of Troutman, Yaretzi  Comayagua of Virginia; sons, Josh and Jason Comayagua of Troutman, Jackson Comayagua of Traphill; brothers, Francisco Comayagua of California, Amilcar Comayagua of El Salvador; sisters,  Sandra Comayagua of El Salvador, Claudia Comayagua of Chicago.    
A visitation was held September 19,  at Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes Chapel in Moravian Falls.
In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be given to Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes, P.O. Box  396 Moravian Falls, NC 28654 to help with final expenses.  
Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes has the honor of serving the Comayagua Family.
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learningrendezvous · 5 years
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Water Resources and Management
ONCE WAS WATER
Directed by Christopher Beaver
Las Vegas provides an example to the world of how any city can and must create its own sustainable water solutions.
Las Vegas is perhaps the most famous resort city in the world. It is also the thirstiest city in the driest state in the US, so it has had to be proactive in developing solutions that conserve and redistribute water, their most precious resource. Currently the city is faced with only 2.6 inches of rain per annum, a seventeen-year drought, a constantly expanding population and competition for shared resources. As a result, the city has been forced to create its own sustainable water solutions and in the process has turned itself into an example for other desert regions.
Everything to do with their water supply and disposal is watched, measured and checked. Water is recycled and returned to the source. Every drop is monitored acoustically to detect possible leaks within 6500 miles of pipes. 40% of the water is recycled for indoor use and returned to Lake Mead, 40% of what goes out comes back, but the remaining 60% is for outdoor use and either evaporates or goes back into the ground.
The film follows the story of Patricia Mulroy, the controversial founder of the Southern Nevada Water Authority. Her strength and leadership "helped launch a quiet revolution that will shape Colorado River politics far into the future, and perhaps provide a path to safety in the face of intensifying water scarcity."
The story of Las Vegas's approach to water sustainability is full of surprises, and we hear it from many different perspectives. After all, the strip is just a small part of the valley, but it is the engine that provides the cash to enable the experimentation that has created these models for survival.
DVD / 2019 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adults) / 55 minutes
AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK
Directed by Josh Fox, James Spione, Myron Dewey
Record of the massive peaceful resistance led by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe to the Dakota Access Pipeline through their land and underneath the Missouri River.
The Dakota Access Pipeline is a controversial project that brings fracked crude oil from the Bakken Shale in North Dakota through South Dakota, Iowa and eventually to Illinois. The Standing Rock Tribe and people all over the world oppose the project because the pipeline runs under the Missouri river, a source of drinking water for over 18 million people, and pipeline leaks are commonplace. Since 2010 over 3,300 oil spills and leaks have been reported.
Moving from summer 2016, when demonstrations over the Dakota Access Pipeline's demolishing of sacred Native burial grounds began, to the current and disheartening pipeline status, AWAKE, A Dream from Standing Rock is a powerful visual poem in three parts that uncovers complex hidden truths with simplicity. The film is a collaboration between indigenous filmmakers: Director Myron Dewey and Executive Producer Doug Good Feather; and environmental Oscar-nominated filmmakers Josh Fox and James Spione.
The Water Protectors at Standing Rock captured world attention through their peaceful resistance. The film documents the story of Native-led defiance that has forever changed the fight for clean water, our environment and the future of our planet. It asks: "Are you ready to join the fight?"
DVD / 2017 / (Grades 10-12, College, Adult) / 89 minutes
TRIPLE DIVIDE (REDACTED)
Directed by Joshua Pribanic, Melissa Troutman
Exposes the mishandling and cover-up of drinking water contamination related to unconventional natural gas extraction - aka fracking - in Pennsylvania.
This award-winning "bombshell" documentary covers the impact of fracking in one of the country's most pristine watersheds. With exclusive interviews from oil and gas industry leaders, independent experts and impacted residents, TRIPLE DIVIDE [REDACTED] covers five years (2011 - 2016) of cradle-to-grave investigations that reveal how regulators and industry keep water contamination covered up.
The documentary's title pays homage to one of only four Triple Continental Divides in North America, a place that provides drinking water to millions of Americans, signaling to the audience that everything, and everyone, is downstream from shale gas extraction.
Award-winning actor Mark Ruffalo co-narrates this film.
DVD / 2017 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adults) / 53 minutes
BLUESPACE
Directed by Ian Cheney
Contrasts sci-fi ideas about terraforming Mars with the state of NYC's waterways, and questions the viability of colonizing Mars before making our own planet sustainable.
Could humans live on Mars? Would we want to? Emmy-nominated filmmaker, Ian Cheney, provides insight into our currently unsustainable relationship with our home planet by examining the sci-fi speculation of "terraforming," or making another planet Earth-like, by altering its atmosphere. He calls on a multifaceted brain trust to process this big idea including a desert camp of Mars hopefuls, a bevy of sci-fi writers, Hurricane Sandy survivors, the Gowanus Dredgers Canoe Club, and a who's who of astrobiologists and earth scientists. BLUESPACE makes a strong case for taking better care of our water-rich planet so that future generations won't have to resort to interplanetary colonization.
At times whimsical and funny, serious and poignant and always stimulating, this is a unique exploration of current thinking about the origins and evolution of life and its relationship to water.
DVD / 2016 / (Grades 10-12, College, Adults) / 73 minutes
AFTER THE SPILL
Directed by Jon Boweraster
The oil and gas industry has historically dominated Louisiana politics and is largely responsible for the state's rapidly disappearing coastline.
Ten years ago Hurricane Katrina devastated the coast of Louisiana. Five years later the Deepwater Horizon exploded and spilled more than 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the worst ecologic disaster in North American history. Amazingly those aren't the worst things facing Louisiana's coastline today. It is that the state is fast disappearing through coastal erosion caused largely by oil and gas industry activity.
A follow-up to our 2010 film SoLa: Louisiana Water Stories, this film introduces us to some of the spill's most aggrieved victims as well as those who are desperately trying to save its coastline. Writer and historian John Barry who launched a suit against 97 oil and gas companies attempting to get them to pay their fair share for reparations caused by their explorations. Consultant and native son James Carville who manages to find some hope in new technologies that may save the coast. And Lt. Gen. Russell Honore, the man who saved New Orleans post-Katrina, whose new passion is for a Green Army he has recruited.
Fishermen, scientists, politicians, environmentalists, and oil-rig workers document how the coast of Louisiana has changed. What really happened to all that oil? What about the dispersant used to push it beneath the surface? How has the spill impacted local economies as well as human health and the health of both marine life and the Gulf itself? How much resilience is left in the people and coastline?
DVD / 2015 / (Grades 7-12, Colleges, Adults) / 62 minutes
DIVIDE IN CONCORD
Directed by Kris Kaczor
A fiery octogenarian activist spearheads a grassroots campaign to ban the sale of single-serve plastic bottled water in Concord, MA.
Jean Hill, a fiery octogenarian, is deeply concerned about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, the world's largest landfill. Since 2010, she has spearheaded a grassroots campaign to ban the sale of single-serve plastic bottled water in her hometown of Concord, Massachusetts. She spends her golden years attending city council meetings and cold calling residents. So far, her attempts to pass a municipal bylaw have failed.
As she prepares for one last town meeting, Jean faces the strongest opposition yet, from local merchants and the International Bottled Water Association. But her fiercest challenge comes from Adriana Cohen, mother, model and celebrity publicist-turned-pundit, who insists the bill is an attack on freedom.
When Adriana thrusts Jean's crusade into the national spotlight, it's silver-haired senior versus silver-tongued pro. In the same town that incited the American Revolution and inspired Thoreau's environmental movement, can one senior citizen make history? A tense nail-biter of a vote will decide.
DVD / 2014 / (Grades 5-12, College, Adult) / 142 minutes
GROUNDSWELL RISING: PROTECTING OUR CHILDREN'S AIR AND WATER
Directed by Renard Cohen
Documents the opposition from both sides of the political spectrum to the ubiquitous practice of fracking for natural gas, and the health and environmental reasons behind it.
GROUNDSWELL RISING gives voice to ordinary folks engaged in a David and Goliath struggle against Big Oil and Gas. We meet parents, scientists, doctors, farmers and individuals across the political spectrum decrying the energy extraction process known as fracking that puts profits over people. This provocative documentary tracks a grassroots movement exposing dangers to clean air, water, and civil rights.
GROUNDSWELL RISING shows how fracking has contaminated drinking water and jeopardized health and quality of life. Homeowners near wells suffer from respiratory ailments and property devaluation. Reina Ripple, of Southwest Pennsylvania Environmental Health Project, chronicles mounting ailments related to fracking. A former industry employee shows skin lesions and edema obtained while working with fracking waste.
Grassroots efforts have achieved bans, moratoriums, and referendums on fracking. Stanford University Professor Mark Jacobson paves the way forward globally with his Solutions Project for 100% renewable energy. Transcending the genre of environmental film, GROUNDSWELL's passionate stories inspire and empower.
DVD / 2014 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adult) / 70 minutes
CHASING WATER
Directed by Pete McBride
Breathtaking photography tells the story of the Colorado River, which flowed to the sea for 6 million years and now dries up 90 miles short of the Sea of Cortez.
After spending a decade working abroad as a photojournalist, Colorado native Pete McBride, decided to focus on something closer to his home and his heart: the Colorado River which cuts through his backyard. Taking nearly three years, McBride followed the river source to sea on a personal journey to see exactly where the river goes and what becomes of the irrigation water that flows across his family's cattle ranch in central Colorado after it returns to the creek.
Recruiting his father, John, as his personal pilot McBride chose an aerial vantage to capture a unique and fresh view of the Colorado River Basin. He also partnered with Jon Waterman, an author who stayed stream level to paddle the entire length of the river.
This short film takes the viewer on a 1,500 mile adventure downstream, from mountains and cities and through canyons and across shrinking reservoirs. For 6 million years the Colorado River flowed to the sea. Today it runs dry some 90 miles shy of its historic terminus at the Sea of Cortez.
This visual journey is both revealing and alarming as it highlights the state of the river and the Southwest's drying future.
Featuring the photography of Pete McBride and music by Explosions In The Sky, This Will Destroy You, Jesse Cook, and Ludovico Einaudi.
DVD / 2011 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adult) / 18 minutes
SEMPER FI: ALWAYS FAITHFUL
Directed by Rachel Libert, Tony Hardmon
Master Sgt. Jerry Ensminger reveals the Marine Corps' cover-up at Camp Lejeune of one of the largest water contamination incidents in US history.
Marine Corps Master Sgt. Jerry Ensminger was a devoted Marine for nearly twenty-five years. As a drill instructor he lived and breathed the "Corps" and was responsible for indoctrinating thousands of new recruits with its motto Semper Fidelis or "Always Faithful."
When Jerry's nine-year old daughter Janey died of a rare type of leukemia, his world collapsed. As a grief-stricken father, he struggled for years to make sense of what happened. His search for answers led to the shocking discovery of a Marine Corps cover-up of one of the largest water contamination incidents in U.S. history.
Semper Fi: Always Faithful follows Jerry's mission to expose the Marine Corps and force them to live up to their motto to the thousands of soldiers and their families exposed to toxic chemicals. His fight reveals a grave injustice at North Carolina's Camp Lejeune and a looming environmental crisis at military sites across the country.
DVD / 2011 / (Grades 10-12, College, Adult) / 76 minutes
SOLA: LOUISIANA WATER STORIES
Investigates how the exploitation of Southern Louisiana's abundant natural resources compromised the resiliency of its ecology and culture, multiplying the devastating impact of the BP oil spill and Hurricane Katrina.
Everywhere you look in Southern Louisiana there's water: rivers, bayous, swamps, the Mississippi River, the Gulf of Mexico. And everyone in Cajun Country has a water story, or two or three or more. Its waterways support the biggest economies in Louisiana - a $70 billion a year oil and gas industry, a $2.4 billion a year fishing business, tourism and recreational sports.
They are also home to some insidious polluters: the same oil and gas industry, 200 petrochemical plants along a 100-mile-long stretch of the Mississippi known "Cancer Alley," the world's largest Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico and erosion that is costing the coastline twenty five square miles of wetlands a year. At the same time, SoLa is home to one of America's most vital and unique cultures; if everyone who lives there has a water story they can also most likely play the fiddle, waltz, cook an etoufee and hunt and fish.
DVD / 2010 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adult) / 62 minutes
WATER ON THE TABLE
An intimate portrait of international water activist Maude Barlow and the debate over whether water is a commercial good or a human right.
WATER ON THE TABLE features Maude Barlow, who is considered an "international water-warrior" for her crusade to have water declared a human right. "Water must be declared a public trust and a human right that belongs to the people, the ecosystem and the future, and preserved for all time and practice in law. Clean water must be delivered as a public service, not a profitable commodity."
The film intimately captures the public face of Maude Barlow as well as the unscripted woman behind the scenes. The camera shadows her life on the road in Canada -- including an eye-opening visit to Alberta's tar sands -- and the United States over the course of a year as she serves as the UN Senior Advisor on Water to Fr. Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, President of the 63rd Session of the United Nations.
More than a portrait of an activist, WATER ON THE TABLE presents several dramatic opposing arguments. Barlow's critics are policy and economic experts who argue water is no different than any other resource, and that the best way to protect freshwater is to privatize it. It is proposed that Canada bulk-export its water to the United States in the face of an imminent water crisis.
DVD / 2010 / (Grades 10-12, College, Adult) / 79 minutes
TAPPED
Directed by Stephanie Soechtig
An unflinching examination of the big business of bottled water.
Is access to clean drinking water a basic human right, or a commodity that should be bought and sold like any other article of commerce? From the producers of Who Killed the Electric Car? And I.O.U.S.A., this timely documentary is a behind-the-scenes look into the unregulated and unseen world of the bottled water industry -- an industry that aims to privatize and sell back the one resource that ought never to become a commodity: our water.
From the plastic production to the ocean in which so many of these bottles end up, this inspiring documentary trails the path of the bottled water industry and the communities which were the unwitting chips on the table. A powerful portrait of the lives affected by the bottled water industry, this revelatory film features those caught at the intersection of big business and the public's right to water.
DVD / 2009 / (Grades 9-12, College, Adult) / 75 minutes
WATERLIFE
Directed by Kevin McMahon
An epic cinematic poem that reveals the extraordinary beauty and complex toxicity of the Great Lakes, the largest remaining supply of fresh water (20%) on Earth.
The film tells the epic story of the Great Lakes by following the cascade of its water from northern Lake Superior to the Atlantic Ocean, through the lives of some of the 35 million people who rely on the lake for survival.
Providing earth with 20% of its surface fresh water and its third largest industrial economy, the Great Lakes are a unique and precious resource under assault by toxins, sewage, invasive species, evaporating water and profound apathy. They are also one of the planet's great preserves of extraordinary wilderness beauty and a bounty of unique species.
WATERLIFE blends these realities with a dreamlike fluidity as it pours through the lives of some amazing characters. We meet an Anishinabe medicine woman who walked 16,000 miles around the lakes to sympathize with them; the last of the great Michigan fishing families; a man whose lakefront home now borders a field thanks to sewer overflows; the people of a village where mysterious toxins ensure that most new babies are girls; and the residents of Love Canal, a notorious Niagara Falls neighborhood abandoned in the 1970s and now dubiously refurbished.
Along the way, WATERLIFE show viewers the Great Lakes as they might appear to a seagull, a fish or a water molecule...and from a myriad of other amazing perspectives. Filmed over a full year with a battery of specialty cameras and techniques, WATERLIFE provides an unprecedented view of an incredible ecosystem rarely seen by the city dwellers who form most of its population. From the ornate fountains of Chicago to the sewers of Windsor, viewers are carried through marsh and pipe, across pounding waves and through thunder clouds on a journey which, as the film says, has no "ending or beginning, that shapes every body it passes through and unites them all across space and time."
WATERLIFE's director, Kevin McMahon, is one of Canada's most innovative documentary filmmakers. Gord Downie, leader of The Tragically Hip and a Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, narrates the film. Topping off this epic cinematic poem is a fabulous soundtrack featuring Sam Roberts, The Allman Brothers, Dropkick Murphys, Sufjan Stevens, Sigur R?, Robbie Robertson, Daniel Lanois, Phillip Glass, Brian Eno and a new song by The Tragically Hip. Plus check out the award-winning interactive website.
DVD (Closed Captioned) / 2009 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adult) / 109 minutes
RETURN OF THE CUYAHOGA, THE
Directed by Lawrence R. Hott and Diane Garey
The story of the death and rebirth of one of America's most emblematic waterways.
For centuries, the Cuyahoga River has been on the frontier. When the United States was a new nation, the river literally marked the western frontier. But "civilization" came to the river; by 1870 the river was on the industrial frontier. On the river's banks sprouted a multitude of factories, a booming display of what was called progress. The river, as it flowed through Cleveland, became a foul-smelling channel of sludge, with an oily surface that ignited with such regularity that river fires were treated as commonplace events by the local press.
But then, in 1969, the river burned again, just as a third kind of frontier swept across the nation: an environmental frontier. And the Cuyahoga River became a landmark on this frontier too -- a poster child for those trying to undo the destruction wrought by progress in America.
The Return of the Cuyahoga is a one-hour documentary about the death and rebirth of one of America's most emblematic waterways. In its history we see the end of the American frontier, the growth of industry, the scourge of pollution and the advent of a political movement that sought to end pollution.
The Cuyahoga's story is a particularly apt example for future environmental efforts, because the once burning river can't just be cleaned up and "set aside" as a pristine wilderness park - it runs right through Cleveland, and like most American rivers, the Cuyahoga has to serve widely varying needs - aesthetic and economic, practical and natural, human and animal. The challenge: how to maintain industrial uses of the river near Lake Erie, encourage recreation and entertainment, and yet preserve the nature in and around the river. It's the same challenge that much of our riparian nation is facing today.
DVD (Color, Closed Captioned) / 2008 / (Grades 9-12, College, Adult) / 57 minutes
WATER FIRST: REACHING THE MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
Directed by Amy Hart
An inspiring story from Malawi shows that clean water is essential for the achievement of the UN's Millennium Development Goals.
Through the inspiring story of Charles Banda, a humble Malawian fireman turned waterman, we see how water is a solution to many of the problems in his impoverished, sub- Saharan country. From hunger and poverty to women's equality and population control, HIV/AIDS to environmental sustainability, Banda makes it clear that the best way to assist and empower people in developing nations, and to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), is by putting water first.
Water First draws a clear correlation between clean water and all of the other Millennium Development Goals. The goals are a set of 8 targets set by the UN in the year 2000 and endorsed by 187 nations. Sadly, at the halfway mark, we are less than halfway there. Charles Banda believes that if more people knew about the MDGs we would have a much better chance of achieving them. And, if clean water was the top priority, achieving the goals would be much more feasible. "30% of the goals would automatically be achieved if everyone had clean water," says John Oldfield of Water Advocates.
DVD (Color, Closed Captioned) / 2008 / (Grades 10-12, College, Adult) / 46 minutes
WATER FRONT, THE
Directed by Liz Miller
The story of Highland Park, Michigan, and the larger issues of water privatization and human rights.
What if you lived by the largest body of fresh water in the world but could no longer afford to use it?
With a shrinking population, the post-industrial city of Highland Park, Michigan is on the verge of financial collapse. The state of Michigan has appointed an Emergency Financial Manager who sees the water plant as key to economic recovery. She has raised water rates and has implemented severe measures to collect on bills. As a result, Highland Park residents have received water bills as high as $10,000, they have had their water turned off, their homes foreclosed, and are struggling to keep water, a basic human right, from becoming privatized.
The Water Front is the story of an American city in crisis but it is not just about water. The story touches on the very essence of our democratic system and is an unnerving indication of what is in store for residents around the world facing their own water struggles. The film raises questions such as: Who determines the future of shared public resources? What are alternatives to water privatization? How will we maintain our public water systems and who can we hold accountable?
DVD (Color, Closed Captioned) / 2007 / (Grades 9-12, College, Adult) / 53 minutes
SWIM FOR THE RIVER
Directed by Tom Weidlinger
The story of the Hudson, and the battle to save it, are told as Chris Swain swims the entire length of the river.
Christopher Swain braved whitewater, sewage, snapping turtles, hydroelectric dams, homeland security patrols, factory outfalls, and PCB contamination to become the first person to swim the entire length of the Hudson River from the Adirondack Mountains to New York City.
Swain's experience links together stories of the river, which begins in wilderness and ends in one of the nation's densest population centers. We meet heroes who are fighting to protect the Hudson against a range of threats from industry, inept regulatory agencies, and public indifference. We also see how ordinary citizens can and do make a difference through choices they make effecting the environment, and by joining together around a common cause.
DVD (Color, With 58 Pages Teacher's Guide) / 2006 / (Grades 6-12, College, Adult) / 56 minutes
RISING WATERS: GLOBAL WARMING AND THE FATE OF THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Shows that global warming is already hurting the Pacific Islands.
" We are like the warning system for the whole world to see." Penehuro Lefale, Samoa
For 7 million people living on thousands of islands scattered across the Pacific ocean, global warming is not something that looms in the distant future: it's a threat whose first effects may have already begun.
Through personal stories of Pacific Islanders, RISING WATERS: Global Warming and the Fate of the Pacific Islands puts a human face on the international climate change debate.
The majority of scientists around the world now agree that global warming is real, and key studies show that the tropical Pacific islands will be hit first and hardest by its effects. The water temperature in the tropical Pacific has risen dramatically over the last two decades, bleaching coral and stressing marine ecosystems. Sea level rise threatens to inundate islands, and extreme weather events -- such as more frequent and intense El Ninos, severe droughts, and mega hurricanes -- could wipe out ecosystems and the way of life that has existed for thousands of years.
"Way before most of these islands go under, they're going to lose their fresh water supply." Anginette Heffernan, Fiji
In the program, islanders show the viewers the physical and cultural impacts caused by global warming. Unusual high tides have swept the low-lying atolls of Micronesia, destroying crops and polluting fresh water supplies. Ancestral graveyards are being destroyed by the impacts of rogue waves and erosion never witnessed before the last decade. An increase in the frequency and intensity of hurricanes is making it difficult for island communities and ecosystems to recover.
"It's very difficult for someone living in the United States to grasp the fact that if the sea level rises just a few feet, a whole nation will disappear." Ben Graham, Republic of the Marshall Islands
But the islanders' stories have not convinced everyone in the rest of the world. Some scientists refute the studies, and business leaders and economists warn that forcing industries to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions will cause a global economic collapse.
While the policy makers and scientists argue about when and how much to reduce greenhouse gas emissions over the next twenty years, many Pacific Islanders are wondering if they will have a future. One thing is known: the longer emission reductions are delayed, the harder it will be to curb the effects of global warming, and prevent sea level rise from devastating the Pacific Islands.
What, then, should the islanders do? Whom should they believe? Where would they go if forced to leave their homes? RISING WATERS explores what it means to live under a cloud of scientific uncertainty, examining both human experience and expert scientific evidence. The problems facing the islanders serve as an urgent warning to the rest of the world.
Locations include Kiribati, the Samoas, Hawai'I, the atolls of Micronesia including the Marshall Islands, as well as laboratories and research centers in the continental United States. RISING WATERS weaves the portraits of the islanders with historical film and video materials, interviews with top scientists, and voiceover. 3D animation is used to illustrate key scientific concepts.
DVD (Color, Closed Captioned) / 2000 / (Grades 7-12, College, Adult) / 57 minutes
WIND RIVER
The battle over water rights on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming.
WIND RIVER is a modern-day story of cowboys and Indians. White ranchers on the Wind River Indian Reservation in central Wyoming are fighting to protect their long-held water rights for irrigated agriculture. The Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes are fighting to save the de-watered Wind River and a part of their own heritage.
This is a classic example of the changing face of the West, as environmentalists and Indian activists use the courts in an attempt to curtail some of the traditional, but harmful, practices of white ranchers and farmers.
DVD (Color) / 2000 / (Grades 10-12, College, Adult) / 33 minutes
LOOK AGAIN: JOURNEY OF THE BLOB
An illustration of the water cycle in a cautionary tale about pollution.
This classic, wordless film from the "Look Again" series tells a story that appeals to all ages, and is used widely in environmental education courses around the country.
A boy makes a decision about how to dispose of a green glob he has concocted. What will happen if he dumps it into a stream? Where does water come from and where does it go? This film illustrates the water cycle and raises many questions about environmental responsibility and the consequences of our decisions.
DVD (Color) / 1989 / (Grades P-6, Adult) / 10 minutes
http://www.learningemall.com/News/Water_1907.html
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19 dei peggiori incubi per uno chef
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19 dei peggiori incubi per uno chef
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Quali sono le paure degli chef che li fanno sudare sotto l’uniforme? I peggiori scenari da incubo che li tengono svegli la notte? Fare confusione con gli ordini, servire a un critico gastronomico un piatto poco cotto?
Siamo incappati in questa interessante discussione su Quora in cui agli chef è stato chiesto quale fosse il loro peggiore incubo.
Jay Racavich Il mio peggior incubo come chef è la mancanza di corrente.
Dan Knight
– Un fornitore a cui ho ordinato delle cose che non si presenta – Lavorare con uno staff che non pulisce – Uno staff che non ascolta, non è puntuale, non obbedisce e ha una cattiva igiene personale – Il personale delle pulizie che non si presenta – Non avere l’attrezzatura necessaria – Non venire pagati – Non potere preparare i piatti più richiesti perché lo staff ha finito tutti gli ingredienti
David Mowbray
L’incubo di ogni chef è essere il capo che
a) pensa che Gordon Ramsay sia lo chef migliore del mondo
b) pensa di essere Gordon Ramsay
Michael Terry Avere cuochi nella brigata che non hanno passione per quello che fanno
Kerry Heffernan Scatta l’allarme antincendio e tutta la sala si bagna
Rich Rogers Un proprietario che non compra ingredienti di qualità e vuole dare pareri (incompetenti) sul menu
Karl Troutman Un incendio.
Charles Mann Avvelenare i clienti rimane sempre il peggior incubo in qualsiasi situazione
Shawn Ramirez Una brutta recessione. Ho vissuto quella del 2008 e tutto il nostro duro lavoro veniva sprecato. Non c’era modo di vincere.
Keith Wright Una perdita d’acqua. Il ristorante dovrebbe chiudere completamente.
Christopher Stanton Uno staff indisciplinato che non segue le istruzioni.
John Smith I clienti che si prendono un’intossicazione alimentare. Un gruppo di clienti. Non credo che mi riprenderei.
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babaalexander · 7 years
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