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Independent Lens: The Tuba Thieves On-Demand

The Tuba Thieves: What is the role of sound and what does it mean to listen? Hard of hearing filmmaker Alison O’Daniel uses a series of tuba thefts in Los Angeles high schools as a jumping-off point to explore these questions. Through several d/Deaf people telling stories in a unique game of telephone, the central mystery of The Tuba Thieves isn’t about theft of instruments; it’s about the nature of sound itself.

Watch On-Demand Through 8/18/24

More About the Film at PBS Independent Lens: The Tuba Thieves

Learn More: ITVS Film Website

Independent Lens: The Tuba Thieves on WXXI-WORLD

The experimental documentary The Tuba Thieves is about deaf storytelling and the very nature of sound and listening.

Independent Lens: The Tuba Thieves airs Tuesday, January 14 at 2 p.m. on WXXI-WORLD

The Tuba Thieves: Between 2011 and 2013, tubas were stolen from high schools across Southern California. Against this backdrop, hard of hearing filmmaker Alison O’Daniel generates new sensitivity to sound and meaning in an unconventional documentary experience. What does it mean to listen? An exploration of musicality set against a theft. The central mystery of this unconventional documentary isn’t about theft; it’s about the nature of sound itself.

This program is presented as part of Dialogue on Disability, a partnership between WXXI and Al Sigl Community of Agencies – in conjunction with the Herman and Margaret Schwartz Community Series. Dialogue on Disability is supported by the Fred L. Emerson Foundation with additional support from The Golisano Foundation. The weeklong initiative runs January 13-19, 2025


WXXI and Al Sigl have been hosting Dialogue on Disability since 2005. In 2014, with the support of businessman and philanthropist Tom Golisano and the Golisano Foundation, Move to Include™ was formed. This initiative enables WXXI to present and develop programming that promotes inclusion year round.

Watch the Extended Trailer:



More About the Film at PBS Independent Lens: The Tuba Thieves

Learn More: ITVS Film Website

Norm & Company: Dr. Alice Holloway Young On-Demand

Norm & Company features Educational pioneer, Dr. Alice Holloway Young

Dr. Young was a Founding Trustee & Board Emerita at Monroe Community College (MCC) and has been a leader in the fight for greater equality in education. Dr. Young shared what it was like growing up on a farm in the rural South, her role in bringing the Urban-Suburban program to Rochester schools, how she became involved in MCC, and what she hoped her legacy will be.

Norm & Company is hosted by WXXI President & CEO Norm Silverstein, who speaks with long-time Rochesterians as they recount fascinating stories about their lives in the community. 

WXXI News article:

A longtime local educator has died. Alice Holloway Young, who fought for equity in education and helped establish both Monroe Community College and the Urban Suburban program died recently at the age of 100.

Holloway Young was a native of North Carolina, and moved to Rochester. She was the city school district’s first Black principal, and in 2021, Nathaniel Rochester Middle School No. 3 was renamed the Dr. Alice Holloway Young School of Excellence.

WXXI at the Rochester Lilac Festival at Highland Park • May 9-11

Come visit us at the Lilac Festival!

We’re kicking off festival season with the Lilac Festival. We’ll be setting up our booth the first weekend of the 10-day festival, so if you’re headed there on Friday, May 9, Saturday, May 10, or Sunday, May 11 be sure to stop by our booth. When you do, you can learn more about Protect My Public Media, pick up a CITY magazine, find out what’s happening at the Little, plus enter a drawing to win a WXXI gift basket.

Also, on Saturday from 12 to 4 p.m. WXXI’s Education Team will be setting up their tent next to us with fun kids activities.

For a list of activities, free concerts, and the parade, visit roclilacfest.com.

“Memory Piece” VOGUE Best Book of 2024 • Facebook Live Event

“A moving, strikingly evocative exploration of New York’s art, tech, and activism scenes across the decades.”

A Conversation with Bestselling Author, Lisa Ko on Wednesday, May 1 at 8pm ET on WXXI’s Facebook page.

In celebration of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, PBS Books is thrilled to have a bestselling author, Lisa Ko, join us to discuss her highly anticipated book Memory Piece. Lisa takes us on a road trip through time with Giselle (artist), Jackie (internet tech expert) & Ellen (activist), three lifelong friends whose lives as children growing up in the 80’s shaped their prospects as adults at the turn of the millennia. We discuss the stories, people and cultural events spanning the past four decades that inspired this story, and the outlook based on current events that shaped the book’s dystopian landscape four decades in the future. This visionary book will have you remembering and reflecting on the past, give you a glimpse of life not driven by technology, and leave you questioning what the future looks like. Join Lisa Ko this Wednesday, May 1 at 8pm ET for an opportunity to gain insight and learn about the creative process behind this provocative book. 

“Still Standing:  The Barns of J.T. Wells & Sons” • Producer Q&A

Still Standing:  The Barns of J.T. Wells & Sons, a new documentary produced by Katie Andres and Jill Kuchman of Churchbell Creative, LLC., highlights the history, heritage, and present-day plight of Western New York’s agriculturally and architecturally significant Wells barns. The 90-minute film makes its television debut on WXXI-TV on Monday, May 13 at 9 p.m. and encores Sunday, May 19 at 2:30 p.m.

We asked co-producer Katie a few questions about the film and here’s what she had to say.

Q. What inspired you to produce a documentary specifically focused on Wells barns?
While working at the Avon Century Barn in 2015, guests peppered me with questions related to the barn’s history and design.  My limited knowledge about the structure wasn’t enough to satisfy the curiosity of the guests – or my own!

I turned to the Monroe County Library System in desperation.  Typing “Wells Barns” into the search box revealed a single title:  Wells Barns:  J.T. Wells & Sons, Scottsville, NY 1886-1942:  Barns Still Standing. Locating this book at the Scottsville Free Library was a game-changer.  Type-written by the wife of a Wells descendant, and featuring black and white photos, the book was a relic – and a researcher’s dream come true. This documentary is an extension of that original work – bringing barn lovers up to speed on the current status of Western New York’s Wells barns.

Q. How did you decide which Wells barns to feature in your documentary?
A.
Meeting most viewers where they are in terms of their understanding of what a barn is and how it was originally used was strategic.  The first profiled barn needed to be a barn still used for agricultural purposes.  Nathan and Hannah Ruekberg’s barn was the perfect fit.  In the same family for multiple generations, their barn represents a conundrum for the family and the documentary’s viewers – how will the decisions of the family’s sixth and seventh generations impact the barn’s future?

From there, we encourage viewers to “see” barns differently, presenting several adaptive reuse scenarios – culminating in the colossal undertaking of not only giving a barn a new purpose, but ultimately a new home in a new location. 

Q. Did you encounter any challenges during the production phase, and how did you overcome them?
A.
Over the past nine years we encountered many challenges.  Funding its production was tough.  The Wheatland Historical Association’s fiscal sponsorship of our production company greatly expanded our grant pool.  Contributions from family members and friends and digging into our own pockets moved us forward. Filming during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic forced us to think creatively.

Q. How do you believe the documentary sheds light on the historical significance of Wells barns within the context of American agriculture?
A.
Long ago, Wells barns were constructed with a clear purpose. They played an integral role in securing the harvest, protecting livestock, and housing farming equipment. Today, many of these barns have lost their original purpose and fallen into disrepair. 

According to Frances Stern, former Manager of Technical & Grant Programs with the Preservation League of New York State, Wells barns were selected for inclusion on the League’s 2018-2019 “Seven to Save” Endangered Properties List with the intent that their example could provide a case study designed to raise awareness and to help inform and educate barn owners in NYS and across the country looking for support in re-purposing and re-envisioning other endangered barns and agricultural outbuildings.

Visually striking and arguably iconic, Wells barns are taken for granted by the average passerby. Yet beneath their soaring heights, their vast spaces are filled with stories. Rich in culture and history, they risk being silenced.  As producers, we recognize the power of sharing these stories on-screen.

Q. Did you uncover any surprising stories while researching the history of these barns?
A.
We have been spoiled with access to such a rich historical repository.  Uncovering the history of other kinds of barns often proves much more difficult due to each structure’s unique vernacular architectural style.  Documenting the history of houses usually took precedence over detailing the history of functional agricultural outbuildings.

Fortunately, Wells barns have had a series of champions – including Jean Melville, Daniel Fink, Bob and Judy Pratt, and others. The support of local historians and access to the Monroe County Library’s archives in conjunction with access to personal, family, and municipal archives was crucial.

Q. In what ways do you hope your documentary will contribute to preserving the legacy of Wells barns for future generations?

A. While several other states including Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, and Washington State, have active and thriving barn preservation programs and associated financial and informational resources for barn owners considering preservation and adaptive reuse, people are taking a closer look at how New York State can provide additional support for barn owners.

In 2012, during a “Wells Barn Owner Meet-and-Greet” event co-sponsored by the Preservation League of New York State and the Wells Barn Legacy Team, Cynthia Howk, retired Architectural Research Coordinator for the Landmark Society of Western New York, urged the barn owners in attendance to advocate for an expanded and re-envisioned version of  New York State’s own bygone Barn Restoration and Preservation Grant Program.  

Since then, based on the combined efforts of State Senator Michelle Hinchey (SD-46) and Assemblymember Didi Barrett (AD-106), Governor Kathy Hochul signed the New York State Historic Barn Tax Credit into effect back in 2022.  However, a series of qualifications currently exclude certain barn adaptive reuse scenarios – especially those costs involved with converting a historic barn into a primary residence.

With this television documentary, the producers of Still Standing:  The Barns of J.T. Wells & Sons  thrust one subset of New York State barns fully into the limelight, juxtaposing the importance of preserving these agriculturally and architecturally significant structures while leaving viewers questioning next steps for supporting barn owners currently shouldering our region’s collective history.  

Q. What was the most rewarding aspect of producing this documentary for you personally?

A. Working together over the past nine years to further champion the stories of barn owners alongside my best friend has been an indescribable and humbling experience.  Being able to rely on her technical expertise, experience, and artistry when my own production skills were lacking has been a powerful and eye-opening gift.  Having the trust of each barn owner and expert profiled in the documentary has been a heavy weight and a powerful motivator during the hardest of times.  Having a husband and a son who supported our efforts  every step of the way was crucial as life has a way of trying to derail projects like this.  We remain grateful to every single person who encouraged us. 

CREATE Showcase: Use Your Kitchen Tools • WXXI-CREATE

From knives to pressure cookers, learn how to best you favorite kitchen tools with CREATE experts.

CREATE Showcase: Use Your Kitchen Tools airs Saturday, April 27 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Sunday, April 28 from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on WXXI-CREATE.

From cast iron skillets and chef’s knives to pressure cookers and vacuum sealers, learn which kitchen tools will help you compose the best sweet and savory creations with help from the pros at America’s Test Kitchen and Cook’s Country.

Environmental Connections • Fridays at 8:30 p.m. and Sundays at 11 a.m. on WXXI-TV

The impact of food choices, electrification, the future of rainfall, the choice of whether or not to have children, this half-hour weekly series hosted by Jasmin Singer discusses what matters — and what should — when it comes to environmental preservation.

Environmental Connections airs Fridays at 8:30 p.m. and Sundays at 11 a.m. on WXXI-TV.

THIS WEEK (8/30 + 9/1): Air Travel: In this episode of Environmental Connections, we dive into the environmental impact of air travel and explore potential solutions for reducing aviation’s carbon footprint. 

With the threat of increased rain, and smoke from nearby wildfires affecting our area, anxieties about climate change are rising for many people. To address these concerns, WXXI has launched a new monthly series, Environmental Connections, which explores all things climate. The program launched on the radio in February as a two-hour spinoff of the daily talk show, Connections with Evan Dawson, and will launch a weekly half-hour television version in April, which is also Earth Month.

The televised version of Environmental Connections curates the best discussions from the taped, live radio broadcast and mixes in video packages from the field. Listen to the Environmental Connections Radio Series here to hear monthly episodes of the related radio series.

WXXI News’ Jasmin Singer is the host and producer of Environmental Connections and is uniquely qualified, given her personal and professional experiences. Relocating to Rochester from Los Angeles (by way of lower Manhattan) because of this city’s relatively positive long-term climate implications, she and her wife transformed their home into a near-net-zero dwelling, embodying the essence of environmental stewardship. Her journey to Rochester initially connected her with WXXI, leading to coverage of her story as a climate migrant, a subject also explored by Evan Dawson on Connections. Since then, Singer has evolved within WXXI, serving as the Weekend Edition host and a regular fill-in for Connections, Morning Edition, and All Things Considered. As a published author (“Always Too Much and Never Enough” [Penguin Random House’s Berkley, 2016] and Fabulous Vegan [Hachette, 2020]), podcast host (Webby-recognized “Our Hen House,” and the “VegNews Podcast”), interviewer and long-time vegan with a deep-rooted commitment to environmentalism, Singer brings a wealth of knowledge and a personal connection to the topic, making her an ideal host for this groundbreaking show. 

Environmental Connections also air on WXXI-WORLD Saturdays at 11:30 a.m. and Mondays at 6:30 a.m., as well as on City 12 Saturdays at 10 p.m.

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