Above the Rest………

Above the Rest.........

Above the Rest………, photo by smiles7.

Stand up, stand out.

Check this out bigger and in Julie’s Spring/Summer slideshow.

Dog Days of Summer: August in Michigan

Dog_Parade_3

Dog_Parade_3, photo by Steven Scherbinski.

“If you saw a heat wave, would you wave back?”
– Steven Wright

Every month, we post a Michigan event calendar on Absolute Michigan. Our 2010 August Calendar of Michigan Events features too many cool Michigan events to list here – click that link and get a little relief from the Dog Days of Summer!

You can see this photo bigger (if you dare) and also have a look at Steven’s slideshow from the Northport Dog Parade.

Also check out the August slideshow from the Absolute Michigan pool!

Elk Rapids Beach

Elk Rapids Beach

Elk Rapids Beach, photo by kmoyerus.

Somebody told me once, “If you see a curve, take a picture.”

Check this out bigger and see more black & white photography on Michigan in Pictures.

Michael Moore to help restore Michigan’s downtown movie theaters

Bohm Theatre, Albion

Bohm Theatre, Albion, photo by I am Jacques Strappe.

One of the cool things that came out at this year’s Traverse City Film Festival was Michael Moore’s plan to to bring back downtown movie theaters. John Flesher And Mike Householder of the AP write in USA Today:

For generations, Americans viewed films in stately, single-screen theaters that were pillars of city business districts — an experience that faded with the rise of suburban multiplexes and the decline of downtowns.

Michael Moore wants to bring those theaters back. The Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker has a plan to refurbish or prop up downtown movie houses in his home state of Michigan— and eventually nationwide.

Such efforts have been made before. But Moore’s approach has a twist, modeled on the successful resurrection of the State Theatre in Traverse City, his adopted hometown in northern Michigan.

The way to rescue downtown movie houses, Moore says, is to run them as nonprofit ventures staffed mostly with volunteers. That slashes costs and gives the community a stake in the theater’s survival, he says.

Moore plans to provide grants and training to theater operators who use those methods. The money would come from a fund he’s creating with his rebate from a state film tax credit earned by producing his documentary, Capitalism: A Love Story, in Michigan. He expects the refund to total about $1 million.

“One of our goals is to create an economic boost, particularly in struggling downtown areas,” he told The Associated Press this week during the annual Traverse City Film Festival, which he and others established six years ago. “Another is to save the art of cinema and encourage great films to be made.”

The Flint native moved to the Traverse City area in 2003 and took an interest in the State Theatre on the resort town’s main street. Opened in 1916, it had become a shuttered relic.

As someone who lives in Traverse City and has seen the amazing impact that the re-opening of the State Theatre has had on downtown Traverse City by driving traffic to restaurants and shops, I have to say that this is an economic development idea that communities should take a good look at!

If you want to see these theaters, there’s no better place than Marjorie O’Brien’s amazing Theaters of Michigan set. The theaters are organized alphabetically by city name. She hopes to do a book and writes that although it’s probably an obsession:

This project is, however, the least I can do to raise public awareness about the plight of historic movie theaters.

Each theater featured in this set is unique and different from the next. Each theater has had very different stages in its life; each has its own storied history.

Check them out, beginning with Albion’s shuttered Bohm Theatre, in her Theaters of Michigan slideshow.

PS: If you want to learn more about Marjorie, check out our Michigan in Pictures photographer profile of Marjorie O’Brien.

Taking time with a Lake Superior sunset

_DSC1376

_DSC1376, photo by adonyvan.

Hey everyone, sorry for being a day late with this. I plead film festival. ;)

Check this out bigger and see more from this shoot in his Houghton & UP MI slideshow.

Edge of the night

Edge of the night

Edge of the night, photo by kevindooley.

Here’s a “beauty shot” from Michigan’s Creative Commons King, Kevin Dooley. You can learn a lot about how Flickr works from Kevin right here.

View it bigger and in his Water slideshow.

Here’s more messing about in boats on Michigan in Pictures, and have a wonderful weekend!

Cooler by the Lake

Gull Lake, Michigan, Circa 1930, photo courtesy Archives of Michigan

On Cooler by the Lake at seekingmichigan.org – the Library of Michigan and the Archives of Michigan’s very cool Michigan history site – Mary Zimmeth writes:

I am an urban child. During the summer, I rode my bike everywhere and took in a matinee at least once a week. I went to Tigers baseball games, enjoyed bittersweet hot fudge sundaes at Sanders, and watched the Scott Fountain change colors on Belle Isle. It was a great childhood, yet I envied people who owned cottages and boats. It did not matter that I could not swim. Each summer I desired a vacation near a lake with a boat in the dock. Boats in the water or being towed on the road equal summer.

This first image comes from the Charles R. Childs Collection of photograph prints and negatives dating 1922-1951. (Childs was a photographer from Illinois who specialized in tourist shots.) Taken at Gull Lake, this photograph (c. 1930) centers on Chris-Craft boats filling up at Dixie Gas and Oil. Builders of the standard “runabout,” the company marketed to the middle class by introducing payment plans in the mid-1920s. Boats were no longer just for the wealthy.

Read the rest and see lots more of Michigan’s photographic history at Seeking Michigan!

Michigan gets its own oil spill on the Kalamazoo River

Danger

Danger, photo by raddad!.

On Monday about 850,000 gallons of crude oil spilled into the Kalamazoo River near Marshall. Over on Facebook, the Kalamazoo River Oil Spill group has been formed to provide a hub to volunteer, offer goods or services for donation, provide expertise, provide information and anything else that will help clean this mess up post-haste.

In addition to the photos from the oil spill group on Facebook, the Freep has photos of the spill – the worst in Michigan history – and you can get the latest updates on the Kalamazoo River from mLive.

Check this out bigger in Randy’s Kalamazoo River slideshow and here’s the Kalamazoo River Slideshow from the Absolute Michigan pool on Flickr.

2010 Traverse City Film Festival

2009-7-31 TCFF 0065 copy

2009-7-31 TCFF 0065 copy, photo by tcfilmfest.

All week long I’m going to be on location with Absolute Michigan, working for the Traverse City Film Festival.

Tune in to Absolute Michigan’s Traverse City Film Festival coverage where we’ll try and take you up close and personal with one of Michigan’s most dynamic festivals!

Many more photos are posted daily during the festival to the Traverse City Film Festival Flickr. You can see some of the best in the Traverse City Film Festival Flickriver and the Traverse City Film Festival group on Flickr.

Planet Poison Ivy

Thanks to the good folks at WordPress.com for featuring this post (and for hosting Michigan in Pictures)!

Vacant Factory

Vacant Factory, photo by Voxphoto.

I was driving the other day and noticing that the ivy seems especially profuse this summer. I was ready to chalk it up solely to the warm, wet summer of 2010 when my daughter Kenyon told me about this interview of Dr. Lewis Ziska, plant physiologist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service by Michele Norris on NPR:

NORRIS: We’ve long known that poison ivy is nasty stuff. Even if you barely brush up against it, you can get an angry, weeping, contagious, red rash that takes weeks to heal. Well, it turns out that poison ivy, along with its voracious cousins poison oak and poison sumac, is even more of a nuisance this summer. The plants are spreading faster, growing larger, showing up in new places and becoming more toxic. It’s the kind of thing that’s so scary, it almost deserves its own soundtrack.

…NORRIS: Why is the plant spreading more and becoming more voracious? Why is it growing larger?

Dr. ZISKA: One of the things that we think is occurring is that as carbon dioxide is increasing in the atmosphere – carbon dioxide, as everyone knows, is a basic greenhouse gas, but it’s also plant food. And plants take that carbon, and they convert it into sugars and carbohydrates and so forth.

But not all plants respond the same way to that resource, and we think that vines, particularly vines like poison ivy or kudzu or other noxious weeds, seem to show a much stronger response to the change in CO2 than other plant species. So on average, the poison ivy plant of, say, 1901, can grow up to 50 to 60 percent larger as of 2010 just from the change in CO2 alone, all other things being equal.

And as a result of that change, we see not only more growth but also a more virulent form of the oil within poison ivy. The oil is called urushiol, and it’s that oil that causes that causes that rash to occur on your skin when you come into contact with it. Read on >

Check this out bigger and in in Ross’s A Few in Color slideshow and know your poison ivy!