We're too good to acknowledge that it's Halloween weekend. Wrong! We're not missing our one opportunity of the year to embrace the scary side of the outdoors—and we don't mean BASE-jumping scary.
Photography
'Overview' by Benjamin Grant
The title refers to a life-changing feeling—sometimes referred to as a cognitive shift or state of mental clarity—that astronauts get when they look down on the little blue marble of earth. The book is a collection of super-high-quality satellite imagery that was taken over 15 years, now stitched together and presented with a focus on human activity viewed from on high (“Where We Play, Where We Extract, Where We Live). Our favorite section, though, is “Where We Are Not,” which includes some unreal images of the earth's more isolated places (see a few shots from this section below).
Overview won't change your life (you'll have to ask NASA for more information about that), but there's something about seeing humanity's footprint and a few natural wonders from such a tidy, distant perspective that makes this a compelling collection.
Reprinted with permission from Overview by Benjamin Grant, copyright (c) 2016. Published by Amphoto Books, a division of Penguin Random House, Inc. Images (c) 2016 by DigitalGlobe, Inc.
Documentary
'3,000 Cups of Tea'
The discussion around the fall of Greg Mortenson, the protagonist of Three Cups of Tea and founder of the Central Asia Institute, continues. A new documentary, 3,000 Cups of Tea, is a defense of Mortenson from filmmakers Jennifer Jordan and Jeff Rhoads, and a criticism of 60 Minutes and Jon Krakauer, whose reporting raised questions about Mortenson's story and his work with the nonprofit CAI. Jennifer Dobner explores the controversy:
“That he was able to build the number of schools he did was an incredible achievement,” Jordan said during a Salt Lake City radio broadcast. “There are mistakes. Greg has owned them, the board has owned them. But the bottom line, I think, particularly given where we are in the world right now, is that the education of these villages, of these people, is crucially more important than trying to put an American sensibility on this area of the world.”
“Absolutely it matters,” Krakauer argued. “People need to believe. They need to believe that the leaders of [nonprofits] are telling them the truth.”
Movie-to-Be
'Andy: The Untold Story of Andy Irons'
https://youtube.com/watch?v=qs2N50Ek01M
On November 2, 2010, hugely accomplished but troubled surfer Andy Irons was found dead in a Dallas hotel room at age 32. As the anniversary of the athlete's death nears, Teton Gravity Research has released a teaser for an in-the-works film about Irons's life. “It has definitely been touchy for me, but it has also been therapeutic,” Irons's younger brother, Bruce, said of the film in a press release. “We aren’t going to sugarcoat it. We’re going to tell the whole story.”
Because filmmakers Steve and Todd Jones didn't want any corporate influence on the documentary, they're running a Kickstarter campaign to raise $150,000 for the project, now through November 12.
TV
‘The Great Indoors’
We'll just say this: Outdoor Limits, the magazine at the center of CBS's new sitcom, looks awfully familiar. Just how familiar?
ϳԹ Reads
The Horror of the Outdoors
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Quick read: In horror films that take place in nature, the monsters aren't real (we hope) but the what-not-to-do-in-the-wilderness lessons are.
And a longer read from the archives: a classic real-life horror story from Joshua Hammer, set in one of America's most iconic national parks.
Having decided to begin their search in the immediate area, the squad split up into five groups. Kidd and four other members of the search party walked the woods along Crane Creek. Beneath the hot noonday sun, they bushwhacked through dense brush, watching for rattlesnakes and looking for signs of the missing woman. After only a few minutes, they spotted footprints, broken saplings, trampled ferns and grass—all evidence of a recent run, perhaps a chase, through the woods. Suddenly one of the rangers noticed something metallic. “What's that?” he asked.
In a narrow ditch filled with three feet of still water, Kidd spotted a key ring glinting in the sun. Just beyond it lay something else: a woman's body, clad in a white T-shirt and blue jeans. As Kidd drew closer, he noticed something that nearly made him gag. “Jesus,” he said, and ran back to the ranger in charge. “We have an 11-44,” he said, using the police code for a dead body. “And she's been decapitated.”