What War Looks Like.
Posted Saturday December 22nd 2007, 12:38 pm by CaseyJPorter
Filed under: Docublogs - Community, Docublogs - Dom, Docublogs - KLRU, Docublogs - Sean

Hey everyone. Sorry it’s taken so long for me to post this. However, I have been filming a new short interview with a Military Family which I will post soon. I am a Vet of this Iraq screw-up, and this is a video I made of picture taken while I was there.

I’ll let the video speak for itself.


Casey J Porter

www.virb.com/caseyjporter

www.youtube.com/caseyjporter



BBQ-tatusious
Posted Thursday December 20th 2007, 12:15 pm by lennyjay
Filed under: Docublogs - Community

What makes Austin unique? The BBQ for one. Here is a short documentary filmed for my RTF 366k class (Professor Anne Lewis).



Graffiti Project
Posted Thursday December 20th 2007, 8:53 am by sll454
Filed under: Arts, Docublogs - Community, TX, Austin


This is a short documentary I made for class. I follow two members of a graffiti crew called DDM. This short doc follows a one night adventure into the east side of Austin, TX. This is their story.



UT Flashmob: A Short Documentary by Lance Heruela, Cecy Correa, & Chris Tran
Posted Wednesday December 19th 2007, 1:52 pm by L.Heruela
Filed under: Docublogs - Community, Docublogs - KLRU, TX, Austin


Produced for the Intro to Digital Documentary Class taught by Anne Lewis

Department of RTF, University of Texas at Austin



woode wood: segment #2
Posted Friday December 07th 2007, 9:45 am by woodewood
Filed under: Docublogs - Community


chumbe salinas and i edited this piece, for more than 25 hours, over 5 days. the whole story is on my blog:

www.woodewood.blogspot.com

chumbe will start posting the testimonials, in their entirety(unedited, in near 5 minute segments), on youtube tomorrow, friday december 7, 2007:

www.youtube.com/woodewood



Returning Home - Veterans in Texas
Posted Wednesday December 05th 2007, 12:39 pm by docublogger
Filed under: Docublogs - KLRU, Docublogs - Sean

As I write, men and women of our armed forces are living their lives abroad in the midst of combat. Their families back in Texas and around the nation wait with trepidation for the return of their fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers, and children who are enmeshed in a world of bullets and bombs. Those who defend the war and those who decry it can set aside their ideological differences on at least one issue - the soldiers coming home. (more…)