Cinema Ephemera: The Human Machine

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Porches' Studio 9 will show "The Human Machine," the first installment of a new film series presented by Cinema Ephemera.
 
The screening will take place on Oct. 30, at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 in advance or $25 at the door.
 
Rich Remsberg and Shawn Rosenheim have curated an evening of ephemeral films: vintage classroom instruction, industrial animations, forgotten children's TV shows, declassified military training films, religious movies, scraps of stock footage, and a bunch of weird science stuff.
 
"These are films that were not necessarily meant to last beyond their original showings," said Remsberg. "They weren't even necessarily meant to be considered films."
 
"This is an accidental chronicle of 20th century America," added Rosenheim, speaking of their collection culled from government archives, flea markets, dumpsters, and the basements of old hoarders. "This is a world both very familiar and very strange."
 
From 1920s personal hygiene guides to NASA's zero-gravity experiments to amateur disco exhibitions, this is a celebration of the ordinary and the forgotten. Some of it is funny. Some is disturbing. Much of it is unbelievably beautiful – a revelation of our world in all its poverty and extravagance, stated a press release.
 
"Breaking open the original context of these films allow us to see the gems among the pot shards," said Remsberg. "You'll never look at the 20th Century in the same way again."
 
Rich Remsberg is an Emmy Award-winning and Oscar-nominated archival producer, consulting with such directors as Ron Howard, Ben Stiller, and Lawrence Kasdan for documentary films on Netflix, HBO, Disney+, and PBS. "The Human Machine's" films are the fruits of Remsberg's 25 years of combing through rare and obscure footage.
 
Shawn Rosenheim teaches film, nonfiction audio, and literature at Williams College, where he co-founded the Documentary Today conference. He has consulted on Errol Morris' documentaries, and his work includes interviews at Mass MoCA and Williams College with Werner Herzog, Ken Burns, and Frederick Wiseman, among others. He is the director of "Biosphere 2."
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Health Secretary Tours Berkshire Food Project

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Executive Director Matthew Alcombright explains how the project's free lunch program works. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — State Health & Human Services Secretary Kiame Mahaniah wound up a trip to the Berkshires on Tuesday with stops at the Berkshire Food Project, North Adams Regional Hospital and the Brien Center. 
 
The secretary, escorted by state Rep. John Barrett III, Tricia Farley-Bouvier and Leigh Davis, was in Pittsfield in the morning for roundtable at the Pittsfield Community Food Pantry.
 
Mahaniah said he'd been to a few pantries in the Boston area recently, and spent Monday in the Pioneer Valley and Tuesday in the Berkshires as "food security days."
 
"I'm hearing that people are terrified about the changes that are coming. I'm hearing that even before the changes came, inflation has really caused a spike in people's need, and that here in the Berkshires, in particular, all the things that make life difficult, sort of further negatively affecting people's ability to access food, be it public transportation or transport or jobs or so that. So that the data is also striking," he said. 
 
"And I think it's also what I always when I'm always impressed about when I come to the Berkshires, is just how well the different organizations are able to collaborate. It's just amazing what people in the what organizations and the Berkshires do, what communities do with so little."
 
Some 1.1 million state residents were set to lose Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program funds this month as the government shutdown continues through orders from the Trump administration, although SNAP benefits have not been affected by previous shutdowns. A federal judge on Wednesday ordered the use of reserve funds to continue the program but that could mean recipients getting 50 percent to 35 percent, or less, of their regular allotments.
 
Gov. Maura Healey advanced $4 million in funds for November, to be added to the $4 million provided monthly to Massachusetts Emergency Food Assistance program. But that's not enough. 
 
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