Friday night, March 4th 2011, World of Source put on a party in Southside, RVA, just over the river. Below are some videos of some of the acts. There is more to come.
Showing posts with label wrir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wrir. Show all posts
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Yes Virginia, Richmond Does Have Warehouse Parties
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Friday, February 25, 2011
The Fourth Annual Virginia Film Festival for the Byrd.
Hear the audio version of this story here

One such documentary, “Beardo the Movie, covers the 2009 World Beard and Moustache Championships. IT’S being shown alongside A Gift for the Village, about a cultural connection between the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Himalayas.

Robert Mark is the director of the short film Relax, which is a movie about relaxing sights and sounds meant to soothe the audience.


/James Klentzman.
For the fourth straight year, the Byrd Theatre in Richmond is hosting the Virginia Indie Film Festival on Saturday and Sunday. The Festival, produced by the Virginia Film Office and the Virginia Production Alliance, will once again feature independent documentaries, short film, and features from filmmakers across Virginia.
Kathryn Stephens is the Industry Relations Manager at the Virginia Film Office, and alongside managing the Indie Film Festival, works with independent filmmakers to find locations and resources to show their films.
“It’s a great opportunity for Virginia filmmakers to showcase their work, allow other industry professionals to see who else in the state is making excellent film products, and it’s a great way to support the arts.”
According to Stephens, the Indie Film Festival is one of the few festivals in Virginia that shows shorts, documentaries, and feature films. The film festival is also open to a specific group of people.
“The Virginia Indie Film Festival is open only to Virginia filmmakers, so the most important qualifying rule is that they have to live in Virginia to submit their film. This year was the first year we allowed filmmakers who shot their films outside Virginia to submit work, but mostly we did this to sort of widen the pool of talent and talented films to be shown at the Byrd.”
The Byrd, Richmond’s historic theater located in the heart of Carytown, has played host to the Indie Film Festival since the beginning, and for specific reasons.
“It’s just gorgeous. It’s a gorgeous venue, and they’ve been very supportive of the independent film-making community. They allow filmmakers to screen their films there and they give them excellent rates, so we want to support the Byrd. They’ve been great to us, and it’s also just a fantastic historical venue to screen films in.”
This year’s films Span a wide-range and are full of topics and stories. The documentaries and shorts will be shown on Saturday.

One such documentary, “Beardo the Movie, covers the 2009 World Beard and Moustache Championships. IT’S being shown alongside A Gift for the Village, about a cultural connection between the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Himalayas.
Shorts being shown include Caution Wet Floor, about corporate executives caught in a dangerous situation and RE: MESSIAH, which shows what happens when technology gains sentience, and love.

Robert Mark is the director of the short film Relax, which is a movie about relaxing sights and sounds meant to soothe the audience.
“It’s a small sample from a much bigger project that I’m working on, and as the name Relax implies, this film contains beautiful relaxing images and nat sounds to reduce stress.”
Mark, a Virginia Commonwealth University graduate and long-time Richmond citizen, is at the Indie Film Festival for a second time. His first entry was about VCU’s excavation of historic Curles Neck Farm, and the artifacts that were uncovered there, some dating as far back as the 1600s. Before making his own films, Mark spent some time in the television industry filming shows. When filming the archaeology film, Mark did not think it would go far.
“My personal history is that I worked in broadcast TV for over 20 years and most of the stuff I worked on in the past is news magazine programs and documentary-oriented programming, and the archaeology part was right up my alley. So I thought ‘Well, maybe I’ll put this out there and see if there’s any interest in it.’ And to my surprise the film festival liked it and put it in the finals.
Mark says that festivals like the Virginia Indie Film Festival are great for the city of Richmond because it showcases the city’s unique cultural status.
“I think it’s great that they do these types of festivals because it promotes filmmaking in general and it’s either low-cost or no-cost to enter these festivals, and I think it brings a lot of awareness to the region that it’s a creative hub. And Richmond has always been like that in terms of musicians, and artists, and filmmakers, it’s a very rich region for its size.”
Three feature films will be shown on Sunday, and include Quick Feet, Soft Hands, about a minor league baseball player trying to make it big, and Tracks, about a man reflecting on his troubled childhood in Baltimore.
Brian Wimer’s film, Danger. Zombies. Run., is one of the three feature films being shown on Sunday. In his movie, zombies attack a crew while filming a zombie movie.
“The movie is about a bunch of indie filmmakers who are making a zombie movie and they intermittently get attacked by real zombies, so it’s essentially my notion being an independent filmmaker of, I don’t know, reality intruding upon all of our notions of what zombies really are about and why zombies chase us.”

Calling his movie a “philosophical zombie comedy,” Wimer wanted to discover just why we’re so fascinated by zombies and why most zombie movies follow a similar formula.

“You can do something that’s really dumb that’s a zombie movie. But why do that? Why not, I went to an Ivy League school, I’ve got a brain, why not put in notions? So it’s to investigate what is it about zombie movies. Like, if I said I’m making a zombie movie, whoever’s in the room jumps up and down saying ‘Can we see it?’ If I said I’ve got a coming-of-age drama, you know, you’ll hear crickets, so what is it about zombie movies that make people crazy? And why here? I don’t know, Japan had Godzilla movies for a while and there was a reason why. It was because of Hiroshima, and we have zombie movies, and we’re plagues by zombies, why is that? I think there actually are philosophical, psychological ramifications to why we find ourselves to be persued.”
While the names involved in these small low-budget films aren’t recognizable now, Stephens has no doubt that some of them will end up becoming great success stories.
“I think it’s a lot of really talented film-makers who, although they’re not known now, maybe in 10 years they could be. So I think it might be one of those things that maybe, 10 years from now you’re sitting at a theater, watching a film and you realize ‘Oh I saw that guy’s film at the Indie Film Fest all those years ago. I totally connected that now!”
For more information on the individual screenings you can visit the Virginia Film Office’s website at http://www.film.virginia.org/.
Screenings for documentaries and shorts will be on Saturday 1 to 6 p.m., and features will be presented on Sunday from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m.
/James Klentzman.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Elf Power Stops by WRIR Studios
Elf Power came by our studios before their show at Strange Matter this past week. Thanks to them for coming out, and if you've got anyone else you'd like us to interview, let us know!!
Monday, August 16, 2010
Thursday, April 29, 2010
WRIR's 2010 Spring Fund Drive

Listen to the full story here
Every fall and spring since 2005 marks this happy little time that all of us at WRIR like to call "fund drive." During this spring's fund drive -- and others in the past -- the station comes to life, filling with people, laughter and a great deal of delicious food provided by local businesses. This time of year truly encompasses what being a locally-produced, operated and run station is all about.
WRIR Board Member Josh Bearman told his story.
"The meaning of the fund drive, besides the obvious 'getting us a third of our yearly income,' is to us an attempt to validate ourselves by seeing how much of the community will come out to help support WRIR because WRIR's whole message is one of localism and community outreach and community engagement," Bearman said.
In Fall 2009, WRIR raised $27,900 with 426 donors. In Spring 2009, 414 donors gave $27,700 to the station. During WRIR's first-ever fund drive, $21,000 was raised.
There is a sense of community in the kitchen as people filter in and out and grab food. Local residents come together to support a cause they believe in: independent radio, radio for the rest of us.
Julia McCauley, Operations Director for the station, spoke about what WRIR means to her.
“My favorite part about being with WRIR is working with so many people who give up their time and talents to bring radio to Richmond,” McCauley said.
“Indie radio is important because it brings voices that you won’t hear anywhere else. A lot of people don’t know the music scene around here, a lot of people don’t know about other political views and WRIR gives them that voice.”
Phil Ford is a DJ and spoke about what the station means to him.
“I do the Friday Breakfast Blend, every Friday, from 6-8am,” Ford said. “It’ll be five years coming in August. I think it’s a good sense of community more than anything; a community of people that like music and like being involved in something bigger than themselves that’s actually worth a damn.”
Melanie Lane, a donor, spoke about her WRIR experience.
"I love your station -- amazing shows, especially on Sundays. I love your Sunday shows, Monday mornings -- pretty much any time I flip it on it's just refreshing to hear something different and new. I think it's just a little bit more heartfelt, it's not so mainstream. You have a lot of people that are really pulling together for the same kind of common cause and I think that is a very important thing, especially in any community," Lane said.
"So it just kind of shows a lot of support and a lot of information that we wouldn't normally not be able to get. I don't watch the news, so you guys are my news."
A variety of premiums are offered during this year's fund drive. Keeping consistent with past drives, a newly-designed T-shirt is available for donations of $45 or more. For $100, you receive two fund drive tees and the WRIR 5th anniversary silk-screened poster signed by artist Noah Scalin. And a portion of your $200 donation will benefit Tricycle Gardens.
A student premium is also available for $20 and comes with a T-shirt from a past fund drive. All premium donation levels come with a WRIR sticker and schedule. During WRIR's music shows, a number of prizes are given out like concert tickets, CD packages and gift certificates.
WRIR's Fund Drive will continue through Sunday, May 2. Any donation helps keep the station alive. You can donate by calling 804-622-9747 or coming by the station, located at 1621-B West Broad Street. You can donate online at wrir.org.
-Laura Peters
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