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Funding Unsuccessful
This project reached the deadline without achieving its funding goal on July 18, 2010.
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Pledge this amount and receive the above and a signed copy of The Coal War DVD (when released).
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Pledge this amount and receive all of the above and the "Still Moving Mountains: The Journey Home" album, a musical compilation of artists and spoken word recordings that mourn the devastation of mountaintop removal coal mining and celebrates the courage of coalfield resistance.
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Pledge this amount and receive all of the above and a 8x10 photographic print by the award-winning photographer and director of The Coal War.
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Pledge this amount and receive all of the above as well as a "patron credit" in the film and an invitation to screen the film (and give feedback) with us before it's released.
Pledge $2,500 or more
If you pledge $2500 or more you get all of the above as well as an associate producer's credit in the film. If you're interested in making larger donations or becoming a co-executive producer on the project, please contact us for details. LARGER DONATIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE THROUGH OUR FISCAL SPONSOR FROM THE HEART PRODUCTIONS.
Project By
Connected as Chad A Stevens (1342 friends)
Chad A. Stevens is a storyteller. With a breadth of experience in photojournalism, multimedia and film, Chad's career spans the spectrum from the newsroom to long-term documentary filmmaking. In 2003, after beginning a workshop for his photojournalism students, Chad saw, for the first time, a scene that changed his life – a mountaintop removal coal mine. From that moment on, he began a project that confronts our ideas of energy extraction and consumption and documents the struggle of a grassroots movement to end mountaintop removal and begin the first sustainable energy, green jobs project in Appalachia. The film, The Coal War, is in production and recently won the New York Film Grant.
Between shooting trips to West Virginia and grant writing sessions, Chad has been a multimedia producer at MediaStorm and was twice nominated for a National Emmy Award for Innovative Storytelling, twice received the Webby Award in 2007 and 2008 and won duPont-Columbia Journalism Award in 2010. Currently he is a professor of visual communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but he has also taught in the documentary photography programs at the International Center of Photography, Western Kentucky University and Ohio University.