Archive for Events

Urgent: Sign Petition by Monday Demanding the NYPD Take Rape Seriously & Rally on Tuesday!

Found guilty of official misconduct but acquitted rape, ex-cops Moreno & Mata made 3 unauthorized return trips to a woman’s apartment and even placed a fake 911 call to buy themselves more time inside the residence of the helpless person they had been called to protect. Moreno, while denying the rape allegation, actually testified he got into this semi-conscious woman’s bed while she was wearing nothing but a bra.

This outrageous conduct was a clear betrayal of the officers’ duty to protect this member of the public. Their misconduct leaves NYC women forced to wonder whether a police officer called in a moment of need will be a protector or a predator.

Let Sentencing Judge Know How You Feel: Sign a petition (which will be hand delivered to Justice Gregory Carro)

Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 9am – Wear White!
Foley Square – 4,5,6,N,R train to Brooklyn Bridge/City Hall. J,Z to Chambers St.

For more info & to RSVP: Contact:  Connect the Dots, a coalition comprised of CONNECT, Crime Victims Treatment Center, Feministing, National Organization for Women (NOW-NYC), The Healing Center, New York City Alliance Against Sexual Assault and Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN). We are a diverse NYC based coalition of advocates and organizations working to prevent violence and sexual assault in our city and promote women’s health and rights. Along with NYC Council members, activists and survivors, we are coming together to “connect the dots” between the sentencing of Officers Moreno and Mata, and the larger issue of Violence Against Women!

RSVP on Facebook now!

If you have any questions, concerns, or comments, email NYC Connect the Dots!

"How I Learned to Speak Turkish" Film Screening: June 28th

How I Learned to Speak Turkish will be having a rare NYC screening June 28th as part of “Where Less Is More,” an evening of shorts presented by New York Women in Film.

The films are about pigeon racing, immigrants in Greece, a aPakistani-American kite-flying competition, a psychiatric patient’s recovery, a Jewish immigrant’s journey to West Virginia, and a Margaret Cho tribute! .

There will be a Q&A following the screening, and an after-party with cash bar and complimentary food.

SCREENING INFO

Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 7:00 PM
Anthology Film Archives [32 East Second Avenue, New York]
Tickets $6 – $9 (can be or purchased at box office)
After party: Dempsey’s Pub, 61 2nd Avenue

ABOUT THE FILM

Winner – Atlanta Film Festival Jury Prize – Best Documentary Short
Using a witty first-person documentary style, the story begins as the filmmaker Therese Shechter travels to Turkey to interview young Turkish women for a documentary on feminism. Instead, she becomes fascinated with Turkish men. And they, in turn, are fascinated with her. The film is a twisted and entertaining travelogue that asks important questions about identity, sexuality and the nature of female power. And it’s all true.

CAN’T MAKE THE SCREENING?

  • Download the whole film from IndiePix for the low arkadaş price of $7.95 or
  • Watch the trailer plus bonus clips of Hakan and the dancing fools of Cafe Vazgal.
  • For film updates, Turkish news, and future screenings –  follow on Facebook and Twitter.

[Taken from e-mail newsletter and modified for this blog post]

"NOT DEAD YET" Screening & Discussion Unites all Generations! Featuring SUSAN LOGEAIS, Filmmaker/Star & YANA WALTON, Media Activist & Women's Media Center


PARADIGM SHIFT: NYC’S FEMINIST COMMUNITY Proudly Presents
A Film Screening & Discussion to Unite the Generations:
NOT DEAD YET
A dramedy about life, hot flashes, and profound re-awakenings!
Featuring
SUSAN HESS LOGEAIS, Writer/Producer/Star
&
YANA WALTON, Media Activist & former VP of Communications, Women’s Media Center
(Jennifer Pozner, WIMN, is unavoidably unavailable and sends her regrets)

NOT DEAD YET brings a dramatic new perspective to a range of women’s issues rarely embraced by American cinema.

Three women join forces to revive their acting careers, only to find themselves on a quest for something far more important.  Frustrated by the lack of roles for women over 40, they decide to create their own film, starring themselves.  As the project spins out of control, so do their lives.

Best Feature – Rhode Island International Film Festival
Best Narrative Feature – Baltimore Women’s Film Festival
View the trailer!  http://vimeo.com/10413647
Wednesday, July 6th at 6:30 PM
Just outside the Feminist District
Roy Arias Studio – Stage IV, 300 W. 43rd. St. Ste. 402 (corner of 8th Ave), NYC
Subway: A,C,E to 42nd Street/Times Square
FACEBOOK INVITE: http://on.fb.me/jMoZGB

$15 pre-paid, $20 at door
** Buy Tickets/ Limited Seating- ONLINE SALES END 2:30 PM 7/6 **
PARTNERS INCLUDE:
PARTNERS WELCOME:  Join as a supporting organization.  Subject Line: 7/6/11 Partner
Email: Meredith@paradigmshiftnyc.com
SUSAN HESS LOGEAIS
Prior to leaving the entertainment industry in 1990, Logeais had accomplished in 15 years what few people achieve in a lifetime. Beginning at the age of 17, the classically-trained ballerina spent a year performing with the Santa Francisco Ballet under Artistic Director Michael Smuin.
Then, in 1978, the teen began a seven-year stint during which she graced over a dozen magazine covers.  In 1984, Logeais scaled back her modeling to pursue her passion: acting. During the years that followed, she co-starred in four network television movies, a Sidney Sheldon mini-series for CBS, and episodes of “Miami Vice,” “Knightwatch,” “Spencer: For Hire,” and “Christine Cromwell.”
Finally, after years of being in front of audiences and the camera, Logeais decided to step behind the lens, and began learning the craft of screenplay writing. At the same time, she formed her own production company, Two Chicks with Cameras, and co-directed and produced a series of short films.
Then in 1992, her body rejected the breast implants she had gotten 8 ½ years earlier. Realizing how she had unwittingly inspired other women to follow her example, she convinced Allure magazine to chronicle her surgery and recovery. In addition, she appeared on a local LA television program to share her story.
Teaming up with local talent and crew, she produced her screenplay “Not Dead Yet”.  Her goal in producing the film was threefold; to see one of her screenplays produced; to star in a feature film; and to produce a story that would encourage women over 40 to embrace themselves and the wisdom their age represents.
“Not Dead Yet” was completed in early 2009 and has since screened at numerous film festivals, winning Best Feature at the Rhode Island International Film Festival and at the Baltimore Women’s Film Festival.  Subsequent projects include a short documentary entitled “Nerves of Steel, a year with The Portland Ballet,” which she recently completed; “Clay In Their Hands,” a documentary focusing on the importance of valuing women and children that is in production; and “The Emerald Tree,” an illustrated short story that is in development.
YANA WALTON, MEDIA ACTIVIST
Yana Walton is the former vice president of communications for the Women’s Media Center, an organization working to make women visible and powerful in the media. A media activist with a background in U.S. women’s and LGBT American history, Yana was previously the Southern Media Field Strategist at GLAAD, where she was responsible for monitoring and responding to media, training activists and coordinating media campaigns in 12 Southern states. During the 2008 election, Yana provided media training for activists after the passage of Proposition 8 in California, worked on op-ed campaigns in Florida for the “No on 2” marriage ballot initiative and tenth observance of Matthew Shepard’s murder.
Yana was also the director of communications for the Utah Pride Center, where she trained newsrooms on fair, accurate and inclusive reporting on LGBT people and issues, was the spokesperson for the Utah Pride Festival, and worked on transgender-inclusive housing policies for state universities. She also ran the statewide outreach and volunteer program for Planned Parenthood Association of Utah, where she focused on providing testing outreach and comprehensive sex education, and created a peer-education teen council.
Yana was the research assistant for Dr. Elizabeth Clement’s upcoming history of gay family in 20th century America, We Are Family: Lesbians, Gays, and the American Family. Yana resides in Brooklyn, where she co-organizes the Brooklyn Skillshare in her spare time, an annual learning event offering free classes taught by residents, for residents.

You’re Not Alone: Strengthening LGBTQ Community & Allies – Interactive Webinar for Berkeley College

Paradigm Shift NYC proudly presents our second webinar commissioned by Berkeley College.

Available to BC students and staff only.

“Faster, Pussycat” Dance Party – This Friday Night!

Show your love for “indie, feminist publishing” this Friday night by heading to 116 (116 MacDougal Street, New York, NY) at 9 pm for “Faster, Pussycat,” a dance party to benefit the Feminist Press!  There will be raffles, including prizes from Babeland and Dykes in the City.

Co-hosted by:
Bklyn Boihood
The Desk Set
Que(e)ry Librarians
Riot Grrrl Ink
with media sponsor Velvetpark: Dyke Culture in Bloom

9pm-11pm DJ Shae Bryant
11pm raffle prizes! announced by Bevin Branlandingham
Then WOAHMONE (Nath Ann & Savannah!) brings us dancing into judgement day!

moving images by Nica Ross!
super rad FP books for sale!
plus Tura Satana immortalized on the big screen all night long!

$5 before 10pm, $7 after.

RSVP on Facebook today!

Film: Women’s Rights and the Muslim World Take Center Stage in NYC

Women’s Voices Now, in conjunction with the Rubin Museum of Art, presents a film and dialogue event focused on women of the Muslim World.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Catinca Tabacaru
919.475.8407

May 17, 2011—Riding high after the successful Women’s Voices from the Muslim World: A Short-Film Festival, held in Hollywood, CA, Women’s Voices Now (WVN), a non-profit New York City-based arts organization, has partnered with The Rubin Museum of Art to bring the Festival films and women’s issues to the forefront.

On May 21st, The Rubin Museum of Art (150 W. 17th Street) presents A Focus on Afghanistan, featuring a full day of screenings and two panel discussions highlighting WVN’s astounding collection of Afghan films. This collection is the largest collection of Afghan films ever presented outside of Afghanistan. The films touch upon a range of subjects from drug addiction and domestic violence to tae-kwon-do and fashion, and feature some of Afghanistan’s most inspiring and powerful women. The screenings will be held in four segments beginning at 12pm, 1pm, 3pm and 4pm. At 2:25pm, there will be a panel discussion with Rina Amiri (Political Affairs Officer in the Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General at the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan-UNAMA), Masha Hamilton (author and founder of the Camel Book Drive and the Afghan Women’s Writing Project), and Wazhmah Osman (filmmaker, Buried Alive: Women of Afghanistan Under the Taliban). A second panel discussion will begin at 5:25 with Anita Anastacio (Senior Technical Advisor for Education, International Rescue Committee), Vikram Parekh (Policy Officer in the United Nations Peace-building Support Office) and Sunita Viswanath (co-founder for Women for Afghan Women). Each panel will contextualize the films preceeding the discussion and with provide further insight on the on the topics addressed. TIckets for the event can be purchased at www.rmanyc.org.

For more information, visit www.womensvoicesnow.org/events

Dessert & Disorders: Video installations and stills by Erica Schreiner

In a dark humor vein, Dessert & Disorders links together the ideas of the final course of a meal and human obsessive-compulsive disorders. Murky impulses and mental dysfunctions are presented or “served” as a treat, through a combination of video and stills.

Opening reception with the artist: June 2nd, 6-8pm
Show runs June 2nd- July 2nd at the –
Bill Hodges Gallery (24 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019)

Schreiner’s exploration of problematic states of mind is conveyed through self-representations consisting of obsessive repetition of the same actions. Self-representation and prominent use of the body have been key elements for feminist interpretations of works of art by female artists, such as Ana Mendieta and Cindy Sherman. Nonetheless, Schreiner’s work significantly differs from Mendieta’s and Sherman’s. Compared to Mendieta, Schreiner does not disguise the body in natural environments in order to signify a return to Mother Nature; instead, she emphasizes and dramatizes the presence of the body through the use of sensuality. And unlike Sherman, Schreiner’s use of self-representation does not involve playing stereotypical female roles in front of the camera; self-representation is, for Schreiner, instrumental to portraying mental states that affect behavior and the body, regardless of gender. Her video portrayals are often accompanied with flowers, glitter and food-smashing gestures in what seems to simultaneously be an attempt to establish an imaginary world filled with magic, and an effort to destroy it.

For more information about “Dessert and Disorders,” check out .

This Wednesday: “Stop Rape NYC” – A Peaceful Protest

You can make a difference.

Join us Wednesday, May 11, 2011 –  In front of the NYPD Rape Cop’s  misogynist lawyers, Joe Tacopina and Chad Seigel, whose strategy is to put the rape victim on trial and questioningly compared her bruised genitalia and all women’s private parts that Seigel calls “it” he compares to a Venus fly trap that snaps shut!

Comparing women’s private parts to a fleshing eating plant in court is an in your face hate crime.

Even more woman will not come forward and the stats for RAPES are up!!!!

See you in front of Joe Tacopina Chad Seigel’s law firm (275 Madison Avenue at 40th Street)
Contact: Stoprapenyc@yahoo.com or Suzannahartist on YouTube
Go to YouTube search Tacopina Seigel NYPD Rape – watch YouTube series.

Reminder –  Tacopina represented Hiram Monserrate until he couldn’t tax payers to pay his $750 an hour rate and represented Natalee Holloway’s murderer – you can watch Tacopina on YouTube declaring Van der Sloot’s innocence.  It is sickening!!!

Poetic People Power: “The Revolution Will Be…”

Poetic People Power will premiere its 9th annual show titled “The Revolution Will Be…” at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe. Poets include Tara Bracco, Erica R. DeLaRosa, Andy Emeritz, Frantz Jerome, Shetal Shah, Jonathan Walton and Justin Woo.

Date: May 25, 2011
Time: 7 PM
Venue: Nuyorican Poets Café, 236 East 3rd Street, NYC
Admission: $15 online or at the door.

Poetic People Power is an ongoing project that combines poetry and activism. Each year, poets are commissioned to write new poems about timely social or political issues. In light of recent events, this year’s show focuses on protest and revolution. Join us as our poets bring their creativity to the stage! More info at www.poeticpeoplepower.com

Poetic People Power is made possible in part with public funds from the Manhattan Community Arts Fund, supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and administered by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.

"The Effect of Media on the Global Movement for Women's Rights – focus on Muslim Worlds": A Panel Discussion

Monday, May 9, 2011 at 6:30 pm ET
The Paley Center for Media (25 W. 52nd Street, New York, NY)

IN PERSON

Qanta Ahmed, Associate Professor of Medicine, SUNY-Stony Brook; Author, In the Land of Invisible Women
Maha Awad, International Television Host and Producer
Danielle Lurie, Filmmaker, In The Morning
Negar Mottahedeh, Associate Professor, Program in Literature Duke University – Reading Film Fiction
Catinca Tabacaru, Executive Director and General Council, Women’s Voices Now

The Paley Center in partnership with Women’s Voices Now and the Rubin Museum will examine how women in Muslim worlds are using media to illuminate their personal and cultural environments. The panelists will consider what happens to a previously closed society that now confronts the free-flowing information of the Internet, as well as how women are using all types of media to struggle for civil, economic, and political rights. The discussion will also focus on the recent uprisings in the Middle East and the role played by women using social media and the Internet. Before the discussion, several films from different genres will be screened to exemplify the diversity of these women’s response.

Follow the live tweets @PaleyCenter on Twitter and use #MuslimWomen and #PaleyLiveNY to join the conversation!

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