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DESCRIPTION:Youth Empowering Youth (YEY) uses social documentary filmmaking to teach 
 digital arts.Come see the student’s films: The Santa Cruz Film Festival 
 will screen the annual 2009 showing of these films for the public on May 9 
 at 11:30 at the Regal Riverfront Twin Theater, and an Awards Party at 
 Woodstock’s after — all in the Galleria Shopping Center, Santa Cruz. 
 \n\n\nThe Voice of Our Youth: YEY Social Documentaries Celebrates its 
 Fourth Year  at the Santa Cruz Film Festival\n\nYouth Empowering Youth 
 (YEY) uses documentary filmmaking to teach digital arts, community 
 engagement, career skills and personal empowerment to high school and 
 college age youth working together. YEY, a program of Visionary Arts and 
 Media Foundation (VAM), a Santa Cruz non-profit organization, is in its 
 fourth year. It has grown each year with more young people making more 
 exciting short films. The Santa Cruz Film Festival will screen the annual 
 2009 showing of these films for the public on May 9 at 11:30 at the Regal 
 Riverfront Twin Theater, followed by an Awards Party at Woodstock’s in 
 the Galleria Shopping Center, Santa Cruz.  \n\nThis year YEY has expanded 
 to include an independent after school group, GirlZ Space, and Renaissance 
 High School students, a continuation school. Cabrillo Community College’s 
 Digital Media students have also joined the YEY family as mentors. There 
 are also the three Santa Cruz County high schools veterans of the program; 
 Aptos, Watsonville and San Lorenzo Valley. \n\nYEY empowers the voice and 
 point of view of young people in our community through digital arts. The 
 program is designed to encourage young people to become journalists, aware 
 and engaged citizens, with tools to be able to critically evaluate and 
 influence the shape of the future expressed through the creative 
 technologies of new media. \n\nSeveral of the participating YEY High School 
 students have been considered at-risk or second chance youth. The many 
 positive impacts the YEY program has on their lives are beyond measure.  
 One of the films is on youth and their relation to correction authority. 
 With limited equipment, sometimes using just cell phones and small cameras 
 they capture images in new creative ways. The students who began their 
 project "angry at the system” are being transformed by the experience of 
 making their documentary. Their new, more positive outlook inspired them to 
 change the focus and name of the film to reflect what they learned.   
 Forty-six high school students and mentors work as teams to tell compelling 
 stories about community solutions. Experts with technical and expressive 
 skills, such as sound, interviewing, and visual composition coach the 
 students. The skills for collaborating, project planning, making deadlines 
 throughout film production are part of the artists' discipline. Twelve UC 
 and Cabrillo students serving as mentors, practice leadership skills by 
 guiding the high school students through all phases of the filmmaking 
 project from developing the story’s message, through stylizing and 
 editing the final product.   This Year's Films\n\nThe nine upcoming films 
 are: Education Outside the Box, comparing several approaches to education, 
 Homelessness, the reasons people end up with the label homeless, 
 Foundations of Education, explores how education shapes a child to prosper 
 in life, AIDS, how is AIDS affecting the local community?, Emission 
 Addiction, exploring the alternative options and practicalities of using 
 sustainable transportation in Santa Cruz, Graffiti vs. Art, the 
 similarities and differences between art and graffiti, Get Wheels, the 
 advantage of riding a bike, Authority and Youth: Working Together, 
 investigates attitudes about treatment of youth by adults, law enforcement, 
 and Grades in Perspective, do grades reflect the whole student?.  Leonora 
 Clow is the founder and Executive Director of Visionary Arts and Media 
 (VAM), the parent organization of the Youth Empowering Youth Program. 
 Leonora's vision is to get students and young people involved, through 
 media and film, with the incredible community work that happens in Santa 
 Cruz County.  Hina Pendle is the Program Director and Zoe Jacobson is the 
 Mentor Coordinator of YEY. VAM has been teaming up with the UCSC Community 
 Studies department’s Mike Rotkin and the Film Department Students, as 
 well as Beth Regards of the Digital Media Department of Cabrillo College. 
 We are also grateful to the ROP (Regional Occupation Program) teachers in 
 the high schools and the staff of the Walnut Street Women’s Center for 
 their support and participation. \n\nBudget cuts are greatly affecting 
 schools. VAM is privately funded to help high schools, UCSC and Cabrillo 
 students learn more about their community. VAM welcomes local support 
 http://www.vizartsmedia.org \n\nWe welcome the community to view the films. 
 Bring the whole family. The films will shown by the Santa Cruz Film 
 Festival on Saturday May 9th at 11:30 at the Regal Riverfront Twin at the 
 Galleria Shopping Center at Front Street.  Admission is Free. Join us for a 
 complementary Awards Party and fun-raiser at Woodstock Pizza immediately 
 after the films. For more information, call Hina Pendle, 831.662.2232.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/04/08/18587057.php
SUMMARY:The Voice of Our Youth: YEY Social Documentaries Celebrates its Fourth Year at the SCFF
LOCATION:The Regal Riverfront Twin Theater, and an Awards Party at Woodstock’s 
 after — all in the Galleria Shopping Center, Santa Cruz.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/04/08/18587057.php
DTSTART:20090509T183000Z
DTEND:20090509T203000Z
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