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Short Film “Animal Committee” Debuts at Santa Barbara International Film Festival

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – The 41st annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival kicked off Wednesday evening, celebrating another year of the best in independent and international cinema. The nearly two-week festival will showcase over 200 films, filmmakers, and tributes from February 4th-14th.

The festival will be showing a variety of short films done by filmmakers right here in Santa Barbara, including Committee Animal by Robert Redfield.

Redfield and film star Leslie Zemeckis gave your Morning News a sneak peak at their newest project.

With a run time of 13 minutes, Committee Animal looks at the idea that maybe it took more than God and evolution to make our wonderfully weird animals.

"I think that's maybe why some of the animals come out as like mistakes. Like you have an animal with a large tail that makes no sense or something like that" Redfield explains. "It's just trying to whip it out for. You know, production, kind of imitating real life in a sense, right?"

Redfield says the short film is a pilot episode for a seven-episode series he hopes audience will catch in the future. The series will expand on the inter-workings of the committee, bring in new characters, and add lots of drama and conflict to the plot.

"I mean, there are some really big questions that are touched upon here, and, you can either drive yourself crazy thinking about them or kind of have a chuckle. And we prefer the latter."

You can see Committee Animal at the McHurley Film Center on February 7th and 9th during the Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

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The post Short Film “Animal Committee” Debuts at Santa Barbara International Film Festival appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

CNN’s analysts answer key questions about the search for Nancy Guthrie

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating

By Eric Levenson, CNN

(CNN) — The search for Nancy Guthrie is now in its fifth day, and investigators and the family are frantically searching for her whereabouts after her suspected abduction.

Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of “Today” anchor Savannah Guthrie, was reported missing Sunday around noon when she did not attend her regular church service. Investigators believe Nancy Guthrie was taken from her home against her will overnight, but there are no suspects yet, the sheriff’s department said Wednesday.

In response to reports of alleged ransom notes, Guthrie’s family released a heart-rending video on social media Wednesday night pleading with captors to provide proof their mother is alive. “We are ready to listen,” Savannah Guthrie said.

To better understand these latest developments, CNN senior correspondent Josh Campbell, a former FBI agent, and CNN chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst John Miller, a former deputy commissioner with the NYPD, answered our questions about the family’s video, the status of the investigation and law enforcement’s next steps.

What do you make of this plea from the Guthrie family?

Campbell: A personal plea by victim family members can be a powerful driver in seeking the safe resolution of a kidnapping. It can accomplish multiple things at once, including: opening a line of communication between the family and the abductor, humanizing the victim in a way that only loved ones can, and ideally eliciting a response from the abductor proving the victim is still alive.

In many ways, the Guthrie Instagram video is a reflection of the evolution in modern communication. Families have attempted to appeal to kidnappers for time immemorial via whatever medium was available. Releasing a video on social media, which is then amplified by the national news media, increases the likelihood that Nancy Guthrie’s abductor will see it.

Miller: It tells us that the authorities and the family believe that the notes contained enough information that appeared to be credible, knowledgeable about the abduction, that they are responding by trying to make what has been a one-way conversation – a ransom demand sent out to three different media organizations – into a two-way conversation … They are reaching out to implore the kidnappers to make contact with them.

Why did the Guthrie family release this video?

Campbell: The first goal of the family is to remind the abductor they are dealing with an innocent person who is loved, is a cherished member of the community, and has done nothing to deserve her current situation. A kidnapper may only see the victim as a means for financial gain, but hearing directly from the anguished Guthrie children provides the kidnapper with an outlook they may not have on the anguish they have caused.

The second purpose is to try to determine the kidnapper’s goal in order to help obtain a peaceful resolution. A kidnapping negotiation only works if both sides have something the other wants.

Miller: Well, they’re doing two important things. One is, a great deal of effort is put into, and it’s very natural, to humanize their mother. She’s not an object. She’s not a commodity. She’s not just a victim who is for sale with a price tag and a ransom demand. She is a loving person who is loved back by her family.

(The goal is) to develop that kind of empathy, between the family and whoever is holdi

New analysis suggests puzzling fossil may have been an unknown life-form

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
From right

By Katie Hunt, CNN

(CNN) — Some 400 million years ago, long before dinosaurs or even trees had evolved, an enigmatic organism towered over the landscape like a prehistoric monolith.

Now, new research makes the case that the ancient life form is not a plant, animal or fungi and instead may be a completely unknown form of multicellular life.

“What we can say, based on all of those new analyses, is that it’s so different from any modern group we have,” said Corentin Loron, a palaeontologist at Edinburgh University and a co-lead author of the research, which published in the journal Science Advances last month.

First identified 160 years ago, the fossils — known as Prototaxites — measure up to 30 feet (around 9 meters) tall and have long defied easy classification.

In the 19th century, scientists initially thought Prototaxites was the rotten trunk of a conifer. Subsequent study, however, revealed it was composed of interwoven tubes, rather than the block-like cells that make up plant tissue.

Other scientists argued that it was a lichen-like mass, a symbiotic association between a fungus and algae. In recent years, some researchers thought the organism more closely resembled a fungus, in part because it didn’t appear to produce energy through photosynthesis.

The new research focused on three Prototaxites fossils unearthed in the Rhynie chert, a prehistoric land ecosystem near Aberdeen, Scotland. The Rhynie chert is home to the best-preserved examples of the earliest plants, fungi and fauna that colonized land 400 million years ago, during a period known as the early Devonian. The site was once an ancient hot spring like Yellowstone.

The exceptional preservation of the fossils embedded in the rock at the Rhynie chert allows scientists, with the right tools, to detect the chemical signatures of long-vanished molecules, known as fossilization products.

“We are able to still have signatures that inform us about the original composition of those fossils, meaning it’s not overcooked, it’s not overly transformed by the geology,” Loron explained.

Unanswered questions

The new analysis by Loron and his colleagues suggests that the biomarkers in Prototaxites fossils were chemically distinct from those of fossilized fungi found at the site and preserved in similar conditions. Fungi fossils preserved in the chert contained compounds from the breakdown of chitin and glucan, key structural molecules in fungi. Prototaxites, however, lacked these biomarkers.

“If Prototaxites was fungi, we would have expected it to follow the same trend as the fungi because they are next to each other in the same burial conditions,” Loron said.

Other structural features — such as a complex branching pattern within dark spherical spots in the fossil that could have carried out a gas, nutrient, water, or served another exchange function — were distinct from all known fungi, whether living or extinct, the researchers noted in the study. Based on these results, it is too early to shoehorn Prototaxites into a specific category, according to the team.

Different

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