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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220413T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220413T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T094043
CREATED:20220218T195537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220218T195537Z
UID:2851-1649872800-1649876400@hiddencompass.net
SUMMARY:The Impossibly Objective Lens: A Photojournalist’s Reflections on the Story Behind the Camera
DESCRIPTION:The assignment may seem straightforward: to simply document what is occurring in front of the lens. In pursuing this goal\, many photojournalists have mastered the art of blending into their surroundings\, positioning themselves and their cameras as witnesses to the reality unfolding before them. But objectivity is never simple: From the choice of what to put in frame\, to the personal stories\, experiences\, beliefs\, and physical presence that accompany each photojournalist into the field\, a certain amount of subjectivity is inescapable.  \nIn “The Impossibly Objective Lens\,” German-born documentary photographer and visual storyteller Sarah Pabst explores whether true objectivity is possible — or even preferable. Pabst will share some of her own work\, and discuss not only how the person behind the camera can accept their part in the stories they tell\, but the possibilities such acceptance reveals. Hidden Compass co-founders Sabine K. Bergmann and Sivani Babu join Pabst to discuss which doors are opened by recognizing the emotional connections and narrative choices of photojournalists — and the new spectrum of storytelling these openings reveal. \n  \nBio \nSarah Pabst is a German-born documentary photographer and visual storyteller based in Buenos Aires. Her work is often autobiographical\, but also focuses on women\, identity\, human rights\, and environmental issues. She is a National Geographic Explorer and a Pulitzer Center grantee. Her work has been exhibited worldwide and has been published in numerous international outlets such as Time\, National Geographic\, The New York Times\, The Wall Street Journal\, The Washington Post\, Bloomberg\, and Der Spiegel\, among others. She has won awards in competitions such as Picture of the Year International\, POY Latam (Picture of the Year\, Latin America)\, the Daylight Awards\, the International Photography Awards\, the Lensculture Emerging Talent Award\, Arles’ Voies Off\, Athens Photo Festival\, and the Gomma Grant.  \nHer first book\, Morning Song\, was a Lucie Foundation Photobooks Award finalist and was named one of the best Photobooks of 2021 by the Photographic Museum of Humanity. She is a member of Women Photograph and Ayün Fotógrafas\, a collective of 8 female photographers united by Latin America\, that recently announced their partnership with the storytelling collective Noor. In 2022\, she was nominated as a mentor for the Women Photograph Mentorship program.
URL:https://hiddencompass.net/event/the-impossibly-objective-lens/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Alliance Benefit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://hiddencompass.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/SarahPabst_headshot_color.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220324T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220324T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T094043
CREATED:20220207T224112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220207T224112Z
UID:2831-1648144800-1648148400@hiddencompass.net
SUMMARY:Penguins as a Catalyst for Change: How a Vulnerable Species Group Can Inspire Global Conservation
DESCRIPTION:The well-being of our planet depends on the health of our oceans — to which all of us are connected evolutionarily\, economically\, and often emotionally and spiritually. Yet we have initiated an unprecedented age of alterations to marine systems. Penguins are a species group particularly impacted by these phenomena\, and they’re telling us a story we need to hear. \nBiologist Dr. Pablo Borboroglu\, founder and President of the Global Penguin Society\, joins the Hidden Compass community to share how penguins’ fragile conservation status reflects the condition of the oceans and coasts they inhabit. Borboroglu will share his passion for penguins and explore how they are vulnerable to climate change\, mismanagement of fisheries\, and pollution at sea\, and to human disturbance and introduced predators on land. But despite their precarious situation\, penguins present an opportunity to catalyze large-scale conservation efforts\, including those undertaken by the Global Penguin Society. \nFollowing Borboroglu’s presentation\, Hidden Compass co-founders Sabine K. Bergmann and Sivani Babu will join in for a discussion on how penguins can inspire changes throughout the international community for the betterment of us all. \n \nBio \nDr. Pablo (Popi) Garcia Borboroglu is the founder and President of the Global Penguin Society\, an international\, science-based conservation coalition dedicated to the survival and protection of the world’s penguin species. Borboroglu is also a researcher at the National Research Council in Argentina and an Associate Professor at the University of Washington. \nHe has spent more than 30 years in the field of marine conservation\, conducting research on seabird ecology and working with government agencies\, communities\, and institutions to designate protected areas — including the largest UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Argentina — and develop and implement conservation plans in multiple countries. Borboroglu also focuses on communication and outreach to the public: He has been a scientific advisor to Paramount Pictures\, the Swedish and German National Television Channels\, Tokyo Broadcasting System\, Disney\, the BBC\, and others. \nBorboroglu studied biological sciences at the National University of Patagonia San Juan Bosco and received his Ph.D. with honors in biology from the National University of Comahue in Argentina. He has received multiple awards and fellowships\, including the Pew Fellowship in Marine Conservation\, the National Geographic Buffet Award\, The Rolex Award for Enterprise\, and an Honor Recognition by the Congress of Argentina.
URL:https://hiddencompass.net/event/penguins-as-a-catalyst-for-change/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Alliance Benefit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://hiddencompass.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/1-NatGeo-Award-Ceremony-Speech.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220215T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220215T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T094043
CREATED:20220119T002549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220119T002549Z
UID:2792-1644948000-1644951600@hiddencompass.net
SUMMARY:Hummingbirds\, Hibernation\, and Human Medicine: What the World’s Tiniest Birds Reveal About Our Future
DESCRIPTION:Hummingbirds are incredible animals. Some of the world’s tiniest birds\, they have among the highest metabolic rates of all vertebrates — they burn through energy so quickly they are almost always a few hours from perishing. But these little creatures have remarkable strategies for survival. For Dr. Anusha Shankar\, who has studied hummingbirds from the cloud forests of Ecuador to the deserts of Arizona\, it was the hummingbirds’ ability to use a hibernation-like state called “torpor” to save energy at night that ignited her interest. In “Hummingbirds\, Hibernation\, and Human Medicine\,” Shankar not only shares her fascination with the strategies hummingbirds use to survive\, but also how her and other scientists’ research on torpor has implications that soar beyond the realm of birds. Such research illuminates possibilities for human medicine\, from life-saving techniques to futuristic ambitions such as cryogenics and human hibernation. \nBio \nAnusha Shankar studies hummingbirds as a Rose Postdoctoral Fellow at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. She is investigating how hummingbirds can use a hibernation-like state called “torpor” to get cold (50°F) and rewarm safely every night\, without damaging organs like their hearts and brains. During her PhD\, Shankar captured hummingbird nightlife with infrared video\, and before that tracked king cobras and studied giant birds — hornbills — in India. She plans to work longer term in the tropics\, with a home base in India.  \nShankar is passionate about teaching and mentoring\, and has mentored 17 students on her projects in the past few years. She is also a National Geographic Explorer and Young Leader and loves dancing salsa\, bachata\, and swing\, and reading fiction.
URL:https://hiddencompass.net/event/hummingbirds-hibernation-and-human-medicine-what-the-worlds-tiniest-birds-reveal-about-our-future/
LOCATION:Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://hiddencompass.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/AShankar_JenShook_crop-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220120T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220120T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T094043
CREATED:20220113T005111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220113T005619Z
UID:2769-1642701600-1642705200@hiddencompass.net
SUMMARY:Solving the Plastic-Waste Crisis: Reframing our Relationship with Trash
DESCRIPTION:From soil and water contamination to the deadly effects on wildlife\, there are many impacts that stem from our trash. But when Lillygol Sedaghat set off on a 9\,000-mile journey to better understand the plastic supply chain\, she discovered many of those impacts can be positive — especially when communities recognize the untapped value of their trash.\n\nSedaghat’s journey began by questioning the fate of the plastic containers of her favorite drink\, bubble-milk tea\, and it led her to the ingenious waste management enterprises of Taiwan\, the women-led expeditioners following plastics along the iconic Ganges River in Bangladesh and India\, and initiatives — both global and local — that embody a more sustainable future. After a multimedia presentation\, Sedaghat will be joined by Hidden Compass co-founders Sabine K. Bergmann and Sivani Babu for a discussion on the role our waste plays in connecting us\, and the promise and hope of circular economies. \nBio\nLillygol Sedaghat is a National Geographic Explorer and Multimedia Storyteller who believes in the power of stories to change the world. Her work has included documenting the women-led Sea to Source Ganges River Plastics Expedition\, the effects of climate change and coronavirus on coastal communities on an 800-mile bike journey\, and Taiwan’s waste management system and plastic recycling initiatives. \nIn 2020\, Sedaghat co-founded Suan Tian Stories\, a multimedia storytelling platform exploring ideas about people\, place\, and change. With her stories\, Sedaghat aims to make science accessible to the greater public and spark the realization that every choice we make affects someone\, somewhere\, hoping to promote our connectivity to each other and the world\, and to transform people’s perceptions of trash from something disposable to something valuable. \nSedaghat is currently building one of the first human-story focused databases of circular economy initiatives in Taiwan\, working with government and industry representatives to help build a blueprint for a circular economy of plastics in the United States\, and convening international conversations with global experts and stakeholders to prepare a slate of solutions focused on solving the crisis around end-of-life plastics.
URL:https://hiddencompass.net/event/solving-the-plastic-waste-crisis-reframing-our-relationship-with-trash/
LOCATION:Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://hiddencompass.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Nat-Geo-LS-Capture-April-2019-1.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211214T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211214T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T094043
CREATED:20211114T223116Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211117T000526Z
UID:2557-1639504800-1639512000@hiddencompass.net
SUMMARY:Portraits of Hope\, an Evening with Joel Sartore
DESCRIPTION:*Note: Those who purchase a membership to Hidden Compass: The Alliance receive FREE access to this event and EXCLUSIVE access to the breakout session — plus a signed\, hardcover copy of Joel Sartore’s upcoming book\, Photo Ark Wonders: Celebrating Diversity in the Animal Kingdom\, featuring more than 450 photographs by the author. Become an Ally at hiddencompass.net/Alliance to get access. \nAward-winning media company Hidden Compass is proud to present “Portraits of Hope\, an Evening with Joel Sartore.” Join the acclaimed National Geographic photographer for the 2021 “Ethos of Exploration Talk\,” an annual Hidden Compass event featuring speakers whose work embodies the modern age of exploration. \nFor more than 15 years across 50 countries\, Joel Sartore has been on a quest to create a photo archive of global biodiversity for his Photo Ark project. In “Portraits of Hope\,” Sartore will present stunning images from around the world and chronicle his effort to create portraits of more than 12\,000 species of birds\, fish\, mammals\, reptiles\, amphibians\, and invertebrates. In addition to presenting on his work and photographic adventures\, Sartore will reflect on his mission for the Photo Ark to serve as an important record of each animal’s existence and a powerful testament to the importance of saving them. \nAfter the presentation\, Sartore and the Hidden Compass co-founders will host a 1-hour breakout Zoom session exclusively for Allies — members of Hidden Compass’s Alliance — in which attendees are invited to sit in virtual conversation with the acclaimed photographer. Each Ally will also receive a signed\, hardcover copy of Sartore’s upcoming book\, Photo Ark Wonders: Celebrating Diversity in the Animal Kingdom\, which features more than 450 photographs by the author. \nBio \nJoel Sartore is a photographer\, speaker\, author\, teacher\, conservationist\, National Geographic fellow and regular contributor to National Geographic Magazine. His hallmarks are a sense of humor and a Midwestern work ethic. \nSartore has produced several books\, including RARE: Portraits of America’s Endangered Species\, Photographing Your Family\, The Photo Ark\, Animal Ark\, and The Photo Ark Vanishing. He has contributed to Audubon Magazine\, Life\, The New York Times\, Sports Illustrated and numerous book projects. Sartore and his work have been the subjects of several national broadcasts\, including NBC Nightly News\, NPR’s Weekend Edition\, Fresh Air with Terry Gross\, and the PBS documentary series\, Rare: Portraits of the Photo Ark. He is also a regular contributor on the CBS Sunday Morning Show. \nSartore graduated from the University of Nebraska with a degree in journalism. He currently lives in Nebraska with his wife and children.
URL:https://hiddencompass.net/event/portraits-of-hope-an-evening-with-joel-sartore/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Alliance Benefit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://hiddencompass.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/16_NG_Photo_Ark_cr_Grahm_S_Jones_Columbus_Zoo_and_Aquarium_MM8451.jpg
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