All Posts Tagged With: "aufderheide"

A Fair Use Win

It’s been a while since I posted about fair use. But the , the Washington College of Law and others who have joined the fray, like Stanford’s Fair Use project, continue to fight the good fight. From the Center’s newsletter:

Chicago filmmaker Floyd Webb wanted to make a movie about a colorful martial arts figure, who called himself Counte Dante (http://johnkeehan.blogspot.com/). The grandmaster of the Black Dragon Fighting Society, William V. Aguiar III, tried to stop him by blocking his access to images of Counte Dante and material from his training video. But Webb had attended an Independent Feature Project panel discussion of the Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use. (IFP was a signatory and co-author of the document, which was facilitated by the Center and the Washington College of Law.) Read the whole article>>

Got a great short that employs fair use? Submit to the Center’s contest! In partnership with the University Film & Video Association, there are cash prizes for student and faculty entries. Deadline is May 1.

Aufderheide on NPR

Thanks to Amy King for pointing to an appearance by my friend and mentor Pat Aufderheide on The Kojo Nnamdi Show talking about documentary. The segment is called The Future of Documentary Film and unfortunately is guest hosted by Matthew Felling, who thinks that Michael Moore is not a documentary filmmaker and chooses to argue the point with Pat. But, she’s a pro and her understanding of the history of docs shines through his amateur, Republican viewpoint. I wish that she had gotten to talk more about the future of docs, as she started talking about what she called personal audiences, in describing new modes of distribution, but had to deal with a doc neophyte and time got cut short. Hear Pat and join the fan club!