Happy Bermuda @Pharrell Williams @BurntHouseProd

Pharrell Williams‘ Happy #Bermuda Version created by Andrew Kirkpatrick and Laura Siegfried with Burnt House & Rock Fire Productions

PharrellWilliams.com

Foreign Reality – Life on the go w/ Brown Suga (sneak preview)

It’s funny, it’s adventurous and it’s entertaining!

Bermudian born Brown Suga – verbalist, blogger & explorer – is an island girl who recently moved off the rock and into the midst of the confusion that is in her travels. She shares first hand the every day experiences, challenges and obstacles brought about through the cultural differences of a new country. She brings us up close and personal with the “Brits” through entertaining live interviews and new experiences on the street corners of the UK.

Together with Brown Suga we will surely Live, Love & Laugh at her “Foreign Reality” 

thirstycurlz.com/My_Journey

===

Dedicated to the memory of her father Frankie Simmons August 28, 1951 – November 10, 2013

 

Earl Cameron interview @Brent_Council Word Up Festival

October 24, 2011

Journalist and broadcaster Alex Pascall OBE interviews acting legend Earl Cameron CBE during Black History Month, part of the Brent Council Word Up Festival.

A fascinating and revealing interview with one of the first black actors to break the color bar in Britain. 

Brent Council

 

When Voices Rise … Dismantling Racial Segregation in #Bermuda in the 1950s

In a world where inequality is increasing and individuals feel powerless, it’s uplifting to know that ordinary people can make a difference. We tell the untold story of Bermuda’s struggle to end segregation in the 1950s. Mixing unseen archive footage with lively characters this film paints a vivid picture of the struggle to end discrimination in the rich man’s playground.

“Bermuda was made up of two communities – one black and one white,” recalls Rev Kingsley Tweed, founder of the Black Brotherhood. The black majority were forced to accept the worst jobs, banned from certain hotels and theatres and forced to allow whites to take priority over them in queues. “I used to really get irate because our class would have to clean up after white children and do all kind of demeaning work,” recalls Florenz Maxwell. Another activist recalls how black children had to wait outside church to allow white children to take their place before they could enter.Angered and frustrated by the level of discrimination that existed in Bermuda, some young professionals decided to address the situation.

The first protest began when a group of women were unable to buy tickets to a professional theatre production because they were not “of unmixed European descent.” They picketed the theatre, alerting tourists to the theatre’s policies until it was forced to open its doors to everyone. Inspired by their success they went on to form a society dedicated to combating all forms of segregation. This society became known as the Progressive Group and would ultimately reshape history in Bermuda. Previously, anyone who had attempted to challenge segregation had had their mortgage called in at short notice or faced other forms of harassment. “We were quite aware that most of the members of the group, if not all, might suffer some kind of repercussions,” states member Georgine Hill.

Therefore one of the group’s main concerns was protecting the identities of their members. Only those who were financially stable or who didn’t have young children were allowed to participate in high-profile protests. New members were strictly vetted and tourist friends were used to purchase important supplies to prevent them being traced to members.The group’s first major act of defiance was to publish a ‘secret document’ analysing the social problems in Bermuda. When members of the government saw it several years later, they were concerned that its findings would spark riots. However it was their boycott of the theatres and cinemas that ultimately highlighted the problem of segregation and led to its end.

Unfortunately, for some members, this success came at a high price. Kingsley Tweed was forced to flee Bermuda after receiving several death threats for his role in the theatre boycott.“White people did not realise just how much blacks hated the segregation system and how much they were just waiting for someone to take the lead,” recalls one member. When the Progressive Group provided this lead, they became the voice of the oppressed majority and were able to restructure their society, In the words of member Florenz Maxwell, their success “brought people together like they’d never been brought before and really became a people’s victory.”


For more information, or to buy the DVD, visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/9041/documentaries/when-voices-rise.html

Watch the full film here: http://vod.journeyman.tv/s/When+Voices+Rise

 

#Bermuda ‘Nightlife’ – Just AWESOME !

Everyone’s so absorbed with the hustle and bustle of life …. mindless of the amazing and awesome events taking place right in front of (and above) our very eyes!Take some time out and see what’s happening every night, as most of us sleep, here on this paradise island – BERMUDA.

This is videographer Jacin Lowe‘s  entry into the Bermuda Department of Tourism video competition.

facebook.com/jacin.lowe

bermuda-nightlife-just-awesome

 

Bermuda Docs Weekend Film Series (17.02.13) Chasing Ice & Barbara [Trailers]

Bermuda Docs Weekend Film Series

chasingice.com In the spring of 2005, National Geographic photographer James Balog headed to the Arctic on a tricky assignment: to capture images to help tell the story of the Earth’s changing climate. Even with a scientific upbringing, Balog had been a skeptic about climate change and a cynic about the nature of academic research. But that first trip north opened his eyes to the biggest story in human history and sparked a challenge within him that would put his career and his very well-being at risk.

Chasing Ice is the story of one man’s mission to change the tide of history by gathering undeniable evidence of our changing planet. Within months of that first trip to Iceland, the photographer conceived the boldest expedition of his life: The Extreme Ice Survey. With a band of young adventurers in tow, Balog began deploying revolutionary time-lapse cameras across the brutal Arctic to capture a multi-year record of the world’s changing glaciers.

As the debate polarizes America and the intensity of natural disasters ramps up globally, Balog finds himself at the end of his tether. Battling untested technology in subzero conditions, he comes face to face with his own mortality. It takes years for Balog to see the fruits of his labor. His hauntingly beautiful videos compress years into seconds and capture ancient mountains of ice in motion as they disappear at a breathtaking rate. Chasing Ice depicts a photographer trying to deliver evidence and hope to our carbon-powered planet.

 

“Barbara” Official US Trailer, directed by Christian Petzold

East Germany, 1980. Barbara Wolff is a talented young doctor who has applied for an exit visa from the GDR and, as punishment, has been transferred from her prestigious post in Berlin to a small pediatric hospital in the country. Even though she is constantly aware of the shadowy presence of, and overwhelming numbers of Stasi officers chronicling her every move, every waking hour, she arrives at her new post having already planned a series of dangerous assignations with her lover, with whom she plans to escape to the West, to Poland.

To Barbara, everyone is suspect as a potential betrayer at her new hospital — everyone except the patients, who receive every ounce of her compassion and loyalty, without hesitation. One such potential enemy is a young doctor named Andre. Initially rejecting his overtures of friendship, she is perplexed by his talent, his determination, and his sincerity. It doesn’t jive with the enemies she sees, and those she doesn’t see, all around her. His side interests in art and music, which mirror her own, cause her to let down her guard a bit, and an attraction grows, an attraction she knows she can’t afford to nurture.

In a rare moment of dual repose Andre confides to Barbara that he wound up at this particular post, in self-exile, after an intern whose work he was overseeing made a tragic, unintentional mistake that caused the blindness of two young children. As poignant as the story is Barbara can’t help herself from asking, “Is the story true?”

A young female patient, Stella, arrives at the hospital suffering from meningitis. She immediately latches onto Barbara as the only doctor from whom she will allow treatment and visitation. Barbara takes on a maternal role in addition to her role as a healer as soon as she learns Stella is pregnant.

Life-changing decisions must be made: Will she permit Stella to be returned to a work camp once the meningitis is treated, a fate that will almost certainly imperil the life of Stella’s unborn child? Will she continue to fall in love with a doctor in whom she sees a kindred spirit, a relationship, should it flourish, that might doom her to remain in the East? Will an escape plan hatched by her lover be carried out or thwarted when her prodigious medical skills are suddenly required to possibly save the life of a new patient?

BARBARA is a story of self-sacrifice and freedom and quiet heroism at a time and place when such values are at a premium. It is also about a healer whose morality and set of personal ethics are being called into questions by circumstances specific to that same time and place in history. An Adopt Films release.
adoptfilms.com
facebook.com/adoptfilms
twitter.com/adoptfilms

 

Arthur Rankin Jr. Interview – NYC 2005

WATCH ALL 8 VIDEOS ON YOUTUBE HERE

Arthur Rankin, Jr. was interviewed for three and a half hours in New York City for the Television Academy Foundation’s Archive of American Television. The interview was conducted by Jim Colucci on October 25, 2005.

Arthur talks about: his childhood and early influences; animation’s early days in the 1950s; Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Frosty the Snowman and the Animagic legacy; Santa Claus is Coming to Town; adapting JRR Tolkien’s The Hobbit; The Jackson Five show with Diana Ross; the television movie The Bermuda Depths; advice to young animators.

adapted from: emmytvlegends.org arthur rankin jr interview

Links

Joy T. Barnum – Island Home – Bermuda

https://vimeo.com/54990955

Produced by Alia Hamza. ‘Island Home’ was the winner of the 2nd Bermuda Department of Tourism Video Competition, December 2012.

Joy is a popular Bermuda musician. Her culturally diverse background is reflected in the range of her musical tastes – from rock to country, gospel, jazz and opera. Bermuda is a constant source for Joy. Spittal Pond Nature Reserve offers tranquility and natural beauty, giving Joy a chance to work on her songwriting. Rock Island Coffee is one of her favorite places to go because “all walks of life come here.” The walls of the coffee shop are filled with colourful Bermudian art, sparking the imaginations of all who visit. Rock Island roasts its own coffee, too. “If you’re into coffee, this is the place,” Joy says. “In the wintertime, you can get an eggnog latte.” She recommends you check out the bulleting board here to see what events are happening on the island. Joy loves wandering amidst the seaside caves at Admiralty House. “There’s so much more than just the beach,” she says. For lunch, she recommends the island favorite, Art Mel’s, where you can dig into a giant fish sandwich.

Joy T.Barnum joytbarnum.com | facebook | twitter

Bermudians.com/joytbarnum


Credits:

Alia Hamza, Cowpolly Productions
Writer, Director, Producer, Camera, Editor

Antoine Hunt
Camera, 2nd Editor

Hannah Collins
Make-up Artist

Carrol Wilson
Lighting, Production Assistant

Joy T Barnum
Singer

John Rocha
Driver, Production Crew

Denise & Antonio Soares
Production Crew

Santa Claus Is Coming To Town – Animagic Version @JustinBieber

Music video by Justin Bieber performing Santa Claus Is Coming To Town. (C) 2011 The Island Def Jam Music Group. Published @youtube on Nov 8, 2011 by JustinBieberVEVO 

Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town is a 1970 stop motion television special, made by Rankin-Bass. The models carved were from wood (as with most Rankin-Bass specials). 

Arthur Rankin, Jr. (born July 19, 1924) is an American-born, Bermudian director, producer and writer.


Santa Claus is Coming To Town – Lyrics

You better watch out
You better not cry
Better not pout
I’m telling you why
Santa Claus is coming to town
He’s making a list
And checking it twice
Gonna find out Who’s naughty or nice
Santa Claus is coming to town
He sees you when you’re sleeping
He knows when you’re awake
He knows if you’ve been bad or good
So be good for goodness sake!
O! You better watch out!
You better not cry
Better not pout
I’m telling you why
Santa Claus is coming to town
Santa Claus is coming to town

 

#Bermuda National Puppet Party | Elackshun 2012 Promo @Bermemes

you tube video no longer availablePolitical parody from the ever popular Bermemes regarding the PLP political broadcast ‘Both Ways OBA!’

Bermemes launches the new “political party” NPP! (The National Puppet party) … and like any good political party does not miss the chance to plug for their aceboy @exist270

Ay buh… We guys a tiyad uv de Bermewjin politikul pardees. Wuh starting our own. De pardees shoulda hired ya boy exist.multimedia as campaign manajah. Boasty. VOTE FA DE NPP IN 2012!

A recent comment on the Bermemes facebook page already sheds doubts on this new ‘political force’ that is taking the Bermuda Isles by storm.

I have issues with the National Puppet Party. Who’s got their hands in it? Who’s really pulling the strings and are they really speaking for themselves?” – Chris Gibbons


BERMEMES | bermemes.com | facebook | twitter | instagram


Bermemes #YTplaylist

https://twitter.com/bermemes

 

#Bermuda National Puppet Party | Elackshun 2012 Promo @Bermemes

you tube video no longer availablePolitical parody from the ever popular Bermemes regarding the PLP political broadcast ‘Both Ways OBA!’

Bermemes launches the new “political party” NPP! (The National Puppet party) … and like any good political party does not miss the chance to plug for their aceboy @exist270

Ay buh… We guys a tiyad uv de Bermewjin politikul pardees. Wuh starting our own. De pardees shoulda hired ya boy exist.multimedia as campaign manajah. Boasty. VOTE FA DE NPP IN 2012!

A recent comment on the Bermemes facebook page already sheds doubts on this new ‘political force’ that is taking the Bermuda Isles by storm.

I have issues with the National Puppet Party. Who’s got their hands in it? Who’s really pulling the strings and are they really speaking for themselves?” – Chris Gibbons


BERMEMES | bermemes.com | facebook | twitter | instagram


Bermemes #YTplaylist

https://twitter.com/bermemes

 

#Bermuda Department of Tourism (BDOT) Video Competition 2012 @Bermuda

Following the enormous success of the Burnt House Production’s cliff jumping video with Shreddy Times and the BDOT’s Spring Break Promo video (also produced by Burnt House) the Bermuda Department of Tourism (BDOT) wanted to open the market to all residents, with no age limit, to capture the best of Bermuda on film.

And it was so that The (BDOT) Video Competition 2012 was born!

 

The Nature of Life – Bermuda (Charles Reilly)

Island Paradise (Choy Aming)

The quarterly competition is open to all Bermuda residents. The next deadline for submissions is October 15, 2012.Video content should target potential visitors to Bermuda and address the question why should you visit Bermuda. The content must inspire visitors to want to come with positive images and scenes. Additional criteria for production are all videos must be of HD quality; proof of ownership or copyright release for music is required in writing; videos should not exceed two-minutes; and must not include any obscene content or language and nudity and product marketing is prohibited.BDOT is seeking creative, innovative fun and exciting footage of Bermuda to promote the island on the Department’s social media sites.

Bermuda Department of Tourism