Dr. Pop


Dr. Pop Blog

Fun Theory of Change. Los Angeles.

8/24/2010 by Gilda Haas - No comments


Super-CitizenFree Film Screening and Discussion

Bogotá Change


EVENT DETAILS
DAY:  Sunday, September 12
Film: 4 PM
Discussion: 5 PM
Place: Busby’s East
5364 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90036

street parking


Register for The Fun Theory of Change in Los Angeles, CA  on Eventbrite




What does fun have to do with social change?


How can mimes, super-hero costumes, and artistic interventions help to transform a city?


Join Dr. Pop for a lively screening of Bogotá Change, a documentary that tells the story of how Antanas Mockus and Enrique Peñalosa reshaped an entire city through creativity and an incredible commitment to being human.


After the movie we will share ideas on what this has to do with L.A. and the creative work we are already doing.


Bring your best plots, schemes and dreams.

Dangerous Districts

2/13/2010 by Gary Phillips - 1 comment


As mentioned in my previous post – back to the future of dystopia – with an emphasis on re-zoning sci-fi style.


walled city of Kowloon


I can’t cite the direct literary root (or route), though this idea of a walled-off or secret city separate from hostile environs has threaded its way through various science fiction and fantasy novels and films over the years. Tarzan searched for and protected the Lost City of Opar in a few of his adventures. In Robert Heinlein’s novel, The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, an entire planetoid, our moon, is populated with underground colonies containing, among others, criminals and political exiles.


Pissed off with their lot, some of these disparate forces band together for freedom against Earth rule and stage a revolt. Marvel Comics’ Black Panther is the super-hero, warrior king of the scientifically advanced hidden African kingdom of Wakanda. For centuries the one who wears the mantle of the panther has led the people to fight off everything from European colonizers to Dr. Doom.


The notion of the jewel of a city protected from the predatory outsiders is turned on its head in John Carpenter’s 1981 film Escape from New York. In this flick, due to runaway crime in the near future, Manhattan Island has been walled off and turned into a maximum security prison. Black helicopters patrol from the air, making sure no scofflaw climbs out.


Inside a kind of Lord of the Flies meets Clockwork Orange tableau has played out as various sub-cultures exist bumping up against each other amid the trash, crumbling buildings and warring gangs and tribes. It’s World War III between us, the Soviet Union and China, and the President of the United States’ plane is hijacked by revolutionaries, and crash lands in the prison-city. Ex-hero soldier turned bank robber Snake Plissken is sent in and has 24 hours to find the prez. The Duke of New York, leader of the latest gang, the Gypsies, is also on the hunt for the world leader. But the Duke lacks vision, he’s not out to unite the prisoners and fight for their freedom and sovereignty, he merely wants to use the president as a shield for an escape across one of the mined bridges. Read More…