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Join Luz Cabrales and Desiree Zielinski as they chat with American Film Director, Playwright, and Environmental Activist Josh Fox.Josh Fox is an independent filmmaker and founder and artistic director of International WOW Company, a film and theater company working closely with actors and non actors from diverse cultural backgrounds, including activist communities in sustainable energy and design, creating work that addresses current national and global environmental, social and political crises.Josh Fox is best known as the Oscar-nominated, Emmy-winning writer/director of GASLAND Parts I and II (HBO). He is internationally recognized as a spokesperson and leader on the issue of fracking and extreme energy development. In 2017, he was awarded his third Environmental Media Association award for Best Documentary for his latest film HOW TO LET GO OF THE WORLD AND LOVE ALL THE THINGS CLIMATE CAN'T CHANGE (HBO), which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016, toured the world theatrically and was released on HBO in June 2016. In 2017, he produced and co-directed and co-wrote AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK (Netflix) with indigenous filmmakers Doug Good Feather and Myron Dewey, which premiered on Netflix and toured to hundreds of locations around the world.In 2018, Fox created THE TRUTH HAS CHANGED, a solo performance, book and film about misinformation, propaganda and psycho-graphic targeting aimed at manipulating our current media and political ecosystem.https://josh-fox.ghost.io
Indigenous People's Day special episode** with segments from our archives: We begin with Lyla June who speaks about the role that the creative arts have played in her own life, as well as the impact of the creative arts in movement spaces for environmental and social justice. Then, we revisit our story on the Land Back of Papscanee Island to the original inhabitants of the land, Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of the Mohican Indians Later on, Matoaka Little Eagle speaks to the impact boarding schools had on Indigenous Society After that, our interview with Grammy Award winning musician, Joanne Shenandoah Finally, we will play part of the Myron Dewey interview: an incredible filmmaker, educator, and activist whose life was recently cut short
Tribute to Myron Dewey Founder, Digital Smoke Signals --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cut-to-the-chase/support
Leonard Crow Dog Translation & Tribute with Phil Two Eagle Thacker Pass Lithium Mine with Myron Dewey and Max Wilbert Closing --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cut-to-the-chase/support
Extended conversation from 'Cut to the Chase' #18 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cut-to-the-chase/support
HMM 12 - 25 - 2020 Myron Dewey by WOOC 105.3 FM Troy
Hudson Mohawk Magazine 11-26-20
In this segment of the podcast series "Indigenous Voices at the Intersection of Environmental & Social Justice," HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Myron Dewey. Myron Dewey is a filmmaker, journalist, digital storyteller, and the founder of Digital Smoke Signals, a media production company that aims to give a platform to Indigenous voices in media. He co-directed the award-winning 2017 film "Awake: A Dream from Standing Rock," which tells the story of the NoDAPL movement and the Native-led peaceful resistance and fight for clean water, the environment, and the future of the planet. Through both Digital Smoke Signals and his own media work, Myron seeks to bridge the digital divide throughout Indian Country and to indigenize media with core Indigenous cultural values. In this segment, Myron speaks about his personal experience at Standing Rock as both a Native participant and media maker. He discusses the importance of Indigenous people becoming community journalists, so what is shared is the Indigenous narrative through Indigenous eyes. Myron discusses the historical trauma that continues to affect Indigenous people—including Western encroachment, Western media and misrepresentation, broken treaties, and environmental extraction and degradation. He also speaks about the strength, synchronicity of support, and spirit of Standing Rock, as well as the importance of ceremony and kinship for Native healing and his own efforts to empower Native communities. Further, he shares his perspective on how one can be a white ally, and what role an ally has in the movements for environmental and social justice—describing the decolonizing process of (re)learning, healing, and holding space in solidarity with Indigenous people. Listen to more segments in the podcast series "Indigenous Voices at the Intersection of Environmental & Social Justice" at: https://www.mediasanctuary.org/indigenous-voices-at-the-intersection-of-environmental-social-justice-podcast-series/
On March 29th, the Augsburg Native American Film Series, along with director Myron Dewey, presents Awake: A Dream from Standing Rock. The film documents the events at Standing Rock and the Dakota Access Pipeline from the water protector's perspective. Here's Reporter Leah Lemm with the story.
Myron Dewey is an indigenous journalist, educator, documentary filmmaker and the developer of Digital Smoke Signals, a social networking and filmmaking initiative, emerging out of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline project of 2016-17. Using a full range of contemporary media, including drone technologies, Dewey has pioneered the blending of citizen monitoring, documentary filmmaking, and social networking in the cause of environment, social justice and indigenous people’s rights; he co-directed the 2017 award-winning documentary, Awake: A Dream from Standing Rock. Introduction by Lisa Parks, Professor, Comparative Media Studies; Director, Global Media Technologies & Cultures Lab and recently awarded MacArthur Fellow.
Events at Standing Rock from April 2016 to February 2017 altered the media landscape. To discuss that aspect of the opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline are some of the organizers of the opposition and indigenous media makers. Panelists: John Bigelow, Paula Antoine, and Myron Dewey. Moderator: Todd Darling. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 32569]
Events at Standing Rock from April 2016 to February 2017 altered the media landscape. To discuss that aspect of the opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline are some of the organizers of the opposition and indigenous media makers. Panelists: John Bigelow, Paula Antoine, and Myron Dewey. Moderator: Todd Darling. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 32569]
Events at Standing Rock from April 2016 to February 2017 altered the media landscape. To discuss that aspect of the opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline are some of the organizers of the opposition and indigenous media makers. Panelists: John Bigelow, Paula Antoine, and Myron Dewey. Moderator: Todd Darling. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 32569]
Events at Standing Rock from April 2016 to February 2017 altered the media landscape. To discuss that aspect of the opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline are some of the organizers of the opposition and indigenous media makers. Panelists: John Bigelow, Paula Antoine, and Myron Dewey. Moderator: Todd Darling. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 32569]
The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King declared that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are living in threatening times. The White House has openly threatened CNN that critical coverage of the Trump Administration could affect a pending merger between Time Warner and AT&T. Chicago is threatening to deny the earned high school diplomas to graduates, unless they have a job, are enrolled in college, or enlisted in the military. House Republicans are threatening to force US troops to pay their own GI Bill. Indigenous journalist Myron Dewey who is known for work covering the Stand Rock camps and other Native American-led resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline faces trial on July 12 and is threatened with conviction. He is accused of "stalking" and other harrassment during the use of a drone in his reporting work. We will revisit a major story coming out of the Pride marches in June, notably the Dyke March Collective in Chicago which barred three Jewish women from the gathering. Dallas County commissioner votes "No" to honoring murdered cops. Wait til you hear his reasoning. Minnesota governor wants to name a police training fund after Philando Castille. Studies show that cities rely more on fines for revenue if they have more black residents. The NAACP issued a travel advisory for African Americans visiting Missouri. African Americans are 75% more likely to be pulled over in a traffic stop than whites. This travel advisory is effective until August 28. A Texas Republican blocks the trans bathroom bill because he "didn't want a single suicide" on his hands. The Texas governor has said he may introduce another bathroom bill. US marshals sieze a Florida deputy's property to pay expenses for a man he shot and paralyzed. Tues, July 11, 6pm Pacific
Host Kevin Gosztola interviews the filmmakers involved in the production of "Awake: A Dream From Standing Rock," which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 22. Josh Fox, Oscar-nominated director of "Gasland" and "How to Let Go of the World and Love All The Things Climate Can’t Change," produced Part 1 of the film. Part 2 was created by James Spione, who was nominated for an Oscar for his work on the short film, "Incident In New Baghdad." He is also known for directing "Silenced," a documentary profiling whistleblowers. Myron Dewey, founder of Digital Smoke Signals, is Newe-Numah/ Paiute-Shoshone from the Walker River Paiute Tribe, Agui Diccutta Band (Trout Eaters) and Temoke Shoshone. Through Part 3, he captures much of the indigenous perspective of what unfolded at Standing Rock in the struggle against the Dakota Access pipeline. Dewey also is a media maker known for live streaming and flying a drone to capture what was unfolding on the ground. What appears in the film from this footage is stunning, whether what we see happening at Standing Rock is beautiful or tragic. The film is available at for streaming. If you would like to support the show and help keep us going strong, please become a subscriber on .
This is the SECOND episode in a series featuring a collection of live stream Facebook posts from water protectors and features first hand accounts and information regarding what has taken place October 27th to October 30th 2016 in Standing Rock, ND. Broken Boxes Podcast is assisting this information to reach further than the one media forum of Facebook and to share this story in the way the water protectors creating these live broadcasts have asked us all to do. To get the message out into the world, and break media blackout. We are all connected. Not one single person can live without water, we are Standing Rock! Please share far and wide! Break Media Blackout!!! Material sourced for this podcast from live video on the following water protector Facebook pages October 27-30 2016, FOLLOW THESE FB PAGES: Unicorn Riot, Prolific The Rapper, International Indigenous Youth Council, Myron Dewey, Standing Rock Medic & Healing Council, Dallas Goldtooth, Waniya Locke, Idle No More, Indigenous Environmental Network, Activist Post, Sacred Stone Camp, Red Warrior Camp. Thank you to all those who continue to be the eyes, ears and voices of this moment, keep broadcasting live, we are the media! Stay peaceful! Stay in prayer! History is being made!
This is the SECOND episode in a series featuring a collection of live stream Facebook posts from water protectors and features first hand accounts and information regarding what has taken place October 27th to October 30th 2016 in Standing Rock, ND. Broken Boxes Podcast is assisting this information to reach further than the one media forum of Facebook and to share this story in the way the water protectors creating these live broadcasts have asked us all to do. To get the message out into the world, and break media blackout. We are all connected. Not one single person can live without water, we are Standing Rock! Please share far and wide! Break Media Blackout!!! Material sourced for this podcast from live video on the following water protector Facebook pages October 27-30 2016, FOLLOW THESE FB PAGES: Unicorn Riot, Prolific The Rapper, International Indigenous Youth Council, Myron Dewey, Standing Rock Medic & Healing Council, Dallas Goldtooth, Waniya Locke, Idle No More, Indigenous Environmental Network, Activist Post, Sacred Stone Camp, Red Warrior Camp. Thank you to all those who continue to be the eyes, ears and voices of this moment, keep broadcasting live, we are the media! Stay peaceful! Stay in prayer! History is being made!