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AHA MEDIA is proud to help announce the screening of “Copyright Criminals” at W2 Storyeum, Sunday April 18, 7-10pm

April 18, 2010 Leave a comment

COPYRIGHT CRIMINALS


April 18, 7 – 10 p.m. at W2 Storyeum, 151 West Cordova
Screening with filmmaker Kembrew McLeod (7pm)
Discussion (8pm)
Remix Meetup 9-10pm. Show n share your remix works.
$10 at door (includes complimentary beverage)

Copyright Criminals is a riveting and expansive documentary about the history of music sampling, charting the movement from its inception during the rise of hip hop to the legal battles that dominate the practice today.

Artists’ Legal Outreach (ALO), W2 and Emily Carr University will present two screenings of this work, April 16 and 18, with the film’s executive producer Kembrew McLeod taking part in a post-screening Q&A at the April 18 event.

April 16 / Emily Carr University of Art and Design
1399 Johnston Street, Granville Island
12 noon / Room 301

April 18: Screening, Q&A and After Party
7 – 10 p.m. at W2 Storyeum, 151 West Cordova
$10 donation at the door

Q&A with Kembrew McLeod, the film’s executive producer, writer and music consultant. Stay for remix music, video and drinks.

Copyright Criminals examines the creative and commercial value of musical sampling, including the related debates over artistic expression, copyright law, and (of course) money.

This documentary traces the rise of hip-hop from the urban streets of New York to its current status as a multibillion-dollar industry. For more than thirty years, innovative hip-hop performers and producers have been re-using portions of previously recorded music in new, otherwise original compositions.

When lawyers and record companies got involved, what was once referred to as a “borrowed melody” became a “copyright infringement.” The film showcases many of hip-hop music’s founding figures like Public Enemy, De La Soul, and Digital Underground—while also featuring emerging hip-hop artists from record labels Definitive Jux, Rhymesayers, Ninja Tune, and more.

It also provides an in-depth look at artists who have been sampled, such as Clyde Stubblefield (James Brown’s drummer and the world’s most sampled musician), as well as commentary by another highly sampled musician, funk legend George Clinton.

As artists find ever more inventive ways to insert old influences into new material, this documentary asks a critical question, on behalf of an entire creative community: Can you own a sound?

Copyright Criminals features:
Public Enemy
De La Soul
Mix Master Mike
Clyde Stubblefield
George Clinton
DJ Spooky
El-P
Mr. Len

AND ALSO
Harry Allen
Anthony Berman
Jeff Chang
Cibo Matto
Coldcut
Danger Mouse
Pam the Funkstress
Eyedea & Abilities
Ken Freundlich
Bobbito Garcia
Kid 606
Matmos
Mr. Dibbs
Qbert
Pete Rock
Prefuse 73
Sage Francis
Tom Silverman
Greg Tate
Siva Vaidhyanathan

“The Only Seafoods” being carried away from Hastings and Carrall in Vancouver Downtown Eastside

April 15, 2010 1 comment

In the following photos and video, Stephen Hill of the Fearless City Mobile Project and Advisor to AHA MEDIA films Vancouver’s Legendary “The Only Seafoods” sign being carried away on a flatbed truck from Hastings and Carrall in Vancouver Downtown Eastside

This video was filmed by Stephen Hill of Fearless City Mobile Project and given to April Smith of AHA MEDIA to upload. Stephen Hill filmed this video on a New Media camera – Kodak Zi6.

Both AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile Project are about exploring mobile media production through New Media cameras. For a better quality version of this video, please DM April Smith @AprilFilms on Twitter or Facebook.com/AprilFilms

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Below is a photo of the very noticeable absence of the Legendary “The Only Seafoods” sign along Hastings street

Hendrik Beune of AHA MEDIA attends “Homeless and Advocates Response to Impending Shelter Closures” at Northern Street Shelter, 240 Northern Street, Vancouver on Monday April 12, 2010

April 13, 2010 1 comment

Homeless and Advocates Respond to Impending Shelter Closures

Media Advisory – April 11, 2010

On Monday morning, homeless residents of the Northern Street shelter and housing advocates will announce a coordinated response to the upcoming closure of the HEAT shelters. A total of seven HEAT shelters, which housed more than 600 homeless individuals during the Olympics, are scheduled to begin closing on April 20, with the last shelter to close on April 31.

What: Coordinated response to shelter closures
When: 9am, Monday April 12, 2010
Where: Northern Street Shelter, 240 Northern Street, Vancouver
Who: Shelter residents and representatives from Citywide Housing Coalition, Downtown Neighbourhood Council, Carnegie Community Action Project, and Pivot Legal Society

According to homeless count statistics released earlier this week, the number of homeless in Vancouver has increased 12% from 2008, from 1576 to 1762. Until now, most homeless people have been able to find beds; the closure of the HEAT shelters will increase Vancouver’s street homeless population from approximately 400 to more than 1000.

Homeless will start Tent City to Demand Shelter

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The following is from

Red Tent 2010 – For a National Housing Strategy

For Immediate Release, April 12, 2010

Homeless representatives from the Aboriginal Central Shelter on Central Street announced their intention to start a tent city if their 100-bed shelter closes, on April 20.

“We’ll try to stay here otherwise we’re going to the parks,” says Stuart Fraser, a resident of the Central Shelter. “People with poor mental health should not be living on the street. The cost of decent housing is ridiculous.  It’s just wrong. ”

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“We did our share, we worked, our relatives here in BC worked too and put their share in.  We should not be put aside because we’re 45-50 years old and have trouble getting work,” said Kari Koivu, a resident of the Central Shelter. “They put so much into the Olympics. We should at least have support to live at the poverty line.”

“The same thing happens again and again.  We all need this shelter,” says Dave, a resident of the Central shelter. “Shut it down and we go right back to sleeping outside. Like a circle that goes round and round.”

Members of the public are being asked to sponsor 100 red tents to go to Central shelter residents forced to live on City streets and Parks as a result of the shelter closure.  More than 600 people face living on the street if planned HEAT shelter closures proceed. A coalition of housing organizations is calling on government to keep the shelters open.

“Rich Coleman needs to stop trying to force the City to pay the bill, and go after the federal government,” said Rider Cooey, of the Citywide Housing Coalition. “The City has no money, and it’s the federal government’s withdrawal of funding for social housing that has created this situation.”

“By funding the shelters, the province could prove that they were not set up solely to hide the homeless for the Olympics,” said Wendy Pederson of the Carnegie Community Action Project. “It’s hideous to fight for shelters but unfortunately, these shelters are needed until incomes are raised and real social housing is built.”


“The provincial government knows that people will be forced to live on the street and in parks if these shelters close,” said John Richardson, of Pivot Legal Society. “If the decision is to have homeless people living outside, we are asking the public to defend their right to shelter by sponsoring a red tent or a red tarp.”

Under a December 2009 BC Court of Appeal decision, homeless individuals have a constitutional right to erect a tent on public land if shelters are full. It is the first appeal court decision to find that the “right to life” under section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms includes the right to shelter. More than 70 homeless people were given permanent housing as a condition of closing the last tent city, during the Olympic Games.

The number of homeless in Vancouver has increased 12% from 2008, from 1576 to 1762. Until now, most homeless people have been able to find beds; the closure of the HEAT shelters will mean more than 1000 people will sleep on the streets of Vancouver.

For more information, contact:

Aboriginal Central Shelter 604-720-9761
Wendy Pederson, Carnegie Action Project (604) 839-0379
Rider Cooey, Citywide Housing Coalition (604) 872-1382
John Richardson, Pivot Legal Society (604) 417-6074

or visit www.redtents.org

CANADA’S RED TENT CAMPAIGN

BACKGROUND FACTS

Homelessness in Canada & British Columbia

  • Canada’s homeless population is somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000 people and 1.7 million residents across the country struggle with housing affordability issues.
  • There are between 10,500 and 15,000 homeless people in British Columbia.
    • A homeless person dies every 12 days in British Columbia.
    • The 2008 homelessness count identified 2,660 people who were homeless in the Metro Vancouver region.
    • Homelessness has more than doubled since the Olympics were awarded to Vancouver.
    • Roughly half of all Canadians live in fear of poverty, and 49 per cent polled believe they might be poverty stricken if they missed one or two pay cheques.
      • 73% of homeless aboriginal people are street homeless in Metro Vancouver.
      • 45% of homeless women in Metro Vancouver are aboriginal.

The High Cost of Homelessness

  • Government numbers show a cost of up to $6 billion a year to service a “core” homeless population of 150,000 people. That cost includes health care, criminal justice, social services and emergency shelter costs.
  • Canada is the only G-8 country in the world without a national housing strategy.

What is the Adams Decision?

–       The Adams decision, which arose from a housing protest in a park in Victoria, held that homeless people have a constitutional right, under section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to erect temporary shelter on public space if there is insufficient shelter space.

–       The consequence of the Adams decision is that municipalities in British Columbia must now respect the right of homeless people to erect temporary shelters on municipal property designated for public use.

What is the Red Tent Campaign?

–       The Red Tent campaign is about exercising the right to housing, as dictated by the Adams decision, during a time when billions of dollars are being spent on the Olympics and Olympic security.

–       The goal is to raise the visibility of homelessness through the international media that will be attending the 2010 Olympic Games, exposing the Federal Government of Canada’s deep lack of inaction and urging them to do fund a National Housing Strategy. 

–       Red Tent is an open-sourced campaign with a statement of unity that connects many different individuals and organizations working around housing issues.

–       The Red Tent campaign is endorsed by:

The Red Tent Campaign is modeled off the 2006 campaign by French anti-poverty organization Children of Don Quixote, which used Red tents as a symbol to draw attention to the plight of the homeless in Paris. The organization launched the campaign to coincide with a French national election. The tents were used as a visual reminder that there were over 100,000 people who were homeless in France and that shelter did not have adequate space available for all those in need and that shelters are not a substitute for long-term housing.  In the end the French government announced the creation of 27,000 new shelter beds across the country and introduced improvements to already existing shelters, they also guaranteed that a new law recognizing housing as a right would be passed.

–       For more information on Canada’s Red Tent Campaign visit: http://www.redtents.org

Now is the time for action

  • The Red Tent Campaign and our supporters are calling on the Federal Government of Canada to implement a fully funded National Housing Strategy to deal with the homelessness crisis in Canada.
  • Member of Parliament for Vancouver East, Libby Davies currently has a national housing strategy bill coming to parliament for third reading after parliament is reconvened after the 2010 Olympics.  For the full version of the Bill C-304 visit: http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?Language=E&Parl=40&Ses=2&Mode=1&Pub=Bill&Doc=C-304_1&File=24
  • It has been 17 years since Canada has had a national affordable housing strategy. The former plan, which created 650,000 units providing housing for more than two million Canadians, was cancelled in 1993.

For more information, visit www.redtents.org

AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile was glad to help W2 Community Media Arts move into Storyeum on Sat April 10, 2010

April 13, 2010 1 comment

Hendrik Beune of AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile documented the move from W2’s present location of 112 West Hastings to W2’s new location at Storyeum at 151 East Cordova through the photos below.

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Below is a photo of Irwin Oostindie – Executive Director of W2  looking on while Clyde Wright and Jennifer Wallington of AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile Project places boxes of gear to their new home at Storyeum! 🙂

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Below is a photo of Richard Czaban and Peter Davies of  AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile in front of W2’s current location

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W2 has four floors and a basement. Lots of walking up and down stairs with our elevator experience technical difficulties!

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Below is just some of the items on one of the floors of W2  that has to move into Storyeum

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Please click on any of the following photos to enlarge

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A view of W2 at 112 West Hastings from outside Woodwards Atrium

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We’re still moving furniture and gear this Saturday April 17th, we’ll be working throughout the day from 11am-6pm.  If moving isn’t your bag we also need help cleaning up, designing and setting up new spaces.  Contact Hywel directly to help out: hywel@creativetechnology.org

We have plenty of volunteer opportunities in the coming months including: committee work, venue staffing, gallery sitting, media lab attendants, event production and working with us on committees.

AHA MEDIA was glad to meet many members of various Vancouver Lions Clubs on April 3. 2010

April 12, 2010 Leave a comment

AHA MEDIA was invited by Gary Lee of the Vancouver East Lions Den to learn more about the great community work they do!

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In this photo and video montage, April Smith of AHA MEDIA meets many members of various Vancouver Lions Clubs on Saturday April 3, 2010.


Thanks to Gary Lee of Vancouver East Lions for the introduction!

In order of appearance:

Jackie Chan Sam Cheung, Gary Lee, Winnie Yu – Van East Lions
http://www.19a1.com/vaneastlions.htm

Ellie Chan – Vancouver Shaughnessy Lions
http://www.19a1.com/vanshaughnessylio…

Theresa Ng- Vancouver Pacific Lions
http://www.vancouverpacificlions.com/

Grace Hwo- Vancouver Pacific and Vancouver Chinatown Lioness club
http://www.vancouverpacificlions.com/
http://www.vancouverchinatownlioness….

Adelina Ko- Vancouver Arbutus Lions
http://www.19a1.com/vanarbutuslions.p…

Jimmy Ho- Vancouver Metropolitan Lions – Upcoming ZC of A-7
http://metropolitanlions.com/index.html

Sheila Keung- Vancouver Broadway Lions PZC- A-7
http://www.lions-bc19a.org/index.html

April Wong- Vancouver Cathay New Century Lions
http://www.vancouverlions.com/

Troy Dalen- DG Elect- Vancouver Marpole Lions
http://www.vancouversouthlions.com/ab…

This photo and video montage was filmed by April Smith and edited by Richard Czaban of AHA MEDIA .AHA MEDIA is about exploring mobile media production through New Media cameras. For a better quality version of this video, please DM April Smith @AprilFilms on Twitter or Facebook.com/AprilFilms