Archive for People

The People?s Games ? Tryouts March 13: New York City vs. Los Angeles Basketball Rivalry Heats Up

The People’s Games – Tryouts March 13: New York City vs. Los Angeles Basketball Rivalry Heats Up











The People’s Games

Santa Monica, CA (PRWEB) March 10, 2011

The People’s Games announces a call for tryouts to basketball players in New York City and Los Angeles. Participants can register for tryouts at http://www.PeoplesGames.com (or by calling 800-TPG-3098).

The People’s Games is a new sports competition that offers athletes the opportunity to represent their city as they face off against other US cities in a battle to prove which has the best athletes.

This inaugural basketball competition calls on recreational, streetball, college and pick-up players to bring their best game to the court. The People’s Games offers the best non-professional players in a city the opportunity to represent their hometowns and show the world their skill in local venues with local sports icons as their coaches.

Once teams are chosen, a “best of three” finals series will be played, starting on May 1 in Los Angeles before moving to New York City on May 3. If necessary, a tie-breaking third game will be played on May 4.

Tryouts are open to the public. Participants must be 18 years of age or older and a resident of the city they are representing. New York tryouts will take place at 1pm ET in the following locations:


    Bronx: St. Mary’s Recreation Center, 450 St. Ann’s Avenue, Bronx, NY 10454
    Brooklyn: St. John’s Recreation Center, 1251 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, NY 11213
    Manhattan & Staten Island: Alfred E. Smith Recreation Center, 80 Catherine Street, New York, NY 10038
    Queens: Al Oerter Recreation Center, 131-40 Fowler Avenue, Flushing, NY 11355

Los Angeles City tryouts will take place at 9am PST in the following locations:

    Balboa Sports Complex: 17015 Burbank Blvd., Encino, CA 91316
    EXPO Center: 3980 S. Menlo Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90037
    Normandale Recreation Center: 22400 Halldale Ave., Torrance, CA 90501
    Pan Pacific Recreation Center: 7600 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90036
    Pecan Recreation Center: 145 S. Pecan St., Los Angeles, CA 90033
    Westwood Recreation Complex: 1350 S. Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90025

The People’s Games will be conducted in partnership with the City of Los Angeles Department of Recreation & Parks and in coordination with the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation. A portion of the proceeds from The People’s Games will be donated to the local recreation and parks departments in participating cities.

About The People’s Games http://www.PeoplesGames.com

THE PEOPLE’S GAMES is a new brand of sport in America. It is an original and unique concept which provides an opportunity for the common man to represent their city in sporting competition against rival cities. It’s an opportunity for real people…teachers, taxi drivers, policemen, janitors, waiters, etc…to live out their dream of playing in a big time sporting event, representing their family, neighborhood, and city in pursuit of the thrill of victory.

THE PEOPLE’S GAMES recaptures the way sports used to be…when it was about heart, passion, and teamwork…played by people of varying backgrounds, race, religion, and social status…in short, when people played for “the love of the game”, not for money or fame.

Unlike other competitions, players on a team must come from the city for which they play. THE PEOPLE’S GAMES are the antithesis of professional sports.

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Possible Futures Film Contest Announces 2011 Winners

Possible Futures Film Contest Announces 2011 Winners











San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) August 11, 2011

Seven filmmakers from India, Lebanon, New Zealand, and the United States have been selected as winners in the first annual Possible Futures Film Contest, receiving awards valued at $ 30,000 including cash and trips to the Amazon rainforest. The contest, sponsored by The Pachamama Alliance, invited filmmakers to illustrate their vision for a new future for humanity, through the medium of short films.

317 films from 44 countries were accepted into the 2011 Film Contest. Screening teams nominated 20 of those films to be considered for two Grand Awards, and a panel of five esteemed judges made the final selections.


    Nitin Das of India received the Possible Futures Award for the film Superhero, plus $ 10,000 and a trip for two to the Amazon rainforest with The Pachamama Alliance, parent organization of the Contest.
    Dawn Mikkelson of the United States received the Pachamama Award for the film Smooch, plus $ 5,000 and a trip for two to the Amazon rainforest with The Pachamama Alliance.

Grand Judges were: Chris Eyre, film director/producer; Neil Huxley, media producer and motion graphics designer for films, including Avatar; Annie Leonard, Director of The Story of Stuff Project and author of The Story of Stuff; Trudie Styler, actress, producer and global activist; and Geshe Yong Dong, Tibetan Buddhist teacher and leader.

Five People’s Choice Awards were selected through a public voting process, and people around the world cast more than 14,000 votes. The films with the most votes in each category received the People’s Choice Awards.

    Ryan Mlynarczyk of the United States received the Overall People’s Choice Award for the film Within Reach.
    Tim Armstrong of New Zealand received the People’s Choice Award in the Peace and Freedom category for the film Nuclear Free World.
    Jude Chehab of Lebanon received the People’s Choice Award in the Fair Societies category for the film I’m Here.
    Joaquin Baldwin of the United States received the People’s Choice Award in the Sustainability and Beyond category for the film The Windmill Farmer.
    Lauren Selman of the United States received the People’s Choice Award in the Human Fulfillment category for the film I Want To Be Me.

The Possible Futures Film Contest is a project of The Pachamama Alliance and its FOUR YEARS. GO. campaign. Partners include promotional support from Wieden + Kennedy, the world’s largest independent ad agency network, and funding from The Embrey Family Foundation.

The Contest invited people from every country and at all levels of filmmaking experience to create a short film imagining a positive, possible future for the world. Entries could be one to five minutes in length and incorporate a wide range of styles, including drama, comedy, documentary, animation, or a mix.

Envisioning the future is the first step in making it real. The Pachamama Alliance and Possible Futures Film Contest congratulate all participating filmmakers for their creative and courageous visions.

Winning films and other entries to the contest can be viewed at http://www.possiblefuturesfilmcontest.org.

For more information about the Possible Futures Film Contest, contact Karen Dallett: karen(at)apossiblefuture(dot)org or go to http://www.possiblefuturesfilmcontest.org.

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Vocus©Copyright 1997-

, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb, and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.