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Street Harassment Film Nominated for Best Documentary

June 8, 2011 By HKearl

I just got word from Tiye Rose Hood that her documentary Objectified received a nomination for best documentary in Academy of Art’s 2011 Epidemic Film Festival in San Francisco. Congratulations, Tiye!

For those of you who’ve seen the documentary before via this site or another, this is an updated version of the film and the version entered in the Film Festival.

Objectified. from Tiye Rose Hood on Vimeo.

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: Academy of Art, documentary, Epidemic Film Festival, objectified, san francisco, street harassment, Tiye Rose Hood

Viewing Street Harassment

December 8, 2009 By HKearl

Hearing women talk about their street harassment experiences and how it makes them feel and watching street harassment in action is powerful. It brings faces and voices to the problem. It shows what it looks like.

Check out a range of documentaries, news clips, and PSA-type videos on street harassment and see what this issue is all about.

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: documentary, street harassment

Street Harassment Event in Asheville, NC

April 5, 2009 By HKearl

heybabyartexhibitashevillencAre you in North Carolina? If so, on April 10, you can check out this free street harassment event in Asheville called “Hey Baby!: Resisting Sexual Harassment in Public Spaces, One Bloque at a Time.”

“A bunch of people I know were talking about sexual harassment in our neighborhood, especially downtown and in West Asheville,” Erin Johnson, one of the organizers  said. “We were frustrated by how we felt unsafe, even in groups of people. So we thought, ‘What are some ways that we can take the frustration and anger and make something productive?’”

But the art included in the event that will take place at Asheville BookWorks on April 10 isn’t meant to be hung on a gallery wall; it’s designed to be taken to the streets and be used as tools to prevent, resist or educate.

She views this exhibit as “the first step, raising awareness, and doing it through art,” she said.

For the event, Johnson is making magnetic bumper stickers that respond to particular instances of sexual harassment that she’s experienced riding her bike around downtown Asheville, she said. The magnets display such phrases as “You sexually harassed me,” which can be placed on a vehicle but can be removed by the offending occupant.

That way, “they have to interact with (the magnet) and have to think about it,” she said.

The organizers will be accepting submissions until Wednesday.

Other pieces already accepted include posters with radical cheerleading chants, bike flags and business cards with instructions for appropriate interaction, Johnson said.

The event will also include a viewing of a documentary as well as workshops about what to do if you are sexually harassed and ways to start a conversation about the issue, she said.”

I wish I could attend, it sounds like it will be a great event.

Where: Asheville BookWorks, 428 1/2 Haywood Road. When: 7-10 p.m. April 10. For more: To submit works, contact Erin Johnson at ejohnson00@gmail.com or drop work off at BookWorks 1-4 p.m. by April 8. For more information, call 255-8444 or visit www.AshevilleBookWorks.com.

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Filed Under: Administrator, street harassment Tagged With: asheville, Asheville BookWorks, bike flags, business cards, catcalling, documentary, north carolina, radical cheerleading chants, sexual harassment in public places, street harassment

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