Podcasts about Be Natural

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Best podcasts about Be Natural

Latest podcast episodes about Be Natural

Social Skills Coaching
Turning On The Charm

Social Skills Coaching

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 31:02 Transcription Available


Easily listen to Social Skills Coaching in your podcast app of choice at https://bit.ly/social-skills-home00:03:25 Why Stories Matter00:05:23 Four Elements of a Good Story00:09:28 Be Natural ... But Have a Plan00:17:16 USING WITTY BANTER IN BUILDING RAPPORT00:22:35 Technique 2: Use the Element of Surprise00:24:03 Technique 3: Sarcasm 00:26:25 Technique 4: Being Self-Referential00:28:15 Banter WarningsHear it Here - https://adbl.co/3N9lsjI• Though the real foundations of a good conversation are humility, curiosity, and open-mindedness, it's still worth learning how to tell engaging and entertaining stories. Storytelling is human, and anyone can be a good storyteller. But a story's value is in how it's perceived by the audience.• The best stories have an attention-grabbing hook; they're short, precise, and have a relevant emotional core. In conversation, a story is meant to create connection and rapport, not showcase you as interesting. Prepare somewhat by building a story “library” beforehand, then use natural transition phrases such as “You know, that reminds me of . . .”to introduce the story. Remember that telling a story is still a kind of conversation.• Witty banter is playful, clever, amusing conversation that speeds up rapport and builds closeness very rapidly. Anyone can learn to banter as long as they follow the rules: start small and build, banter WITH someone, not AT them, and a little goes a long way.• Self-deprecating or self-referential humor helps you drop your ego and shows strength and maturity, putting people at ease. Be brief and very obviously exaggerate something you're actually comfortable with. Be unexpected and use the element of surprise to grab attention and create spark and spontaneity. Flaunt conversational norms with playful sarcasm. The focus is always on building rapport, not on entertaining or impressing people.#AndyRichter #Banter #Sarcasm #ScottYoung #SelfDeprecatingHumor #Selfdeprecation #Selfreferential #WITTYBANTERINBUILDINGRAPPORT #RussellNewton #NewtonMG #PatrickKing #PatrickKingConsulting #SocialSkillsCoaching #MakeFriendsEasily #TurningOnTheCharm

The Forum
Alice Guy: The first female movie mogul

The Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 39:35


In the late 19th Century, when the motion picture camera was invented and cinema was born, a young French woman called Alice Guy ended up becoming the first ever woman film-maker; rising from being a lowly young secretary to a prolific and pioneering director, producer and entrepreneur. Yet at her death in 1968, she was barely known, most of her thousand or so films had been lost and her crucial role in the history of the film industry was forgotten. In the past few decades, Alice Guy's reputation has been gradually revived, and today she is recognised as a creative visionary and inspiration to many women film directors. Joining Rajan Datar to track the career of Alice Guy, or Alice Guy Blaché as she was also known by her married name, is the film scholar, Dr Anthony Slide, the editor of The Memoirs of Alice Guy Blaché; Dr Alison McMahan, the author of Alice Guy Blaché: Lost Visionary of the Cinema, and the novelised biography WonderShadows; and Caroline Rainette who performed, wrote, and directed, Alice Guy: Mademoiselle Cinema. With the contribution of Pamela Green, the director and producer of Be Natural: the untold story of Alice Guy Blaché. The reader is Félicité du Jeu. Producer: Anne Khazam (Photo: Alice Guy at her Solax film studios in Fort Lee New Jersey USA, in 1914. Credit: By kind permission of Dr Anthony Slide)

The Movie Loot
The Movie Loot 70: 2nd Personal Short Film Fest/September Loot

The Movie Loot

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 27:10


Just like June 2022, September was a month dedicated almost solely to short films. After a hurricane and a week-long blackout, short films provided an easy way for me to achieve my monthly goal, so here it is. Shorts about everything from creepy masked men or cross-dressing bunnies to dangerous tramps or animated stick figures. But writing this description leads me to wonder, how often do people read the podcast episode descriptions? I dunno, but check the episode out!Music: Tino Mendes & Yellow Paper - The HeistRejected clip (c) Don Hertzfeldt

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio)
Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 36:13


Director/co-writer Pamela B. Green and producer/co-writer Joan Simon discuss their documentary "Be Natural: The Untold of Alice Guy-Blaché" with moderator Cynthia Felando. Green and Simon explain the 10-year-long process of researching to make the documentary, as well as their respective inspirations for discovering more about the pioneering film making of Alice Guy-Blaché. Green also discusses her unique directorial approach that involved relaying film history like a “detective story” by involving the audience in her archival work. Simon talks in detail about the feminist scholars and film festivals that first brought Guy-Blaché's films into academia, and how many of Guy-Blaché's contributions to early cinema are often overlooked. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38079]

Humanities (Audio)
Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché

Humanities (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 36:13


Director/co-writer Pamela B. Green and producer/co-writer Joan Simon discuss their documentary "Be Natural: The Untold of Alice Guy-Blaché" with moderator Cynthia Felando. Green and Simon explain the 10-year-long process of researching to make the documentary, as well as their respective inspirations for discovering more about the pioneering film making of Alice Guy-Blaché. Green also discusses her unique directorial approach that involved relaying film history like a “detective story” by involving the audience in her archival work. Simon talks in detail about the feminist scholars and film festivals that first brought Guy-Blaché's films into academia, and how many of Guy-Blaché's contributions to early cinema are often overlooked. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38079]

UC Santa Barbara (Audio)
Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché

UC Santa Barbara (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 36:13


Director/co-writer Pamela B. Green and producer/co-writer Joan Simon discuss their documentary "Be Natural: The Untold of Alice Guy-Blaché" with moderator Cynthia Felando. Green and Simon explain the 10-year-long process of researching to make the documentary, as well as their respective inspirations for discovering more about the pioneering film making of Alice Guy-Blaché. Green also discusses her unique directorial approach that involved relaying film history like a “detective story” by involving the audience in her archival work. Simon talks in detail about the feminist scholars and film festivals that first brought Guy-Blaché's films into academia, and how many of Guy-Blaché's contributions to early cinema are often overlooked. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38079]

Film and Television (Video)
Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché

Film and Television (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 36:13


Director/co-writer Pamela B. Green and producer/co-writer Joan Simon discuss their documentary "Be Natural: The Untold of Alice Guy-Blaché" with moderator Cynthia Felando. Green and Simon explain the 10-year-long process of researching to make the documentary, as well as their respective inspirations for discovering more about the pioneering film making of Alice Guy-Blaché. Green also discusses her unique directorial approach that involved relaying film history like a “detective story” by involving the audience in her archival work. Simon talks in detail about the feminist scholars and film festivals that first brought Guy-Blaché's films into academia, and how many of Guy-Blaché's contributions to early cinema are often overlooked. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 38079]

Design Thinking 101
Protect Your Solutions with Transformation Stories: Part 2 — Telling Well // ALD 011 — DT101 E92

Design Thinking 101

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 7:07


Thank you for listening to this Ask Like a Designer episode of the Design Thinking 101 Podcast.  This episode continues where episode 89 on crafting transformation stories left off, and focuses on telling your solution's transformation story.  This episode is based on this article: ALD011 // Protect Your Solutions with Transformation Stories: Part 2 — Telling Well. Read the article and others like it on Fluid Hive's Ask Like a Designer. In these short Ask Like a Designer episodes on the Design Thinking 101 podcast, you'll find new ways to explore the show's stories and ideas about design-driven innovation. I'll share methods, templates, and ideas that have worked in my practice in teaching. What did you think of this episode? Please send your questions, suggestions, and guest ideas to Dawan and the Fluid Hive team. Cheers ~ Dawan Design Thinking 101 Podcast Host President, Fluid Hive Show Highlights [00:54] What is a transformation story? [01:15] The magic bridge. [01:44] Defining a good transformation story. [02:19] Fluid Hive's Story Shield checklist. [02:28] Story. [03:14] Translating. [03:49] Shape-shifting. [04:21] The 360 perspective. [04:40] Be Bold. [05:10] Be Natural. [05:36] Always Ask. [06:05] Avoid the Spandex. [06:50] Fluid Hive's free thinking tool will help you tell your solution's transformation story. The Design Thinking 101 Podcast's Ask Like a Designer series  Ask Like a Designer — DT101 E61 Design, and One Question to Rule Them All // ALD 002 — DT101 E63 There Are No Problems Worth Solving — Only Questions Worth Asking // ALD 003 — DT101 E65 Your Good-Life OS: Designing a System for Living Well and Peak Performance // ALD 004 — DT101 E67  The Swiss-Army Lives of How-Might-We Questions // ALD 005 — DT 101 E69 Designing Facilitation: A System for Creating and Leading Exceptional Events // ALD 006 — DT101 E73 The Innovation Saboteur's Handbook // ALD 007 – DT101 E77 Three Little Words for Better (Business) Relationships // ALD 008 — DT101 E79  The 30-Minute Solution Matrix: How to Think and Solve Under Pressure // ALD 009 — DT101 E87 Protect Your Solutions with Transformation Stories: Part 1 — Crafting Well // ALD 010 — DT101 E89

Design Thinking 101
Protect Your Solutions with Transformation Stories: Part 2 — Telling Well // ALD 011 — DT101 E92

Design Thinking 101

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 7:07


Thank you for listening to this Ask Like a Designer episode of the Design Thinking 101 Podcast.  This episode continues where episode 89 on crafting transformation stories left off, and focuses on telling your solution's transformation story.  This episode is based on this article: ALD011 // Protect Your Solutions with Transformation Stories: Part 2 — Telling Well. Read the article and others like it on Fluid Hive's Ask Like a Designer. In these short Ask Like a Designer episodes on the Design Thinking 101 podcast, you'll find new ways to explore the show's stories and ideas about design-driven innovation. I'll share methods, templates, and ideas that have worked in my practice in teaching. What did you think of this episode? Please send your questions, suggestions, and guest ideas to Dawan and the Fluid Hive team. Cheers ~ Dawan Design Thinking 101 Podcast Host President, Fluid Hive Show Highlights [00:54] What is a transformation story? [01:15] The magic bridge. [01:44] Defining a good transformation story. [02:19] Fluid Hive's Story Shield checklist. [02:28] Story. [03:14] Translating. [03:49] Shape-shifting. [04:21] The 360 perspective. [04:40] Be Bold. [05:10] Be Natural. [05:36] Always Ask. [06:05] Avoid the Spandex. [06:50] Fluid Hive's free thinking tool will help you tell your solution's transformation story. The Design Thinking 101 Podcast's Ask Like a Designer series  Ask Like a Designer — DT101 E61 Design, and One Question to Rule Them All // ALD 002 — DT101 E63 There Are No Problems Worth Solving — Only Questions Worth Asking // ALD 003 — DT101 E65 Your Good-Life OS: Designing a System for Living Well and Peak Performance // ALD 004 — DT101 E67  The Swiss-Army Lives of How-Might-We Questions // ALD 005 — DT 101 E69 Designing Facilitation: A System for Creating and Leading Exceptional Events // ALD 006 — DT101 E73 The Innovation Saboteur's Handbook // ALD 007 – DT101 E77 Three Little Words for Better (Business) Relationships // ALD 008 — DT101 E79  The 30-Minute Solution Matrix: How to Think and Solve Under Pressure // ALD 009 — DT101 E87 Protect Your Solutions with Transformation Stories: Part 1 — Crafting Well // ALD 010 — DT101 E89

Inclusive Storytelling
28 - Alice Guy-Blache

Inclusive Storytelling

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 3:23


Alice Guy Blache is considered one of the first filmmakers to make a narrative fiction film and the first woman to direct a film. It is said that from 1896 to 1906, she was the only female filmmaker in the world.  Her first movie was La Fee aux Choux (The Fairy of the Cabbages) which has a 60 second run time and  was released in 1896. She really wanted to incorporate fictional story-telling elements into movies.  There is a documentary, Be Natural, that is narrated by Jodie Foster that is out about her life. Pamela B. Green is developing a biopic about Alice and I would like to see this movie reach a wide audience so people can know about Alice's incredible life and her contributions to movies!

jodie foster cabbages be natural alice guy blache pamela b green
Culture Prohibée
Saison 13 Episode 12 spécial femmes et cinéma

Culture Prohibée

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 50:50


Au sommaire de cette spéciale femmes et cinéma : -Retour sur le documentaire réalisé par Pamela B. Green intitulé BE NATURAL, L'HISTOIRE CACHEE D'ALICE GUY-BLACHE, ainsi que sur HONOR AMONG LOVERS & MERRILY WE GO TO HELL, deux films de Dorothy Arzner (Elephant Films) ;-Une évocation d'un cinéaste qui a énormément mis en scène des personnages féminins, à savoir Claude Chabrol, à l'occasion de la sortie, chez Carlotta films de UNE AFFAIRE DE FEMMES, MADAME BOVARY & BETTY ;-Focus sur THE NIGHTINGALE (2018) de Jennifer Kent, disponible chez Condor Entertainment. Bonne écoute à toutes et à tous !

Be Natural
Amy Geller: On Producing, Perfectionism, and Progress

Be Natural

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2021 47:43


Amy Geller is an award-winning producer and documentarian whose work includes The Guys Next Door, PBS's The War That Made America, and The Rabbi Goes West. Hear how she crafts story in her documentaries, finds community with female-centered film organizations, and overcomes obstacles––like releasing a film during a pandemic. See more of her work at amymgeller.com -- Be Natural is on Instagram! Follow us at @benaturalpodcast

Mujeres de Cine
Be Natural: The untold story of Alice Guy Blaché

Mujeres de Cine

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2021 59:49


Hoy conversamos sobre "Be Natural: the untold story of Alice Guy Blaché" (2018) de la directora Pamela B. Green. Acompañanos en nuestras reflexiones, críticas, contradicciones, comedias, dispersiones y mas junto a @_Sgniward_ehs y @belencito_ .

Jadestone Vintage Soul
Jadestone Vintage Soul: Beam Radio (Episode 017F)

Jadestone Vintage Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2021 54:35


In this takeover episode with Beam and friends, we talk about angel numbers and messages from the universe. The importance of sharing love and embodying love, trusting the process, and being patient in our endeavors. Spreading light through the streets each Beam radio broadcast at a time. Follow us on our socials! Beamorganix Dreambeamm Chelsieluck Wusg00dkels 1. Be Natural by Fertile Ground 2. Masters of War by Bob Dylan 3. Shuffering and Shmiling, Part 2 by Fela Kuti 4. Makeda by Les Nubians 5. Dancing by Black Party 6. Sound of Rain by Solange 7. Funny Thing by Thundercat 8. Addiction by Kanye West 9. Lipstick by Willow 10. Little Dark Age by MGMT 11. Show Me How by Men I Trust 12. Take Me Higher by Fertile Ground 13. Bullets (f. Little Dragon) by Kaytranada --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jadestonevintagesoul/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jadestonevintagesoul/support

Darmstadt On Air
Darmstadt On Air #20: Singleton in Darmstadt Again

Darmstadt On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 62:27


For the 20th episode of Darmstadt On Air, we will hear an interview with composer Alvin Singleton, conducted by historical musicologist Harald Kisiedu and composer George Lewis on July 19 2021. In 1972, Singleton's work Argoru II for cello was the first ever to be performed by a Black composer at the Darmstadt Summer Course. Two years later, his Be Natural for three string instruments received the Kranichstein Music Prize. In this podcast, Singleton talks about his early listening experiences and music studies during his formative years in Brooklyn, New York, his graduate work in composition at Yale University with Mel Powell and Yehudi Wyner, and his activities as the founder of Yale's Black Music Students Union. Singleton also discusses his fourteen-year sojourn in Italy and Austria, his rich experiences at the Darmstadt Summer Course, where he collaborated with cellist Siegfried Palm and others, and he tells us about the significance of improvisation and cultural intermixture in his life and work. Singleton's Again for chamber orchestra, which won the 1979 Musikprotokoll Composition Prize, will be performed at the Darmstadt Summer Course Opening Concert on July 31 2021 by Ensemble Modern, conducted by Enno Poppe. From the Darmstadt archives, we will hear Singleton discussing Again at the Darmstadt Kompositionsstudio in 1979, chaired by Brian Ferneyhough, as well as excerpts of several other Singleton compositions: Et Nunc for alto flute, bass clarinet, and double bass, Be Natural, and Mestizo II for orchestra, from a rare recording of its 1970 premiere by the Yale Symphony Orchestra.

Brute Force and Ignorance - A D and D Podcast
Fireside Chat - Custom Magic Items

Brute Force and Ignorance - A D and D Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2021 59:12


Welcome back Friends! On the weeks we can't record the main campaign Harmz and Dan will be trying to do these Fireside Chat episodes. In this episode we answer questions from Rick Ifrah and Jason Prevatte and create three custom magic weapons, slightly edited to save time but mostly live. We hope you enjoy it. Thank you for listening and as always May All Your Rolls, Be Natural 20's.

Brute Force and Ignorance - A D and D Podcast

Welcome back Friends! The band is back together! The gang take a walk around Proskur in an attempt to glean information on the Orc of O'Bould, the final champion before they take on Gruumsh. With their new ally Meeka Zuki's help they question the denizens and enjoy some local chow. Thank you all for your patience, thanks for listening and as always May All Your Rolls, Be Natural 20's.

Brute Force and Ignorance - A D and D Podcast

Welcome back Friends! Yes that's right, we're actually back and let us say thank you. Thank you to all the listeners new and old that have been with us on this journey. We truly appreciate each and every one of you. In this episode DM of Awesomeness Jake Harman recaps us in the story of our 5 heroes. As we pick up at the steps of the Sword Masters of Proskur. This one is a little different. We decided to leave in a lot of mistakes and behind the scenes banter between the cast as a celebration of the shows return and a thank you to you all so you can hear what its like to be part of the party. We hope you enjoy this insane episode and are so happy to be back. Thank you all again and as always May All Your Rolls, Be Natural 20's

friends dm be natural
Questions & Narratives
Chapter 7 - Be Natural

Questions & Narratives

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2021 59:16


Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché is Pamela B. Green's energetic film about pioneer filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché. It is both a tribute and a detective story, tracing the circumstances by which this extraordinary artist faded from memory and the path toward her reclamation.Some interesting facts about Be NaturalThis documentary film premiered in 2018 at the Cannes Film Festival.It was co-written and directed by Pamela B. Green.It was narrated by filmmaker and actress Jodie Foster.Some things that surprised Livia & Zainab about Be NaturalLivia: The idea that someone's life, legacy and work can be completely forgotten by her peers and students. And even though Alice struggled at the end of her life to re-write her own story, she was still relatively ignored. Zainab:  The revelation that Alice was the first filmmaker in the world and that also happens to be a woman, in addition to the breath of her legacy and contributions to the film industry.Follow along as Livia & Zainab review Be Natural and discuss how social constructs influence our sense of self and identity. They also rate the film by critically reviewing four key elements of filmmaking: Storytelling, Cinematography, Character Development and Overall Message. Music CreditTheme Song: The Way by  KAR33MMusic: Purple Planet Music 

AlloCiné
Alice Guy, Agnès Varda, Chloe Zhao... Quelle place pour les femmes dans l'Histoire du cinéma?

AlloCiné

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2021 60:56


Dans la nuit du 28 février au 1er mars 2021, le nom d'une cinéaste est rentré dans l'histoire : celui de Chloe Zhao, réalisatrice de Nomadland, primée aux Golden Globes, avec ce film favori de la saison des prix cette année, qui enchaine les récompenses.Un moment historique à plus d'un titre : elle est la seconde réalisatrice, seulement, à décrocher la statuette de meilleur réalisateur, 37 ans après Barbra Streisand et son film Yentl aux Golden Globes, et elle est la première réalisatrice asiatique à remporter ce prix.En 2021, plus de 120 ans depuis la création du cinéma, les femmes sont toujours plus rares à être mise en lumière, récompensées. Le nom de certaines à l'image d'Alice Guy ont mis du temps à être connu, réhabilité. Leurs films peuvent aussi être plus complexes, plus rares à trouver, comme ceux de Chantal Akerman, dernièrement remis en avant temporairement par la plateforme de streaming La Cinetek… Pourquoi les parcours de ces femmes ont eu tendance à disparaitre de nos livres d'histoire, voire employons le mot, à être effacé…Cette semaine, notre podcast Spotlight a souhaité s'intéresser à la place des femmes dans l'histoire du cinéma. Pour cette table-ronde, nous nous associons avec un autre podcast, dont le but est justement de réhabiliter ces parcours, Silence ! Elles tournent, créé par Esther Brejon. L'émission est co-présentée et préparée avec Esther Brejon, journaliste et podcasteuse.Trois invitées pour parler de ce sujet :Jackie Buet (@LascauxUn), directrice du Festival de films de femmes de Créteil, créé en 1979. La 43ème édition du Festival de films de femmes de Créteil se tiendra en ligne du 2 au 11 avril 2021Véronique Le Bris (@Cine_woman), journaliste, autrice du livre “100 grands films de réalisatrices”, qui vient de paraitre chez Arte Edition, fondatrice du prix Alice GuyFabienne Silvestre, co-fondatrice du Lab Femmes de Cinéma et co-fondatrice des Arcs Film Festival, créatrice du prix Femmes de cinémaPour aller plus loin...Retrouvez le podcast Silence ! Elles tournent, créé par Esther Brejon, journaliste pour Revus & Corrigés. Le dernier épisode sorti est consacré à Nelly Kaplan.Quelques idées de livres :100 grands films de réalisatrices, Véronique Le Bris, Arte Editions - Gründ (2021)50 femmes de cinéma, Véronique Le Bris, Marest Editeur (2018)Films de femmes, six générations de réalisatrices, Jackie Buet, Editions Alternatives (1999) / Précisons qu'un volume 2 couvrant les 20 années suivantes devrait paraitre à l'automneLe regard féminin, une révolution à l'écran, Iris Brey, Editions de l'Olivier, Les Feux (2020)Sous nos yeux, petit manifeste pour une révolution du regard, par Iris Brey et Mirion Malle, aux éditions de La Ville Brûle (sortie : le 2 avril 2021)Quelques idées de documentaires :Be Natural : l'histoire cachée d'Alice Guy, actuellement sur ciné+ (2020)Et la femme créa Hollywood, Clara et Julia Kuperberg, OCS (2016)Tout peut changer, et si les femmes comptaient à Hollywood (2020)Cinéast(e)s de Julie Gayet et Mathieu Busson (2013)À la recherche de Debra Winger de Rosanna Arquette (2002) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Big Beatles Sort Out
Episode 20: Dear Taxman, We Can Work out Happiness Honey.

The Big Beatles Sort Out

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2021 62:27


Welcome to the Big Beatles Sort Out, a show in which I, author and musician Garry Abbott, attempt to finally decide my favourite Beatles recordings by scoring each and every one for lyrical content, musicality and production. I am assisted in this venture by my brother and resident Beatles expert, Paul Abbott, with a deep knowledge of the Beatles and the wider context in which they operated. Each episode we explore and score 5 songs from the Beatles full recording catalogue. The songs are drawn at random to try and avoid any album or era prejudices skewing the results. So please join us as we try and sort out, The Beatles. Episode 20 Songs: Dear Prudence, Taxman, Happiness is a Warm Gun, We Can Work it Out, Honey Don't PLUS RUTLES BONUS! Let's Be Natural. Please let anyone know about this podcast who might be interested! You can contact me on Twitter @big_sort or @Garry_Abbott, or via my website www.garryabbott.co.uk. Please listen out for Paul's other Podcasts, 'The Head Ballet' - all about novelty music, and 'Hark! 87th Precinct Podcast' - all about Ed McBain's seminal police procedural novel series. You can listen along to the songs featured in this episode on this handy spotify playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/721DoSYkwNZA009X5DcQmy Keep up with the scoring charts, or start your own using the blank-master, with this handy google sheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Qc7mHMeBBM9LSPUV0L6zrYrF2Rib9eX-Xssua-Wox3g/edit?usp=sharing

Hearthside Salons with PageCraftWriting
Christina Kotlar - Writer/Director - Film Town 1910: When Hollywood was in Jersey and the studio owner was a woman

Hearthside Salons with PageCraftWriting

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 49:44


Hollywood didn’t start out as a boy’s club, nor did it start in Hollywood. Alice Guy Blache was the industry’s first woman director and the co-owner of Solax, a film studio built in Fort Lee, New Jersey in 1910. Writer/Director Christina Kotlar has been celebrating Alice and working to bring her forgotten story to the world. We’ll talk about Alice’s groundbreaking life and career before there were barriers to inclusion, including directing the first film with an all African American cast. More on Christina and her work. More on Alice. We talk about filmmaker Pamela Green and the Alice documentary Be Natural. Filmmaker Marquise Lepage and her film The Lost Garden. More on Fort Lee where it all happened. Alice's memoir. Her 1896 film The Cabbage Fairy. Alison's McMann's book The Lost Visionary. Alice's legacy in female filmmakers like Maya Deren and her 1943 film Meshes of the Afternoon. Suffragist Alice Paul. Trainee and later rival, Edison. And Alice's final resting place. We also mention the very first episode of Hearthside Salons featuring Emmy winning puppeteer, Liz Hara. And as always, more information on PageCraft's upcoming screenwriting classes and workshops.

SOROCINÉ
Épisode 33 - Sorociné, la revue (1)

SOROCINÉ

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2020 51:48


En mars 2018, timides mais passionnées nous avons enregistré notre premier épisode. Centré sur les personnages féminins dans la filmographie de Steven Spielberg, il était et est le premier d'une longue liste, celle qui semble ne jamais s'arrêter. Si le format podcast restera toujours, car c'est l'essence même de ce projet, nous travaillons depuis six mois sur un format papier. Amoureuses de l'écrit, passionnées par la critique cinéma et témoins d'un manque crucial dans les écrits traditionnels, nous nous lançons avec passion dans la création de cette revue papier qui, nous l'espérons trouvera un écho. Dans cette série documentaire uniquement consacrée à la création de cette revue nous souhaitons partager avec vous le processus de création mais aussi dévoiler quelques unes de nos histoires personnelles avec le cinéma. Participantes : Pauline - @paulinemallet_ / Amandine @MotherOfSighs_ / Laura @CookieTime_LE / Manon @MnFrankenstein Création, animation, réalisation, montage et mixage son : Pauline Mallet Générique : Audrey Goldberg Musique de fin d'épisode : Run the world - Beyoncé (2011) Références mentionnées par Laura dans sa dvdthèque (dans l'ordre annoncé) Films  Mulan - Tony Bancroft et Barry Cook (1998) Le Prince d'Égypte - Brenda Chapman, Steve Hickner et Simon Wells La Rumeur - William Wyle (1961) Charade - Stanley Donen (1963) The Voices - Marjane Satrapi (2014) Persepolis - Marjane Satrapi et Vincent Paronnaud (2007) Le Conte de la princesse Kaguya -Isao Takahata (2013) Hugo Cabret - Martin Scorsese (2011) Avatar - James Cameron (2009) Les Glaneurs et la Glaneuse - Agnès Varda (2000) Les Plages d'Agnès - Agnès Varda (2008) Star Wars - George Lucas (à partir de 1977) Harry Potter - (à partir de 2001) Lady Bird - Greta Gerwig (2017) Lolita malgré moi - Mark Waters (2004) Les filles du Docteur March - Greta Gerwig (2020) Be Natural, l'histoire cachée d'Alice Guy-Blaché - Pamela B. Green (2020) Marie-Stuart, Reine d'Écosse - Josie Rourke (2018) Liz et l'Oiseau bleu - Naoko Yamada (2018) A Silent Voice - Naoko Yamada (2018) Éternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind - Michel Gondry (2004) Minuscules - La vallée des fourmies perdues - Thomas Szabo et Hélène Giraud (2013) Les Bonnes manières - Marco Dutra et Juliana Rojas (2017) Épisodes  Les Studios Ghibli - partie 1 → https://podcast.ausha.co/sorocine/episode-27-les-studios-ghibli-partie-1 Les Studios Ghibli - partie 2  → https://podcast.ausha.co/sorocine/episode-27-les-studios-ghibli-partie-2 Les costumes  → https://podcast.ausha.co/sorocine/episode-22-les-costumes Autres  Coffret Les Pionnières → https://shop.lobsterfilms.com/fr/products/les-pionnieres-du-cinema

CreaShan By Dr Shantanu Chakravarty
"Connect With Nature"

CreaShan By Dr Shantanu Chakravarty

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2020 1:08


Be Natural

nature be natural
Certains l'aiment à chaud ! (CLAAC)
Filles de Joie - L'Ombre de Staline - Be Natural, l'histoire cachée Alice Guy Blaché

Certains l'aiment à chaud ! (CLAAC)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 58:13


Finis les épisodes au chaud, retour à la normale pour l'équipe de CLAAC ! On a repris le chemin des salles de cinéma, avec une sélection des nouvelles sorties de la semaine. Départ pour la frontière belge avec Filles De Joie. Noémie Lvovsky, Sara Forestier et Annabelle Lengronne nous dévoilent un portrait abrupt de la situation de ces femmes contraintes de recourir à la prostitution. On continue avec L'Ombre de Staline, où le miracle soviétique va se voir fortement amoché par des révélations alarmantes. Enfin, Be Natural, l'histoire cachée d'Alice Guy-Blaché, un documentaire sur cette fabuleuse pionnière cinématographique, la première réalisatrice de l'histoire, malheureusement oubliée de tous, et à qui on tente de rendre justice et notoriété. Programme varié, bonne écoute ! Temporalité de l’épisode : 04:06 Filles De Joie, d'Anne Paulicevich et Frédéric Fonteyne, avec Noémie Lvovsky, Sara Forestier, Annabelle Lengronne... 17:50 L'Ombre De Staline (Mr. Jones) de Agnieszka Holland, avec James Norton, Vanessa Kirby, Peter Sarsgaard... 28:16 Be Natural, l'histoire cachée d'Alice Guy-Blaché (Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché), documentaire de Pamela B.Green avec la voix de Jodie Foster et les interventions de Geena Davis, Peter Bogdanovich, Agnès Varda.... 45:15 les recos : Les Aventures Du Baron De Munchausen (1988) De Terry Gilliam Mon Nom Est Clitoris (2019) de Lisa Billuart Monet et Daphné Leblond 53:39 Bonus Épisodes cités :  CLAAC La Bonne Epouse - Radioactive - Une Sirène à Paris Spécial Films Coréens #FFCP 2019 (2/2)  AU CHAUD 12 Les recos "Doudous" de l'équipe Crédits :  Émission animée par Thomas Bondon, Thierry de Pinsun et Yassa Harbane. Générique original : Kostia R. Yordanoff (tous droits réservés)  Retrouvez aussi Certains l’aiment à chaud sur :  Facebook : @claacpodcast Instagram : @claacpodcast Twitter: @CLAACpodcast Ausha  Itunes / Apple Podcast  Spotify  Deezer  Stitcher  Podmust  Podcloud  Podinstall Youtube

Iration presents The Uplifter
10: Chill Out. Be Natural.

Iration presents The Uplifter

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 48:32


Welcome to Iration's weekly meeting/stream called The Uplifter. Our goal is to bring you some quality good vibes and humor to hopefully uplift everyone during these times. THIS WEEK: Chill Out. Be Natural. We make a short statement on the current social climate and discussion around racism in the United States. In a new segment called Sample This, we break down our song "Chill Out." We dig deeper for a fan questions on tour life, and a special audio treat. Poosh talks Twitch. And finally... we've got a little audio treat for you at the end of the episode so STAY TUNED and SUBSCRIBE! To be featured on the show, submit your questions, comments, feedback, etc via text or voice at (805) 225-6886 COASTIN' Album Bundles https://store.irationmusic.com/collections/coastin-pre-orders

Who Gets What?
Civil Liberties in The Time of Corona

Who Gets What?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2020 30:34


During the world's largest known shut down/quarantine, what rights do we lay aside?  Jane Henegar, Executive Director of The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, provides answers with respect to all Americans, but especially to incarcerated persons, persons seeking abortions, and those held only for non payment of bail and fees.  This podcast includes a movie recommendation:  Be Natural:  The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache'  

Arts & Ideas
Early cinema: why are we obsessed with firsts?

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 44:57


Alice Guy-Blaché the pioneering film director, a British film pioneer Robert Paul and how the Boer War led to animated film are the topics for discussion as Matthew Sweet talks to Donna Kornhaber, Ian Christie and Pamela B. Green. Ahead of this weekend's Oscars ceremony they reflect on early film innovations. Alice Guy or Alice Guy-Blaché (July 1, 1873 – March 24, 1968) is considered a pioneer of narrative film. A new documentary Be Natural the untold story of Alice Guy-Blaché is on general release in the UK from January 2020. Robert Paul (3 October 1869 – 28 March 1943) was also an early pioneer of British film. He also worked as an electrician and scientific instrument maker. Ian Christie has written a biography called Robert Paul and the Origins of British Cinema. An exhibition about Paul runs at Bradford's National Science and Media Museum until March 2020. Donna Kornhaber has published Nightmares in the Dream Sanctuary: War and the Animated Film. Producer: Caitlin Benedict

Woman's Hour
Reappraising Christine Keeler, Leah Penniman, Alice Guy Blache

Woman's Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2020 47:00


BBC One drama series The Trial of Christine Keeler is an imaginative reappraisal of the 1960s scandal known as the Profumo Affair. It's told from her perspective and the impact a series of powerful men had on the teenage girl. We hear archive of Christine Keeler talking to Woman’s Hour in 2001. And, Baroness Joan Bakewell and Professor Kate Williams discuss attitudes to Keeler at the time and changes in sexual politics since 1963. New research out today reveals that women in the UK have much poorer sexual health than men. But many of the groups identified in the study – including those with sexual dysfunction and low desire - are often being missed by existing sexual health services. We look at what's happening and why. Fifteen per cent of UK farmers are women. When it comes to Black or ethnic minority farmers, numbers are hard to pin down - and it seems there’s a similar lack of diversity in farming and food production in America. Leah Penniman is a Black woman who describes herself as an activist farmer. She opened a community farm called Soul Fire Farm in New York State, aiming to provide better quality food for people on low incomes. She talks about her new book, Farming While Black. Alice Guy-Blache was a pioneering French filmmaker. In 1896 she wrote, produced and directed one of the first narrative films ever made. She created more than 1,000 films during her 20-year career and ran her own studio, yet her contribution to the birth of cinema has largely been largely forgotten. Pamela B Green spent 8 years researching her story, resulting in the documentary film ‘Be Natural’, and joins us to discuss her work. Presenter: Jenni Murray Producer: Ruth Watts

Modern Films Podcast
S1 E1: Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché | Feat. Pamela B. Green

Modern Films Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2020 15:27


Happy New Year!! Welcome to a brand new season of Modern Films podcast, where each episode features emerging and established filmmakers and sharing their insights and expertises. To celebrate the UK and Ireland release of Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché, I’m here with Pamela Green, the director of Be Natural to talk about the story behind it. Be Natural is in cinemas from 17 January, you can pre-order the DVD now, for more information please visit our website on moderfilms.com/benatural Instagram/twitter: @modernfilmsent Facebook: Modern Films

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One Movie Punch
Episode 657 - "Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché" (2018)

One Movie Punch

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2019 9:37


Hi everyone! Welcome back for another entry in our ongoing series, Under the Kanopy, covering the critically acclaimed, if not commercially successful films available on Kanopy. Kanopy is a streaming service funded by public libraries and universities, giving library card holders up to six free streams per month of classic and contemporary films. Today’s film, BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY-BLACHÉ, is one of the many incredible documentaries you can find on the service. For previous entries in the series, check out HER SMELL (Episode #650), ASH IS THE PUREST WHITE (Episode #643), 3 FACES (Episode #636), and THE IMAGE BOOK (Episode #629). Plenty more on the way! Before the review, we’ll have a promo from our good friends at the How I Met Your Friends podcast. Every episode, Julie and Kathleen examine one episode of each hit sitcom, exploring the hidden connections and easter eggs within each episode. Don’t miss their recent guest review for THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Episode #610), where they gave the villain a brief taste of his own medicine. You can find them on Twitter @himyfriendspod,and on Facebook and Instagram @howimetyourfriendspod. Subscribe to stay current with the latest releases. Contribute at Patreon for exclusive content. Connect with us over social media to continue the conversation. Here we go! ///// > ///// Today’s movie is BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY-BLACHÉ, the Kino Lorber and Zeitgeist Films documentary directed by Pamela B. Green and written for the screen in collaboration with Joan Simon. The documentary examines the overlooked, but influential life and work of Alice Guy-Blaché, the first female director and producer, and head of production for Gaumont Studios from 1896 to 1906. BE NATURAL also examines the efforts to locate, preserve, and transfer her many lost works for future generations to review, study, and most of all, enjoy. No spoilers. Before the Internet, a surprising amount of history was produced via hearsay, often unresearched, or critically under-researched, and with a clear, male bias. In the scientific world, women were systematically written out of existence, or relegated to obligatory lists of colleagues, now receiving their just recognition and rewards thanks to films like HIDDEN FIGURES and MERCURY 13 (Episode #116). However, this same erasure also happened in the entertainment industry, in subtle forms like the widespread recognition of George Lucas over Kathleen Kennedy, to the more blatant attempts to erase women from film, like the story of Alice Guy-Blaché. If you feel bad for not knowing about Alice Guy-Blaché, you shouldn’t. The trailer includes a montage of many high-profile filmmakers and scholars who know little to nothing of her work or her influence. I’m happy to admit that I knew almost nothing about her prior to this documentary, only seeing passing mention to her name in lists of early female filmmakers. Don’t feel bad, though! BE NATURAL, in addition to providing a comprehensive introduction to Alice Guy-Blaché, also explains why and how her name slowly eroded from film history, and as mentioned in the opening, how they are working to re-introduce her groundbreaking work back into the historical record. The early film industry was a far cry from the modern film industry with films which cost and generate billions of dollars. Pamela Green lays perfect groundwork for the early industry, covering the major film manufacturers, and their surprisingly limited usage. Green shows how the early films captured mostly pedestrian scenes, an upper-class novelty for home videos and curiosities, at least before Alice Guy became a secretary at Gaumont Studios, a very high-class, progressive position for women at the time. After integrating herself into the organization, she asked if she could make a different kind of film, which was titled “The Cabbage Fairy”, and would be the world’s first narrative short film. Now, I need you to stop and take that fact in. An overwhelming majority of the films created today are fictional and narrative in nature, but hers was the first, and would launch a studio war in Paris to write and produce narrative films, and to generate a hefty profit in the process. Guy-Blaché would make over 1,000 films in her lifetime and would be the first to experiment with multiple now standard film techniques. She addressed issues of gender, race, and class. She would also systemize the process, from conception to display, creating an industry where one did not exist. Her initial ideas and firsts in film would be pirated and copied over and over again as other film studios began to open, which is how she ended up in the United States. Pamela Green continues Alice’s tale, from the founding of Solax Studios in Fort Lee, New Jersey, to the disruptive effects of the Great Depression, a divorce, two world wars, and being slowly disappeared from history. Green uses excellent visual aids to help tell the story, allowing the viewer to process a great deal of information in very subtle ways, akin to Guy-Blaché filmmaking style. The search for information about Guy-Blaché is also embedded into the story, with some discovered video content included as well, including restored versions of Guy-Blaché’s work and a forgotten and restored interview with her daughter, Simone Blaché. Green also includes brief primers on the difficulty of preserving and transferring Alice’s works from various media, especially the highly flammable nitrate film stock. I think the most important aspect of this documentary, however, is that it completes the work that Alice Guy-Blaché spent her life doing after her film career, which was correcting the record of the early film industry and her slow erasure from it. After her autobiography was finally published in 1976, a host of researchers began separate quests to find out whatever they could about her influential life and work. As she was rediscovered, she has also been recognized posthumously for her work and contributions to the industry. Pamela Green stands on the shoulders of the researchers before her, but also adds to the growing body of work about Alice Guy-Blaché, in an excellent and accessible package. BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY-BLACHÉ corrects and expands the record of one of the most influential filmmakers of all-time. It’s rare to find a documentary so effective and comprehensive, which balances a complete introduction to the subject as well as instilling a desire to know more. For filmmakers and film critics, there are precious few documentaries about the industry that are as important as today’s film. All film fans owe it to themselves to see this documentary, for the education alone, but also for the mesmerizing visual aids and insightful look into the film industry as a whole. Rotten Tomatoes: 96% (CERTIFIED FRESH) Metacritic: 76 One Movie Punch: 10/10 BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY-BLACHÉ (2018) is not rated and is currently playing on Kanopy.

Best Girl Grip
Episode 034: Pamela B. Green, Director, Producer & Main Titles Designer

Best Girl Grip

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 38:23


Pamela B. Green has creative directed, produced, and directed feature film main titles, motion graphics, and award packages. She did the titles for a recent indie film I really loved called Blindspotting, as well as Crown Heights and Fences but if you look at her imdb page you will be scrolling for a while. Her most recent project, a documentary called Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché is her feature directorial debut. Alice Guy-Blaché is missing from most film histories and continues to be a little-known name outside academic circles. From her directing debut in 1896 at Parisian-based Gaumont studio and her role as head of production there, to the opening of her own studio and subsequent career in the US, Guy-Blaché worked as a director, producer or writer on more than 1000 films. A visionary who mastered technique, pushed the boundaries of genres and wrote progressive narratives, her influence is such that she cannot be overlooked. Be Natural is a captivating, must-see profile of the mother of cinema. This episode actually follows on quite nicely from last week’s interview with Elise McCave the Director of Narrative Film at Kickstarter, because the journey of Pamela’s film coming into the world more or less began with Kickstarter as well.  We talk about why her grandmother was her mentor, how she learnt how to be a filmmaker on the job, Hugh Heffner’s role in the film and pushing through days when she didn’t feel like it was going to be completed. I think this is a really honest and insightful interview, so thank you to Pamela for being open and to TIFF for making it happen.

Film Grain
Be Natural, Brian Sheridan and the story of Alice Guy-Blaché

Film Grain

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 53:33


This week professor and film historian Brian Sheridan joins us to talk about his beginnings in the world of film appreciation as well as some film history regarding Alice Guy-Blaché, the focus of "Be Natural," our newest Film Grain feature. Also discussed is the importance of diversity and representation in filmmaking both behind and in front of the camera. Get tickets for our showing below. Tickets Follow us on Twitter / Facebook / Instagram "night vibe" available via Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ "Fairuz - Adaysh Kan Fi Nas (Lo-Fi Hip Hop Redux)" available via Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/

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Whiskey and Popcorn
'Be Natural' uncovers the lost story of movie maven Alice Guy-Blaché

Whiskey and Popcorn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2019 18:20


The origins of film are wrapped up in the romantic stories of the Lumière brothers and Thomas Edison. Moving pictures were a curiosity. It took a woman to really explore the potential of storytelling with film. And that woman was Alice Guy-Blaché. Director, writer, cinematographer, studio founder, she did it all from the beginning. But her story has been lost to cinematic history -- until now. "Be Natural" uncovers one of the movie greats and gives her the justice and spotlight she deserves. Never miss a review by subscribing. We're on iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, and right here on Soundcloud. We're also at WhiskeyandPopcorn.org. And don't forget to follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Search for Whiskey and Popcorn!

Sitting Around Talking Movies
Crazy With The Heat!: "Luce," "Brittany Runs a Marathon," "Be Natural" and more!

Sitting Around Talking Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2019 36:18


Blame global warming or just hot air coming from Washington DC, but whatever the cause, the summer heat just won't stop this year. It's nuts, and that means there's nothing better than OPAC (Other People's Air Conditioning) And there's no better place for that than your local theater. And even though the movie companies aren't exactly putting out their most prestige product that doesn't mean there aren't some interesting films to catch up on. We've taken the trouble to find several for you. For instance there's a fascinating documentary on the musical "Fidler on the Roof" which tells how it went from failure to fabled. Then there's the drama "Luce," It stars Tim Roth and Naomi Watts as a married couple forced to reckon with their idealized image of their son, adopted from war-torn Eritrea, after an alarming discovery by a devoted high school teacher (Octavia Spencer) threatens his status as an all-star student. And there's "Brittany Runs a Marathon" staring Jillian Bell who seeks to take control of her life by, well, the title gives it away. Plus there's the documentary "Be Natural" about pioneering filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché, who was somehow erased from history. We've got everything you need to beat this never-ending summer heat. Well, except a gin & tonic.

Matt's Movie Reviews Podcast
#231 - Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache director Pamela B.Green

Matt's Movie Reviews Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2019


Filmmaker Pamela B. Green joins Matthew Pejkovic of Matt's Movie Reviews to talk about her debut documentary 'Be Natural. The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache', when she first came across the name Alice Guy-Blache, the stunning revelations that arose from investigating Alice's story, the impact of Alice's legacy on today's female filmmakers, and much more!

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Fog of Truth: A Podcast About Documentary Film

There are no shortage of documentaries on various aspects of film history and we discuss a few of them plus we have a group review of BE NATURAL and Chris interviews Midge Costin of MAKING WAVES.   Group Review Documentary: BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY BLACHE (2018) / USA (Director / Producer: Pamela B. Green) Now playing at select theatres nation-wide   Film Featured in Interview Portion: MAKING WAVES: THE ART OF CINEMATIC SOUND (2019) / USA (Director: Midge Costin / Producers: Bobette Buster, Midge Costin, & Karen Johnson) Now playing at select theatres nation-wide   Other Documentaries Mentioned: After Tiller / 2013 (Directors: Lana Wilson & Martha Shane) Cameraman / 2017 (Director: Jon Alpert) Cameraperson / 2016 (Director: Kirsten Johnson) Casting By / 2013 (Director: Tom Donahue) Celluloid Closet / 1996 (Directors: Rob Epstein & Jeffrey Friedman) Color Adjustment / 1992 (Director: Marlon Riggs) The Cutting Edge / 2004 (Director: Wendy Apple) Decade Under the Influence / 2003 (Directors: Ted Demme, Richard LaGravenese) Easy Riders, Raging Bulls / 2003 (Director: Kenneth Bowser) Mamadrama: The Jewish Mother in Cinema / 2001 (Director: Monique Schwarz) Natan / 2013 (Directors: Paul Duane & David Cairns) Perfect Bid: The Contestant Who Knew Too Much / 2017 (Director: C.J. Wallis) A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies / (Directors: Martin Scorsese & Michael Henry Wilson) Picture Character / 2019 (Directors: Martha Shane, Ian Cheney) Raiders! A Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made / 2015 (Directors: Jeremy Coon & Tim Skousen) Score: A Film Music Documentary / 2017 (Director: Matt Schrader) Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood / 2018 (Director: Matt Tyrnauer) The Search for General Tso / 2015 (Director: Ian Cheney) Visions of Light / 1993 (Directors: Todd McCarthy & Arnold Glassman) Women He’s Undressed / 2015 (Director: Gillian Armstrong)   Links to reviews/interview by Christopher Llewellyn Reed:   Hammer to Nail review of BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY BLACHE Hammer to Nail review of MAKING WAVES: THE ART OF CINEMATIC SOUND     Timestamps: 00:45 - Intro discussion of photography documentaries 19:38 - Group Review of BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY BLACHE 30:09 - Chris interviews Midge Costin of MAKING WAVES: THE ART OF CINEMATIC SOUND 49:12 - Doc Talk   Website/Email: www.fogoftruth.com disinfo@fogoftruth.com   Credits: Artwork by Hilary Campbell Intro music by Jeremiah Moore Editing by Christopher Llewellyn Reed Transitional music by BELLS (thanks to Christopher Ernst)

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Rough Cut
Pamela B. Green on the Darkest Moments in Filmmaking

Rough Cut

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2019 23:52


Pamela B. Green directed and produced Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché, a documentary about the first female filmmaker. For her day job, Green produces movie trailers and other marketing materials for films.Be Natural appeared at festivals including Cannes, BFI, NYFF, and made its U.S. theatrical debut in April 2019.For more info on Rough Cut visit https://www.roughcutpodcast.com/Jennie Butler on Instagram @jen_butSky Dylan-Robbins on Instagram @skydylanrobbinsRough Cut on Instagram @roughcutpodcast

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Across Women's Lives
Ready for her close-up, Guy-Blaché was a film pioneer lost to history

Across Women's Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019


One afternoon in Paris in 1895, a young secretary at the Gaumont Film Company attended a private screening put on by the Lumière brothers to demonstrate the Cinématographe, a camera and projector that paved the way for motion pictures.The audience was delighted by moving images of trains, oceans and people bustling about on busy Parisian streets.Related: Four women from history who changed the worldBut, that young secretary — Alice Guy-Blaché — thought more could be done with this new invention. She loved theater and knew her way around a camera, so she started experimenting.Pamela Green is the director of a new film about Guy-Blaché called “Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache.” She says Guy-Blaché changed the course of cinema.“She came up with content just to show what you can do with the technology. But she weaved in storytelling, which was very fresh and new at the time and set up certain grammar points that we use today in cinema. That hasn't changed. It's just evolved.”Pamela Green, director of  “Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache”“She came up with content just to show what you can do with the technology. But she weaved in storytelling, which was very fresh and new at the time and set up certain grammar points that we use today in cinema. That hasn't changed. It's just evolved,” said Green, who is based in Los Angeles. The film chronicles Guy-Blaché’s life as probably the first female filmmaker and one of the first to write, direct and produce a narrative film. Jodie Foster, a fluent French speaker, narrates "Be Natural," which also features numerous interviews with Hollywood notables like Ava DuVernay and Geena Davis.Guy-Blaché was born in Paris after her parents moved there from Chile in the mid-1800s. After her father died, Guy-Blaché applied for a job at the Gaumont film studio. She needed to work to support herself and her mother. She had no idea at the time how important that job would be or how her humble roots would connect with audiences.“And I think that's what's really special about her is being able to create relatability and have universal stories that still stand the test of time,” Green said.Guy-Blaché went on to direct thousands of films over a 20-year career. Her first was the popular movie “The Cabbage Fairy.”The short film (it's under a minute) features a young woman pulling babies from a fantasy cabbage patch. It “references a folk tale regarding the origin of babies, not unlike the delivery stork, and predating Cabbage Patch dolls by about 80 years,” a YouTube page featuring the movie says.Guy-Blaché pioneered film techniques like the close-up and hand-tinted color, and she used synchronized sound with a device called a Chronophone, which was invented by Léon Gaumont in 1902.But Green says it’s not just her technical achievements that made her career extraordinary. The profound subject matter she tackled in some of her later works still resonates today. Guy-Blaché made films about religion, feminism and anti-semitism and was one of the first directors to employ an all African American cast.“She really took social issues to the limit. And I think she got away with it because she did it through this medium that nobody took seriously, so she could express herself that way.” Pamela Green, director of  “Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache”“And she really took social issues to the limit. And I think she got away with it because she did it through this medium that nobody took seriously, so she could express herself that way,” Green said. Portrait of filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché in 1912.  Credit: Courtesy of Be Natural Productions Guy-Blaché wrote and directed “The Making of an American Citizen,” which dates to 1912. It portrays an immigrant couple moving from Eastern Europe to the United States and a husband who had to “deal with his Old World patriarchal values,” Green said, quoting Guy-Blaché. Remember, this was a film shown before women even had the right to vote. Guy-Blaché also directed a film about Margaret Sanger, the founder of the organization that eventually evolved into Planned Parenthood.Pamela Smoluchowski is the director of the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, which recently featured Be Natural. She says Guy-Blaché’s films were radical.“They're so full of courage, but they're also so full of humor. And so, she can tackle these topics that nobody else is really talking about in any kind of depth at the time — and we hardly ever do at this point — with such, kind of, luminosity,” said Smoluchowski at a screening of the film. Film still of Doris Kenyon in "The Ocean Waif" (1916), directed by Alice Guy-Blaché. Credit: Courtesy of Kenyon Sills Before “Be Natural,” Guy-Blaché had been largely forgotten. Many of the Hollywood personalities interviewed in Green’s documentary admitted they had never heard of her. She made hundreds of films throughout her 20-year career, but a lot of them were lost and some were even wrongly credited to male filmmakers. So, when Green set out to make this documentary, she wanted to set the record straight and to advance Guy-Blaché’s story.“I wanted to find new material because I felt that that would validate some of the points that were missing about her — as a person, and her as an artist, and a filmmaker, as a whole as a creator,” said Green.To do so, Green says, she became a detective. For starters, she used Guy-Blaché’s address book, housed at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, to track down the relatives of people listed. Green also talked with curators at several museums — one of whom had a recording of a conversation with Guy-Blaché’s daughter. The film shows Green breathlessly trying to get tapes of that conversation turned into digital files.She says that over the years, male film critics largely left Guy-Blaché out of the history books. She wanted to change that. It took her a decade to make the documentary, but she kept on going. Now, "Be Natural" continues to make the rounds at film festivals across the US and in Canada and Portugal. (See a schedule here.) 

Sandi Klein's Conversations with Creative Women

Meet another creative woman with an impressive resume. Pamela Green's professional life includes directing and producing music videos, commercials, motion graphics, feature film titles. She's the founder of Legwork Collective, which locates and obtains the rights to unusual and rarely seen before footage, stills, audio and artifacts used in features, docs, tv series and commercials. 10 years in the making, Pamela also wrote, directed and edited the documentary "Be Natural," the untold story of Alice Guy-Blache, the first female filmmaker, who made her first movie in 1896 at the age of 23...and went on to write, direct and produce more than 1,000 films!

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Future Sounds from Korea • Podcast
Future Sounds from Korea 11. Guest Mix: AEGYOKILLER

Future Sounds from Korea • Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2018 72:10


Future Sounds from Korea 11 Guest Mix: AEGYOKILLER 한국 독립 전자음악 라디오 11번 - Electronic/Experimental Music Podcast 
 이 팟캐스트는 한국의 전자/실험적인 음악을 당신에게 소개합니다 
⬇ Click for Track List below ⬇ AEGYOKILLER https://aegyokiller.bandcamp.com https://www.youtube.com/user/AEGYOKILLER Submit tracks /// 당신의 음악을 보내주세요 
Email: futuresoundskorea@gmail.com AEGYOKILLER Guest Mix Track list: 1:00 이달의 소녀/고원,츄 ft.김립 LOONA - Go Won & Chuu ft. Kim Lip - See Saw (Chop by Aegyokiller) 4:55 BLACKPINK - '휘파람'(WHISTLE) (Chopped and Screwed) 8:27 Red Velvet 레드벨벳 - Be Natural (feat. SR14B 'TAEYONG (태용)') [Chopped & Screwed] 13:28 박지윤 (Park Ji Yoon ) - 성인식 (Coming of age ceremony) CHOPPED & SCREW 15:41 이달의 소녀/김립 (LOONA/Kim Lip) "Eclipse" ((Chopped and Screwed)) 18:34 Teengirl Fantasy X Hoody Kim (후디) - U Touch Me [Chopped & Screwed] 22:18 BRYN ((브린)) - Do you love me? 《CHOP & SCREWED》 25:28 박하이 (Park Hi) - Higher (하이어) CHOPPED & SCREWED 27:05 이달의 소녀 오드아이써클 (LOONA/ODD EYE CIRCLE) "Chaotic" 《Chopped and Screwed Remix》 31:30 이달의 소녀/Olivia Hye (LOONA/올리비아 혜) "Egoist (Feat. JinSoul)" 《Chopped and Screwed Remix》 34:06 SOHEE(소희) _ Spotlight (Chop by Aegyokiller) 38:13 Red Velvet 레드벨벳 'Bad Boy' (Chop by Aegyokiller) 43:18 Red Velvet 레드벨벳 - Automatic (Chopped and Screwed) 48:04 체리콕 (Cherry Coke) - Like I Do 《Chopped and Screwed》 49:47 Kana Bathe ((카나베잇)) - Crystal Moon 《CHOP & SCREWED》 54:43 Jvcki Wai ((재키와이)) - To. Lordfxxker 《Chopped and Screwed》 59:55 이달의 소녀 오드아이써클 (LOONA/ODD EYE CIRCLE) "Starlight" Chop & Screw 1:04:36 체리콕 (Cherry Coke) - Crush 《Chopped and Screwed》 1:08:12 CRUSH (크러쉬) – 먼지 (Dust) (Aegyokiller Chop and Screw)

Blue Ocean Church Ann Arbor Sunday Sermons
04 Mar 2018—Prayer: The Shaping of Desire—Singing Our Prayers

Blue Ocean Church Ann Arbor Sunday Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2018 38:57


In week three of our Lenten Series, Ken Wilson looks at the power of song with “Singing Our Prayers: Recovering What Used to Be Natural,” or, how the professional ideal of singing is robbing us of a simple way to improve our conscious contact with God. Learn more about Blue Ocean Faith, including service times and […]

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Freedomizer Radio Network
Body & Soul Awareness/TBD

Freedomizer Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2016 87:00


This weeks special guest is Veronica Reid.  Veronica started her company, Natural4U  with a vision to create all natural products for hair and body that are free from harsh chemicals that are prevalent in popular hair and body products that are on the shelves today.  She started on November 2013 and is still going strong, keeping her main focus of creating healthy products for her customers in mind. Natural4U's motto is Be Wonderful! Be Natural! Be You! and is based on the Biblical scripture Psalm 139:14: I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. Veronica is also a wife of 5 years and has been in the field of education for 16 years. You can contact Veronica via: Website (www.bewonderfulbenatural.com ) Facebook page (Natural4U ) E-mail :Veronica@bewonderfulbenatural.com Phone : 571-264-6225

You are SWIM
SWIM Episode 001 - Pamela B Green

You are SWIM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2015 23:46


New York native Pamela Green is a Director/Producer in the film and entertainment industry. Her abilities range from creative direction, to producing music videos, to creating main titles for feature films, including The Kingdom, Furious 6, 42, and The Muppets. To say she is multi-faceted is an understatement. On top of being the co-founder of PIC, an entertainment and motion design studio based in LA, she is also fluent in 4 languages. Currently, she is working on Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché, a documentary that tells the story of the first female film director and how she was a critical influence on the film industry. You can find out more about Be Natural, and donate to the film here: http://benaturalthemovie.com/ And be sure to take a peek at PIC's work here: http://picagency.com/

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Hollywood 2.0
Pamela Green, director of the doc Be Natural talks Alice Guy-Blache, the 1st woman film director

Hollywood 2.0

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2013 55:46


Pamela Green, director of the doc Be Natural talks about her subject Alice Guy-Blache, the 1st woman film director and owner of a movie studio, as well as how she worked with her team to Kickstart this project. Links: http://benaturalthemovie.com/

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