war

A Military Education: Youth and the Cost of War

Producer of the Work / Filmmaker: 

Tashuana Bagby, Ron Blye-Coleman, Alexis Cummings, Rebecca Ebner, James Shelton, Daimen Squire, Tenneh Vincent.

Year released: 
2006
Length: 
23 min 4 seconds

With the Iraq War in its fourth year, eight Philadelphia high school students explore the impact of war and military recruitment on youth. The documentary skillfully weaves together archive footage and interviews with veterans, academics, recruitment officers, activists and young people who have enlisted in the U.S. Armed Forces.

Something To Wear

Producer of the Work / Filmmaker: 

Produced by the Documentary History project for Youth 2000 and Scribe Video Center

Filmmaker Facilitator: 

Tina Morton and Maria Teresa Rodriguez

Year released: 
2001
Length: 
27 minutes

Did you know that pedal pushers were made for safety reasons? Or that jeans were originally designed for gold diggers? (Real gold diggers, not the money-hungry vixens commonly found in a rap video or hip hop song near you.) Something To Wear colorfully traces the history of fashion from the 1960s to the present and addresses the social, political and economic impact that fashions has made -- and continues to make -- on our society.

Filmmaker's Name: 
Tina Morton & Maria Teresa Rodriguez
Filmmaker's Bio: 

Documentary History Project for Youth 2000 student media makers were: Rachel Chapman (Conestoga High School), Loren Hicks (Central High School), Kyree Holmes (Central High School), Cabral Keita (Project Learn), Terrina Price (Masterman School) and Nicole Santiago (High School for the Creative and Performing Arts).

Tina Morton is an award-winning and prolific film and videomaker whose previously completed films and videos, include: The Dance in Aunt Ida Lee [LINK TO SCRIBE CATALOG ENTRY], A Day's Work, We The People, OpnFlo: Investigation, If You Call Them, The Plan and A Promise Fulfilled, which documents a Vietnam veteran who made a promise to his fallen comrade to journey across country in a horse-drawn covered wagon in the tradition of the Buffalo Soldiers. Morton's work has been broadcast on public television, featured in film festivals, exhibited in galleries and museums, and taught in colleges and universities in numerous cities across the United States.

Tina divides her time between Philadelphia, PA and Washington, DC where she is an assistant professor in the Department of Radio, Television and Film at Howard University. In addition to her teaching experience at Howard University, she has taught several film/video production courses at Temple University and has served as a project facilitator for several Scribe Video Center community based projects. She is also the director of the video Severed Souls [LINK], a popular documentary short in the Scribe Video Center catalog.

Maria Teresa Rodriguez is an award-winning film and video maker whose documentaries have been exhibited nationally and internationally. Rodriguez has received numerous fellowships, including a 2001 Pew Fellowship in the Arts. She is on faculty at University of the Arts and she has completed, with Frances McElroy, Mirror Dance, an ITVS funded documentary about two Cuban sisters, both dancers, and the different paths their lives have taken.

Press: 

May 16, 2001 - "Severed Souls: Wrongly Accused, Corrine Sykes, First Black Woman Executed," by Arlene Edmonds, Philadelphia New Observer

Public Screenings, Broadcasts and Festivals: 

February 17, 2001 - Preview screening at the African American Museum of Philadelphia
March 10, 2001 - Part of Youth Media Jam II at Prince Music Theater (Philadelphia, PA)

Broad Street History Project

Producer of the Work / Filmmaker: 

Produced, directed and edited entirely by local high school students from Scribe's Documentary History Project for Youth

Year released: 
2003
Length: 
83 minutes

From the Naval Yard to Progress Plaza, from the Civil War to Yellow Fever -- these are the themes of The Broad Street History Project, ten video documentaries produced by middle and high school students as part of Scribe Video Center's Documentary History Project for Youth. The series celebrates the exciting and often unknown stories of Broad street, Philadelphia's longest thoroughfare, with a history dating back to the days of William Penn and even earlier.

Filmmaker's Name: 
Student Filmmakers
Filmmaker's Bio: 

Student filmmakers and the schools they attended during their participation in Scribe's Documentary History Project for Youth are Brooke Asman (Central High School), Jodi Cantor (Central High School), Corey Cohen (Central High School), Krystle Colon (Stoddard-Fleischer/Dobbins HS), Omar Estrada (Camden County Tecnical Schools), Kitty Garrett (Ben Franklin High School), Rayna Guy (Central High School), Taren Hall (Camden County Technical Schools), Julian Harris (University City High School), Christina Ortiz (Stoddard-Fleischer/Mastbaum ATVS), Melissa Rowe (CAPA), Marchelle Smalls (Parkway Center City High School), and Eric K. Willie (Central High School).

Filma nd videomakers Sarah Poindexter, Erica Pennella, Pablo Colapinto, Shakti Jaisang, Christina Choe and Jessica Lakis served as Project Facilitators. Dr. Charles Hardy was the project's chief historian, Dr. Steve Parks served as humanities consultant, and Maria Cortese was the Project Coordinator for the overall Broad Street History Project.

Press: 

November 25, 1999 - "Coming Soon: Broad Look at Philadelphia's Most Famous Street" by Elisa Ludwig, Philadelphia Weekly's [behind the lines], Philadelphia, PA
June 19-25, 2003 - Screen Picks, Philadelphia City Paper, Philadelphia, PA

Public Screenings, Broadcasts and Festivals: 

May 29, 2003, Premiere at the Prince Music Theater, Philadelphia, PA, part of the Prince's Youth Media Jam 4
June 20, 2003, Street Movies screening at Project Home, Phildelphia, PA
June 21, 2003, Street Movies screening at Whole Foods Market, Phildelphia, PA
August 2003, USS Battleship New Jersey, Camden, N.J.
October 19 & October 22, 2003, Broadcast on WHYY TV-12, Philadelphia, PA

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