Columbia native's film explores complexity of AIDs Crisis. SC helped him see life in shades of gray.
The line, uttered at the beginning of the 39-minute documentary "Cashing Out," encapsulates the thinking behind a little-known impact of the AIDs crisis in America. The film, directed by Matt Nadel ...
Stories have power. We tell stories so we’re seen and heard. We tell stories to pass down knowledge and history. We tell stories to heal. Projects that document those stories capture them for future ...
With AIDS Walk L.A. days away, Phill Wilson reflects on decades of HIV/AIDS research and prevention and looks ahead as those ...
Aug. 23, 2006— -- As the world marked the 25th anniversary of the first reported cases of AIDS this summer, one important story was mostly ignored: AIDS is an epidemic in the African American ...
Alysia Abbott's memoir about growing up in 1970s San Francisco with her gay, single father, has been adapted into a film ...
July 9, 2OO3 — -- The parents of Africa are dying of AIDS, and their children are fighting to live. "Only the strong can survive," said Humphrey Mulenga, an 18-year-old Zambian whose parents died ...
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40 years ago, the first AIDS movies forced Americans to confront a disease they didn't want to see
First it was referred to as a "mysterious illness." Later it was called "gay cancer," "gay plague" and "GRID," an acronym for gay-related immune deficiency. Most egregiously, some called it "4H ...
That uncompromising fighting spirit continues to inspire people today, including Bonsai Bermudez, co-founder of Youth Empowerment Performance Project, a Chicago-based organization that promotes ...
In the new documentary “Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore,” there’s a one-of-a-kind scene where the titular actor, who is Deaf, stands in the kitchen with her family. Matlin’s brother tells her there ...
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