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00:00:00 02/02/12
No Room For Rockstars: Movie Trailer
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 00:00:00 02/02/12
With more than 300 hours of film shot during the 2010 tour, No Room For Rockstars documents the true stories of modern era rock and roll from every possible angle. From the kids in the van playing parking lots to gain notice, to the veteran stage manager whose life was saved by the tour, to the musician who crosses over to mainstream success while on the road, No Room For Rockstars is cinema vérité story-telling at its finest. A historical retrospective or concert film this is not. No Room For Rockstars is meaningful insight into current state of rock and roll and the zeitgeist of youth culture.
Ranked 3.50 / 5 | 15 views | 0 comments
Click here to watch the video (03:20) Submitted By: videodetective Tags: Movie Trailers Movie Trailers No Room For Rockstars Parris Patton Documentaries Vans Off The Wall Categories: Entertainment
5 Views
21:00:38 12/01/11
#OccupyLA: Photographer Beaten by LAPD during Raid
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 21:00:38 12/01/11
A photographer on the scene of Occupy LA during the LAPD raid on the encampment, identified by L.A. Now as Tyson Heder, 35, was taking pictures of the eviction, when a police officer shoved him away. The video shows Heder then standing up, yelling at the officer, and then being forced to the ground by several policemen.
Via : >
His sister, Christy Collins, said Heder was in custody Wednesday morning.
Collins, who lives in Albany, N.Y., said she got an emotional phone message from him some time after his arrest. He posted on Facebook, “They beat me and stole my camera.” Collin said her brother had not been an Occupy participant previously and apparently went to the encampment Tuesday night just to take pictures.
“I do think it was horrible and excessive,” Collins said after watching a video of the encounter. “But I have to say, I was relieved it wasn’t worse once I saw it.”
A blogger who is a member of Occupy LA writes of other police violence during the eviction: >
"Approximately 300 of us walked down 1st towards Los Angeles, leaving 300 left standing by the cops. The police moved in after us, and kettled the 300 left behind. Seeing this, we ran, as a group, a couple of blocks to get away from them, losing people all along the way. Then suddenly a group of police emerged. We were blocked (kettled) in on Alameda between second and first. The police started running towards us - the group was now about 100 people by this point - and everyone ran into a parking lot to escape. The police ran after them and started beating protestors with batons repeatedly as they were running away trying to escape. I saw about ten police hit protestors. I did not get video footage nor photographs as I was running."
While most can agree that the police violence in LA wasn't nearly as bad as Occupy Oakland, or Occupy Wall Street, it hardly seems cause for the high praise given the LAPD in the mainstream media. They successfully shut down a peaceful group exercising their First Amendment rights without beating them up "too badly." Woo-hoo?
5 Views
21:00:38 12/01/11
#OccupyLA: Photographer Beaten by LAPD during Raid
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 21:00:38 12/01/11
A photographer on the scene of Occupy LA during the LAPD raid on the encampment, identified by L.A. Now as Tyson Heder, 35, was taking pictures of the eviction, when a police officer shoved him away. The video shows Heder then standing up, yelling at the officer, and then being forced to the ground by several policemen.
Via : >
His sister, Christy Collins, said Heder was in custody Wednesday morning.
Collins, who lives in Albany, N.Y., said she got an emotional phone message from him some time after his arrest. He posted on Facebook, “They beat me and stole my camera.” Collin said her brother had not been an Occupy participant previously and apparently went to the encampment Tuesday night just to take pictures.
“I do think it was horrible and excessive,” Collins said after watching a video of the encounter. “But I have to say, I was relieved it wasn’t worse once I saw it.”
A blogger who is a member of Occupy LA writes of other police violence during the eviction: >
"Approximately 300 of us walked down 1st towards Los Angeles, leaving 300 left standing by the cops. The police moved in after us, and kettled the 300 left behind. Seeing this, we ran, as a group, a couple of blocks to get away from them, losing people all along the way. Then suddenly a group of police emerged. We were blocked (kettled) in on Alameda between second and first. The police started running towards us - the group was now about 100 people by this point - and everyone ran into a parking lot to escape. The police ran after them and started beating protestors with batons repeatedly as they were running away trying to escape. I saw about ten police hit protestors. I did not get video footage nor photographs as I was running."
While most can agree that the police violence in LA wasn't nearly as bad as Occupy Oakland, or Occupy Wall Street, it hardly seems cause for the high praise given the LAPD in the mainstream media. They successfully shut down a peaceful group exercising their First Amendment rights without beating them up "too badly." Woo-hoo?
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18:12:39 11/18/11
Occupy Protesters March Nationwide; 300 Arrested
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:12:39 11/18/11
Occupy Protesters March Nationwide; 300 Arrested
Occupy Wall Street protesters have clogged streets and tied up traffic around the United States to mark two months since the movement's birth and signal they aren't ready to quit despite the breakup of many of their encampments by police. From: wmurtv Views: 8 1 ratings Time: 02:12 More in News & Politics
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09:08:29 11/16/11
Red Bull Most Wanted 2011
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 09:08:29 11/16/11
This is the edit for The Red Bull Most Wanted contest that started at Empire BMX in Austin on Friday, October 29th. Austin native Aaron Ross landed the top trick and took home the most bounty, donating his $600 to Nina Buitrago, pro BMX athlete for her recent jaw surgery; Mike Tag, for his fight against cancer; and the Empire BMX Ramp. Darryl Nau hosted Red Bull Most Wanted, based on the notorious bounty hunting of the Wild Wild West, in which specific BMX tricks performed at a specific location were snatched off the wall one-by-one as riders made a mad dash to "capture" them and earn the amount of cash that each bounty was worth. Afterwards, more than 300 people gathered at the infamous Ninth Street Trails for the 8th Annual Halloween Jam. This event shows appreciation to the locals that make Austin a hub for cultivating the BMX scene across the country.
Filmed and edited by: Devon Hutchins
Additional Filming by: Joe Simon, Walter Pieringer, Drew Pickles, Cody Nutter, and James Stevens
Post audio: Daniel Mcneil
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19:33:23 10/21/11
China's Great Wall Crumbling due to Mining
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 19:33:23 10/21/11
China's Great Wall Crumbling due to Mining
For more news visit ☛ english.ntdtv.com Follow us on Twitter ☛ http Follow us on Facebook ☛ me.lt And it's one of the most iconic symbols of China%mdashbut now the Great Wall is facing a threat more deadly than foreign invaders. Here's more. Legal and illegal mining operations are achieving what time and war could not%mdash threatening to crumble the Great Wall of China. About 124 miles southwest of Beijing, in rural Laiyuan County in Hebei Province, dozens of small mines are threatening the stability of the Great Wall. Prospectors are digging for copper, iron, and other minerals. Some mines have excavated within just 300 feet of the Wall itself. But many of these mines hold legal permits, so there may be little conservationists can do to fight the destruction. Cultural protection experts say more than 70 percent of the Wall lies in ruins, with just a little over 20 percent of it in good shape, state-run Xinhua reported. In Laiyuan County, residents who previously relied on agriculture have turned their land over to the miners%mdashevident by trucks rumbling along the rural roads, carrying away the excavated spoils. [Ding Qingzhong, Local Resident]: "Our village is empty%mdashthe whole southern area is empty. In the north, they've dug a hole going all the way through to Tielingzi and even 1.5 kilometers beyond that to a place called Geziling." Local resident Tong Zhongrong disagrees with the idea of making money at the expense of preservation. [Tong Zhongrong, Local Resident]: "Ancient ... From: NTDTV Views: 128 10 ratings Time: 01:44 More in News & Politics
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12:17:10 10/07/11
What We Saw at the Occupy Wall Street Protest
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 12:17:10 10/07/11
What We Saw at the Occupy Wall Street Protest
Down with banks, student-loan debt, and expensive elections! Up with barter...capitalism...and...Mitt Romney?!?! On October 4, 2011, Reason.tv visited the Occupy Wall Street protests at Liberty Square in Lower Manhattan, on Day 18 of the ongoing demonstration. The crowd was relatively small at about 300, and included educated but unemployed workers, college students and recent graduates, homeless drifters, performance artists, 9/11 truthers, and a not-insignificant number of journalists. The "leaderless" movement is made up of more than a dozen smaller groups, such as the "Information" group with Macbooks hooked up to generators who maintain the "OccupyWallStreet" Twitter feeds and liveblogs, a "People's Library" consisting mostly of donated leftist literature, and a well-stocked kitchen where organic vegetables are sliced for communal salads. Student loan debt, campaign finance reform, and general anger with the sluggish economy were the more frequent grievances aired, but the demonstrators are hardly monolithic in their passions or opinions. Among the boilerplate anti-capitalist rhetoric included a lifelong Democrat professing his support for Mitt Romney, an unemployed aviation mechanic declaring his continued support of capitalism and disgust at corporate welfare, and a homeless man expressing skepticism that any of the protestors would remain in the park if just "one bad wind" rolled through the area. Also in the crowd was Republican New York City Councilman Daniel J ... From: ReasonTV Views: 107113 743 ratings Time: 06:04 More in News & Politics
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22:04:07 09/06/11
Wall Street Drops Following Bad Day In Europe
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:04:07 09/06/11
The Dow Jones industrial average was down more than 300 points early on Tuesday, then clawed its way back to close down about 100 points.
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15:46:39 08/05/11
Unemployment Rate Dips, Economy Adds 117K Jobs
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 15:46:39 08/05/11
Unemployment Rate Dips, Economy Adds 117K Jobs
Hiring picked up slightly in July and the unemployment rate dipped to 9.1 percent, an optimistic sign after the worst day on Wall Street in nearly three years. (Aug. 5) From: AssociatedPress Views: 300 21 ratings Time: 01:58 More in News & Politics
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20:41:09 07/25/11
As Washington Debates, Wall Street Waits
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:41:09 07/25/11
As Washington Debates, Wall Street Waits
The debt showdown in Washington is rattling the stock market again. Stocks fell Monday after Republican and Democratic lawmakers offered competing proposals to solve the nation's debt crisis. (July 25) From: AssociatedPress Views: 300 11 ratings Time: 01:54 More in News & Politics
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20:08:50 07/04/11
School's Out Forever
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:08:50 07/04/11
School's Out Forever
CBC News Nova Scotia at 5, June 30, 2011. Most kids are ecstatic about the last day of class, but for students at schools that are closing their doors for good, it's a bittersweet walk out the door...and some are even taping themselves to the walls to delay the inevitable. From: CBCtv Views: 300 5 ratings Time: 02:20 More in News & Politics
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22:10:16 02/18/11
Sky's the Limit: The Vertical Gardens of Patrick Blanc
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:10:16 02/18/11
Sky's the Limit: The Vertical Gardens of Patrick Blanc California Academy of Sciences - California Academy of Sciences NightLife presents a talk by Patrick Blanc, world-renowned botanist and inventor of the vertical garden, and creator of Drew School's 'living wall' -- the largest such installation in the U.S. The talk will focus on describing his design approach and philosophy behind his incredible creations -- vertical gardens that now number over 200 throughout the world.Patrick is both a research scientist working for the French National Center for Scientific Research and an artist. He is known as the "inventor of the vertical garden" and is renowned for transforming naked city walls and homes into havens for biodiversity.Drew School's 1,720 sq. ft. project will be his largest installation in the United States. His work is featured in places like Quai Branly Museum inaugurated by the president of France in 2006, Madrid's Caixa Forum Museum with 20,000 plants and 300 species, and Hotel Pershing Hall in Paris.
3 Views
13:09:00 11/25/10
Video: Reintegration Day 3
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 13:09:00 11/25/10
War veterans often come home struggling with a number of issues from violence, to psychological issues. The military now requires soldiers to go through a Reintegration program following deployment to help with these struggles. Call it a lesson learned... Numerous soldiers went to war and returned before any program was in place. Donnell Preskey shares two of those soldier's stories... Memories hard to shake... (Janet) lost guys, had guys who had unfortunate accidents... (Fleck) "I remember myself worrying if I would be returnig or not, wondering if this would be my last phone conversation with my family the night before." Troy Fleck and Janet Masseth were both deployed with the North Dakota National Guard's 957... The first unit to go to Iraq in the War on Terror. Placed in an unorganized, dangerous, and hostile area taking gun fire daily... (Fleck) "You need to pick which people go on certain missions, and you know you are sending them in harms way, you know they have a family and children at home." 300 plus days of terror... And then back home... (Janet) Kid thrown ball at car, I wasn't in Bismarck, I was in Iraq instantly, took off seatbelt, get ready to get out and yell..." Janet's war wounds cut deep... She lost her dad while deployed, and came home to her being mom diagnosed with cancer... (Janet) felt like life on hold for so long and when I was trying to move forward it wasn't moving with me, it was hard to adjust to all the changes. Frustrated... Janet acted out... (Janet) small things like just trying to log onto my bank account, if that didn't go right, i'd punch computer, get up and kick the tower. If a window wouldn't open i'd punch the wall next to it. (Dustin) could see she's still hurting, and needed help. (janet) I was afraid of it when first learned of it, i couldn't believe I would act out like that, I was in disbelief, that wasn't me, not normal and I was ashamed having those thoughts and feelings... (Fleck) Don't think anyone told me that the feelings having okay, normal and can be expected, because at times I didn't think I was normal and shouldn't feel this way... Six and a half years after returning... Their wounds have healed... Now they're on to making memories... that bring them peace beyond the war.
2 Views
13:09:00 11/25/10
Video: Reintegration Day 3
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 13:09:00 11/25/10
War veterans often come home struggling with a number of issues from violence, to psychological issues. The military now requires soldiers to go through a Reintegration program following deployment to help with these struggles. Call it a lesson learned... Numerous soldiers went to war and returned before any program was in place. Donnell Preskey shares two of those soldier's stories... Memories hard to shake... (Janet) lost guys, had guys who had unfortunate accidents... (Fleck) "I remember myself worrying if I would be returnig or not, wondering if this would be my last phone conversation with my family the night before." Troy Fleck and Janet Masseth were both deployed with the North Dakota National Guard's 957... The first unit to go to Iraq in the War on Terror. Placed in an unorganized, dangerous, and hostile area taking gun fire daily... (Fleck) "You need to pick which people go on certain missions, and you know you are sending them in harms way, you know they have a family and children at home." 300 plus days of terror... And then back home... (Janet) Kid thrown ball at car, I wasn't in Bismarck, I was in Iraq instantly, took off seatbelt, get ready to get out and yell..." Janet's war wounds cut deep... She lost her dad while deployed, and came home to her being mom diagnosed with cancer... (Janet) felt like life on hold for so long and when I was trying to move forward it wasn't moving with me, it was hard to adjust to all the changes. Frustrated... Janet acted out... (Janet) small things like just trying to log onto my bank account, if that didn't go right, i'd punch computer, get up and kick the tower. If a window wouldn't open i'd punch the wall next to it. (Dustin) could see she's still hurting, and needed help. (janet) I was afraid of it when first learned of it, i couldn't believe I would act out like that, I was in disbelief, that wasn't me, not normal and I was ashamed having those thoughts and feelings... (Fleck) Don't think anyone told me that the feelings having okay, normal and can be expected, because at times I didn't think I was normal and shouldn't feel this way... Six and a half years after returning... Their wounds have healed... Now they're on to making memories... that bring them peace beyond the war.
1 Views
13:09:00 11/25/10
Video: Reintegration Day 3
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 13:09:00 11/25/10
War veterans often come home struggling with a number of issues from violence, to psychological issues. The military now requires soldiers to go through a Reintegration program following deployment to help with these struggles. Call it a lesson learned... Numerous soldiers went to war and returned before any program was in place. Donnell Preskey shares two of those soldier's stories... Memories hard to shake... (Janet) lost guys, had guys who had unfortunate accidents... (Fleck) "I remember myself worrying if I would be returnig or not, wondering if this would be my last phone conversation with my family the night before." Troy Fleck and Janet Masseth were both deployed with the North Dakota National Guard's 957... The first unit to go to Iraq in the War on Terror. Placed in an unorganized, dangerous, and hostile area taking gun fire daily... (Fleck) "You need to pick which people go on certain missions, and you know you are sending them in harms way, you know they have a family and children at home." 300 plus days of terror... And then back home... (Janet) Kid thrown ball at car, I wasn't in Bismarck, I was in Iraq instantly, took off seatbelt, get ready to get out and yell..." Janet's war wounds cut deep... She lost her dad while deployed, and came home to her being mom diagnosed with cancer... (Janet) felt like life on hold for so long and when I was trying to move forward it wasn't moving with me, it was hard to adjust to all the changes. Frustrated... Janet acted out... (Janet) small things like just trying to log onto my bank account, if that didn't go right, i'd punch computer, get up and kick the tower. If a window wouldn't open i'd punch the wall next to it. (Dustin) could see she's still hurting, and needed help. (janet) I was afraid of it when first learned of it, i couldn't believe I would act out like that, I was in disbelief, that wasn't me, not normal and I was ashamed having those thoughts and feelings... (Fleck) Don't think anyone told me that the feelings having okay, normal and can be expected, because at times I didn't think I was normal and shouldn't feel this way... Six and a half years after returning... Their wounds have healed... Now they're on to making memories... that bring them peace beyond the war.
0 Views
13:08:00 11/24/10
Video: Reintegration - Part 3
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 13:08:00 11/24/10
You've heard of war veterans becoming violent, commiting suicide or having mental issues. The military now requires soldiers to go through a Reintegration program following deployments. Call it a lesson learned... Numerous soldiers went to war and returned before any program was in place. Donnell Preskey shares two of those soldier's stories... Memories hard to shake... (Janet) lost guys, had guys who had unfortunate accidents... (Fleck) "I remember myself worrying if I would be returnig or not, wondering if this would be my last phone conversation with my family the night before." Troy Fleck and Janet Masseth were both deployed with the North Dakota National Guard's 957... The first unit to go to Iraq in the War on Terror. Placed in an unorganized, dangerous, and hostile area taking gun fire daily... (Fleck) "You need to pick which people go on certain missions, and you know you are sending them in harms way, you know they have a family and children at home." 300 plus days of terror... And then back home... (Janet) Kid thrown ball at car, I wasn't in Bismarck, I was in Iraq instantly, took off seatbelt, get ready to get out and yell..." Janet's war wounds cut deep... She lost her dad while deployed, and came home to her being mom diagnosed with cancer... (Janet) felt like life on hold for so long and when I was trying to move forward it wasn't moving with me, it was hard to adjust to all the changes. Frustrated... Janet acted out... (Janet) small things like just trying to log onto my bank account, if that didn't go right, i'd punch computer, get up and kick the tower. If a window wouldn't open i'd punch the wall next to it. (Dustin) could see she's still hurting, and needed help. (janet) I was afraid of it when first learned of it, i couldn't believe I would act out like that, I was in disbelief, that wasn't me, not normal and I was ashamed having those thougths and feelings... (Fleck) Don't think anyone told me that the feelings having okay, normal and can be expected... Six and a half years after returning... Their wounds have healed... Now they're on to making memories... that bring them peace beyond the war. Fleck says one of the most difficult adjustments for him was dealing with the change in family dynamics he is now divorced. Both Fleck and Masseth say they wish something like the Reintegration program would've been around for them following their return in 2004.







