[Ccpg] Hopedance Media, Movie King Corn SB Public Library Faulkner Gallery Tues Nov 20, 6pm, Film &Dinner
Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
sbpcnet at silcom.com
Mon Nov 19 15:10:34 PST 2007
Hopedance Media Movie King Corn SB Public Library
Downtown Faulkner Gallery Tuesday Nov 20, 6pm
Tuesday, November 20 2007 6pm
Film & Dinner!
Brilliant, funny, exploring 2 young guys searching why they, and the
country, are "full of corn. What happened and why? These two friends
set out to discover why by actually growing corn
on an acre in Iowa to find out. Fascinating!
DiNNER with American Flatbread PiZZA and Sunstone Wine.
Where: Faulkner Gallery, SB Public Library
Suggested donation: $8-$10
REVIEW KING CORN SUSTAINABLE TABLE WEBSITE
<http://www.kingcorn.net/about.html>
King Corn
<http://www.kingcorn.net/about.html>King Corn is
a humorous and touching documentary about two
best friends who decide to move to Iowa to grow
an acre of corn after finding out (through
laboratory hair analysis) that their bodies were
made primarily out of
.corn. But this is not
your typical buddy picture. While it does trace
a year in the life of two friends, the film is
really about the history of corn in modern
America and the filmmakers relationship with the
crop theyve decided to grow.
After the somewhat shocking discovery about their
bodily composition, Ian Chaney and Curt Ellis
move to a small county in Iowa (where,
coincidentally, both had farmer
great-grandfathers) in order to find out how they
(and most other Americans) ended up made out of
corn. The two friends convince an Iowa farmer to
lend them an acre of land to plant their corn
crop. They purchase genetically modified corn
for planting, and with the help of their
neighbors, some heavy machinery, and lots of
chemical fertilizers and herbicides, they end up
growing a bumper crop of corn. But as Ian and
Curt show us this isnt your sweet summer
corn-on-the-cob were talking about its corn
bred specifically for industrial
applications. The two friends decide to find out
what happens to the corn theyve grown after it
leaves the grain elevator and find that tracing
their crop is easier said than done. Ultimately,
however, they come to the conclusion that their
corn is likely destined for one of two American
industries: animal feed or corn syrup.
Diane Hatz interviewing Curt Ellis at Clear Creek Distillery
in Portland during the
<http://www.sustainabletable.org/features/articles/kingcorn/../../../roadtrip>Eat
Well Guided Tour.
Americans are so corny because almost every
product in conventional grocery stores from
steaks to chicken breasts to condiments to
desserts to tomato sauce to frozen entrees (the
list goes on) are ultimately derived from corn,
either in the form of high fructose corn syrup or
from corn-based animal feed. The filmmakers
visit cattle feedlots which hold thousands of
animals dining on corn-based feed and learn that
too much corn causes the cattle to eventually
develop an acidic condition in one of their
stomachs (acidosis) that eventually kills
them. And after having trouble getting a tour of
a high-fructose corn syrup factory, they decide
to make corn syrup themselves (note: the process
requires sulfuric acid and other industrial
chemicals). Both corn-fed beef and high-fructose
corn syrup contribute to the obesity epidemic in
the United States. Nutritionists and others
interviewed in the movie also discuss the link
between the diabetes epidemic and high-fructose
corn syrup (especially corn syrup consumed in the form of soda).
King Corn
The filmmakers trace the history of corn
subsidies in the US the current system started
only about 30 years ago when the Farm Bill was
changed and the emphasis was put on
industrial-style monocropping. The two friends
lose money growing their acre of corn the cost
of seed, herbicides, chemical fertilizers, and
equipment rental outweigh the price per bushel
they get for their corn. However, they get
government subsidies for growing the corn which
makes up for the initial input cost. The film
gets to the heart of the matter by revealing the
farmers frustrations. Many of them are
multi-generation farmers caught up in the farm
subsidy system. They realize that the current
farm subsidies are part of an end to the more
traditional farming of generations past, but
cant remove themselves from the system without losing their shirts.
The movie contains interviews with Michael Pollan
(author of The Omnivores Dilemma) and several
farmers in the Iowa town where Ian and Curt grow
their corn. All-in-all, King Corn is a well-made,
though provoking and sometimes humorous film about our modern food system.
For copies of the DVD and more information on the
filmmakers odyssey into the world of corn, check
out the King Corn www.kingcorn.net/ -
Read more about
<http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/policy/>US
agriculture policies,
<http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/economics/>economics,
<http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/feed/>animal
feed,
<http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/familyfarms/>family
farms, and more on the Sustainable Table
http://www.sustainabletable.org/features/articles/kingcorn/
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