Author Archives: Laura Hertzfeld

Voices of the unemployed

Some filmmakers pride themselves on making a film every year or two. Or even only every ten (ahem, James Cameron). But documentarian Alex Jablonski is making a film a month for a whole year.

In the second installment of Sparrow Songs, Jablonski interviews people in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, all of whom have felt the affects of the recession. Some have lost their jobs, others have family members who are out of work. All of them have a story.

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Jablonski didn’t have a big Hollywood budget to get the stories for Sparrow Songs, but he said it didn’t take much to get people talking.

“We set up a backdrop in a parking lot and just asked people,” Jablonski told EconomyStory.org. “Everyone was struggling or knew someone who was struggling.”

Sparrow Songs isn’t alone in trying to exhibit individual stories about the recession.

The new film Up in the Air uses interviews with people who have recently lost their jobs and inserts them into scenes in the film, where George Clooney plays a man who makes his living by firing people. Online series like the New York Times project Jobless: In Their Own Words asks people to submit their own stories about coping with unemployment. Patchwork Nation’s photo feed gathers photos from around the country documenting people’s experiences in different types of communities. And Marketplace’s Public Insight Network gathers first-hand reports from people around the country about topics ranging from job hunting to gift-giving.

Clearly, people are anxious to tell their stories and find a community to share them with.

Jablonski said the experience of asking people in person and having them look directly into the camera helped him to connect with people, especially being unemployed himself at the time.

“People are honest because I’d told them my story,” he said.

Holiday hardship

Chicago holiday train/Credit: Flickr user Morydd

Chicago holiday train/Credit: Flickr user Morydd

The holiday season is off to a rocky start, as many families have less money for gifts and travel. But things are starting to look up in some parts of the country, and even hard-hit areas are taking a glass-half-full approach to the new year.

At WEKU in Kentucky, Charles Compton reports that maybe we’ve had Scrooge wrong all these years. While he wasn’t happy, he might not have been as miserly and mean as meets the eye.

“Citing research done by the Ghost of Christmas Past, psychologist Susan Mathews concludes Ebenezer Scrooge was in pain.
“The longer that I work with people and the more I encounter people who have had life struggles or who are currently in pain, the more I realize that people tend to do the things they do for a reason,” she said. “I find that life experiences absolutely shape our actions, whatever they may be.”

If you’re feeling Scrooge-like and want some inspiration to get out of the funk, a new Michigan Public Radio project hosted by Jennifer White has a collection of stories about how Americans are dealing with the recession.

In Ohio, one church is having a Blue Christmas, offering a place for its community members who are feeling down this year, WYSO reports.

“Collins says that the holidays can bring up memories of those that have passed away. Also, families are facing more financial hardships than in years past.
“The thing about Christmas or any holiday, it kind of brings up all of those losses and hurts and anxieties. If you’re going to hurt, that’s the time you’re going to feel that pain,” says Collins.
Collins felt that Blue Christmas was a way to help people share their grief. During the service, each person is asked to light a candle to commemorate a loss. He says all of the lit candles act as a visual reminder for people, so they’ll know they’re not alone.”

Things are looking slightly better in California, one of the hardest hit job markets in the country, where there was some good holiday news today. KQED reported that the economy will be slowly lifting out of recession, according to a forecast from Beacon Economics.

And to start off your weekend on a holiday note, NPR Music has compiled its annual list of holiday music. Enjoy!

Seeing REDD

Stopping the Earth from getting warmer is a goal of the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, but the conference itself seems to be heating up.

One area where progress is being made is on REDD, the Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation program, which would provide developing countries with credits from developed countries in exchange for rain forest preservation. As David Gillette explains in the video below, this is among the least controversial in a series of topics that are sparking protests and debate in Denmark:

Youth Radio’s Caitlin Gray is on the scene in chilly Copenhagen this week, as well, and wrote a strong opinion piece based on her experiences as a youth representative.

“Sometimes it feels that no matter what we do here, no matter what anyone does anywhere, that the people in power will not listen. That no matter the bicycle critical mass happening in the streets of Copenhagen TODAY, or the 10,000 people that marched to the Bella Center in protest on the International Day of Climate Action on the 12th, the message is still not getting through to the people who decide.”

While there is controversy brewing over the larger accord, Denmark as a backdrop for the summit is setting an example for the world. Denmark has made strides to reduce its own carbon emissions, leading Europe by creating a cleaner economy with fewer cars, but the country uses high taxes to get results, Marketplace’s Sam Eaton reports.

For a glimpse on what’s happening inside the Bella Center in real time, follow the #cop15 tag on Twitter, and check out videos from the conference, like this one on Future Cities:

Teaching the economy

It may be almost time for winter vacation, but PBS Teachers has just launched a set of tools to help students understand the economy in the new year.

Lesson plans, and videos tackle topics like agricultural subsidies and the “ripple effect.”

And widgets like this glossary are helpful for those in school, as well as anyone who’s been confused by the financial terms in the news lately.

Naming the old decade, defining the new

Fashion plate

Fashion plate

As we head towards the end of the decade, there’s been much discussion around what to call the past 10 years, and where we’re heading beyond that.

What were the 00’s called? The ‘Ohs?’

Coming in at First Place in the running to name the decade is the “aughts” or playfully, the “aughties.” We already had an ‘Aughts’ from 1900-1909, full of hoop skirts, the Wright Brothers and saloons.

New Hampshire Public Radio is asking listeners for their Name-The-Decade suggestions, just in case the Aughts doesn’t catch on. Commenter Ryan Guerra suggested the “unis” (yoo-nees)– share your ideas here.

What should we call the next era? Looking at some of the innovations of the past decade help to give a sense of where we’re headed. The Nightly Business Report has a series on the top technologies of the past 30 years, and how quickly things like phone books have become all but obsolete.

The PBS NewsHour is asking experts what’s in store for the economy in the next year. The predictions are mix of hopefully and fearnervous, but this one from Richard Sylla, professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business, gives provides hope for light at the end of the dark economic tunnel:

“My biggest surprise in 2010 would be to witness a failure of the U.S. economy to grow at least at its real long-term trend rate of about 3 percent. Add in 1-2 percent inflation, and nominal GDP ought to grow at least 4-5 percent.”

Answering more tough questions about the economy in 2010, Capitol News Connection’s podcast took questions for Rep. Jim Hines, a member of the House Financial Services Committee this week.