Reverend Billy Goes to Main Street: Free Speech, Trespassing, and Activist Documentary Film
IF 0.1
3区 艺术学
0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION
Karen E. Whedbee
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Abstract
©2019 by the board of trustees of the university of illinois on september 3, 2016, amy goodman (anchor and reporter for Democracy Now!) was the only reporter on site covering a protest action near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota. Native American protesters were attempting to stop bulldozers that were constructing the Bakken oil pipeline through privately owned ranch land. The protesters alleged that the land contained ancient cairns, sacred stone prayer rings, and burial markers. They also argued that a leak or spill in the pipeline would send oil into the tribe’s main source of drinking water. When the protesters broke through a fence along a highway and attempted to stop construction, security personnel from the oil company physically assaulted them with pepper spray and attack dogs. Goodman and her camera crew followed the protesters across the fence line to record the conflict. Her report quickly went viral on Facebook (with over thirteen million views). It was also rebroadcast by CNN, CBS, MSNBC, and numerous international media outlets. Five days later, on September 8, an arrest warrant was issued against Goodman. Although she had not been notified that she was trespassing at the time of the original event, she was belatedly charged with criminal trespass and with riot. Goodman is not alone among journalists or filmmakers who have found themselves pulled across property lines in pursuit of a story. In recent years, activist documentary filmmakers have become especially vulnerable to charges of trespass. For example, in February 2009, Chad Stevens was charged with criminal trespass while attempting to film an environmental protest action about mountaintop removal at a coal mine in Marsh Creek, West Virginia (Jones). In September 2009, Andy Bichlbaum was arrested and charged with trespassing when he and twenty-one “survivaballs” gathered on New York City’s East River and announced they were going to invade the United Nations as part of a climate change protest stunt for their film The Yes Men Are Revolting (2014) (Villarreal). On October 11, 2016, filmmaker Deia Schlosberg was arrested in Walhalla, North Dakota, while documenting an act of civil disobedience committed by protesters at TransCanada’s Keystone Pipeline (Visser). On that same day, Lindsey Grayzel and Carl Davis were arrested for filming the activities of a climate activist who was attempting to shut down a pipeline near Burlington, Washington (Levin). The vulnerability of activist documentary filmmakers to the charge of trespass is significant. One of the defining traits of the genre is that it functions as a platform for exposing social problems and expressing perspectives that would otherwise be ignored by mainstream media. Giving priority to civic education and social justice over profit and popularity, the Reverend Billy Goes to Main Street: Free Speech, Trespassing, and Activist Documentary Film
比利牧师走上大街:言论自由、非法侵入和活动家纪录片
©2019伊利诺伊大学董事会于2016年9月3日发布,艾米·古德曼(《立即民主》主播兼记者)是现场唯一报道北达科他州Standing Rock Sioux保留地附近抗议活动的记者。美国原住民抗议者试图阻止推土机通过私人牧场修建巴肯输油管道。抗议者声称,这块土地上有古老的石堆、神圣的石头祈祷环和埋葬标记。他们还认为,管道的泄漏或泄漏会将石油输送到部落的主要饮用水来源。当抗议者冲破高速公路沿线的围栏并试图停止施工时,石油公司的安保人员用胡椒喷雾和攻击犬对他们进行了人身攻击。古德曼和她的摄制组跟随抗议者穿过围栏线,记录下这场冲突。她的报告很快在脸书上疯传(浏览量超过1300万)。美国有线电视新闻网、哥伦比亚广播公司、微软全国广播公司和许多国际媒体也对其进行了重播。五天后的9月8日,古德曼被签发了逮捕令。尽管在最初的事件发生时,她没有接到非法侵入的通知,但她后来被指控犯有非法侵入罪和暴乱罪。古德曼并不是唯一一个在记者或电影制作人中发现自己为了追求一个故事而被拉过底线的人。近年来,激进的纪录片制作人变得特别容易受到非法侵入的指控。例如,2009年2月,查德·史蒂文斯(Chad Stevens)在试图拍摄一场关于西弗吉尼亚州马什溪(Marsh Creek)一座煤矿山顶拆除的环境抗议活动时,被指控犯有非法侵入罪(Jones)。2009年9月,Andy Bichlbaum和21名“幸存者”聚集在纽约市东河,并宣布他们将入侵联合国,这是他们的电影《唯命是从的人在起义》(2014)(比利亚雷亚尔)的气候变化抗议噱头的一部分,他被捕并被控非法侵入。2016年10月11日,电影制作人Deia Schlosberg在北达科他州的Walhalla被捕,当时她正在记录抗议者在TransCanada的Keystone Pipeline(Visser)犯下的公民抗命行为。同一天,林赛·格雷泽尔和卡尔·戴维斯因拍摄一名气候活动家的活动而被捕,该活动家试图关闭华盛顿州伯灵顿附近的一条管道(莱文)。激进纪录片制作人容易受到非法侵入的指控,这一点非常明显。这一类型的一个决定性特征是,它是一个揭露社会问题和表达观点的平台,否则主流媒体会忽视这些观点。将公民教育和社会正义置于利润和人气之上,《比利牧师走上大街:言论自由、非法侵入和活动家纪录片》
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期刊介绍:
The Journal of Film and Video, an internationally respected forum, focuses on scholarship in the fields of film and video production, history, theory, criticism, and aesthetics. Article features include film and related media, problems of education in these fields, and the function of film and video in society. The Journal does not ascribe to any specific method but expects articles to shed light on the views and teaching of the production and study of film and video.