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Hillsboro from POTS to broadband - Times Gazette

Hillsboro from POTS to broadband Bill Sims Contributing columnist They used to call it POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service). According to Wikipedia, this was the standard phone service offered between 1876 and 1988. Of course, that all began to unravel when we gave birth to digital services and what came to be known as the Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) think copper wire vs. fiber optics and radio waves. The problem with POTS was that rural communities had difficulty getting services. It’s like our experiences with cable networks. There was more profit installing cable infrastructure in densely populated communities. Early on, POTS actually stood for Post Office Telephone Services, where rural residents had to connect through their post offices.

Five films that dig into conspiracy theories

Jef Rouner April 9, 2021 George Clooney in “The Men Who Stare at Goats.” Photo: Laura Macgruder We’re in a golden age of galaxy-brained nuttery. Conspiracy theories abound, from Jewish space lasers setting California on fire to satanic pizza parlors where children are available as toppings. There has never been a better time to sell tinfoil hats, but it’s also terrifying, as we saw during the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Here are five films that help make sense of the nonsense. They poke fun, prod at the truth and, at times, seek to understand the people who fall prey to ridiculous and dangerous ideas.

14 Native American films made by Native filmmakers from Oklahoma

Oklahoman For more than a century, cinema has been a favored American way to tell stories of different peoples and cultures.  But the mainstream movie industry hasn t always treated Native American stories fairly or authentically.  If you look at Native representation in history, it s been pretty bad. So, almost showing any truthful, real version of Native people is humanizing. . I think anytime we show Native people kind of on their terms and in their environments, we re humanizing (them) on the screen and we re changing the narrative that history has kind of laid on us history and Hollywood, said Sterlin Harjo, a Seminole and Muscogee (Creek) filmmaker, native Oklahoman and film festival favorite, in a 2020 interview.

Native filmmakers are changing the narrative that history has kind of laid on us

Native filmmakers are changing the narrative that history has kind of laid on us Brandy McDonnell, Oklahoman © [Sundance Institute] Little Chief, a narrative short film directed by indigenous filmmaker Erica Tremblay (Seneca-Cayuga) had its world premiere as part of the Shorts Selection at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. Tremblay is original from Oklahoma and lensed the short in Oklahoma. The short film stars Lily Gladstone, left and Julian Ballentyne. For more than a century, cinema has been a favored American way to tell stories of different peoples and cultures.  But the mainstream movie industry hasn t always treated Native American stories fairly or authentically. 

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