Updates from August, 2022 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 17:31 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

    The Quebec election campaign hasn’t started officially, but already promises are being made and demands made. Mayor Plante wants a new fiscal deal from the province because cities are handling more responsibilities.

     
    • Kate 09:12 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

      Concordia will be enlarging the capacity of its film school to meet demand for skilled technicians in the industry. But so much of that demand here depends on tax breaks for producers that can change as governments rise and fall and the economy prospers or withers. And educating people to be film editors as the environment collapses may look like insanity in retrospect – if we even get to have a retrospect.

       
      • Phil M 14:48 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Seriously? No more movies because climate change? I can’t deal with this site anymore.

      • DeWolf 15:35 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        I have to admit, this also struck me as a rather millenarian way of looking at things.

      • Kate 16:48 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Explain how you characterize millenarian, DeWolf?

      • DeWolf 18:09 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        In the sense of apocalyptic, but I may not have used the word accurately, because millenarian usually involves a “repent and ye shall be saved” aspect.

      • Kate 18:59 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Maybe it was a silly impulse to write what I did, but the environmental situation is so bad that if I were younger I’d feel compelled to go into a field of study connected with it, even if it weren’t my personal passion. It would feel incredibly decadent and self‑indulgent at this point to study film theory while the world burns.

      • Blork 19:04 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        I read it as snark.

      • Spi 20:38 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Kate it’s never too late for you to dedicate the rest of your life to saving the environment.

      • MarcG 20:52 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Pretty much everything that humans do is a useless wank on this sinking ship. At least the film industry is taking Covid seriously? https://twitter.com/DrKateTO/status/1559142174352199683

      • Louis P 21:06 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        (Full disclosure: I’m a graduate of the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema and also occasionally teach there.) That’s not an entirely irrational take on the enlargement of the film school. But if you want to seize the attention of citizens living in a media-saturated environment in order to raise awareness and educate, you better have people who have mastered editing, cinematography and storytelling on your payroll. I should also add that film schools have really changed over the last few decades. The study of the great works and great auteurs of film history is now peripheral to what’s being taught. Students are introduced to a wide range of audiovisual productions, including documentary, essay films, and all sorts of contents tailored for various online platforms. Contemporary film theory (which, as an historian, I’m not an especially big fan…) also engages with essential political issues, such as identity, representation, and power relations. In other words, it’s not just about distracting the populace.

      • nau 21:50 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Here the only real problem with the framing is that it wouldn’t be false to end many posts with a variation on “but what does this really matter in relation to how we’re degrading the environment”, so it’s perhaps a bit unfair to burden only this particular topic with that unfortunate reality.

      • Blork 22:17 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Following up on Louis P’s excellent comment above, what jumped out for me was the idea of Concordia’s FFA being turned into a technical school. You don’t need a BFA to do “skilled labour.” That’s what technical schools like Mel’s are for (where you can get that training a lot faster and more directly).

        Maybe I’m old fashioned, but when I was going through the BFA program at Concordia (photography), the idea that we were being “trained” for technical or commercial work just wasn’t there. The focus was on the “fine arts” aspects, which included a lot of agonizing over history and theory and interpretation and all that.

        The expectation was that a few of us would go into journalism or documentary photography, fewer still would spend the rest of their lives living off arts grants and teaching (these would be considered the most successful, purely speaking), and the rest would dodder off into various jobs where a certain amount of visual literacy was an advantage. Going into commercial photography was seen as the ultimate sellout, and a waste of a good fine arts degree.

      • DisgruntledGoat 02:38 on 2022-08-16 Permalink

        Best thing we can do for our carbon footprint is not have kids, Kate.

      • Kate 08:33 on 2022-08-16 Permalink

        No kids here, Goat. No kids, no car, public transit all my life. I know there are still things I could do, like going vegan, but I’ve tried being vegetarian and found it ultimately depressing.

        Interesting discussion, especially the arbitrary distinction between being trained in fine arts as self‑expression at university vs. being taught technique in order to find work as a skilled technician at CEGEP.

        Louis P: How many of the graduates go into PR work where they put their skills to use selling whatever it is their company or their customer is selling? Yes, the environmental movement (is that what it is?) needs communicators. Most communicators are not working in that area. They can’t afford to. They get work communicating what the customer wants to communicate. We can’t all live doing the right thing by our consciences.

      • denpanosekai 10:24 on 2022-08-16 Permalink

        If you want to freak out about something, how about private jets. You could dedicate your whole life to the environment and it would still be offset by some dude flying 30 minutes from A to B by himself.

      • dhomas 11:48 on 2022-08-16 Permalink

        I was reading up on Drake doing just that:
        https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jul/29/drake-defends-short-private-jet-flights
        He flies, in a private jet (“Air Drake”), from Toronto to Hamilton (!!!). That’s like an hour drive. He produces more carbon emissions in 15 minutes than most of us produce in a whole year. What a douche. And he’s not alone. We should all do our best to reduce our effects on the environment, but part of that should be to get our governments to create regulations to make such wasteful and harmful forms of travel illegal.

      • EmilyG 12:41 on 2022-08-16 Permalink

      • Louis P 15:45 on 2022-08-16 Permalink

        I don’t have any figures about grad placement. But I can testify to the fact that many if not most of the film students that I’m teaching to are more passionate about issues like social justice and global warming than Scorsese, Coppola or Tarantino… But I’m not naive: I know that most of them will never get the opportunity to use their skills to fight for these essential causes. Still, there’s a lot of emphasis on analysis, critical thinking, and even activism in university film programs, which are not the same as tech schools. When these programs work as they should, they produce more than competent technicians: they produce enlightened citizens equipped to tackle the big issues.

    • Kate 09:07 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

      Le Devoir looks at various views of the city taken with an infrared camera – largely showing how cars and paving radiate heat.

       
      • Ephraim 13:53 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        I love tree covered streets… but it only works if Hydro starts putting their lines underground or in the backyards.

      • DeWolf 15:32 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        You can still have a thick canopy of trees even with hydro lines. Check out these streets:

        https://goo.gl/maps/jCLWZbzn6MjpPhaD6
        https://goo.gl/maps/AGWd1yjkF6pwaBmq8

        The Plateau has been doing a particularly good job of adding greenery to streets that were completely barren, like Napoleon and Marie-Anne just east of St-Urbain. It makes a huge difference in terms of pedestrian comfort (not to mention fighting the urban heat island effect) and it’s a shame many other boroughs haven’t been as aggressive about urban greening. I’m thinking in particular of the more suburban parts of NDG which have some really awful streets like Somerled and Fielding that have vast expanses of concrete and asphalt without a tree or shrub in sight.

      • mare 22:01 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Despite Hydro lines, my street has ample tree cover. Once in a while a branch breaks off and a car gets damaged a bit but that’s the price of doing business. (I think the city will pay for the damage, even though HydroQuebec does the pruning.)

        I’d love to have buried hydro lines, but the downside of that is it will make a patchwork of the street or sidewalk surface, because there are so many renovations going on where the hydro entry is changed or moved.

        Also, LOL at DeWolf’s Google Map Hong Kong links. At least we know that Montreal’s streets aren’t censored (yet).

    • Kate 08:52 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

      An American flight attendant was sacked from her job for posting an Aislin cartoon on her Facebook page. Now she’s challenging the dismissal in court. Aislin says it’s the single most popular cartoon he’s done.

       
      • Orr 22:42 on 2022-08-15 Permalink

        Nice that this made his cartoon so popular. Too bad facebook and twitter don’t pay creators like Aislin for their work based on the number of views content receives, views which definitely increase facebook and twitter’s ad revenues.
        The comments on the Gazette story are something else. I do not understand what value Gazette/Postmedia gets by letting the rabid dogs of hate run wild on their comment section.

    • Kate 08:42 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

      Elections Quebec is planning the October election with an eighth wave of Covid impending. The article explains how its remote voting kits will differ from voting by mail.

      The Gazette has an Allison Hanes piece about how this election will be important for anglos although the notion that the “community” has any influence or importance is not convincing.

       
      • Kate 07:59 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

        A staffing shortage means the paratransit system for disabled people is temporarily barring extra passengers, but in some cases that means vulnerable people can’t be accompanied by their caregivers. There are also fewer vehicles available generally.

         
      • Kate 07:53 on 2022-08-15 Permalink | Reply  

        André Lavallée, who served as mayor of Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie and started Bixi, has died age 70. His lengthy career in politics includes many other roles and positions in and around Montreal.

         
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