Wednesday 26 October 2011

Night Of the Living Shed

The Southside Film Festival is hosting a special Halloween screening at The Shed nightclub in Shawlands.

George Romero’s cult classic Night Of The Living Dead will be shown on Sunday October 30 in a bid to boost the profile of the event which was held for the first time in May this year.

Karen O’Hare, founder and director, said: “The inaugural event was a great success: it gave people in the south side a chance to see quality films in a local setting.”

The Shed was well received as a location during the one of a kind festival and it was for this reason it was chosen for the Halloween special.

Ms O’Hare said: “It (The Shed) is an excellent space with a central location and young clientele.”

These thoughts were echoed by manager of the club Gemma Blair who felt the club provided a unique cinematic venue.

“With the closure of Muirend Cinema a few years ago, many south-siders have missed having a cinema on their doorstep.”

She added: “The Shed was delighted to take part in the first Southside Film Festival… we hope to in time do regular film screenings.”

In a quirk to proceedings Ms O’Hare will lead a “zombie walk” through Shawlands before the movie starts at 7pm and there will be a prize for “best zombie”.

Rather than a run-of-the-mill trip to the flics Ms O’Hare is keen to “give people an experience”.

“The idea is to create a buzz about the occasion and add a fun dynamic to it.”

The event is designed to raise awareness for next year’s festival and is likely to be replicated at Christmas and throughout next year before the opening in May.

Tickets are available from Tickets Scotland for £5 or are available on the night for £6.

 

Cathcart MP offers internship to high school students

MSP James Dornan is offering high school students in the south side of Glasgow the chance of a paid internship.

Students from St Margaret Mary's High School, Castlemilk High School, Hillpark Secondary and Kings Park Secondary are competing for a 3 month placement to shadow Mr Dornan and “experience political life.”

The MSP is passionate about giving young Scottish students the chance to feel they are doing something “worthwhile for their community.”

He also feels it would “help them considerably with their CV and give them great contacts for their future career.”

The winning pupil will perform tasks such as scheduling Mr Dornan’s diary, help to write motions and “become familiar with a mix of parliamentary and constituency duties.”  

Students will earn six pounds per hour to make the position a “more viable option” for them.

Brian Brady, head teacher of St Margaret Mary’s is putting forward two “high achievers” and echoed this saying: “making the internship paid has widened the number of young people who can consider it.”

Fellow head teacher, Margaret Barr of Kings Park High School said of the initiative: “we are delighted to be invited to enter the competition, and we believe it will be an excellent opportunity for the successful candidate.”

Each of the competing schools can propose up to three students who will be interviewed by Mr Dornan and submit essay for consideration before the winning candidate is announced in January.

The politician hopes to run the contest annually in the future.

Monday 10 October 2011

There's no substitute for success




Who would be a football manager?


With salaries inflating at the same rate as egos, it is no easy task to keep these sporting celebrities in line and Manchester City gaffer Roberto Mancini has found this out in dramatic fashion.


When Carlos Tevez allegedly refused to go on during Man City’s Champions League clash with Bayern Munich, shockwaves echoed around the footballing world.  The row has since escalated to seismic proportions with the Argentinian striker currently serving a two week suspension until the outcome of the club’s investigation on Wednesday.


Tevez has now blamed the incident on a misunderstanding and apologised to his team’s fans saying that he did not actually refuse to play, rather that: 'There was some confusion on the bench and I believe my position may have been misunderstood.”


The million pound a month footballer claims that his comments were not translated properly, although independent analyses do not corroborate this.  At the very least he could certainly invest a little more of his huge salary in a better interpreter.


Mancini made the point that this behavior would not be acceptable in any other of the top European clubs but, although this rebuttal was rare in the extreme, it is not the first time it has happened.


Keiron Dyer refused to play in a right wing position when his team Newcastle took on Middlesbrough in 2004.  Boss Sir Bobby Robson was sacked just a few games later and Dyer says “I can’t believe now that I acted the way I did” and that he took some of the blame for Robson’s dismissal “on his shoulders”.


It is hard to imagine Tevez showing such remorse and there is talk that the club will attempt to offload him at a cut price during the January transfer window.


Mancini now has a fight on his hands to regain control of his dressing room and the footballing prima donnas that occupy it. With even the player Tevez was intended to replace, Edin Dzeko, throwing a tantrum at his retiral the former Lazio manager must now stamp his authority.


The City manager has made it explicitly clear that he will never play the striker again while he is boss, so what will happen then if the investigation does not rule in his favour?


Hopefully unlike Carlos Tevez, Mancini is prepared to put his money where his mouth is.

Sunday 9 October 2011

Amanda Knox: Vixen or Victim?






A young girl returned to a massive homecoming in Seattle last week, that girl was Amanda Knox.


Knox has become a media obsession and the decision to overturn her conviction for the murder of British student Meredith Kercher has divided opinion in the most cavernous way.


To some she is the victim of a grievous miscarriage of justice while to others she is a cunning and libidinous creature whose feminine wiles have outwitted an asinine Italian police force.


But what is the truth?


From the outset Perugian local prosecutor Giuliano Mignini asserted this was a crime of passion and that it had the hallmarks of a female perpetrator.


The way the victim’s body was left protected by a duvet was suspicious: “only a woman would have covered her up after killing her” he is reported to have said.


What then ensued was a modern day witch-hunt.


Despite accurate physical evidence to prove it, Mignini formed the hypothesis that Kercher’s murder was the result of a sordid sex game gone awry.


This is a man whose phone tapping exploits would put the News Of the World to shame; he chose a theory and doggedly stuck to it for four years while the case fell around his ears.


Many of the police tactics shared this willfulness: Knox’s defamatory indictment of local bar owner Patrick Lumumba came after a mammoth 53hrs of questioning over a four day period and wasn’t even recorded.


Such blasé disregard for the rules was characteristic of the whole operation: the seriously inept gathering of forensic evidence was the real reason the case fell apart.


Even the prosecution of Rudy Guede was not enough to stem the flow of suspicion toward Knox and her boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito.


Guede’s were the only reliable forensic traces found in the fateful room and he only named the couple after they had been accused, at first insisting that it was another man who had killed Kercher.


Whether the lack of physical evidence is down to ineptitude or to Knox’s innocence we will never know, even judge Claudio Pratillo Hellmann who delivered the not guilty verdict made a crucial distinction between “judicial truth” and the “truth of reality”.


What is certain is that the highly sexualised portrayal of “Foxy Knoxy” by Italian prosecutors and the media almost put a ‘judicially’ innocent if slightly oddball and uninhibited girl in jail for a very long time.