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women employed behind the camera

This single-image created with freely available code shows at a glance the distribution of women across the top jobs in the making of the highest 100 grossing films for 2017, ranked left to right. Each column represents a movie. Each row a job title. The uniform color in the rows reflects the small pool of talent in some jobs. It also shows that some jobs behind the camera are associated with one gender or the other. Each job is shown as a percentage because some are shared by more than one person. The increments from a pale red to dark red show that 1-25% of the job is credited to women, then 26-50%, 51-75% and 76-100%. Blue means there were no women. White means either none (0), or data missing ( ).
Recent posts

Łódź Ghetto photographs

Re: Memory Unearthed: The Lodz Ghetto Photographs Of Henryk Ross. An exhibition underway at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York. Ends June 24, 2018. Re: https://mjhnyc.org/exhibitions/memory-unearthed/ I was fortunate to listen to the curator Judith Cohen talk last week about the photographs of Jewish life under the Nazi occupation. An exhibition is underway at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York. Ends June 24, 2018. The collection will then travel to xxx, xxx The artifacts themselves are extraordinary, however the real value is in their content. That content is not obvious to see. Without the captions, the pictures are often ordinary, maybe  little odd.  Those images in the exhibition familiar to us today were taken for German propaganda. They were deliberately edited or altered to misinform. Some were staged. Surviving testimony details the lengths taken to compose these. The intent was, of course, to hide the abuse, or, more overtly, to dehumanize Jewish orthodox

shell collection (40 years in the making)

I realize now that this kind of shell collecting is destructive. Local divers come across a rare shell which they can make money and systematically search and collect (kill) them for sale. Eventually all are gone. I personally regret collecting. these of course are spondylus. I can take more detailed image if need be. basically what you see here is the entire collection except fossils. Pinnidae Xenophora Each box below contains unique species, all identified, Some duplicates I donated to the Smithsonian (they did not have examples) I have the letters to prove this. The collection started in the early 60s. . Name your price. This Tridacna gigas is 33 inches. there's also a separate pair (see below). What you see here is just the general stuff not my specialty collection . the three images above show Xenophora which was my speciality. In particular corrugata.  The one Macromphalus is damaged but there's another that's fine. Th