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Update #5: World-renowned Photographers Unite to Support Documentary Film through Online Print Auction

Posted on November 16

The A Thousand Little Cuts Online Print Auction features signed prints from six Pulitzer Prize winners, five National Geographic photographers, six Photographers of the Year (POYi and NPPA), two Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award winners, one Guggenheim Fellow, and many legends of contemporary documentary photography. A few of the photographers you'll find include: Ed Kashi, David LaBelle, Carolyn Cole, Stephanie Sinclair, Liz O. Baylen, Bob Sacha, Matt Eich, Scott Strazzante, Alex Harris and Barbara Davidson. Thirty-eight photographers have come together to support the documentary,  A Thousand Little Cuts: a film exploring the grassroots movement to stop the highly-destructive mining process of mountaintop removal.

In a forgotten part of our country, coal feeds families when not much else does. There’s no easy way to take sides when the coal company that takes your land and destroys your streams also pays your electric bills and puts food on the table. That’s why speaking out for the first time was the hardest thing Lorelei Scarbro had ever done.

Lorelei, the main character of A Thousand Little Cuts, is a tenacious grandmother fighting to save one of the last untouched mountains in Appalachia. 

Lorelei simply wanted to tend her garden, paint ceramic angels and spoil her grandchildren. She wanted to live out her days at home -- the rolling mountains of West Virginia. Then bulldozers came, followed by blasting crews. Massey Energy was gearing up for a mountaintop removal operation on Coal River Mountain, the mountain Lorelei calls home. In 2007 Lorelei spoke out. “This isn’t coal mining,” she yelled at a permit hearing. “This is the rape of Appalachia!”     

In  A Thousand Little Cuts, Emmy-winning director Chad A. Stevens takes us on the journey with Lorelei as she fights Big Coal to protect her community from an encroaching 6,500-acre mountaintop removal mine and proposes a positive community solution: the first green-energy project in the region, a 220-turbine industrial wind farm. 

After political lobbying and civil disobedience fail to create tangible change, Lorelei opens a community center in the heart of a struggling coal town. The center brings locals together, even those on opposite sides of the mountaintop removal debate. The cumulative effect of her efforts grows exponentially as she finds opportunities for solutions – unifying a fractured community and supporting an evolving local economy. It’s a story of change: a transforming culture, a dividing community, an awakening individual, and a family hanging in the balance.

Find out more about the project at A Thousand Little Cuts. 

Browse through award-winning photographs in the print auction, buy a print and support the film at the A Thousand Little Cuts Online Print Auction.

Thank you for your support and excitement for the project. 

humbly, 

Chad

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Update #4: Onward

Backer_white For backers only, Posted on July 18, 2010
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Update #3: Great week at the SilverDocs Film Festival

Posted on June 30, 2010

Hello friends, wanted to share this recent blog post about our week at the SilverDocs Film Festival and Conference.

Check it out:

http://thecoalwar.com/silverdocs

Update #2: What's your connection to mountaintop removal?

Posted on June 6, 2010

Last week I spoke to a roomful of media professionals and asked the question: "How many of you have heard of mountaintop removal coal mining?" I'm always shocked to see the response. In this room about one third of the participants raised their hands. I went on to explain how we are all connected to this destructive practice.

Want to see for yourself?

Update #1: An Inspiring Beginning

Posted on June 4, 2010

I sit here, humbled.

I'm amazed that in just three days we've raised over $1000. Since beginning this project four years ago, I knew that this story had to be told. And to now have this tangible example of support serves to motivate, inspire and push me, and The Coal War team, to new levels.

I consider all of the backers part of this team now. Thank you!

In deep gratitude,
Chad

ps. let's keep spreading the word! We have to get to 13,125 to make it count.

96
Backers
$5,465
pledged of $13,125 goal
0
seconds to go

Funding Unsuccessful

This project reached the deadline without achieving its funding goal on July 18, 2010.

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42 Backers

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8 Backers

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20 Backers

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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

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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.

  1. thecoalwar.com
  2. milesfrommaybe.com