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Media Mogul: David Brain and the Business of Movie Theaters

Entertainment Properties Trust CEO David Brain sits down with Nick Haines to discuss trends in the movie theater industry and what changes might be ahead for a film lovers’ in-theater movie-going experience.

Last year, the number of people going to movie theaters in the United States hit a 16 year low. With state-of-the-art home theater systems, Red Box kiosks, Netflix and movies you can download to your phone is it any wonder movie theaters are finding it hard to compete?

Last month, Overland Park based movie theater chain Dickinson Theaters declared bankruptcy. They own half a dozen area theaters including the West Glen, the Palazzo and the Blue Springs 8, which they plan to close. And with Kansas City based AMC recently selling to China, we thought it would be interesting to find out what on earth is going on in the movie theater business from someone who’s thoughts are prized on the subject.

David Brain is President and CEO of Entertainment Properties Trust in Kansas City which has invested over $1.4 billion in more than 110 megaplex theaters around the country, housing over 2,000 movie screens.

Interior of a movie theater with patrons watching a movie

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Meet the Past – Thomas Jefferson

Meet the Past with Crosby Kemper III returns for a conversation with Thomas Jefferson at The Central Library on Thursday, September 20. 2012 at 6:30pm.

Meet the Past with Crosby Kemper III returns for a conversation with Thomas Jefferson, as portrayed by Patrick Lee. Join us at The Central Library on Thursday, September 20, 2012 at 6:30pm. The Central Library is located at 14 W. 10th Street in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

Jefferson, America’s third president and author of the Declaration of Independence, was also a big supporter of the humanities.

The event will be taped by KCPT for later broadcast.

Update: Meet the Past with Crosby Kemper III airs Thursday, November 15, 2012 at 8pm on KCPT.

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Meet the Past to Portray Painter George Caleb Bingham

Join KCPT & Kansas City Public Library for Meet the Past: George Caleb Bingham on Tuesday, August 7, 2012 at 6:30pm, Truman Memorial Building, Independence.

In the mid-1800s Missouri was evolving from a rude frontier environment to a modern state. And capturing on canvas both the wilderness and advancing civilization was painter George Caleb Bingham.

Bingham (1811-1879) – portrayed by actor Robert Gibby Brand - returns for the Library’s popular Meet the Past series on Tuesday, August 7, 2012, at 6:30 p.m. at the Truman Memorial Building, 416 Maple St., Independence.  There  may even be a few of his original paintings on display!

Former Independence, MO resident George Caleb Bingham gained national fame with paintings like “Fur Traders Descending the Mississippi,” “The Jolly Boatmen,” and the controversial “General Order No. 11,” which criticized federal depredations during the Civil War.

The self-taught artist came to Missouri as a child, settling with his family in Franklin. When he was nine Bingham met famed portraitist Chester Harding, an encounter that left a powerful impression.

Initially young Bingham considered careers in cabinet making, the ministry, and law. But by age 19 he was painting portraits for $20 apiece, and thereafter he devoted himself to art and becoming one of the great American genre painters of the 19th century.

Bingham operated a studio in St. Louis. Among his early major paintings were the iconic “Fur Traders Descending the Missouri” depicting two frontiersmen in a canoe, “The Jolly Boatmen,” and “Stump Speaking,” one of many works depicting rural politics.

His large canvas “General Order No. 11″ depicted the depredations inflicted by federal troops on civilians in Western Missouri, who in 1863 were forced to abandon their homes as part of the army’s war with Confederate guerillas. Bingham, a Kansas City resident and a supporter of the Union cause, called the order “an act of imbecility” and purportedly warned Union Gen. Thomas Ewing: “If you execute this order, I shall make you infamous with pen and brush.”

Bingham enjoyed a political career, being elected to the Missouri General Assembly in 1848. He was appointed Missouri State Treasurer during the Civil War. Later he became president of the Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners and Adjutant-General of Missouri. He also was the first professor of art at the University of Missouri.

Metropolitan Ensemble Theatre veteran Robert Gibby Brand, who portrays Bingham, played Edgar Snow at a previous Meet the Past event. This spring Brand portrayed Henry Higgins in the Library’s Script-in-Hand production of My Fair Lady.

RSVP on the library’s website.

Major funding provided by the Courtney S. Turner Charitable TrustKen and Cindy McClain, and the J.B. Reynolds Foundation.

 

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A Modern Night At The Folly: City in Motion’s Choreographer Showcase

City in Motion presents their 10th Anniversary of A Modern Night at the Folly on Feb. 9 at the Folly Theater to showcase the talents of local choreographers. We share a look at last year's event.

For over 25 years, the City in Motion Dance Theater has been developing high quality contemporary dance programming and expanding dance audiences in our metro area.

On Saturday, February 9, City in Motion presents its 10th Anniversary production of A Modern Night at the Folly, staged at the historic downtown Folly Theater and featuring the work of local choreographers.

This performance is Kansas City’s only adjudicated showcase, featuring 10 of the area’s most talented choreographers. This eagerly anticipated event provides the audience with insight into the current direction of our region’s modern dance artists. This year’s performance will feature the choreography of Willie Lenoir, Erin Lustig, James Moreno, Jennifer Owen, Cathy Patterson, Lucy Shopen, Andrea Skowronek, Patrick Suzeau, Halley Willcox, and Ming Xia.

Dancer performing on stage in front of a screen with an image of a field

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Musical Menagerie: KC Symphony Petting Zoo

We tag along at the Kansas City Symphony Instrument Petting Zoo which travels to area classrooms to give elementary students the opportunity to see and hear the different instruments of the orchestra.

You’ve heard of a petting zoo, but what about an instrument petting zoo? It’s one of the Kansas City Symphony’s outreach projects designed to get younger kids up close and personal with the instruments of the orchestra.

Area Schools can sign up for the Kansas City Symphony Instrument Petting Zoo.

Children gathered around a woman as one girl tries using a clarinet

Because of extensive demand for this engaging program, it is preferred that second, third, and fourth grade students have the first opportunity to receive its benefits. Visits to classrooms are available for either morning or afternoon during one of the seven weeks listed.

Zoos will be filled in the order requests & signed contracts are received, with no request considered less than one week prior to the Zoo date. A maximum of three 45-minute sections may be held during one visit, with each section ideally consisting of no more than 80 students.

Your Classroom | $150
October 8-11, 2012
November 5-9, 2012
December 3-7, 2012
January 21-25, 2013
February 25-28, 2013
March 11-15, 2013
May 6-10, 2013

To take advantage of this exciting educational opportunity, please contact Education Manager Stephanie Brimhall at (816) 218-2639.

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Never Too Old To Learn: Literacy KC

Literacy KC provides support to adults in the metro who are functionally illiterate. The Local Show proudly presents excerpts from a recent event at the KC Public Library featuring students of the program sharing their success stories.

It’s hard to believe given the affluence of America that so many people grow up in our community and across the country unable to read. Imagine if you couldn’t make out the words on a menu, figure out what it says on your prescription label or even read a birthday card from your children. It is estimated that 225,000 adults in our metro are functionally illiterate. They can’t do these things. Recently, Nick Haines had the privilege to host the Power of Reading Event for Literacy KC, a Kansas City organization that uses volunteer tutors to help adults learn to read. Several of those adults who have overcome great odds shared their stories in front of a large audience at the Plaza Branch of the Kansas City Public Library.

You can become a tutor if you can spare two 90 minutes sessions a week. Training is provided.

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New Season of Community Cinema Kicks Off with Half the Sky

KCPT’s Community Cinema kicked off its 2012-2013 Season on Saturday, September 8, 2012 at 11am with Half the Sky.

KCPT’s Community Cinema kicked off its 2012-2013 Season on Saturday, September 8, 2012 at 11am with Half the Sky. Nearly 100 people came to the Tivoli Cinemas to see segments from the upcoming documentary series and connect with local organizations.

Half the Sky profiles women across the globe that are combating oppression and issues like gender-based violence, sex-trafficking, maternal mortality and forced prostitution with education, healthcare and economic empowerment. At the screening attendees viewed segments dealing with sex-trafficking in Cambodia and gender-based violence in Sierra Leone. Afterwards community partners from The Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault (MOCSA), Veronica’s Voice, Hope House, AAUW-KC and the UMKC Women’s Center shared insights about the kinds of violence and discrimination women in our community face.

Five women standing at the front of a theater presenting to audience.

From left to right representatives from the UMKC Women’s Center, AAUW-KC, Hope House, Veronica’s Voice and MOCSA share their insights on violence and sexual assault against women.

For example, Hope House is Missouri’s largest domestic violence shelter and has 128 spaces for victims of domestic violence. However, they are always full and turn away more women than they can serve each year.

The founder of Veronica’s Voice, shared how she herself had been sex-trafficked from a young age and how her organization works to stop sexual exploitation.

Woman holding paper address theater full of attendees

KCPT’s Community Cinema organizer Lindsey Foat introduces the panelists and discussion for Half the Sky.

Attendees shared the following questions and comments during the discussion:

  • A female teenager asked the panel if they thought mass media has made gender inequality worse and increased domestic violence. All panelists agreed that it has and that the objectification of women in the media has gotten worse.
  • “As an African American woman, it concerns me that in communities of color there is a degree of normalcy to rape. How do we get women of color to go outside of their community to report rape?”
  •  ”The film infuriated me! Where are all the men?”
  • It’s easier for us to look at what is going on in Africa and Asia and make a judgement about those cultures, than to look at our own culture and see the hyper-sexualization and objectification.
  • To make a difference, it is really important to educate men, women the media and put more women in positions of authority.
  • A teacher at a local Catholic High School started using the Half the Sky book as part of her curriculum for her debate students last year. Those students have since started a social justice club. She felt that the celebrity personalities detracted in some ways from the segments and was shocked by the fact that it was two men (one of which was Kristof) who sort of concerned the young woman in Sierra Leone, after she decided not to pursue prosecution against the man who raped her.
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Nominate a Local MAKER

Do you know a groundbreaker who has sparked change, been first-in-her-field, and paved the way for those who followed?

NOMINATE A LOCAL MAKER: DECEMBER 1 – JANUARY 15
VOTE DECEMBER 1 – JANUARY 15 FOR 3 NOMINEES
WATCH LOCAL MAKERS STORIES ON KCPT IN FEBRUARY

Coinciding with the national airdate of MAKERS in February 2013, KCPT will produce three featurettes of women who have made a difference in the greater metropolitan area of Kansas City. The featurettes will be broadcast as interstitials in conjunction with the national program, will air in a KCPT magazine program, The Local Show, and will be available on the KCPT website, Facebook and Youtube pages.

How do we choose who to feature? You!

You submit your nomination of who should be celebrated as a woman who has made a difference in KC. We will cull the featurette stories from your nominations. You’ll also be able to vote for your favorite stories, helping us determine which of the stories will become a featurette.

Go to makers-kc.org nominate right now! Write up a paragraph and submit a photo. It’s that easy!

Who are the producers of the national project?

The project is founded by filmmaker Dyllan McGee.  Executive Producers are Dyllan McGee, Betsy West and Peter Kunhardt, who worked in consultation with a team of advisors to select the groundbreaking MAKERS featured, and Dalton Delan, Executive Producer for WETA.  The documentary is produced by Kunhardt McGee Productions, Storyville Films and WETA Washington, D.C., in association with Ark Media.  Foundation funding is provided by The Charles H. Revson Foundation, NoVo Foundation, Ford Foundation, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, The Rice Family Foundation, and The Rockefeller Foundation and others.

For more, visit MAKERS.com/press and follow @MAKERSwomen on Twitter and visit Facebook.com/makerswomen on Facebook.

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November-December 2012 Letter from Kliff Kuehl, President and CEO

Kliff talks about KCPT's ability to put Kansas City on the national stage with great productions and events.

KCPT, and our great producers, were nominated for nine Regional Emmys®.  We are proud to report that we came away with two wins –

  • Little Green Steps – A spot teaching kids how taking “Little Green Steps” can help keep waste out of landfills.
  • Celebration at the Station – Every year we receive hundreds of calls praising Celebration at the Station.  We are very proud of this tradition that celebrates our community and brings the KC Symphony, culture, and beautiful fireworks into the homes of thousands of people, many of whom are not able to get out to see it live.

We have had some fantastic opportunities to put Kansas City on the national stage this year.  These events give our viewers a rare opportunity to interact with celebrities and performers, giving them a “behind the scenes” experience.

  • Homecoming, The KC Symphony Presents Joyce DiDonato aired to 96% of the United States.  I know we’ve been touting this accomplishment for some time but it was one of those opportunities that doesn’t come along often.  We are so proud to put Kansas City on the national stage and this was very special because it featured our hometown symphony, our hometown girl, and the new Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts.
  • P. Allen Smith – We had great events surrounding Allen’s visit and tapings at some of Kansas City’s most beautiful gardens.  Watch for those episodes featuring our hometown gardens on P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home.
  • Lidia Bastianich– Lidia is such a great friend to KCPT.  She lends her time and talents to host groups of KCPT supporters when she comes to Kansas City.
  • Coming to Kansas City on November 13, for a special screening of The Dust Bowl, is writer/producer Dayton Duncan.  The two-part documentary airs November 18 and 19 on KCPT.

KCPT’s PerformARTS series is a mixed-media campaign that helps bring community awareness of local arts and culture to the next level.  Last year we successfully promoted six local arts organizations and are queuing up for another six this year.  The organizations will be featured on The Local Show and in the KC Studio magazine.  Our city has a thriving arts scene and we want our community to know what’s out there and to support our local artists.

Be sure and tune into our winter fundraising drive beginning Thanksgiving night.  You’ll find great programs and concerts that support KCPT.

Thank you for your support.

Kliff Kuehl signature

Click here to join Kliff as a proud member of KCPT.

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On The Frontier of Life Science: The Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Pam James takes viewers inside of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research, which has attracted some of the world's finest medical researchers to Kansas City to develop innovative approaches to the causes, treatment and prevention of a variety of diseases.

The term “life sciences” gets thrown around a lot these days. It is even a big part of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce’s Big 5. But what does it mean exactly? It is a concept that can be hard to understand, and sometimes quite complicated.

Wide shot of a lab in the Stowers Institute Life science is a multi-billion dollar industry in Kansas City, and it includes over 240 companies involved in the health of humans, animals and plants. One of these local life sciences organizations is the venerable Stowers Institute for Medical Research, which opened in 2000 with much fanfare on the site of the former Menorah Medical Center and was endowed with a jaw-dropping gift of $2 billion from the founder of American Century investments, Jim Stowers and his wife, Virginia.

Exterior wide shot of the Stowers Institute Over the last decade, the Stowers Institute, located just off the Country Club Plaza, has attracted some of the world’s finest medical researchers to Kansas City to analyze our society’s most debilitating diseases and the keys to their causes. But after 13 years and such a large endowment, what kind of specific research and developments are actually taking place inside the Institute? Producer Pam James visits this center for life science research and discovery to show viewers what the Stowers Institute is all about.

Graphic giving thanks to Big 5 underwriters Burns & McDonnnell, UMB, Kansas City Area Life Sciences Institute and Swope Community Enterprises

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