Category: What's New

Women In The Film Industry

02/24/10 | by Ethnic Embrace [mail] | Categories: What's New, Entertainment, What's to Know

Sent in by Jehmu Greene.

Without women the greatest moments in film this year would not have been possible. The Oscars are less than two weeks away, and "The Hurt Locker" director Kathryn Bigelow - doubly armed with directing awards from the Director's Guild and BAFTA (British Academy Awards) - is better positioned than any other woman in history to shatter the 81-year-old "Best Director" glass ceiling at the Oscars.
Watch and share this video with your friends, honoring Bigelow, Mo'Nique, Meryl Streep, and all the other incredible women who have been nominated for Oscars in 2010: http://bit.ly/oscarwmc
Join our campaign to support women in film, and we'll deliver a strong message to the Academy and Hollywood studio executives to ensure an even longer list of nominees next year. Celebrate women nominees for 2010 Academy Awards and support women in film: http://bit.ly/oscarwmc
Peace,
Jehmu, Rebekah, Leslie
& the WMC Team
Our work would not be possible without your support - and every dollar has a direct and powerful impact. Text WOMEN to 50555 to donate $10, or click here to donate online: https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/937/t/10343/shop/custom.jsp?donate_page_KEY=5719

Did you know how badly women are under-represented in Hollywood? http://bit.ly/oscarwmc In 2009:

1. DIRECTORS: Women directors lost ground, accounting for just 7 percent of directors on the 250 top-grossing movies -- a drop of 2 percent. That's the same number as in 1987
2. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: Women comprised only 17 percent of executive producers, and two-thirds of the movies had no female executive producers.
3. CINEMATOGRAPH ERS: Only 2 percent of the 250 films credited female cinematographers.
4. EDITORS: Editing was the technical area with the most women employed. Women accounted for 18 percent of all editors working on the top 250 films of 2009. However, 78 percent of those films had no women in the editing suite. In 2008, women accounted for 17 percent of editors on the top 250 films.
5. WRITERS: Only 8 percent of writers were female, and 86 percent of the films had no female writers credited.

Women deserve equal opportunity and recognition for their work. Click here to celebrate the women who have been nominated for 2010 Academy Awards and sign onto Women's Media Center campaign supporting women in film: http://bit.ly/oscarwmc

D's Song of the Moment

10/25/08 | by Ethnic Embrace [mail] | Categories: What's New, Music

M.I.A. Paper Planes


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