Getting Played: First Annual Symposium on Equity in the Entertainment Industry and Awards

made possible by a grant from Stanford University's Program in Writing and Rhetoric

When
Sat Feb 21, 2015
Where
Stanford Cubberly Auditorium
Time
1pm - 5pm
Tags
Education, Seminars, Media, Television

Description

Entertainment media shapes who we are. Whether one compares the increasing support of marriage equality to the number of LGBT characters on television, or the objectification of women to the sexualization of female characters across all media, it is clear that the images we see everyday compel our thoughts and behaviors en masse.

Join us for the conversation on Saturday, February 21, 2015. Getting Played: First Annual Symposium on Equity in the Entertainment Industry and Awards will take place in Cubberley Auditorium at Stanford University (485 Lasuen Mall, Stanford, CA) from 1-5pm. Made possible by a grant from the Program in Writing and Rhetoric, this event continues a conversation begun by the 2010 documentary “Getting Played: who’s playing you?!” that explores inequities in the Industry. The keynote address will be delivered by Jeff Chang, Executive Director of Institute for Diversity in the Arts and author of “Who We Be: The Colorization of America” and closing remarks by Harry Elam, Freeman-Thornton Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education. Moderated by Dr. Kathleen Tarr, a lecturer in Stanford's Program in Writing and Rhetoric, the panel of distinguished speakers from the fields of entertainment, psychology, law, business, social justice, and education include Darryl Chiang (Google Legal/Asian American Theater Company), Migdia Chinea (screenwriter/director), Leslie Kirby (psychotherapist), Kent Mannis (lawyer/Senior Editor, LawRoom.com), Eva Paterson (President, Equal Justice Society), Valerie Weak (theater artist/gender parity advocate), and Torange Yeghiazarian (Founding Artistic Director, Golden Thread). The discussion will be followed by awards presented to Adrienne Anderson (Founder and Curator, International Black Women’s Film Festival), Linda Chuan (Actor/producer), Anna Maria Luera (youth worker/theater artist), Kevin Rolston (Actor/writer), and Michael Gene Sullivan (Actor/writer/Resident Playwright, San Francisco Mime Troupe) for their lesser known contributions to Industry equity. Free and open to the public. No ticket, registration, or RSVP required. Wheelchair accessible. Attendees who require a disability accommodation should contact the Diversity and Access Office (650) 725-0326. The event will be photographed/recorded.

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Location

  1. Stanford Cubberly Auditorium
    485 Lasuen Mall, Palo Alto, CA