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The magic goes on: Harry Potter VII wows’em

November 23, 2010
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Story, Photos and Video by Chris Barker, News Net Nebraska

Attention aspiring wizards and witches, half and pure bloods, Muggles and Mud-bloods. Gather your invisibility cloaks, wands and galleons because part one of the Harry Potter finale, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, has hit theatres.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if this is the biggest box office movie of the year, period,” said L. Kent Wolgamott, movie critic from the Lincoln Journal Star.

The movie – the seventh installment in a series of eight – is already bringing in some magical numbers. Box-office receipts worldwide since the flick’s midnight Nov. 18 opening totaled an estimated $330.1 million, including $125.1 million in the U.S., according to Variety. That bested the previous domestic leader in the series, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which reaped $102.7 million on its November 2005 launch.

The Potter spell seems powerful enough to ward off even some decidedly ill-spirited reviewers. The New Yorker faulted its plot for being “as tangled and as corkscrewed” as the hair of actress Helena Bonham Carter (Bellatrix Lestrange). While generally positive, by contrast, The New York Times still struck a tepid note, calling the movie “reasonably satisfying.”

As for Wolgamott, he found it “transitional, a movie long on exposition and short on resolution,” noting “that has caused some to tag the movie as dull and unsatisfying.” But he added that he found it neither. Regarding the series as a whole, Wolgamott said, “There isn’t another one and there isn’t going to be another one,” and “it captures the kids, the adults and they are compelling books, a cultural phenomenon.”

The Potter series is already the highest grossing series of all time and that’s not including the final two movies, which will wrap up the story. Having established itself as a book first, the novels have been translated into 67 languages, placing author J.K. Rowling with some of the most translated authors in history.

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Buzz around Hallows has been building since the release of the final book. Its appeal goes beyond the hordes of high school and college-aged students feeding into the Harry Potter frenzy, a phenomenon ever since the first book was published a dozen years ago.

“At previous premieres I’ve seen 40- and 50-year-old moms wearing Death Eaters masks,” said Alex Burkeland, manager of Marcus Lincoln Grand Cinema.

The Grand sold out its midnight showings three days after tickets went on sale. Afterwards, Warner Brothers gave the theatre another copy of the film and its screen times were quickly sold out, too. Burkeland estimated the midnight premiere drew some 1,400 people into his theater.

“It’s not much different than any other blockbuster premiere except for it’s the seventh one and it’s still huge. No other franchise that I know of can do that,” said Burkeland. He admits, “It’s a show just to see everybody before the movie,” and “audience participation wise, nothing compares to it.”

Movie theatre operators aren’t the only ones excited about the new movie. At UNL, Neihardt residence hall celebrated an entire week of Harry Potter themed events, ranging from trivia to wand making. To cap off the week, Neihardt bought out a theatre at the Lincoln Grand so their residents could see the film as a group.

“I remember reading the first book in 4th grade because it was the only hardcover book in my school’s library,” said Marissa Boyle, a Neihardt resident and sophomore Speech Therapy major. “My parents were hesitant towards me being so young and reading a book about witch craft and wizardry,” said Boyle, “they thought I would take it too far.”

Marissa

Despite the handmade cloak she has worn to each premiere, and a wand complete with authentic witching sound effects, she assures her parents she hasn’t become a witch. But she is clearly is one of the Harry Potter faithful.

Boyle adds that a shirt reading “Muggle” on the front has drawn some welcome attention. “I have gotten numerous pick up lines, phone numbers, free food, free coffee, discounted items, all kinds of things,” she said. “Best $6 I’ve ever spent.”

As a key member of the Harry Potter sorority established roughly a year ago, Boyle wears her heart on sleeve. The group is comprised of her, a handful of Neihardt residents and a few living off-campus.

While it’s not a chartered sorority, it does give “members” a chance to share Potter fandom. Boyle admits, “It’s not real, but it makes us feel cool.”

What’s the appeal? Boyle points to the genuineness of the movies and the ability for people to relate to the characters. “Harry is such a real person, I mean, he has these flaws, he gets angry, he gets upset, he’s not good at things and it’s like, ‘Oh, cool,’ I’m not good at things, I get angry, I get upset, I see where this is going and it feels so real,” she said.

Critic Wolgamott admits there is something to be said about the wide variety of people that have been drawn to the series. “You’ll see grandma and grandpa bringing the little kid, but you’ll also see the 35-year-olds that don’t have kids that are just going to see the movie,” he said.

Tiffanie Gauchat, an Assistant Principal at Ralston High School, was one in attendance at the Deathly Hallows midnight premiere in Omaha, Neb.

“I got hooked with the very first book,” Gauchat admits, “but I didn’t pick it up until after it’d been out for a while.” Gauchat picked up the book purely because she had heard the noise around the series and was looking for something to motivate the boys in her classroom to read for pleasure. “It’s a great way to escape reality and just let your imagination go.”

For now, Hallows part one will have to suffice the imaginations of fans of all ages. Part two – the end of the blockbuster series – is expected to come out July 15, 2011. That should give loyalists plenty of time to brush up on spells, enchantments, curses, charms and jinxes, and to get their wands into prime wizarding shape.

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Bay 198′s Forbidden Skate Session

November 4, 2010
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Skatepark in Gateway mall, coming soon

October 21, 2010
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New Net Nebraska’s Chris Barker talks with Mike Smith, who is putting a skatepark, Bay 198, in the basement of Gateway Mall



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Preparing for winter bike commuting

October 13, 2010
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Lincoln Calling 2010 underway

September 29, 2010
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Lincoln, NE – A couple watches the third installment of Pecha Kucha at the Bourbon Theatre, the first event of Lincoln Calling 2010, on September 28th, 2010.

Story and Photos By Chris Barker, News Net Nebraska

Lincoln Calling, the musical extravaganza that is quickly becoming a signature event for the city, kicked off last night at the Bourbon Theatre. Over five days (Sept. 28th-Oct. 2nd) and 11 venues in downtown Lincoln, citizens will have the chance to see over 100 musical performances.

“The whole goal is to see how much fun we can create,” said Jeremy Buckley, the 32-year-old behind the five-day art and music festival taking over Lincoln’s downtown. The recent University of Nebraska-Lincoln graduate is currently in his seventh year coordinating Lincoln Calling.

Buckley, who books, promotes and works with all the venues said, “This isn’t real work, this is like fantasy work and on top of that, it keeps getting more successful.” Attendance has steadily increased since the first year, giving Buckley no reason to stop. In Lincoln Calling’s first year, the 25 bands that played brought in around 900 people. The concert continued to grow over the years until last year when it reached a startling 100+ bands, drawing some 3,600 people.

Always looking to make Lincoln Calling bigger and better, Buckley is expanding beyond just live bands. Numerous DJ’s, a film festival, a photography event, an ongoing music video project, screen printing and Pecha Kucha, where people riff on whatever moves them for an allotted amount of time, are in the works for this year.

Also new to Lincoln Calling, is the presence of sponsors, both downtown establishments and Toyota Scion. “Having sponsors this year is helping in taking some of the pressure off,” said Andrew Norman, a friend of Buckley’s. Norman is also a contributing editor of The Reader and coordinates HearNebraska.org, a music-based website aimed to promote the music culture in Nebraska.

Norman, who met Buckley when the pair worked at the Daily Nebraskan several years ago, has been promoting Lincoln Calling through HearNebraska.org and Twitter. “I am just a fan,” Norman said. “This is (Buckley’s) baby and he deserves the credit, or complaints.”

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Lincoln, NE – Jeremy Buckley, the ring leader of Lincoln Calling with an handbill for the five day music event occurring Sept. 28-Oct. 2, 2010.

Another new spin on this year’s Lincoln Calling is the boost in DJs and dance music. Local DJ Spencer Munson said, “Bands like Somasphere and The Show is the Rainbow have paved the way for the indie scene to embrace electronic sounds.” More than any year previous, more DJs have been booked to perform.

When Buckley was younger, he played video games such as SimCity and Rail Road Tycoon, and he compares that experience to organizing Lincoln Calling. “They’re all city building games, and this is like building something, hitting play and then watching to see how it turns out,” he said.
Lincoln Calling goes back over seven years ago when Buckley was writing for the Daily Nebraskan. He was a self-proclaimed “cocky freshman” who criticized the UPC (University Program Council) for its use of money. Buckley thought it wasteful to spend large sums on one big name act to perform when you get could numerous, smaller acts to play for a lot less. “The idea was Lincoln Calling, which I didn’t know then,” Buckley said, admitting it was a long-shot idea at the time.

Nick Waggoner, of the band Brimstone Howl (formerly The Zyklon Bees), remembers playing the first Lincoln Calling. Waggoner was 18 and it was his second show with the band. Waggoner said, “The diverse mix of music and bands,” is what he remembers about playing the first year. Waggoner and Brimstone Howl will be playing this year’s Lincoln Calling and he attributes experiencing new music and reuniting with old friends as his main reasons for coming back.

“It takes people like Buckley who are willing to put in really thankless hours to put something like this on,” Norman said. “Everybody’s doing it because they love art and love making art, and that to me is the coolest part.”

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Lincoln, NE – Pecha Kucha and the film festival that followed drew crowds to help fill the Bourbon Theatre Tuesday night, Sept. 28, 2010.

All of the people involved with Lincoln Calling have dreams for bigger and better things, including more venues, more bands and more diverse activities. Comparisons and admiration to be more like Austin, Texas’ 23 year strong festival of music and art, South by Southwest (SXSW), are very apparent throughout the close group of friends that have banded together to insure Lincoln Calling happens year after year.

“While I’m there (SXSW), I’m researching. What works well at this venue, parking, volunteers, tickets, what else is going on in town at the same time, how the newspapers cover it,” Buckley said. “They do it better than anybody else. How do I take what I like from this and leave behind what I don’t?”

Buckley points to one edge that Lincoln has over other music-minded communities. The clubs and bars mostly work together to promote the events. “Something that we have that is missing in probably most other music communities is the camaradie between music venues and making sure we’re all healthy,” Buckley said.

Jeremy Wardlaw, a worker at Duffy’s in Lincoln, believes Lincoln Calling could draw crowds from outside Nebraska. “This event can be the next big festival that people around the country want to go to,” Wardlaw said.

Promoters of the event believe it is a key to putting Lincoln on the cultural map for something other than sports and cows.

“If you want to see a really strong art culture develop and thrive, you have to support it,” said Norman. “You have to go to these shows and buy merchandise from bands. Otherwise, we’re going to be left with Husker football, agriculture and Warren Buffet. Lincoln to me is about more than that.”



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Profile: Jared Hanner

September 22, 2010
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By Chris Barker, NewsNetNebraska

Jared Hanner, a 23-year-old News-Editorial major at UNL, has little use for a certain recent digital trend in the journalism industry.

“I don’t believe in blogs,” Jared said. “They’re not reliable and they aren’t good for the country.”

Along with discussing his issues about bloggers, Jared has an even stronger interest in politics. Jared helped out with the Barack Obama presidential campaign in 2008 and is a former intern for the Nebraska Democratic Party. With his deep passion for politics, it all makes perfect sense that Jared has his concentrations in history and political science and wants to continue working in politics and using his journalistic skills after graduating.
Jared has called Lincoln, Nebraska home his whole life, even though he spent this past summer in Washington D.C.

“I’m in no hurry to get out of the state,” Jared said, and he is content with where he is right now. Jared hopes to continue working in politics following his graduation in May 2011.

Jared enjoys reading in his free time, but maybe not blogs so much. His favorite books are the Lord of the Rings trilogy or “anything by Tolkien.”



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Profile: Chris Barker

September 2, 2010
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By Josh Compton, News Net Nebraska

Chris Barker, 23, a news-editorial major at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, feels an almost therapeutic comfort when listening to music.

“When I was younger, I would always have music pounded into my brain by my parents and I learned about it by going through different musical phases,” says Chris.

Since he moved from his hometown of Ralston, Neb. to live and attend UNL, Chris has listened to music and has aspirations of writing for a music magazine or working in Denver, Colo.  Chris’ experiences in Denver’s music community have led him to believe it has higher focus on the arts.

He hopes his love of music will translate into a job where he can cover the industry while also being a photojournalist. Chris hasn’t found a news writing style that suits him yet, but prefers abstract and narrative stories to hard news pieces.

Chris has taken a few photography classes since coming to UNL and found that taking pictures developed into a passion.

When Chris isn’t listening to music or taking pictures, he rides his bike. Commuting from his apartment to campus, Chris tries to avoid driving his car whenever possible. He says the cost of gas and parking passes, as well as not wanting to be “hot and sweaty,” are legitimate reasons to be a cyclist.

“I’m actually getting really excited for winter,” says Barker, who looks forward to testing out his pride and joy; a 1987 Trek road bike that was bought for him through a bike co-op in Boulder, Colo.



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