January 25, 2018
Solving Fake News, Changing the Media, and the Future of Journalism: News & Journalism Track Sessions for SXSW 2018
Join us this March at SXSW for the News & Journalism Track and explore how journalism and analysis is dispersed and how it will be impacted by the future of technology.
According to SXSW Programmer Brianna Carney, “As the credibility of media is thrust into the spotlight now more than ever, the News & Journalism Track explores how news and the media continue to inform and engage us through ideas like representation, the pivot to video, and the use of social media.” Discussions range from how social media sparked social evolution in Korea to the many faces of modern media censorship, as well as a deep look at communicating authentically in the age of social media.
Dive deeper into the News & Journalism Track from March 10-15 during SXSW Convergence programming. SXSW Convergence programming features a range of topics that straddle the cultural and technological intersection at the heart of SXSW with primary access granted to all SXSW Badges.
News & Journalism Session Highlights
The Only Solution to Fake News: Education for All
Speakers: Esther Wojcicki (Journalistic Learning Initiative), Ed Madison (University of Oregon), and Barbara McCormack (Newseum)
Your mother shared a fake news story. Your students cited “alternative facts.” There’s only one thing to do: implement news and media literacy education. In this session, education experts discuss why a system-wide change is needed to support informed, effective news consumers, and the characteristics of effective responses. Case studies of successful education programs will prepare participants to empower all participants in the news media cycle, from students to seniors.
Investigative Journalism in the Social Media Age
Speakers: David Fahrenthold (The Washington Post), and Sonya Gavankar (Newseum)
Washington Post reporter David Fahrenthold won a 2017 Pulitzer Prize for his national reporting on then-candidate Donald Trump’s charitable giving. Fahrenthold used Twitter to fact check his reporting, asking for help from Twitter users. This conversation will focus on the future of transparent investigative journalism in the age of social media and during the Trump administration.
Latinx Representation, Resistance & Identity
Speakers: Curly Velasquez (BuzzFeed), Joanna Hausmann (YouTube Producer & Personality), Prisca Dorcas Mojica Rodriguez (Writer), and Andrea Gompf (Remezcla)
Representation, resistance, and identity are crucial elements to making Latinx-targeted content work. Panelists will answer questions like: How do you listen to your audience carefully to create content that they want – and need? Why is the Latinx representation so varied – what identifies us and what brings us together? And how do you market to and target such a diverse community? Finally, learn what resistance means for the Latinx community and how it’s portrayed in Latinx-targeted content.
The Humanoid Future of Journalism
Speakers: Hanna Tuulonen (Göteborgin Sivukonttori), and Robin Govik (MittMedia)
Learn how modern newsrooms in Sweden and Finland use automated content as an editorial platform, with algorithms analyzing the facts, writing the news and pointing the journalists to the most interesting stories. Panelists will present academic research on automation in the newsroom, and practical experiences from Sweden and Finland – where robots now write more news articles than humans – as well as how all this will affect the news industry in the future.
Browse All News & Journalism Sessions
Crossover Track Recommendations
Explore topics outside of your focus area and learn from SXSW sessions across all 24 Tracks of Conference programming. These recommended sessions are outside of the Food Track but will interest any SXSW attendee.
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Documenting The Unknown-Storytelling in the Amazon
– Alexander Santa (Rainforest Partnership), Rafa Calil (duo2), Matt Lankes (Photographer), and Niyanta Spelman (Rainforest Partnership)
Track: Making Film & Episodics -
The Misinformation Age: Can AI Solve Fake News?
– Amie Stepanovich (Access Now), Andy O’Connell (Facebook), Mark MacCarthy (Software & Information Industry Association), and Sameena Shah (Thomson Reuters)
Track: Startup & Tech Sectors -
Nardwuar’s Video Vault! – Nardwuar The Human Serviette (Nardwuar the Human Serviette Inc)
Track: Music Culture & Stories
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Teaser Photo by Akash Kataria
The post Solving Fake News, Changing the Media, and the Future of Journalism: News & Journalism Track Sessions for SXSW 2018 appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
January 24, 2018
The Unedited StoryCorps Interview: Norma Mai Tsen Wang Braun & Dava Weinstein
Did you know that the stories you hear from us on NPR and our podcast are excerpts of interviews pulled from the StoryCorps Archive? Participants visit one of our recording locations with a friend or family member to record a 40-minute interview with the help of a trained StoryCorps Facilitator, or record a conversation using the StoryCorps App. We’re sharing this unedited interview from the StoryCorps Archive with you in its original form.
In October 2008, Norma Mai Tsen Wang Braun talked with her friend, Dava Weinstein, about what it was like to grow up in China during World War II, her family’s emigration to the United States, and her experiences as a child of mixed race parents. Their conversation was recorded at the StoryCorps’ Lower Manhattan StoryBooth in Foley Square.
Norma remembers always having to run during her childhood: “I remember my legs weren’t long enough to run fast enough.” She shares the story of Englishman in Hong Kong who took them in, remembering that “He allowed us to stay the whole week, which is the longest we’d stayed anywhere when we were running… And the day we left was the day he was interned by the Japanese, and we never saw him again.”
She tells Dava about wandering around markets as a young child and how one day, she came across a homeless woman suffocating her baby. The woman told her, “’I was able to sell my son, but no one wants a daughter, and I can’t watch her starve to death.’”
When Norma and her family moved to the United States, her and her siblings were beaten up by the other kids in school because they “looked Asian” and “any Japanese had to be an enemy.” She recounts the story of a kind teacher who kept them after school and took it upon herself to teach all of them how to speak English: “I think these are America’s unsung heroes, our teachers.”
Throughout the conversation, Norma recalls stories about her mother’s strength and sense of humor. She tells Dava about the time her mother took over a luncheonette in Philadelphia so that her family would always have something to eat. When her customers would give her advice, Norma remembers, her mother would say, “’It’s so wonderful that you give me advice, and whenever you pay my bills, I’ll take them.’”
All material within the StoryCorps collection is copyrighted by StoryCorps. StoryCorps encourages use of material on this site by educators and students without prior permission, provided appropriate credit is given. This interview has not been fact-checked, and may contain sensitive personal information about living persons.
Source: SNPR Story Corps
January 23, 2018
Job Market: Tap into the Talent Attending SXSW
All employers know the importance of talent acquisition, but the reality is that it’s no easy task. Sifting through applications, conducting interviews, hoping to find the perfect candidate–the process is tedious and long. That’s why we started the SXSW Job Market.
The Job Market offers businesses the opportunity to tap into the large pool of talent attending SXSW. In fact, last year the Job Market saw 12,501 attendees from 95 countries over two days.
This year’s Job Market, which is open to all SXSW attendees as well as free and open to the public, promises to be just as exciting and there are still some spaces left. If your company is looking for top-tier professionals, don’t miss your chance to get in front of the thousands of creative, highly-educated and tech-savvy candidates planning to attend the Job Market on March 10-11. Apply now for a space.
In addition to a space on the expo floor, all companies that exhibit at the Job Market get a free listing on the SXSW Job Board for year-round recruitment.
If that’s not enough to convince your HR department to visit Austin in March, check out some of the candidate statistics from the Job Market in 2017:
- 89% of candidates had a bachelor’s degree or greater
- 77% of candidates had 3+ years’ experience in their field
- 26% of candidates had 13+ years’ experience in their field
- 76% of candidates are willing to relocate for their career
Don’t miss out! Seize the moment to meet with qualified, awesome job candidates over two days of SXSW. Apply to exhibit at the Job Market now.
Photo by Randy & Jackie Smith
The post Job Market: Tap into the Talent Attending SXSW appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
January 23, 2018
Net Neutrality, Local Elections, and Tech: Government Track Sessions for SXSW 2018
The Government Track focuses on areas related to government policy on all levels as well as privacy issues on both the personal and corporate level. Specific topics include policy and civic engagement on the local, state, and federal level; the relationship between government and technology; big data tracking; and surveillance concerns. Discover what our 2018 Government Track has to offer.
“Government is omnipresent. Whether we know it or not, so many parts of Government impact our daily lives,” says SXSW Programmer Monica Sack. “Understanding those different areas, how they affect us, and different ways in which we can participate will hopefully help us all stay engaged in the process.” During Conflicting Visions: The Debate on Net Neutrality, panelists discuss the ramifications of the repeal of the existing rules on Net Neutrality, while in Reforming the Vote lawmakers weigh in on how voter reform can potentially harm voter turnout.
Dive deeper into the Government Track as we highlight different sessions that discuss net neutrality, local elections, tech, and much more. Government Track sessions are held March 9-12 with primary access to all badge types.
Government Session Highlights
Conflicting Visions: The Debate on Net Neutrality
Speakers: Gigi Sohn (Mozilla/Georgetown Law/Open Society Foundations), Maura Corbett(Glen Echo Group LLC), and Curt Levey (Committee for Justice)
Net Neutrality is the highest profile issue in FCC history to-date. After the 2015 approval of Net Neutrality rules, upheld in 2016 by the US Appellate Court, many thought the battle was over. But in June 2017, Chairman Ajit Pai announced his intention to roll back these protections and in December 2017 the FCC voted 3-2 to repeal the existing Net Neutrality rules. We’re bringing together leaders from both sides to discuss what’s next and what this means for the Internet we know and love today.
Can Small-Donor Progressives Win Local Elections?
Speakers: Beto O’Rourke (US House of Representatives) and Ryan Grimm (The Intercept)
Bernie Sanders showed that big money isn’t needed to run a presidential campaign, changing the national calculus. But can the same be done in Texas? Will 2018 be the year small dollars make the difference at the local level? Join us for a candid conversation between Rep. Beto O’Rourke, D-Texas, who is running against Ted Cruz for Senate and Ryan Grim, The Intercept’s DC Bureau Chief.
Tech Under Trump: A 2017/2018 Scorecard
Speakers: Gary Shapiro (Consumer Technology Association), Aneesh Chopra (CareJourney), Matt Lira (White House – Office of American Innovation), and Michaela Ross (Bloomberg Law)
Despite the news headlines, the tech community and the Trump administration share many of the same goals, specifically around building a vibrant, 21st-Century American workforce, expanding access to broadband and updating our nation’s infrastructure. The endgame – for everyone – is to ensure that America leads the world in innovation. One year in, how is tech’s policy agenda faring in the age of Trump? What’s worked? What hasn’t? And what are the top policy prospects for the coming year?
Resist Tech & What Influences Congress
Speakers: Yuri Beckelman (Office of Congressmen Mark Takano), Travis Moore (TechCongress), and Therese Acuna (Harvard – Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation)
Frustration with the outcome of the election has led to an uptick in civic activism, and startups have been launching to harness that energy. Some get it right by using tech to improve the quality of contact between elected officials and their constituents, while some get it wrong focusing on quantity of contacts. Learn what actually happens when you contact your Member of Congress — how your messages are received and affect decision making, and how understanding this will improve your advocacy.
Reforming the Vote
Speakers: Mike Allen (Axios), Terri Sewell (US House of Representatives), and Richard Hasen (UC Irvine School of Law)
Voting in America is hard. And optional. While 22 industrialized countries have gone to great lengths to force their citizens to vote, some American lawmakers are trying to make it even harder for some citizens to reach the ballot box. We also know that adversaries have successfully hacked state voting systems. Axios’s Mike Allen speaks with experts and lawmakers about the complicated and frightening implications of voting reform.
Browse All Government Sessions
Crossover Track Recommendations
Adventure outside of the Government Track – explore SXSW sessions across all 24 Tracks of Conference programming. These sessions are not a part of the Government Track, but these subjects will interest anyone with an interest in government.
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First Amendment Report Card – Lata Nott (Newseum), Robert Corn Revere (Davis Wright Tremaine LLP), Ilya Shapiro (Cato Intitute), and Gene Policinksi (Newseum)
Track: News & Journalism -
Displaced Kitchens: Community Empowerment via Food – Nas Jab (Komeeda) and Jabber Al-Bihani Jr (Komeeda Inc)
Track: Food -
Redefining Sanctuary Cities – Alvaro Bedoya (Georgetown University Law Center), Vanita Gupta (The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights), and Tanvi Misra (CityLab, The Atlantic)
Track: Cities Summit
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Interactive Opening Speaker Senator Cory Booker Teaser – Photo by Alexa Gonzalez Wagner
The post Net Neutrality, Local Elections, and Tech: Government Track Sessions for SXSW 2018 appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
January 21, 2018
‘White Fang’ Review: Jack London’s Classic Story Is Vividly Reimagined in Lush Animated Offering
Jack London’s “White Fang,” the classic story of a wild wolf-dog rendered against the harsh environment of gold-rush Alaska, has spawned a number of cinematic adaptations — a well-regarded 1991 live-action feature starring Ethan Hawke, a 1993 animated series — but it’s in the hands of French animator Alexandre Espigares that the tale comes to its most vivid life. Adapted from London’s novel by a cadre of screenwriters (there are three listed in the film’s official press kit: Dominique Monfery, Philippe Lioret, and Serge Frydman), Espigares’ film captures the essence of London’s hard-knock story while reimagining it for a slightly younger audience (in short, it’s still traumatic, but not traumatic enough to drive away the audience who will also love it so very much).
That the film includes some star-studded voice talent for this American version (the film will be translated for a variety of territories), including Nick Offerman, Rashida Jones, Paul Giamatti, and Eddie Spears, is a nice touch, but even their contributions are overshadowed by the lush animation and memorable moments that make “White Fang” such a standout. While the film mostly adheres to the plot laid out in London’s 1906 novel, Espigares and his collaborators have lightened up some of its worst moments (no need to worry about that pack of lynx kittens) and a time-flipping narrative helps dilute the tougher stuff that comes later in White Fang’s story.
And yet, it starts with heartbreak: White Fang’s final dog fight, where he’s billed as the “legend of the Klondike” and the most fearsome creature in town. He collapses before the fight can even get going.
“White Fang” then slips back to his time as a pup, trundling around the wilds with his mother Kiche, and giving way to a wordless and wondrous exploration of the natural splendor of Alaska. The painterly style that informs the film’s animation is best suited to these sequences, rendering White Fang, Kiche, scores of fellow animals, and their forest home in evocative style, so carefully crafted that you want to reach out and touch every leaf and tuft of fur. Despite such intense beauty — there’s one scene that sees White Fang and Kiche observing falling snow that’s already a frontrunner for best of the year — “White Fang” never lets the worries of the real world slip away, and the two wolf-dogs are constantly left to contend with hunger, fear, injury, and worse.

“White Fang”
There are threats on all sides (that first sequence makes it clear that White Fang will eventually fall prey to the worst of them), and the introduction to still more humans speaks to the scant weaknesses of the film: Most of the human characters don’t look as lovely as White Fang and his mother. They appear harsh and big-eyed, even when they’re friends (and if they’re foes, all the more horrifying; Giamatti’s character is a wretch for the ages), and their dialogue often feels stilted and limp. When “White Fang” focuses on its real stars — animals, Alaska, the spread of untamed country — it’s as visionary as any animated film. Placed alongside ham-fisted humans, it loses its power.
That may be the point. London’s novel never skimped on portraying the darker sides of human and beast, and “White Fang” is as much about man’s need to confront the wildness in order to move into domesticated space as it is about unbroken animals doing the same thing.
As White Fang comes into contact with still more humans, he’s forced to contend with their very different approaches to the world and those that inhabit it. From Grey Beaver (voiced by Spears), his first human master — here portrayed as far more virtuous and loving than London originally wrote him — to the evil Beauty Smith (Giamatti) and the warm-hearted Weedon Scott (Offerman), “White Fang” navigates both its lead and its audience through the best and worst that mankind has to offer.
The film makes the same argument for animated offerings, deftly moving between scenes as stirring as dazzling and lavish as could be provided by any live-action film, before swinging towards an uneasy depiction of the human world. The power and majesty of White Fang, a truly wonderful protagonist, still makes a journey worth taking.
Grade: B
“White Fang” premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.
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Source: IndieWire film
January 21, 2018
Armie Hammer Was Very Generous With His Weed on ‘Sorry to Bother You’ — Watch
Pretty much everyone besides James Woods loves Armie Hammer these days. Just ask the cast and crew of “Sorry to Bother You,” a racial satire that’s currently the talk of the town at Sundance. Speaking to Vulture, his castmates showered praise on the “Call Me by Your Name” star for his marijuana-related generosity on set.
“The first time I saw him, he gave me some weed,” said Omari Hardwick, one of Hammer’s co-stars in the film. “Yeah, I heard you had weed too,” chimed in Tessa Thompson. As laughter took over the room, director Boots Riley took charge. “I’m gonna clear this up,” he said. “Omari was like, ‘Man, that Armie, he’s a cool dude. He just gave me all this weed as a gift.’ And when I saw Armie the next time, he’s like, ‘Hey, have you seen Omari? I asked him to hold all this weed for me.’ ”
“I found more,” Hammer then assured everyone. “Don’t worry, I found more.”
“I thought you were so generous,” added Thompson. “Taylor was on set like, ‘Armie’s giving away lots of pot.” Watch the full exchange below.
Source: IndieWire film
January 21, 2018
‘The Happy Prince’ Review: Oscar Wilde Is a Depressed Loner in Rupert Everett’s Humorless Biopic — Sundance 2018
Most people know Oscar Wilde as the preeminent source of British wit, a high-society raconteur whose plays and novels epitomize what it means to be the life of the party. That characterization recedes to the shadows in “The Happy Prince,” in which Rupert Everett directs and stars as the flamboyant literary giant at the end of his life. Anyone expecting Wildean banter will be sorely disappointed — think more of an autobiographical spin on “The Portrait of Dorian Gray” than “The Importance of Being Earnest” — but it’s Everett’s formidable investment in the role that rescues the movie from being a total letdown. Nevertheless, “The Happy Prince” largely amounts to a bland rumination on Wilde’s lesser-known decline.
The drama mostly takes place in 1867, shortly after Wilde was released from prison for “indecency with men.” Exiled to France, he roams about town with Falstaffian prowess, even as he’s clearly a sad shell of his former self. Everett, who played a variation of this character onstage more than once with “Judas Kiss,” transforms Wilde into an absinthe-guzzling mess who wanders through back alleys and claustrophobic cabarets. At one establishment, he holds court with a rapt audience while singing an old show tune, then face-plants in a drunken heap, yielding an injury that leaves him bedridden. So far, so intriguing — but “The Happy Prince” settles into a glacial character study more content to linger in its pity party than provide deeper insights.
From there, the timeline shifts, exploring the immediate aftermath of Wilde’s release from prison with occasional flashbacks to happier times. Back in England, his estranged wife Constance (Emily Watson, her face frozen in disapproval) continues to support Wilde from afar. In lieu of her company, he’s joined by longtime lover Lord Alfred Bosie Douglas (Colin Morgan, in a heartfelt turn), literary agent Robbie Ross (Edwin Thomas), and longtime pal Reggie Turner (Colin Firth, wearing an awkward mustache). This trio forms a cogent support system as Wilde repeatedly moans about his lost opportunities, writer’s block, and the occasional spiritual insight. (“I am my own Judas,” he says, contemplating the discovery of faith during his jail time.) Set across beaches and lonely cafés, the movie foregrounds Wilde’s insights about his faded stardom and disdain for the culture that exiled him. “The natural habitat of the hypocrite is England,” he sighs, recalling a world that embraced his exuberance before rejecting it for good.
There’s plenty to appreciate in Wilde’s struggle, thanks in large part to Everett’s investment in the role, but he falls short of giving the surrounding movie the same elevated intensity. Unfolding in the format of a melodrama, “The Happy Prince” suffers from murky lighting schemes and peculiar transitions, suggesting that Everett’s first time as a director found him uncertain how to apply his theatrical instincts to a different medium. The result is more “Masterpiece Theater” than movie.
Beyond that, “The Happy Prince” takes Wilde’s stature for granted, and makes hardly any reference to his best-known works. Instead, they hover around him with a phantom-like air, requiring audiences to do the extra legwork. Onstage, it’s easy to see how the melancholy air might resonate without additional context. Here, the movie falls into a grating pattern of men chatting in somber tones about old times. Diehard Wilde fans will find some intriguing observations lurking in this snapshot of the writer’s final moments — his capacity as orator, wonderfully realized by Everett, explains much about his prose — but redundancy sets in.
Of course, that’s the whole point: “The Happy Prince” is about a man trapped in limbo between the world behind him and new possibilities he can never realize. “We are lost in our own world,” he says, an astute observation for this pioneering figure of gay culture who was forced to hover on the outskirts of Victorian ideals. He’s a strikingly tragic creature, but “The Happy Prince” struggles to say much more about that conundrum, leaving one to contemplate the potential had Wilde emerged from retirement to fill in the blanks.
Grade: C+
“The Happy Prince” premiered in the Premieres section at the Sundance Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.
Source: IndieWire film
January 21, 2018
Natalie Portman Says She Experienced ‘Sexual Terrorism’ as a 13-Year-Old in Hollywood — Watch
Natalie Portman has her own #MeToo story. Speaking at yesterday’s Women’s March, the Oscar winner said that she experienced “sexual terrorism” when she was 13 years old and that the first fan letter she ever received was a “rape fantasy” from a man.
Portman came to attention at a young age, beginning with her role in “Léon: The Professional” and continuing with the “Star Wars” prequel trilogy. “A countdown was started on my local radio show to my 18th birthday — euphemistically the date that I would be legal to sleep with,” she said onstage yesterday. “Movie reviewers talked about my budding breasts in reviews. I understood very quickly, even as a 13-year-old, that if I were to express myself sexually I would feel unsafe and that men would feel entitled to discuss and objectify my body to my great discomfort.”
“At 13 years old, the message from our culture was clear to me. I felt the need to cover my body and to inhibit my expression and my work in order to send my own message to the world that I’m someone worthy of safety and respect,” she added. “The response to my expression, from small comments about my body to more threatening deliberate statements, served to control my behavior through an environment of sexual terrorism.”
Watch her full comments below.
Natalie Portman said experiencing "sexual terrorism" at the age of 13 made her feel the need to cover her body and inhibit expression while addressing thousands in LA gathered for the Women's March https://t.co/LjDJxrz1DV pic.twitter.com/X9Ee9dZUBM
— CNN (@CNN) January 21, 2018
Source: IndieWire film
January 21, 2018
Scarlett Johansson Calls Out James Franco at the Women’s March: ‘I Want My Pin Back’
Scarlett Johansson was among the many actresses to speak at yesterday’s Women’s March, but few were as pointed in their remarks as the “Avengers” star. Addressing a crowd in Los Angeles, Johansson made a comment about men abusing their positions of power that was widely speculated — and later confirmed — to have been directed toward James Franco. Watch below.
“My mind baffles: How could a person publicly stand by an organization that helps to provide support for victims of sexual assault while privately preying on people who have no power?” she asked before adding, “I want my pin back, by the way.”
“How is it okay for someone in a position of power to use that power to take advantage of someone in a lesser position? Just because you can, does that ever make it okay?”
According to the Los Angeles Times, Johansson’s rep confirmed that the remark was “meant for and referring to Franco.”
Ending her speech, Johansson said, “No more pandering. No more feeling guilty about hurting someone’s feelings when something doesn’t feel right for me. I have made a promise to myself to be responsible to myself, that in order to trust my instincts I must first respect them.”
Source: IndieWire film
January 19, 2018
Frontline Cities – 2018 SXSW Programming Trends
Each year, different trends emerge from SXSW programming and act as identifiers for where we’re at and where we’re headed. From the 12 significant trends identified by the SXSW Programming Team for the 2018 event, Frontline Cities explores how cities are evolving and uniting to confront issues like climate change, cybersecurity, immigration, and extremism. Get to know this trend and related-SXSW sessions below that we think will dominate discussions this March.
Frontline Cities Trend
Among SXSW 2018 sessions related to the Frontline Cities Trend, hear from Buddy Dyer Mayor of the City of Orlando, Nathan Sales of the US Department of State, Andy Berke Mayor of Chattanooga, and others during Local Leadership in the Wake of Terror as they discuss how to minimize the short-and long-term impact of terrorism, from reducing hate crimes, fear, and misinformation through the words and actions of local leaders. Delve into how cities are confronting racial inequity in the Government Track session America’s Mayors: Fighting for Racial Equity and learn how cities and advocates are seeking to define – and redefine – what it means to be a sanctuary city during the Cities Summit session Redefining Sanctuary Cities.
According to SXSW Cities Summit Programmer Julie Yost, “In the past year, we’ve seen cities in the US and abroad taking matters into their own hands. These sessions explore the evolving role of cities as new leaders on a variety of issues including immigration, digital equity, climate change, government transparency and more. Beyond government, we’re seeing new generations of activists, artists, technologists, and designers stepping up to solve problems at the local level, and we’re honored to include many of these inspiring voices in our inaugural Cities Summit.
Hear from mayors, directors, researchers, and activists on how cities can overcome partisan politics and revolutionize their role in addressing systemic problems. Stay tuned as we continue to announce more sessions through March. But for now, be sure to add these sessions to your SXSW 2018 schedule.
Frontline Cities Session Highlights
- Local Leadership in the Wake of Terror
- America’s Mayors: Fighting for Racial Equity
- New Localism: Reimagining Power in a Populist Age
- Redefining Sanctuary Cities
- Sensemaking for Cities: Conflict and Complexity
Join Us for SXSW 2018
The SXSW Conference includes 24 programming tracks divided amongst Interactive, Film, Music, and Convergence. Each March, some of the world’s most creative minds come together in Austin, Texas to discover, learn, network, brainstorm and collaborate.
Explore new opportunities during 10 days of sessions, screenings, showcases, exhibitions, networking, and beyond from March 9-18 at SXSW 2018. Save big when you register to attend before Friday, February 9.
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Teaser Photo by Nicole Burton
The post Frontline Cities – 2018 SXSW Programming Trends appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film