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March 2, 2018

2018 SXSW Live Streaming Schedule: Watch Exclusive Studio Interviews, Keynotes, Red Carpets and More Live from SXSW

NYLON party featuring Kloe. Photo by Sean White

We’re going LIVE! Tune in each day of SXSW 2018 to see Keynote presentations, exclusive interviews with SXSW Conference speakers, star-studded red carpet coverage of SXSW Film Festival premieres, live performances from SXSW Music Festival Showcasing Artists, and more. Keep an eye on our live streaming coverage at sxsw.com/live to experience a bit of SXSW magic from all around downtown Austin.

Last year, millions of people from all over the world tuned into our SXSW Live Studio for conversations with Senator Cory Booker, engineer and astronaut Buzz Aldrin, renowned filmmaker Jill Soloway, legendary musician Nile Rodgers, and many more.

Join us again in the SXSW Live Studio for exclusive interviews with dozens of SXSW Conference Speakers conducted by our returning host Douglas Caballero. During SXSW 2018, hear from Mayor of London and 2018 SXSW Keynote Sadiq Khan; The Daily Show‘s Roy Wood Jr. and producers Jocelyn Conn and Ramin Hedayati; designer and technologist John Maeda, and more – view full streaming schedule below.

We’ll also be stepping out of the studio with our host Nathalie Holmes to bring you red carpet coverage from SXSW Film Festival screenings and premieres from the legendary Paramount Theatre. Plus, check out live performances from some of the most buzz-worthy bands showcasing at the SXSW Music Festival. New for this year, our host will also walk us through innovative activations for a glimpse at some of the latest tech. Stay tuned for the full schedule of showcases and red carpet coverage coming soon.

Be sure to bookmark the SXSW Live page to catch all the action. Check out the 2018 SXSW Live Schedule below. All videos will also be available after the live stream on the SXSW Facebook page.

SXSW Live Schedule

Schedule reflects Central Time (CT)

Thursday, March 8

5:30 PM – 2018 SXSW Live Preview

Friday, March 9

10:00 AM – Interview with fashion designer and TV personality Rachel Zoe

11:00 AM – Interview with entrepreneur and Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin

12:45 PM – Interview with Blood Fest director Owen Egerton and actors Robbie Kay and Seychelle Gabriel

8:30 PMAmerican Animals Red Carpet

Saturday, March 10

9:15 AM – Interview with professional climber Alex Honnold

10:00 AM – Interview with The Daily Show‘s Roy Wood Jr. and producers: Jocelyn Conn and Ramin Hedayati

11:00 AM – SXSW Film Keynote Darren Aronofsky – Academy Award®-nominated director and founder of Protozoa Pictures

12:00 PM – Interview with Vida creator Tanya Saracho and actresses Melissa Barrera and Mishel Prada

3:00 PM – Interview with designer and technologist John Maeda

4:15 PM – Interview with psychotherapist and SXSW Interactive Keynote Esther Perel

7:00 PMBlockers Red Carpet

Sunday, March 11

9:45 AM – Interview with Wild Nights With Emily director Madeleine Olnek and actresses Amy Seimetz and Molly Shannon

12:15 PM – Interview with SXSW Convergence Keynote Mayor of London Sadiq Khan

2:00 PM – SXSW Interactive Keynote Melinda Gates – Philanthropist and Co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

3:00 PM – Interview with The Atlantic staff writer Vann R Newkirk II

4:30 PM – Interview with culture writer and editor for Slate Aisha Harris

Monday, March 12

10:00 AMThe Director and The Jedi Red Carpet

12:00 PM – Interview with You Can Choose Your Family director Miranda Bailey and actor and comedian Jim Gaffigan

2:00 PM – SXSW Interactive Keynote – Mayor of London Sadiq Khan

4:00 PM – Interview with Stockton California Mayor Michael Tubbs

5:00 PMThe Last O.G. Red Carpet

Tuesday, March 13

9:15 AM – Interview with digital creator Hannah Hart and the Ad Council’s Lina Renzina

9:50 AM – Interview with Warriors of Liberty City subject Luther “Uncle Luke” Campbell and director Evan Rosenfeld

11:00 AM – SXSW Convergence Keynote – Nonny de la Pena – virtual and augmented reality pioneer; founder and CEO of Emblematic Group

12:00 PM – Interview with co-anchor of Nightline and weekend editions of Good Morning America and host of 10% Happier Dan Harris

2:00 PM – SXSW Convergence Keynote whurley – Founder and CEO of Strangeworks, a quantum computing startup based in Austin, Texas

3:30 PM – Interview with Noor Tagouri – Reporter, journalist, and motivational speaker

5:30 PM – Interview with Director of Engineering at Google Ray Kurzweil

Wednesday, March 14

11:00 AM – SXSW Music Keynote – Lyor Cohen – YouTube’s Global Head of Music

1:00 PM – Interview with Director of the Digital Currency Initiative at the MIT Media Lab Neha Narula

4:00 PM – Interview with Elvis Presley: The Searcher director Thom Zimny and Priscilla Presley

6:00 PMHearts Beat Loud Red Carpet

Thursday, March 15

10:00 AM – Interview with rapper and founding member of the Wu-Tang Clan U-God

2:30 PM – Interview with recording artist, producer and avid technologist Ryan Leslie

Friday, March 16

12:00 PM – Interview with Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth of Talking Heads and The Tom Tom Club

1:00 PM – Interview with Vice President of Marketing Catalog at Atlantic Records Tom Mullen

5:00 PM – Interview with founder and chairman of Fnatic Sam Mathews

Saturday, March 17

12:00 PM – Interview with singer-songwriter Lucy Rose

7:00 PMIsle of Dogs Red Carpet

All subject to change – check back often for the latest updates.

Stay tuned for more!

Go to SXSW Live

Photo by Sean White

The post 2018 SXSW Live Streaming Schedule: Watch Exclusive Studio Interviews, Keynotes, Red Carpets and More Live from SXSW appeared first on SXSW.

Source: SxSW Film

March 1, 2018

Dive into Premiere Pro: Create Pro-Quality Audio Without Ever Leaving Your Timeline

Adobe has turned Premiere Pro and Audition into a true power couple.Filmmaking is thought of primarily as a visual medium, but sound and audio play a …
Source: CW’s Flipboard Feed

February 28, 2018

Goodbye, Bay Area! Thank You for a Decade of Partnership.

This month, we are ending our operations in San Francisco.

StoryCorps has had a footprint in the Bay Area for nine years, recording nearly 6,000 interviews and working with a range of community partners who have connected us to dynamic communities in the greater Bay Area and region.

Starting in 2009, the Contemporary Jewish Museum housed our StoryBooth. In 2014, it was moved to the San Francisco Public Library.

Over the last four years, community organizations and members of the public have come to the library to have intimate conversations with loved ones. In addition, our San Francisco-based team has traveled extensively to partner with organizations and groups in the region and record stories of people of all backgrounds.

Listen to a special collection of San Francisco stories here.

We are very grateful to our community and regional partners who have entrusted us with their stories, as well as to the San Francisco Public Library, our San Francisco-based funders, our local station partner KALW, and the many Bay Area participants who have shared their stories with us.

StoryCorps has recording booths in Atlanta, housed at the Atlanta History Center with WABE as our local station partner; Chicago, located at the Chicago Cultural Center with WBEZ as our local station partner; and in New York City. It also has a mobile recording booth that travels the United States while recording the stories of everyday people.

While our permanent location in San Francisco will no longer be open, StoryCorps works with groups and organizations in other ways:

•  You can record anywhere with the StoryCorps AppContact us for advice on how to incorporate the app into your community events and activities.

•  Make plans to visit our StoryBooth locations in Chicago and Atlanta, where you can record in a recording booth and have your interview added to the Library of Congress.

•  Meet us on the road! Our Mobile Tour continues to travel the country and might be visiting a city near you in 2018.

Source: SNPR Story Corps

February 25, 2018

Alejandro González Iñárritu Thinks the ‘Last Men in Aleppo’ Crew Should ‘Absolutely’ Be Allowed to Attend the Oscars — Watch

Alejandro González Iñárritu is one of only three filmmakers to win the Academy Award for Best Director two years in a row, which is to say he knows a good deal about attending the actual ceremony. And though he isn’t the type of celebrity you expect TMZ to ambush at the airport with timely questions, he was nevertheless asked his opinion on the Oscar-nominated “Last Men in Aleppo” crew being denied visas to make their way to next week’s ceremony — and thinks they “absolutely” should be allowed to.

“I didn’t know that. It’s insane,” a clearly surprised Iñárritu says when first asked about the situation. “Absolutely, I think so — unless the directors are considered criminals,” which they’re not. Syria will not expedite the travel visas of producer Kareem Abeed and star Mahmoud Al-Hattar, making it extremely unlikely they’ll be able to attend. “When we are banned, then the freedom of expression is banned,” the film’s director, Feras Fayyad, recently told IndieWire, referring to the situation as “very sad and unfair.”

Fayyad has also said that he may skip the Oscars in solidarity with Abeed and Al-Hattar.

Source: IndieWire film

February 25, 2018

What Is the John C. Reilly Award, and How Did Michael Stuhlbarg Just Become the First Person to Win It in 15 Years?

John C. Reilly did something exceedingly rare back in 2002: appeared in three different Best Picture nominees. His roles in “Gangs of New York,” “Chicago,” and “The Hours” — all of which premiered within a week of each other — are now the basis for what FiveThirtyEight has appropriately dubbed the John C. Reilly Award, which is “figuratively bestowed on the actor who appears in the most best picture nominees in a single year, with a minimum of three required for consideration.”

This year’s winner — and, in fact, the first one since Reilly himself — is none other than Michael Stuhlbarg.

The oft-snubbed actor had supporting roles in “The Post,” “The Shape of Water,” and “Call Me by Your Name”; he was considered a potential Best Supporting Actor nominee for his lovely performance in Luca Guadagnino’s romantic drama, but those dreams, unfortunately, went the way of first love.

Prior to Reilly, no one had done this since the 1940s. Curiously, it wasn’t an especially rare feat back then — 11 people did it between 1935 and 1943. Only two of them were women.

John C. Reilly Award

The John C. Reilly Award

538

FiveThirtyEight also compiled data on the actors to appear in the most Best Picture nominees throughout their career, with Jack Nicholson taking first place (10) and Tom Hanks close behind him (9). Peruse the full data set here.

Source: IndieWire film

February 25, 2018

Specialty Box Office Lags as Oscar Season Plays Out and Streaming Surges

Looking at the full-page movie ads in the Sunday The New York Times, one might think the upcoming movies are “Phantom Thread,” “Dunkirk,” and “Darkest Hour.” Nearly all the Arts & Leisure film ads were for Oscar contenders.

That’s where the specialized market finds itself after a successful four-month awards season. But those films, many of which are already streaming, are played out with not much gas left in the tank.

What will fill that void? So far, apart from some late-breaking modest foreign-language Oscar contenders (all lagging behind their predecessors) and minor initial interest in Sally Potter’s British import “The Party” (Roadside Attractions), now in its second week, the cupboards are bare. It looks like trouble at the arthouses until some fresh product opens and hopefully clicks.

Young Karl Marx” (The Orchard) had a credible two-city debut this week, which is a positive sign. But it isn’t the movie to lead a recovery nationwide for core theaters.

The main way to view new releases like Duncan Jones’ “Mute” (Netflix)  is on streaming venues. At least nine films debuting on Friday got reviews in at least one major coastal newspaper of record, including the “Moon” director’s latest (which also had limited theatrical play, with grosses unreported).

The Best Picture contenders got a welcome — if temporary–boost (in many cases an increase in theaters) from some marathon packages at some theaters.

Opening

Young Karl Marx (The Orchard) – Metacritic: 63; Festivals include: Berlin, Seattle 2017

$28,599 in 3 theaters; PTA (per theater average): $9,533

Not the most likely biopic subject to get a lot of arthouse interest, “I Am Not Your Negro” director Raoul Peck’s retelling of the early adulthood of the Communist theorist in mid-19th century Europe got a decent response in its initial New York/Los Angeles dates. This is one of the first releases to see the impact of the loss of the Lincoln Plaza Theater. Had it played there (it showed nowhere in uptown Manhattan) that would likely have been the top gross. This scored slightly favorable initial reviews, which makes the response more impressive.

What comes next: This has planned large city openings ahead.

November (Oscilloscope) – Metacritic: 79; Festivals include: Tribeca 2017

$4,300 in 1 theater; PTA: $4,300

This Estonian 19th-century fantasy film with decent reviews scored an adequate gross for the Village East, a second-tier Manhattan exclusive theater.

What comes next: Los Angeles opens this Friday with other big cities ahead.

Also available on Video on Demand:

The Cure (IFC/Toronto 2017) – $5,332 in 3 theaters

lamant double lover

“Double Lover”

Week Two

Double Lover (Cohen)  51/119

$139,869 in 22 theaters (-29); PTA: $971; Cumulative: $139,869

A majority of the theaters in Cohen’s unusually wide initial release for a subtitled art film dropped the movie after week one. The ones that remained for Francois Ozon’s edgy romantic drama limped along with a minor gross.

The Party (Roadside Attractions)  3/53

$100,715 in 30 theaters (+27); PTA: $3,357; Cumulative: $154,186

Sally Potter’s short black and white British ensemble comedy performed better in its expansion than other recent films. These aren’t particularly strong numbers, but are better than just about any other widening specialized release in the first two months of 2017.

Nostalgia (Bleecker Street)

$15,510 in 16 theaters (+13); PTA: $969; Cumulative: $35,248

A disastrous second-week big-city expansion for this high-end ensemble cast drama. The downbeat nature of a fire’s survivors poring over their lost belongings received similar mixed to negative response from critics as it expanded to its initial reviews.

Ongoing/expanding (Grosses over $50,000)

Three Billboard Outside of Ebbing, Missouri (Fox Searchlight) Week 16; also streaming

$1,225,000 in 691 theaters (-89); Cumulative: $50,128,000

This weekend, with fewer theaters than either “The Post” or “The Shape of Water,” it outpaced its two Oscar rivals — despite being the only movie already available at home.

The Post (20th Century Fox) Week 10

$1,200,000 in 795 theaters (-255); Cumulative: $78,848,000

Though it only received two top category nominations, Steven Spielberg’s latest still got a major boost from them, helping the movie to sustain a much longer run. It likely has only one more week of note left, but it will get it to $80 million, the best for any of the director’s films since “Lincoln.”

"The Shape of Water"

“The Shape of Water”

The Shape of Water (Fox Searchlight) Week 13

$1,115,000 in 721 theaters (-236); Cumulative: $55,301,000

Along with “Three Billboards,” this other strong Searchlight title continues to ride the Oscar wave, now ahead of all other 2017 specialized releases.

Darkest Hour (Focus) Week 14; also streaming

$775,000 in 795 theaters (+193); Cumulative: $54,495,000

Decent performance in context of parallel streaming.

Lady Bird (A24) Week 17; also streaming

$645,320 in 601 theaters (+394); Cumulative: $47,277,000

This long-running film, which is already streaming, got one last push from the Oscar marathons.

I, Tonya (Neon) Week 12

$580,640 in 423 theaters (-79); Cumulative: $28,094,000

With its two actresses leading continued interest, “I, Tonya” looks headed for a $30 million total. It already has quadrupled the previous best showing from new distributor Neon.

Call Me By Your Name (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 14

$552,141 in 675 theaters (+343); Cumulative: $15,793,000

Most new theaters came from the Best Picture marathons, with the gross increasing only slightly despite a doubling of locations.

“Phantom Thread”

Phantom Thread (Focus) Week 9

$595,000 in 651 theaters (+296); Cumulative: $18,747,000

A similar small boost for Paul Thomas Anderson’s film, also on its final legs.

2018 Oscar Nominated Shorts (Magnolia) Week 3; also streaming     272/2146

$450,000 in 230 theaters (-42); Cumulative: $2,596,000

This year’s shorts edition is headed to its best result yet, somewhere over $3 million.

“A Fantastic Woman”

A Fantastic Woman (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 4

$162,336 in 78 theaters (+49); Cumulative: $589,415

A quite rapid expansion for the Chilean Oscar nominee is finding interest. With a possible win ahead, this could be around for a while.

Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 9

$76,611 in 102 theaters (+5); Cumulative: $702,483

At its widest point yet, this Annette Bening retelling of Gloria Graham’s last years has run out of whatever juice it had.

The Insult (Cohen) Week 6

$76,160 in 50 theaters (+7); Cumulative: $762,061

Lebanon’s Oscar contender continues to gross above most subtitled arthouse entries these days. Its release, timed to a hoped for Oscar nod, has worked well, with a gross over $1 million likely even if it doesn’t win.

Loveless (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 3

$65,457 in 12 theaters (+3); Cumulative: $131,969

A respectable expansion for a challenging foreign-language Oscar contender. Continued strong reviews are giving the Russian entry a boost ahead of the awards.

Also noted:

Faces Places (Cohen) – $15,118 in theaters; Cumulative: $873,161

Source: IndieWire film

February 25, 2018

HFPA Launches Investigation Into Brendan Fraser’s Sexual Assault Accusation Against Former President

This week’s sad, moving profile of Brendan Fraser included one especially troubling detail: Fraser alleging that the former President of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, best known as the group that hosts the Golden Globes, groped him in 2003. Following that accusation, the HFPA says it is “investigating further details” about the incident involving Philip Berk.

“The HFPA stands firmly against sexual harassment and the type of behavior described in this article,” the organization writes in a statement shared with Us Weekly. “Over the years we’ve continued a positive working relationship with Brendan, which includes announcing Golden Globe nominees, attending the ceremony and participating in press conferences. This report includes alleged information that the HFPA was previously unaware of and at this time we are investigating further details surrounding the incident.”

“His left hand reaches around, grabs my ass cheek, and one of his fingers touches me in the taint,” Fraser said about the alleged incident. “And he starts moving it around. I felt ill. I felt like a little kid. I felt like there was a ball in my throat. I thought I was going to cry.”

“Mr. Fraser’s version is a total fabrication,” Berk said in response. “My apology admitted no wrongdoing, the usual ‘If I’ve done anything that upset Mr. Fraser, it was not intended and I apologize.’”

Source: IndieWire film

February 25, 2018

Saoirse Ronan Wants to Direct, and We Have Greta Gerwig to Thank — Watch

Like so many actors before her, what Saoirse Ronan really wants to do is direct. That list includes Greta Gerwig, of course, who made her solo directorial debut by directing Ronan in “Lady Bird.” In a new interview with Sunday Today, the three-time Oscar nominee reveals that making the film reignited her interest in working on the other side of the camera — something she says she’s “always wanted to” do. Watch below.

“It wasn’t until I saw Greta talk about the film and making it and putting it together, and how all of this came from her and she’s done something brilliant that people truly love and it’s a great piece of work that I thought, ‘Oh yeah, I do want to do this now and maybe I could actually do it,’” Ronan adds. “That was something I was drawn to before I was acting…I’d bully all my friends into being in little films that I made. I’d get the camcorder — I loved bringing all of this together to make one thing.”

No word on when she might make that leap, but in the meantime both Ronan and Gerwig are nominated for their work on “Lady Bird.”

Source: IndieWire film

February 23, 2018

The Recipe for Digital Health Breakthroughs

SXSW Microsoft Datica

Improving patient care while reducing costs is the aim of all healthcare innovators, but the challenges facing digital healthcare solutions are highly complex and frequently misunderstood. According to a 2017 report from Accenture, more than half of all digital healthcare startups fail in their first two years.

Join Microsoft and Datica on Sunday, March 11 for a day-long Digital Health Bootcamp consisting of five sessions that offer digital healthcare startups a recipe for success. Anyone who has ever struggled with compliance or data interoperability, or wondered how to get their healthcare apps into clinical settings, will find the bootcamp enlightening and empowering.

The first half of the Digital Health Bootcamp starts with a crash course from Datica on the need-to-know basics of healthcare: HIPAA compliance, data integration, pilots, and business models. From there, the Datica team offers a deep dive into the hardest technical problem in healthcare: interoperability with EHRs. The second half of the bootcamp examines how a new generation of productivity tools can work in a clinical setting. Microsoft will demonstrate technologies like AI and bots and discuss how to leverage existing platforms to accelerate user adoption.

Content and Photo Provided by Datica Health

The post The Recipe for Digital Health Breakthroughs appeared first on SXSW.

Source: SxSW Film

February 22, 2018

Music Pioneer Lyor Cohen to Keynote SXSW 2018

2018 SXSW Keynote Lyor Cohen

SXSW is thrilled to host Lyor Cohen as a Keynote Speaker for 2018.

Cohen is currently the Global Head of Music at YouTube and Google where he oversees domestic and international music partnerships as well as artist and label relations. He is also the founder of 300, a music content company that leverages innovative tech to discover, cultivate and promote rising artists with a boutique focus.

He began his career in the mid-80s working as Run-DMC’s road manager at Rush Productions, and within a couple of years his work expanded to include label management duties for partner company Def Jam Recordings. In the early years of his career, Cohen signed rap/hip-hop legends such as Eric B. & Rakim, Slick Rick, De La Soul, and A Tribe Called Quest.

In the 90s, Cohen’s work centered around raising the prestige of Def Jam, and rap/hip-hop in general, by focusing on developing the next generation of music industry leaders while executing a series of successful label mergers for Def Jam. In this period, Cohen worked with a new generation of talent including Jay-Z, DMX, Ja Rule, Ludacris, and Kanye West.

In 1999, the creation of the new Island-Def Jam Music Group expanded his work beyond Def Jam’s hip-hop roots and allowed him to work with artists such as The Killers, Ed Sheeran, Bruno Mars, among others. Since founding 300, Cohen has championed yet another generation of impressive talent such as Young Thug, Fetty Wap, Highly Suspect, Migos, and more.

From brokering Run-DMC’s sneaker deal with Adidas in 1986 (one of the first major commercial deals for a rap artist) to helping usher the music industry into the digital age in his current role at YouTube and Google as the Global Head of Music, Lyor Cohen has been at the forefront of innovation in the music business for three decades.

At SXSW, Cohen will speak about the evolution of the music business and encourage attendees to embrace change and innovation in their respective fields. His Keynote will take place on Wednesday, March 14 in the Austin Convention Center.

Add to your SXSW Schedule

2018 SXSW Keynote, Lyor Cohen – Photo by Noa Griffel

The post Music Pioneer Lyor Cohen to Keynote SXSW 2018 appeared first on SXSW.

Source: SxSW Film