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Recent Tweets
- RT @DeepakHomeBase: Reveal's beautiful recap of our incredible evening with Arianna and Agapi: http://t.co/0xZqlRiN 15 hours ago
- RT @punkboyinsf: I just uploaded a video to Studio Occupy on @studioCG. http://t.co/vAJuJVtg 16 hours ago
- @robertshutter Thanks for the retweet! 21 hours ago
- RT @ariannahuff: Abundance: A reminder of the need to focus on our surpluses and not just our shortages. http://t.co/REmi1eIP 21 hours ago
- Still time to enter @XPRIZE Exploration video contest: Why do U explore? http://t.co/FuL1tGfD #whyexplore #filmmakers @StdntFilmmakers February 21, 2012
Tell X PRIZE “Why YOU Explore” By Feb 15 & Get a Jump on the Competition
And an exclusive X PRIZE t-shirt!
We anticipate many entries for the X PRIZE Exploration Video Contest to arrive near the final deadline of April 10, 2012. But if you submit your entry on or before February 15, you’ll be eligible for early selection as one of the four overall contest finalists, before the contest even ends! Also, the next ten submissions that get accepted into the contest by February 15 will receive a limited edition X PRIZE t-shirt.
Remember, it’s not about high-end cameras or high production budgets: it’s about your personal exploration as told in a short video. X PRIZE is looking for heart felt answers to the question “Why do YOU explore?”
The grand prize is a $10,000 National Geographic expedition of your choosing. Plus three awesome prizes for finalists.
Act now while the numbers are in your favor, tell X PRIZE why YOU explore. Check www.iprizeexploration.org for contest details.
Thanks and good luck!
For inspiration check out Ryan Van Duzer’s entry “Live. Bike. Explore”:
Ladies, Gentlemen, and Explorers of All Ages…
Guest Blogger Erika Wagner, Senior Director, Exploration Prize Development at X PRIZE:
This morning, I found my 18-month-old dancing on the dining room table. I had turned my back for just a moment to chase his 3-year-old sister around the house on a mock zoological expedition, when he scaled my chair, climbed up onto the table, and proceeded to celebrate.
Why do we explore? Parenthood has taught me that the urge to push frontiers is written into the most basic levels of our DNA. From the moment they can roll over, kids are off in quest of new adventures, new information, and new challenges. As they become more agile, every couch is to be scaled; every puddle is to be forded. In the oft-quoted words of British mountaineer George Mallory, they explore simply “because it’s there.”
I would love to invite all of our young filmmakers out there to grab a camera and share your explorations.* What takes you to the edge of everything familiar and then one step further?
What do you hope to learn, or do, or see there?
* Yes, it’s true, you have to be 18 to enter our contest. Younger filmmakers must enlist an adult to help with their entries, and the adult will receive any prizes on their behalf. But collaborations are welcome!
Stopping SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act)
This week is crucial to stopping SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) from being passed. If it becomes law, SOPA will institute government censorship of the Internet. And it will make it nearly impossible for sites which rely on User Generated Content (such as CitizenGlobal, Vimeo, Etsy, and Flickr) as part of their business model to survive. On Thursday (December 15) the bill will be brought before the full Judiciary Committee for a vote and must be stopped. The situation is so serious that Wikipedia is considering blacking out its entire encyclopedia to oppose the pending legislation. Please take action now to help prevent SOPA from becoming law.
Please visit the StopAmericanCensorship.org website and the EFF’s Aniti-SOPA Toolkit to learn more and to take action to stop this potentially disastrous legislation from becoming law.
Here are a few things to do:
- Help get the word out: Post your opposition on Facebook, Twitter (hashtag=SOPA) & your blog.
- Contact your congressperson: Made easy here.
- If you work on the Internet, upload your photo here to show your opposition (takes 2 minutes).
SOPA: The End of the Open Internet Era?
Last night, Steven Colbert weighed in on the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and brought discussion of this pending legislation to the mainstream. If passed, SOPA would be a death blow to the open Internet era, and could potentially wipe out start-ups which harness the power of user-generated content (such as CitizenGlobal). SOPA would put in place governmental controls and censorship of the Internet akin to those already in place in China, North Korea and Iran. While China and Iran censor the Internet for political reasons, the United States would do so solely to protect corporate interests. The law would empower infringement-claiming content owners with the ability cut off the advertising revenue sources of a website, with little due process.
The figure of claimed corporate losses due to online piracy currently stands at $200-250 billion, though such is merely a number being tossed around to justify the need for SOPA. As Steven Colbert pointed out, this number is completely bogus. While no one is in love with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), it provides an essential Safe Harbor and allows companies like YouTube, Flickr, Twitter, Itsy, Vimeo and CitizenGlobal to exist. Without it, these companies could be held legally responsible for every bit of infringing content uploaded by their users. While we at CitizenGlobal oppose piracy and take great care to block and remove infringing content from our site, it is simply impossible to remove every bit of it, all of the time. SOPA would effectively overturn the DMCA, leaving us (along with many other companies) with massive lawsuits we could not afford to litigate.
One million Americans have emailed Congress in opposition to SOPA; countless companies and organizations including EFF, ACLU, and over 100 intellectual property law professors are actively opposing the bill; and tech giants like Facebook, Google, Twitter, eBay, Yahoo, AOL, Mozilla, Zynga and LinkedIn have sent their formal opposition in a joint letter. Please join us all in opposition to censorship and control and help promote the continuation of a free and open Internet.
Watch Steven Colbert discuss SOPA and host a debate between Danny Goldberg & Jonathan Zittrain on the topic.
Happy Thanksgiving and Thank You!
StudioOccupy enables democracy in action, and we are very proud to be of service to OWS’s deep, grassroots desire to express and articulate new ideas. We imagine StudioOccupy as a global demonstration of passionate co-creativity. The folks who are showing up are incredible, to do this work with conscious people is a privilege, and here’s a little bit of co-creativity we put together today with Deepak Chopra:
It features our OccupyThanksgiving initiative, and music by Makana, the young musician from Hawaii who sang We Are The Many, the quickly-becoming-a-classic Occupy folksong, to Obama and other world leaders in Hawaii last week. Distribute widely!
Steven Starr
CG at the Green Festival & Feliz Dia De Los Muertos!
This past weekend, Concepcion Lara (CG’s consultant for CitizenGlobal Espanol!) spoke on the panel “Women, Media and Power: Stories from Emerging Voices” at the Green Festival. The panel was hosted by Lisa Ling of OWN (Oprah Winfrey Network), and the other panelists included Susan Cartsonis, producer and WIF Foundation chair; Jodie Evans of the Women’s Media Center; and Sharon Lawrence, the Actress and WIF Foundation Advisory Council Member.
In addition to speaking on the panel, Concepcion promoted CG’s Univision Muestranos Tu Halloween! production and took videos of children in costume and of preparations being readied for the Day of the Dead holiday, which is today. Check out the fun, scary, and lovely Halloween and Day of the Dead videos.
Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers was also at the Green Festival and stopped to admire a Day of the Dead tribute to Cesar Chavez. Watch it here:
Feliz Dia De Los Muertos!



