Labor/Environmental Film "Deep Down" About Mining Industry Screening On PBS On 11/23/2010

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Steve Zeltzer

unread,
Nov 23, 2010, 11:31:46 AM11/23/10
to ws...@googlegroups.com
Labor/Environmental  Film "Deep Down" About Mining Industry Screening On PBS On 11/23/2010

http://www.deepdownfilm.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=47&Itemid=67
BackgroundPDFPrintE-mail

Recent films of national and international significance, such as An Inconvenient Truth , have brought home to Americans our world's state of environmental emergency. Deep Down  (formerly entitled MINE ) also reaches for the national, and even international audience, but puts a human face on the consequences of our environmental impact.

Any exploration of power production in America will lead to Appalachia, a region that has supplied our nation with coal for over a century. As America’s energy consumption rises, the extraction and burning of coal to meet these demands has dramatically altered the Appalachian landscape, economy, and culture. The Tennessee Valley Authority, for example, is assessing the potential of mining an estimated 82 million tons of coal from the Royal Blue Wildlife Management Area. (By comparison, only 3 million tons were mined in the entire state in 2002.)  In Appalachia, coal is the number one industry, with an enormous influence on local economies and people. At the same time, few Americans know about mountaintop removal mining (MTR), nor have any knowledge that their own demand for power is directly impacting the mountains, water, and sky. As we increase our energy usage, we also become more and more removed not only from the natural places that have provided this energy, but from the human beings whose lives we dramatically alter by consuming those resources. The crossroads we find ourselves facing as a nation is one that pervades our land and sky, and it can only be addressed by the cumulative efforts of millions of tiny personal changes. Therein lies the potential for a human story, like the stories we have found in Appalachia, to make a million tiny changes, to reconnect us as humans to the suffering we have caused as well as our own power to prevent it in the future.

Simultaneously, Appalachia as a region deserves our attention as a place of history, complexity, and change. A century of Appalachian scholars and journalists have attempted to eradicate the persisting stereotypes of the Appalachian “hillbilly.” In a society where making fun of a person’s way of speaking or ridiculing their poverty is normally considered unacceptable, mainstream television programs and films continue to portray stereotyped and homogenous images of Appalachia, if they portray them at all. As our advisor Dr. Chad Berry of Berea College so eloquently puts it, “there is not an Appalachian culture, there are Appalachian cultures.” Similarly, we pride ourselves as Americans in being a diverse society, but often neglect the rural poor in the study and depiction of that diversity. It is time for us to look back to this “forgotten” region, to allow its people to teach us and to teach each other about these cultures that the mainstream media has almost entirely overlooked.

By asking us to trace the power lines from our homes to people far removed from our daily lives, Deep Down inspires Americans to preserve Appalachia and our shared legacy.

 
< Prev Next >

Get Deep Down


Donate Now

Make a tax-deductible donation toDeep Down's outreach efforts online through our fiscal sponsor:

Latest News from Deep Down

Airing this week!

Deep Down has over 1000 scheduled airings on PBS stations all over the country starting this week! Find out when Deep Down is playing on your local PBS station here:http://itvs.org/television?film=deep-down. 

New York, CT – Tuesday (11/23) 11:00pm on CPTV HD

New York, NY – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on Thirteen/WNET and Wednesday (11/24) 8:00pm on WLIW

Los Angeles, CA – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on KCET and Wednesday (11/24) 8:00pm on KCET

Chicago, IL – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on WTTW

Philadelphia, PA – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on WHYY and WLVT and Wednesday (11/24) 8:00pm on WHYY

Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX – Tuesday (11/23) 9:00pm, Wednesday (11/24) 7:00pm and Tuesday (11/30) 10:00pm on KERA

San Francisco, CA – Tuesday (11/23) 11:00pm and Wednesday (11/24) 9:00pm on KQED and Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm and Wednesday (11/24) 9:00pm on KTEH

Boston / Manchester, NH – Wednesday (11/24) 8:00pm on WGBH and Friday (11/26) 11:00pm on NHPTV PRIME

Atlanta, GA – Wednesday (11/24) 8:00pm on the Knowledge Channel

Washington, DC – Saturday (12/18) 8:00pm on WHUT

Houston, TX – Tuesday (11/23) 10:30pm on Houston PBS (KUHT)

Phoenix, AZ – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on Eight/KAET

Seattle, WA – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on KCTS 9

Tampa, FL – Tuesday (11/23) 11:00pm on WEDU

Denver, CO – Tuesday (11/23) 10:00pm on Rocky Montain PBS (KRMA)

Copyright 2010 by Forward Films - All Rights Reserved
 

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages