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This season on POV…

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

POV’s Executive Director Simon Kilmurry announced their extraordinary lineup of films for 2010. Among them are many great films that we have had the honor to work with including former Working Films’ Park Scholar Jeremy Levine’s Good Fortune and more recently POV’s Adoption Stories series with Wo Ai Ni (I Love You) Mommy, Off and Running, and In The Matter of Cha Jung Hee.

Only a few weeks ago we hosted a strategy summit in partnership with POV for the Adoption Stories series which will air in late August/early September. At the strategy meeting, we brought together the filmmakers and POV team with non-profit organizations that work on adoption issues on many different levels every day. During the two day meeting, we discussed the multiple layers and complexities of adoption and identified overarching themes in the films such as identity, race, multiculturalism and the concept of family. Their diverse perspectives gave us insight to the best ways to approach an adoption awareness campaign around the broadcast and the films. We’re really excited about the results of the meeting and can’t wait to see the campaign develop leading up to the first film of the series, Wo Ai Ni (I Love You) Mommy on August 31st.

Powerful Trip to Tucson, AZ

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Often times we hear on the news about the hundreds of thousands of people crossing into the United States every year, but seldom do we stop to think that among them are young children… 9, 12, 14 years old risking their lives in the desert. On September 27 I was honored to spend the bulk of the day strategizing with incredible activists and organizers about how Children in No Man’s Land can enhance their work to protect the lives and rights of children and other immigrants crossing our southern border.

An experience the day before the Summit reawakened in me the need to get this story out to folks across the U.S. My colleague and I stopped by the offices of the Coalicion de Derechos Humanos,a leading advocacy group in Tucson AZ whose work aims to save lives, educate immigrants about their rights and change the policy that is putting them in danger. A wonderful volunteer, Isabel, helped us with some logistics for the meeting and showed us around the offices. The cramped quarters were filled with posters, fliers, banners, and research documents, evidence of all of the amazing work that these folks are doing. As we were on our way back out Isabel took us to a small closet where she showed us these crosses: one for each person that Derechos Humanos knows has died crossing the desert.

Crosses

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How Do Our Genes Affect Our Health? A new film in our portfolio explores this question just as a bill protecting our genetic information is signed into law.

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

I have long been intrigued by the question of to what degree our personalities and our health are affected by our genes versus our environment. Through reading and film I’ve learned more and more about how pollutants in our environment put as at risk for health problems, and simultaneously I have marveled at scientists’ capacity to unlock the human genome. Among other advances brought about through these new scientific understandings, we now have the tools to help us learn whether a certain gene might increase our risk of cancer or other diseases.

Because of my fascination with the role of our genes in shaping our lives and because of my own family history of cancer I was delighted when I found out that Working Films would be planning a summit meeting for the film In the Family. In this documentary, filmmaker Joanna Rudnick, age 31, faces an impossible decision: remove her breasts and ovaries or risk incredible odds of developing cancer. Armed with a genetic test result that leaves her vulnerable and confused, she balances dreams of having her own children with the unnerving reality that she is risking her life by holding on to her fertility. In the Family follows Joanna as she connects with other women trying to navigate the unpredictable world of predictive genetic testing.

I’ve worked closely with Joanna and the film’s co-producer Beth Iams in preparing for the summit meeting for the film. At this meeting we will bring together the leading organizations working to prevent breast cancer and raise awareness of the issues surrounding genetic testing for cancers and other diseases. A few weeks ago I picked up our office phone and on the other end heard Beth’s voice, full of excitement: “Anna, take a look at C-Span right now, the Senate is just about to pass GINA.” I hurried over to the television and sure enough the Senators were voting on the Genetic Information Non-discrimination Act.

Beth’s excitement was certainly warranted. One of the reasons that some folks choose not to take potentially life saving genetic tests, like the one taken by Joanna in the film, is that they are worried about the use of the information after the fact. They worry they will never get health insurance or will lose out on job opportunities if they have certain genetic mutations. GINA, which was signed into law On May 21st by President Bush, is landmark legislation designed to avoid those types of abuses. It will provide protections against discrimination based on an individual’s genetic information in health insurance coverage and employment settings.

One of the lead partners in a coalition working for the passage of GINA is our host for the summit meeting, the Genetic Alliance. We look forward to their participation in our strategy meeting and to finding out how In the Family can help raise awareness of the new rights afforded to people under GINA.