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AHA MEDIA filmed at W2 Soul Gardens Long Table Pie Competition in Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES)
Event Details

Time: August 6, 2011 from 4pm to 6pm
Location: W2 Media Cafe
Street: 111 W Hastings
City/Town: Vancouver, BC
Phone: 604-689-9896
Event Type: culinary, food, pie competition
Organized By: W2 Woodwards
Event Description
Soul Gardens Pie Competition
What’s Vancouver’s best pie? Taste the history of Vancouver through the unique ingredients we grow in our gardens and put in our fruity summery pies and savoury dinner pies. Welcoming artful culinary creations that qualify for the artistic category.
3 categories: Savoury, Sweet, Artistic
It is all going down in the Woodward’s Atrium, and to enter, it’s easy!
W2TV: Canada Day Redress Rally 2011
Sixth Annual Canada Day Redress Rally Monument to Chinese Railway Workers and War Veterans in Vancouver
The following screenshot photos are from Sid Tan’s video below:
Below is a photo of Libby Davies, Vancouver East MP speaking
Below is a photo of Vancouverite Gim Wong, a Second World War Air Force veteran and Canadian-born son of two Chinese head-tax payers. Last year on July 1, Wong did a trial run on his motorcycle to Craigellachie, B.C. This year, he left Mile 0 at Beacon Hill Park in Victoria in June on a cross-country ride to raise awareness, promote support, and take a petition asking Ottawa to compensate Chinese-Canadians for the $23 million collected from head-tax payers by paying $21,000 to each survivor and by starting a compensation negotiation process for descendents.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOIMHVsqp1A
Below is a photo of Irwin Oostindie of W2 speaking
Below is Cease Wyss and Kat Norris
Below is Gim Wong
Below is Sean Gunn
Thanks to Head Tax Families Society of Canada for organising folks and W2 Media Cafe for hosting the luch and cabaret. Food was from Foo’s Ho Ho.
Thanks to Kat Norris, Cease Wyss, Karin Lee, Gim Wong, Roy Miki, Sean Gunn, Jordan Paterson, Andrew Lau, Trevor/Matt Chan (No Luck Club) and Irwin Oostindie who spoke and/or performed in the afternoon program. Special thanks to the HTFSC volunteers and W2 staff and volunteers who made this an amazing and fun day.
AHA MEDIA congratulates Inessa Oostindie and St James Music Academy choir in Vancouver Downtown Estside (DTES) for recording with Bedouin Soundclash!
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The Saint James Music Academy gives young people the opportunity to explore their creative potential, gain self-confidence, get an academic head start, and develop good relationships, all of which will add to their success in life.
At a time when Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is rapidly changing, we have established a music education program which will remain accessible to children from low-income families.
Saint James Music Academy is located at St James Anglican Church, where teaching space is provided to the Academy free of charge. In providing this space, the church is continuing its 125-year tradition of excellence in music and commitment to its neighbourhood. |
Here’s two videos of St James Music Academy choir with Bedouin Soundclash experience!
Part I:
Part II:
Bedouin Soundclash is donating all proceeds to St James Music Academy!
Please support this progressive inner-city music program!
http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/here-i-am-feat-saint-james/id429255781?ls=1
AHA MEDIA at With Glowing Hearts the Movie Screening in Vancouver
With Glowing Hearts: A Vancouver 2010 Social Media Story explores what it means to be human, #hashtags, hockey and homlessness.
See you there. Tell us about your Olympic Experience on Twitter @WGHTheMovie
The one year anniversary of the games is fast approaching but the effects that it had on our local culture are still largely unexplored. This documentary
After the screening there will be beverages and celebrations at W2
Review of “100% Vancouver” Dress Rehearsal for PuSh International Performing Arts Festival in Vancouver
Tonight we saw communities from all over the City of Vancouver come together to bring us a show of tears, cheers, and all around smiles.
From little children with their teddy bears and PSPs to Great grandparents with their stories of WW2. It was a tale of statistics that brought everyone together and held the audience spellbound as each person moved through the spotlight in response to real life questions. There were questions about politics (very few), food, where they lived, their relationships, and perhaps the most memorable moment when one man stood alone when the crowd was asked if they recycled.
It was amazing to see how statistics showed the many ways that people interacted and how when seeing something about someone they had never known, those people were accepting, forgiving, and many times comforting.
Viewers will remember how many people stood in the middle when asked if anyone had been abused and how many people had been abusive. I will confess that there were tears in my eyes at that moment.
For those watching, there was a giant round screen behind it all providing an overhead view of people moving side to side as the questions were asked. I think everyone will remember when the spotlight went out and all they could see on the screen were little flickers of light from small LED lights held in each persons hand when they answered a question. The actors were fresh in their approach and funny when asked uncomfortable questions.
The best part was that it was only a rehearsal, the best is yet to come!
Below is 60% David Wong
Below is 73% Terry Hunter
Below is 93% Stephen Lytton
A Statistical Chain Reaction
One by one, 100 people enter the stage. These are not trained actors. These are everyday Vancouverites. The demographics of a city brought to life, with the stories and individuals that make up Vancouver 125 years after its official beginning. As questions are posed, the participants sort themselves according to opinions and political leanings, where they’re from, how they spend their time, car they drive, bus they take, peanut butter preference and so on. A living, breathing portrait of Vancouver emerges.
Each person represents 1% of the roughly 646,385 people residing in Vancouver. Casting starts with a single person. This first person has 24 hours to recruit the next person, who must then find the next, and so on. In just over three months, the full 100 are linked. Participants are chosen according to specific search criteria—gender, age, marital status, ethnicity, and neighbourhood in which they live—attempting to reflect the demographics of the last census.
100% Vancouver is based on an ongoing project of Berlin’s Rimini Protokoll, which has included 100% Berlin and 100% Vienna. With work like the interactive Best Before (2010 PuSh Festival), the company’s signature style draws on the perspectives of “experts in daily life” to create contemporary works where everyday people are the theatre’s real protagonists.
Below is April Smith of AHA MEDIA, Irwin Oostindie of W2 and Stephen Lytton, Actor in 100% Vancouver chatting after the Dress Rehearsal
See more exciting events at PuSh Festival
Matinee Jan 22, 4pm
A Vancity Community Conversation, Jan 22 at 1pm
Running Time 75m
Tickets
Advance $42 /$38 /$36; at door $44 /$40 /$38
ticketstonight.ca604.684.2787 Additional service charges apply to phone orders
Fully eligible for PuSh Pass access with a $10 surcharge, payable to the PuSh Festival Box Office.Vancity Members with proof of current membership are eligible for a $6.50 discount at the door only, subject to availability.
Visit our website for more info http://pushfestival.ca/shows/100-vancouver/














































































































































































































