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Common Ground: Oregon’s Ocean screening events
July 26, 2005 – 6pm – Lincoln City, Oregon. The Driftwood Public Library is hosting a screening of Common Ground: Oregon’s Ocean. Q & A discussion to follow the screening. Free event. For more information, contact Ken Hobson, 541-996-1242
July 15, 2005 – 9pm Manzanita, Oregon. An outdoor screening of Common Ground takes place at the Barn theater at 8350 Old Nehalem Road, Neah-Kah-Nie, Oregon. For more information and directions contact Henry Stanley at 503-368-5786 or henry_indy@hotmail.com
April 26, 2005 – 6 - 9pm, Astoria, Oregon – Columbia River Maritime Museum
Green Fire Productions and Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition will host the Astoria screening of Common Ground: Oregon’s Ocean. A reception will start things off at 6pm, Common Ground will screen at 7pm with a Q&A discussion to follow. Tickets are a suggested $5 donation at the door. Contact Karen Meyer for more information: 541-486-4070 karen@greenfireproductions.org
March 31, 2005 - 6:30pm, Tillamook, Oregon – Oregon Dept. of Forestry Building
The Tillamook Estuaries Partnership will host a screening of Common Ground: Oregon’s Ocean followed by a panel and audience discussion. Contact the Tillamook Estuaries Partnership for more information (503) 322-2222 mtren@co.tillamook.or.us
January 18 & 19, 2005
Green Fire’s new release, Common Ground: Oregon's Ocean, a 28-minute documentary that explores Oregon’s marine environment, will premiere January 18 in Newport and January 19 in Portland. Read about the event.
March 2004
U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Coastal Zone Management releases “St. Croix East End Marine Park”, a 28-minute video program produced by Green Fire for education and outreach about protecting coral reefs and marine life through a new marine protected area in the Caribbean waters around St. Croix.
March 18-21, 2004
The premier Northwest event for environmental film, The Hazel Wolf Environmental Film Festival, is screening “Upstream, Downstream” that portrays a slice of rural America working to preserve their way of life by protecting and restoring their remote Pennsylvania watershed. “Upstream, Downstream”was produced by Green Fire for the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy and was released in 2004.
September - November 2003
Free Speech TV is a national television channel viewed in 11 million U. S. homes that reflects the diversity of our society, presents perspectives under-represented or often ignored by mainstream media, shining a national spotlight on engaged citizens working for progressive social change.
Free Speech TV is featuring 7 Green Fire programs “Ancient Forests-The Power of Place”; “Beyond Borders: Wildlands of the Northern Rockies”; “Copper Salmon”; “Bringing Back the Salmon”; “Taking a Second Look: Communities and Dam Removal”; and “Peace by Piece: Youth Take Action.”
August 26, 2003
For the Record: A celebration of Northwest stories & storytellers presents a collection of NW regional documentary short films, non-fiction stories and photography. They feature a segment of Green Fire's program “Peace by Piece”that explores one Native American family’s way of expressing their culture as a tool to educate and diffuse prejudice through sharing their tradition of dance.
August 8 & 9, 2003
“Peace by Piece”, “Ancient Forests” & “Bringing Back the Salmon” are featured at the Cascade Independent Film Festival in Portland, Oregon. “Bringing Back the Salmon” received the festival honor of Best Short Documentary Film. CIFF presents a 3-day exhibition of experimental, narrative, documentary and animation film and video created by regional and national filmmakers
June 24, 2002 ECO Awards “Taking a Second Look: Communities and Dam Removal” receives a best of category award at the Outdoor Writers Association of America annual conference in Charleston, West Virginia.
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