'Soul Food Junkies' Screens Saturday, June 26, at 3 p.m. CDT

'Soul Food Junkies' Screens Saturday, June 26, at 3 p.m. CDT

Award-winning filmmaker Byron Hurt created a documentary film journey to learn more about the African American cuisine known as soul food. Here’s a sample menu: fried chicken, black-eyed peas, candied yams, and banana pudding for dessert. What’s not to love? The flavors are an enticing blend of West African and Deep American Southern cuisines.

Hurt’s resulting work, “Soul Food Junkies,” is a rich exploration of history, humor, and stories about this cuisine’s soul-warming and cultural benefits as well as possible health consequences.

The Circular Economy: Part 1

The Circular Economy: Part 1

Q: How has the past year—the pandemic year—affected your work and the work of those you partner with?

A: Growers and food companies that had been selling to restaurants had to go more to a retail model or not exist. After the lockdown began and Illinois was put under a shelter-in-place order, Plant Chicago helped farmers pivot toward online sales. And, despite the challenges, we re-launched the farmers market in Davis Square Park, opened our year-round marketplace, offered subsidized local food boxes, piloted a shared-use indoor victory garden, and began accepting food scraps for composting from neighbors. We store the food scraps on site for Urban Canopy to haul away. We’re just now transitioning back into working in person, and we interact with the public a lot, so we’re still masking and probably will be for a while.

Join the Circular Economy: COMPOST

Join the Circular Economy: COMPOST

Keeping food waste out of landfills via composting is a perfect example of how the circular economy can work. Following is a list of Chicagoland composting resources recommended by Jonathan Pereira of Plant Chicago. For those outside of Illinois, search for similar resources in your area to get involved.

Filmmaker Q&A with Pamela Tanner Boll of 'To Which We Belong'

Filmmaker Q&A with Pamela Tanner Boll of 'To Which We Belong'

Q: Tell me about the film’s title.

A: It comes from a quote by Aldo Leopold (1887-1948)—a revered environmentalist of the past century. He said, "We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect." In other words, land is something we can’t live without. Humans don’t live in a vacuum. We depend as much on the health of the ants and the bees and the dung beetles and the soil as we do on the larger flora and fauna.

14 Honorable Mention Winning Youth Films Will Screen April 24

14 Honorable Mention Winning Youth Films Will Screen April 24

See an environmental superhero fly through the sky, a time-traveling climate change reporter, and animals saved from Western wildfires.

As part of the Earth Day Mini Film Fest 2021, the One Earth Young Filmmakers Contest will feature 14 Honorable Mention short films in two one-hour events on Saturday, April 24, at 3 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Online discussion with young filmmakers from California to Texas to New York will be facilitated by Young Filmmakers Contest Founding Director Sue Crothers.

Filmmaker Q&A with Trish Dolman + Betsy Carson, Producers of ‘The New Corporation'

Filmmaker Q&A with Trish Dolman + Betsy Carson, Producers of ‘The New Corporation'

Q: What are the most important "action items" you hope people take away from your film?

Betsy: I hope that people discuss with their families, their friends, and their coworkers how they can disentangle their lives from corporate values. That constant growth is not a sign of success but a sign of greed. And that joining groups that work on environmental change, democratic change, poverty and inequality issues, or other issues that work toward a more equal society is worth doing. That it's rewarding to participate in change in many ways.