- Playing
- The Wisconsin Workers Uprising (Part 2)
- From
- Making Contact
It began as a protest by a few students and teaching assistants over deep budget cuts, but quickly turned into a history making movement of working people in Wisconsin. Was the occupation of the state capital in Madison, Wisconsin a resurgence of organized labor in the United States? Or the last gasp for unionized workers, as they face continual erosion of their rights. This week we hear Part 2 of a retrospective documentary on the 2011 Wisconsin uprising, produced by Workers Independent News.
Also in the Making Contact series
Cracking the Codes: Dr. Shakti Butler on the System of Racial Inequity
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
A conversation with Dr. Shakti Butler about using the medium of film to start conversations around the thorny issues of racial inequity.
Permission to Speak: Ex-Political Prisoners in Burma
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
As Burma transitions from dictatorship to democracy, hundreds of political prisoners have been freed after decades behind bars. On this edition, we hear from some of these ...
Undocumented and Undaunted: DREAMer Artists Speak Out
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
The struggles of undocumented youth in the US often fly under the radar of the mainstream media. But with the tools of creative expression and the power of social media, a ...
Manufacturing Terror: The Media's Anti-Arab and Anti-Muslim Problem
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
After the Boston Marathon bombing, journalists scrambled to identify those responsible for the attack, and their motive. Rolling news and online message boards were filled ...
Surviving Ex-Gay Therapy
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
The growth of the ex-gay movement in the last two decades gave rise to hundreds of therapy programs aiming to change people’s sexual orientation. But there’s a growing ...
Does Portland Oregon’s TriMet Unfairly Cut Service for the Poor?
(08:45)
From: Making Contact
When you think of modern, green, public transportation, a city that likely comes to mind is Portland, Oregon. Portland has built a reputation worldwide, and for many people, ...
Should Buenos Aires’ trains be Re-Nationalized?
(08:36)
From: Making Contact
The trains of Greater Buenos Aires, Argentina are falling apart. A group of train workers and student activists says the problem is that private companies have been put in ...
How NYC’s Public Transit Serves the Blind
(05:42)
From: Making Contact
Reporter Britta Conroy-Randall took a trip with blind advocate Romeo Edmead to find out how easy to is for him to get around town.
Our Bodies, Our Stories: Reproductive Health Behind Bars
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
Pregnant women in America’s prisons are being shackled to their beds; others are being sterilized. Correctional institutions claim the policies are for safety’s sake, but ...
Women Rising #22: International Anti-Nuclear Activists (Encore)
(29:00)
From: Making Contact
For International Women’s Day and the second anniversary of the Fukushima disaster listen again as three prominent female activists tell their stories. Kaori Izumi was part ...
Piece Description
It began as a protest by a few students and teaching assistants over deep budget cuts, but quickly turned into a history making movement of working people in Wisconsin. Was the occupation of the state capital in Madison, Wisconsin a resurgence of organized labor in the United States? Or the last gasp for unionized workers, as they face continual erosion of their rights. This week we hear Part 2 of a retrospective documentary on the 2011 Wisconsin uprising, produced by Workers Independent News.
Timing and Cues
Total run time is 29 minutes (no hard breaks)
-Optional cutaway at 1:00
-Optional (floating) cutaway between 12:00 and 20:00
-Music in/out.
Additional Credits
Contributing Producers: Doug Cunningham, Frank Emspak, Jesse Russell, Molly Stenz
Producers: Andrew Stelzer, Kyung Jin Lee, Esther Manilla
Host: Andrew Stelzer
Executive Director: Lisa Rudman
Associate Director: Khanh Pham
Production Intern: Lisa Bartfai
Web Intern: Irene Florez
Community Engagement and Volunteer Coordinator: Karl Jagbandhansingh
Organizational Volunteers: Barbara Barnett, Dan Turner, Alfonso Hooker, Alton Byrd, Katherine Brousseau, Briana Flin, Catherine Lee and Dashal Moore, Lisa Bartfai.
