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SundialFereshteh Toosi is a Miami-based interdisciplinary artist who recently launched an interactive audio project called “Voice Memos for the Future.” The project discusses Miami residents' shared stories and thoughts about the future in South Florida. They tell us how nature has inspired their life’s work.
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"The Princess Diaries" heartthrob, Robert Schwartzman, is an actor, musician and filmmaker. He’ll be at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival this weekend presenting four films.
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he second annual Subculture Film Festival is tightening its lens on tri-county filmmakers to expand the community. Stories about art, immigration issues, and film creativity serve as the centerpiece for the more than 69 mixed-genre films, from experimental docs to short docs.
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Monica Sorelle is a Haitian-American filmmaker from Miami. Her first feature film, Mountains, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival. It follows a construction worker whose job is to demolish homes in his own neighborhood, Little Haiti.
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“As U.S. Latinos continue to grow, the gap between their economic importance and their absence from the entertainment industry is leaving profitable opportunities on the table," according to nonprofit Latino Donor Collaborative, who unveil their annual report at a conference in Miami Beach this week.
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Two South Florida media companies are betting on a massive LED screen wall to help return Miami to its film production glory days.
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America's largest festival showcasing untold Black stories and films by people of African descent returns this week, with premieres including that of Jamie Foxx's buzzy new Netflix film. Its founder tells WLRN the festival levels the playing field in an industry that lacks support for Black talent and stories.
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In a lifetime of amazing plot twists, Judy Blume is enjoying another at age 85. For the first time, one of her books has been adapted into a major Hollywood film.
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'They're human stories.' Amid political turmoil, South Florida LGBTQ+ film festival hits a milestoneOUTshine Film Festival celebrates its 25th anniversary at a time when LGBTQ+ rights are under unprecedented attack nationwide.
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A Florida teenager has documented how it feels to be young and transgender for a film set to debut at a festival as transgender people around the world celebrate visibility and lawmakers across the country look to restrict their rights and care.
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Filmmaker Rodney Ascher join WLRN's Carlos Frías to discuss his documentary film "A Glitch in The Matrix." The film explores the simulation theory from the perspective of experts and "eyewitnesses" who fear—or hope—that we world we're living in is not actually real.