This must-see documentary is playing SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT at IndieScreen Feb 18 & Feb 19.
See Chasing Ice Trailer, click here.
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This must-see documentary is playing SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT at IndieScreen Feb 18 & Feb 19.
See Chasing Ice Trailer, click here.
At the public hearing to co-locate a charter elementary school in the only public middle school in Greenpoint, a parent stood up and asked, “If the NYC DOE [Department of Education] is doing such a poor job by parents, why don’t we open more charter schools?”
Those who think the solution to fixing the problems of urban education is to redirect taxpayer dollars to privatized charters don’t understand what parents want. We want an end to Bloomberg’s “my way or the highway” totalitarian mayoral control of our schools. Before hopping into another dysfunctional relationship with the next mayor, it’s worth discussing our painful love affair with public education, and an abusive city DOE, in order to find our way out of this mess.
In 2002, the mayor wrested control of our public schools from what for thirty years had been the decentralized power of local school boards. This much authority given to the mayor to appoint the New York City schools chancellor, set policy, and create budgets was radical and unprecedented. School boards were erased and the city Board of Education became the Panel for Educational Policy (PEP). A voting body might sound democratic, but the majority eight out of thirteen PEP members are appointed at the pleasure of the mayor. Imagine the public outcry if the U.S. President were able to assign members to the House and Senate as a rubber stamp for all of his policies. The PEP has never voted against Mayor Bloomberg, even as so many of his controversial policies don’t make any sense for public schools. The one time PEP members threatened to vote against Bloomberg with the use of high stakes tests to end social promotion for third graders, Bloomberg removed those appointees the night before the vote in what was dubbed the “Monday Night Massacre.”
Live performance will take place in the window storefront. Sunday February 17th, 8pm sharp.
Le Grand Strip, 197 Grand Street, Brooklyn, NY 11211
Have your past, present and future revealed to you by candlelight in the witching hours of Wednesday by famed psychic astrologer to the stars, Winston Ludlow. We invite you to put your skepticism aside, indulge your curiosity, and find answers to the questions that trouble you most. Winston assures us that this will present no danger to the person being read, but to himself alone. In-depth Tarot readings $5.
All information confidential and all readings end on a positive card. Winston Ludlow has studied occult, Tarot and Hebrew mysticism since childhood. He also moonlights as a pet psychic.
Nick Hugh Schmidt
When first proposing the idea of having my phone on display, I felt a sense of excitement. I thought about others looking through my phone and wondering if they would have a sense of voyeurism. For me, to have complete strangers looking through my phone, and reading my everyday life, gave me a thrill. That was not the only thrill that I would feel while doing this project.
When I first left my phone in the gallery for viewers to look at, I was not worried. I believed that the people coming to the gallery were respectable, and they believed in the art that I was doing. I trusted the gallery director would keep it safe, and I was on my way. But, not long away from the gallery, I realized that I rely on my phone more than I could imagine. I walked to the L stop and proceeded to get on the train to Manhattan. But before I knew what was going on, I was going deeper into the depths of Brooklyn. I had gotten on the wrong train. Second nature kicked in and I reached for my phone to orient myself and see where I was. My phone wasn’t there of course. I realized in that moment that I rely on my phone to do the simple tasks of reading and understanding basic directions. That’s when my self-imposed circumstance became apparent and the reality hit me.