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Getting creative, a local theatre group is turning the tables to present their latest play.
Having filmed nine hours from three dress rehearsals, Post Productions‘ Negatunity is coming to a screen near you. Written by Matthew St. Amand, the show was scheduled for an April run before current pandemic restrictions went into effect. As a result, it can now be purchased for $25 starting Friday, April 23. Like any in-person production, though, it will go offline in four weeks.
While the concept may seem simple, many challenges were still associated with the switch.
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“We’d created the show for one medium, namely theatre, and now had to transfer it to another without sacrificing its peculiar aesthetic,” said actor and producer Michael K. Potter. “The video version of Negatunity is a hybrid, something that exists in a murky space between theatre and television.”
SAN DIEGO
A man who said he was jabbed with a police baton and shot with bean bags during a protest in downtown San Diego last year is suing the city and the county, alleging civil rights violations.
In his federal lawsuit, filed Friday in San Diego, Matthew Burgess also alleges negligence and lack of training for both San Diego police and San Diego County sheriff’s deputies in relation to actions taken by law enforcement during the May 31 protest to decry police brutality.
Neither law enforcement agency immediately responded to a request for comment.
According to the suit, the city and the county have already denied claims filed by Burgess, who shot cellphone video during the protest. Such claims can be a precursor to a lawsuit.
Protesters told NBC 7 s Jackie Crea it was their duty to take part in Thursday s protest.
Burgess also accused law enforcement of spraying him with pepper spray or another irritant by an unidentified officer, and that another officer jabbed him in
the stomach with a baton.
Burgess previously filed claims for damages, both of which were denied by the city and county. He alleges that in denying his claim, the city stated the officers seen firing projectiles in a video Burgess shot with his cellphone were San Diego County sheriff s deputies and not SDPD officers. Burgess alleges the county made a conflicting claim: that no sheriff s deputies were at the downtown protest, only SDPD was present.
A man who alleges he was shot with "kinetic impact projectiles" by law enforcement officers during a protest in downtown San Diego last spring is suing the city and county.