If you're of the passionate opinion that the Midwest聽is severely underrated聽(it's OK, we know a few of those types), it's your week. If you're of the opinion that road trips are great, it's pretty much always your week here at聽翱耻迟蝉颈诲别.听But that didn't stop us from giving you some sonically-pleasing treats this week, too.
Movies
The Midwest Claims Its Place in the 国产吃瓜黑料 Film World
We keep a pretty close eye on the adventure-film world. So it was an odd moment of realization when we spoke to Aaron Peterson, the Marquette, Michigan-based filmmaker who brought us Cold Rolled, and he pointed out that the Midwest has never had an adventure film festival of its own. At this year's聽Telluride Mountainfilm,聽Peterson says,聽“I was for the most part the only person from a non-mountainous region. I went聽back to the Midwest, thinking, this can鈥檛 just be me. Who else is doing this?”
Luckily, Peterson and friends have a response: the brand-new , running October 13-16 in Marquette. You wouldn't think it's the debut year from the looks of things: the includes more than 50 films, focusing mainly on work that's聽about or from the Great Lakes region, in addition to some national and international favorites like Denali. (Peterson聽does note that Denali profile subject Ben Moon is originally from Muskegon, Michigan.)聽“My driving mantra is聽if you鈥檙e gonna be a bear, be a grizzly,” Peterson told us.聽Here are four聽more reasons to make the trip to the Upper Peninsula next weekend.
You'll see films you've never heard of鈥攂ecause they originally weren't made for you. “A lot of these creators have never really thought about submitting聽this stuff to film festivals.聽I also think folks are just busy. These are independent聽content creators, they鈥檙e getting it done and moving onto the next thing. A friend of mine produced a series called , a series of short films about contemporary Native American culture in the Great Lakes. It was a grant-funded thing created聽basically as educational聽material, but it鈥檚 done really, really well. They鈥檙e really elegant, they鈥檙e poignant, they鈥檙e important.” (Fresh Coast will show a聽film from the series, .)
You'll get to check out a region聽laden with聽Best Town nominees. Who knows,聽you could be living there one day鈥擯eterson thinks so, too. “I'm trying to capture this energy. It seems to me like adventurous folks are聽seeing in their own backyards鈥攚e have great land use, great partnerships, we鈥檙e growing our trails hundreds of miles every year, seems like. We鈥檙e kind of聽behind in the outdoors being cool and a dominant culture, but there are a lot of untold stories here, they鈥檙e a little goofy, not as epic maybe, but nobody else writes about them.”
You'll be supporting work for a greater good. “The driving thing here is, the Great Lakes are important. It鈥檚 a whole hell of a lot of fresh water:聽six quadrillion gallons, the most on earth.聽We鈥檝e got fights on the horizon鈥攐il pipes under the Great Lakes, active sulfide聽mines. We have this really smart,聽experienced older generation of conservationists here, then we have this younger generation who has media savvy鈥攖hey need to come together and share energy one way, knowledge the other way, to try and really cement the future of conservation in the region. I鈥檓 hoping Fresh Coast can be a place for that dialog.”
You'll get to squeeze in some great mountain-biking, kayaking, and fly-fishing.聽Peterson's friend, Bill Thompson, owns local outfitter . With his help, the festival offers , from trail running to SUP. “This area isn鈥檛 designed for tourists.聽If you鈥檙e not a local it鈥檚 hard to get your foot in the door and find those cool spots you saw on Instagram or whatever. It鈥檚 still fairly undiscovered. We don鈥檛 have local guides for the most part, so this is one of the rare times when we鈥檙e organizing it, facilitating it.聽
“Marquette鈥檚 an amazing little town with cool stuff right out the back door. It really does show that true Midwestern fun hog identity. You can do all of this stuff in one day if you have time and the right shoes.”
Music
Soundtrack for Your Fall Road Trips
Late this summer, assistant editor Luke Whelan road tripped from Berkeley, California, through the Southwest to Santa Fe, New Mexico to begin his new聽job at 国产吃瓜黑料. That's a lot of driving. So we asked him to give us his playlist:聽
I鈥檇 never spent time in this part of the country, and the shifting landscapes鈥攆rom the stark Mojave to the towering red rocks of Zion and then up into the pine and fir forests of Colorado鈥檚 San Juan Mountains鈥攎ade for some incredible driving. From beginning to end, my iPod accompanied me with bangers for zooming through the wide open tundra of Northern Arizona, quiet tracks to wind through the Southern Rockies, and still more tunes for everything in between.聽
A good road trip soundtrack has the ability to instill extra layer of meaning to the landscape passing by the windshield, to create a mood and atmosphere to frame the scenery. Few artists can create an aural environment quite like Justin Vernon, who released his much-anticipated third Bon Iver album (22, A Million) last week.聽To take advantage of this exquisite album dropping, we made a soundtrack for your last-minute drives through the foliage, to the ocean, or to your favorite camping spot before the cold comes. 鈥擫.W.
Book
A Memoir Joins the Conversation on Race and the Outdoors
We first saw J. Drew Lanham鈥檚 writing in Orion magazine, which published his essay, 鈥.鈥 The wildlife biologist and Clemson University professor in 2013, 鈥淚 didn't run into anyone who looked like me who liked birds. You know, it just became clear that it was an overwhelmingly white hobby鈥 thinking about how we can serve these beautiful creatures as fellow beings on the planet who share air and water and earth, I think it's a critical thing that we think beyond our binoculars to think about conserving those other beings that share our space.鈥
In his first non-academic book, ,聽 Lanham goes way beyond birdwatching to expand on these ideas. He returns to the people and scenery of Edgefield County, South Carolina, where he grew up and developed his love of nature, and takes聽an unflinching look at what it means to be 鈥渢he rare bird, the oddity鈥 in the activities he loves. Consider it required reading鈥攊t鈥檚 a thoughtful and relevant-as-ever look at race and identity in the great outdoors.