ReportWire

Tag: Pavement

  • Shocking video appears to show CHP officer fatally shoot man on 105 Freeway

    Shocking video appears to show CHP officer fatally shoot man on 105 Freeway

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    Disturbing video recorded by a bystander appears to show a deadly encounter in which a California Highway Patrol officer shot a man repeatedly after a struggle in the middle of the 105 Freeway in Watts on Sunday afternoon.

    The CHP confirmed Monday that a shooting took place on the freeway, but did not provide basic information.

    The Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office confirmed the person had died, though it did not provide identification, pending notification of family. A cause of death was not released.

    CHP officials said they responded to the freeway about 3:15 p.m. Sunday after receiving multiple calls about a man walking through traffic near the Wilmington Avenue exit.

    After the trooper made contact with the pedestrian, “a struggle ensued and an officer-involved shooting occurred,” the CHP said in a release. Authorities said over a police radio that the man had a Taser and fired it at the officer, leading to the shooting, according to audio posted on the Citizen mobile app.

    The CHP directed all inquiries to the California Department of Justice, which investigates police shootings in which unarmed people are killed, according to the department.

    The state DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The video begins with a CHP officer on top of another person as the two struggle on the pavement in the middle of what appears to be a closed stretch of freeway.

    After a few seconds, while the two tussle, a gun seems to go off and a bullet ricochets off the pavement near the body of the man, who remains on the ground.

    The CHP officer then stands up and shoots at least four additional times at the prone man, the video shows.

    The man lies motionless for the rest of the minute-long video. The CHP officer remains by the body with his gun drawn.

    Travis Norton, a law enforcement officer who runs the California Assn. of Tactical Officers After Action Review, said video is a limited way to understand a police shooting.

    “It is hard to diagnose without knowing what the officer saw, experienced and interpreted was happening,” Norton said. “All I see is a very short scuffle. I see the suspect point something that appears to look like some sort of weapon. … From the video, without knowing anything else about it, the use of deadly force appears appropriate.”

    But other experts said the use of force raises many questions.

    Ed Obayashi, a police shootings expert who investigates the incidents for numerous law enforcement agencies in California, said investigators will immediately ask the officer why he was engaging with the person without a partner or backup in the immediate vicinity.

    Obayashi also said that investigators will look into why the officer felt the need to shoot the man after standing up and disengaging from him.

    “Why did you shoot him while he was on the ground?” Obayashi said investigators will ask. “You separated yourself from the individual; why was he still a threat to you?”

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • ‘Her Smell’ Director Alex Ross Perry Talks Nonfiction Projects About Video Stores, Indie Rock Band Pavement: ‘They Are Examinations of the Unexamined Era’

    ‘Her Smell’ Director Alex Ross Perry Talks Nonfiction Projects About Video Stores, Indie Rock Band Pavement: ‘They Are Examinations of the Unexamined Era’

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    “Her Smell” director Alex Ross Perry is developing two nonfiction projects, including the as-yet-untitled doc about video stores.

    “I can’t speak for everybody but yeah, I miss them,” he tells Variety at Poland’s American Film Festival, where he also picked the Indie Star Award and treated the audience to work-in-progress footage.

    “I’m trying to tell this story while it’s still within our grasp. You only have so much time when something is both a present tense memory for one half of your audience and a completely new experience for another. In another decade, everything I’m talking about will be ancient history.”

    Perry, who has been working on the project for 10 years, is also putting finishing touches on “Slanted! Enchanted!: A Pavement Musical” about an indie rock band.

    “I think both this video store movie and the Pavement movie are examinations of the unexamined era,” he says.

    “It was something I was thinking about when I made ‘Her Smell.’ We haven’t started narrativizing the 90s yet. We haven’t really delved into that era and asked what it was and what it meant, but it’s my time. No one who is older can tell that story and no one who is younger can tell that story.”

    In both projects, he will explore “the purity of that period.”

    “These projects attempt to go back to a time when things really mattered. Album sales don’t matter to musicians the way that they used to. Movies don’t matter to people the way they used to. Right now, it’s just ‘content’,” he notes.

    “Putting your hard-earned money on the counter to buy a CD created a relationship between you and that music that doesn’t exist at all anymore, unless you are a record collector.”

    Still, in “Slanted!” he will go one step further.

    “We get 1,000 music docs a year and sometimes, that’s what bands want. They want to protect and polish their legacy as they make a companion piece to their body of work. That’s the opposite of what Pavement wanted,” he notes.

    “I’m a junkie for music documentaries and I watch them too, but my whole question was: ‘Why not do something else?’ My current lack of interest in linear thinking led me to ‘maximalist’ storytelling.”

    In the film, set to be finished “at some point” next year, he will combine reality and fiction.

    “Stephen [Malkmus, vocals and guitar] has allowed me to make a documentary about things that only happened because I created them. It’s a doc about scripted events I fabricated, playing out whether the participants in the room know that or not. We had cameras around the room, rolling, and all the actors were in character the entire time – not as band members but as actors playing band members,” he enthuses.

    “To me, it feels like a new kind of movie. I have never seen anything like this, ever.”

    Despite his acclaimed collabs with Elisabeth Moss, also on “Listen up Philip” and “Queen of Earth,” Perry is not planning to go back to fiction anytime soon.

    “I just don’t get why people who supposedly like making movies only care about one mode of production. Scorsese has almost made more documentaries than narratives at this point. This kind of unbridled creativity it’s not common enough and I don’t understand why people want to rip off his aesthetic and not his work ethos,” he says.

    “When you get to work in nonfiction, the longer you go on, the more the world writes your story. You can edit a documentary one day a week and it’s always simmering just a little, or you can say: ‘I haven’t produced one minute of filmed content in years because I can’t get money.’ That makes no sense to me.”

    He would like other filmmakers to “stretch their legs and participate in parallel forms of creation,” he observes. Just like writers.

    “When you look at authors like David Foster Wallace, he wrote novels, short fiction stories or nonfiction. That’s how filmmaking should be as well,” he insists.

    “There’s nothing riding on [these two films]. There’s no urgency, which to me is the rarest thing in any form of filmmaking and possibly the greatest one too. In that sense, it becomes like writing a book.”

    “On the one hand, I want to be positive because it’s really nourishing for my brain. On the other, I have only arrived at this conclusion because of the dire state of narrative film in the U.S.”

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    Leo Barraclough

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  • Alex Ross Perry Is Helming A Movie About Indie Rock Band Pavement 

    Alex Ross Perry Is Helming A Movie About Indie Rock Band Pavement 

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    By Melissa Romualdi.

    Indie director, Alex Ross Perry, is making a movie about the beloved indie rock band, Pavement.

    After staging an unlikely musical theater show in New York this month- Slanted! Enchanted!: A Pavement Musical- it’s been announced that the production is part of an unorthodox feature film on the popular indie-rockers, as per a profile in the New Yorker this week.

    Although there aren’t many details surrounding the project, the film will reportedly be a mix of footage from the stage musical and its creation, along with biopic and documentary elements.


    READ MORE:
    ‘Mamma Mia! 2’ Director Ol Parker Says Producer ‘Has A Plan’ For Third Movie

    The movie is also reportedly based on an obscure directive from Stephen Malkmus, who was the band’s primary songwriter, lead singer and guitarist. According to profile writer, Hannah Seidlitz, Perry, who helmed Pavement’s “Harness Your Hopes” video and a handful of charming movies starring Elisabeth Moss, “wasn’t interested in hiring a documentary filmmaker. He wanted to hire a screenwriter. But he didn’t want a screenplay.”

    The upcoming film is described as something Perry wrote that is “legitimate, ridiculous, real, fake, idiotic, cliché [and] illogical.”


    READ MORE:
    Naomi Ackie Details The Technical Challenge She ‘Had To Work On’ Playing Whitney Houston In Her Upcoming Biopic

    “You take the Todd Haynes Bob Dylan movie, the Scorsese documentary, the Pennebaker documentary, and the movie Dylan himself directed that everyone hates [“Renaldo and Clara”], and put them all in a blender.”

    A release date for the film has yet to be set.

    Click to View Gallery

    Casting Call: Stars Nab A New Role




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    Melissa Romualdi

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  • Horrocks Engineers and Blyncsy Partner to Bring Artificial Intelligence to Our Roadways

    Horrocks Engineers and Blyncsy Partner to Bring Artificial Intelligence to Our Roadways

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    Machine Vision AI to offer replacement for LIDAR for Cities, Local Governments and Departments of Transportation

    Press Release



    updated: Mar 16, 2022

    Horrocks Engineers is partnering with Blyncsy to roll out the use of AI-powered computer vision on roadways.

    Blyncsy’s Payver technology and Horrocks’ insights will allow a smart and streamlined process for Departments of Transportation, Cities, Local Governments and other agencies to collect data on safety-critical transportation issues and to extend the useful life of their infrastructure quickly and efficiently.

    Horrocks currently uses LiDAR technology to scan and survey roadways. However, they will now be offering Blyncsy’s Payver technology to monitor assets on highways and roads as an additional option.

    This new method of gathering asset data collection and roadway analysis is more efficient than LiDAR technology in many ways. Not only is Payver 25% the cost of LiDAR, it also takes only 5% of the time. It also saves 66-man hours and 2,000 pounds of CO2 per 1,000 miles surveyed. Blyncsy’s Payver technology utilizes crowdsourced images from dash cameras that are already inside thousands of cars on our roadways. By uploading and segmenting images using machine learning algorithms, Payver is able to automatically detect anything from pavement cracking to paint line degradation. This AI technology is able to detect anything the human eye can see and send insights directly to an agency’s workflow, giving clients a high level of situational awareness into the condition of their roadways.

    Horrocks has surveyed hundreds of miles of state and local roadways and are leaders in using new survey technologies. This new partnership with Blyncsy is proof of this.

    “We are excited to be partnering with a company that is so focused on investing in innovative technologies to deliver faster, smarter services to its customers. It’s important to recognize that these kinds of innovations are what ultimately will get our clients their data faster and allow them to make better decisions based on those insights,” said Mark Pittman, founder and CEO of Blyncsy.

    This partnership will allow for smarter and more efficient transportation management for the drivers of tomorrow.

    Source: Blyncsy, Inc.

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