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Blue Corridors: VOICES - Laura Anzola
Many histories in Voices describe trying to fit in, adjust to their new surroundings, and find acceptance when immigrating to Calgary while also being constantly othered, navigating social, geographic...
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Blue Corridors: VOICES - Laura Anzola
The inclusion of the humpback whale in Voices offers a blurring of human and non-human, encouraging a multi-species perspective on the violence of borders and boundaries. Micro-biomes, plants, fungi,...
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THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS: An Interview with Fawzia Mirza
*KH:* How does your film embrace lesboqueer joy, instead of the typical “bury your gays” trope that we so often see in film and TV? *FM:* Well, I think for...
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THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS: An Interview with Fawzia Mirza
So it was a remarkable experience across the board, working with these incredible actors, Amrit Kaur [Azra, the protagonist] and Hamza Haq [Hassan, her father] and Nimra Bucha [Mariam, her mother],...
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THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS: An Interview with Fawzia Mirza
*KH:* It must have been hard to transform those images in Pakistan into the 1960s. *FW:* Pakistan does not look the same. Karachi does not look the same. There’s just so many...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
This scene welcomes you to the Afro-Canadian (food) stock exchange, an informal market where Afro-Canadians feed their hunger for their sizzling (African) “home cooking”. Scenes such as these have...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
I found this rather weird. Wasn’t Canada supposed to be more racially inclusive than the United States? Why then did the Americans have more Black TV sitcoms on...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
But I knew I could do far more for my people (I’m originally from Nigeria, West Africa) if I could weave the Afro-Canadian stories I heard around me...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
These markers critically help to provide a sense of inclusion to those of us whose cultures are featured in the pilot, as well as indicate that other Afro-Canadian traditions...
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The Black Diaspora in Conversation: From Ousmane Sembène to Marilyn Cooke
The film’s protagonist, Keity Richardson (Schelby Jean Baptiste) is forced to intern at the morgue when she cannot find a vacancy in her preferred field of surgery shortly after...