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Robert Kenner

Director of Food Inc. Robert Kenner

Joe Kohen / WireImage / Getty Images

Robert Kenner is an American film and television screenwriter, television director, film director, film producer, and television producer.

His career began in 1971 as an assistant cinematographer, and produced his first motion picture, 3:15 – The Moment of Truth, in 1984 (although it was not released until 1986). His second feature film did not come until 1991′s Lonely Hearts.

His first breakout project was the televised documentary The Lost Fleet of Guadalcanal, which he produced for the National Geographic Society and which aired in 1993 on PBS. The following year, he directed and produced Russia’s Last Tsar for National Geographic and PBS. He also directed and produced America’s Endangered Species: Don’t Say Good-bye in 1996. The International Documentary Association presented the picture with the Strand Award for Best Documentary.

Kenner began a long association with the award-winning PBS documentary television program American Experience in 1998. That year he directed and produced the widely reviewed Influenza, 1918 (about the 1918 flu pandemic)[6] and followed it up with John Brown’s Holy War (about abolitionist John Brown) in 2001. His first documentary which he wrote, directed and produced was War Letters, which aired on American Experience in 2001. The documentary is based on the 2001 New York Times best-selling book War Letters: Extraordinary Correspondence from American Wars by historian Andrew Carroll. He produced the episode, “The Road to Memphis,” for the 2003 PBS documentary series, The Blues, and in 2005 produced and directed the Vietnam War documentary, Two Days in October. The documentary was the season premiere of American Experience. The film, which is based on David Maraniss’ book They Marched into Sunlight, looks at the parallels between a Viet Cong ambush of a U.S. Army patrol (and the subsequent cover-up of the loss by the American military) and a violent clash between police and student protesters at the University of Wisconsin–Madison—events which occurred 24 hours apart in October 1967. The episode was nominated for and won the award for Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking at the 2006 Emmy Awards.

In 2008, Kenner produced and directed the documentary film, Food, Inc., which examines large-scale agricultural food production in the United States, concluding that the meat and vegetables produced by this type of economic enterprise leads to inexpensive but environmentally harmful and unhealthy food.

 

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Food Inc. An Interview with Director Robert Kenner

"Food, Inc." New York City Special Screening

By Frances Romero Tuesday, Mar. 02, 2010 [Time.com]

In his Oscar-nominated film Food Inc., Robert Kenner took on the American food industry and revealed how industrial production is making the nation less healthy. With Fast Food Nation author Eric Schlosser as a co-producer and Omnivore’s Dilemma author Michael Pollan as a consultant, Kenner’s film takes consumers on a journey from the supermarket aisle to meat-packing plants to Congressional food-safety hearings to demonstrate how a handful of corporations often put profit ahead of consumer health, worker safety and the livelihood of the American farmer. (See a video interview with Michael Pollan.)

Now that Food Inc. is back in the spotlight with an Oscar nomination, have you had to deal with more complaints from companies that you call out in the film?
In a funny way, the complaints came before we were released theatrically. After great theatrical success, we went on Oprah and became the No. 1 DVD on Amazon in the country. All of a sudden I think these companies — so many of them who wouldn’t talk to us — had to start to take this issue seriously to understand their consumers are concerned.

You were inspired to make this film after reading Fast Food Nation. How were your expectations of the industry different from what you eventually learned?
I had wanted to do a documentary on Fast Food Nation, but people said, Wasn’t the Morgan Spurlock film, Super Size Me the documentary [version]? So it became important for me to make a film about how the whole supermarket has become industrialized like the fast-food system. On one level, we’re spending less on food than at any time in history, but it’s coming to us at a very high, unseen cost. And I think we’re just beginning to understand that. Ultimately, the most shocking things in this film were when Barb Kowalcyk told me that meat producers knew where the meat that killed her 2-year-old son came from and it sat on the shelves two weeks after he died — and the government did not have the power to recall it. Another was when I went to the hearing on whether we should label cloned [genetically modified] meats. I didn’t even know there was such as thing as cloned meats. When a representative said, I think it’s not in the consumer’s interest to give them this kind of information and that it would be too confusing to the consumer, that made me realize that we were making a film that was about more than just food, it was about our rights. (See the top 10 most dangerous foods.)

How do they get away with that?
Ultimately it [comes down to] “veggie libel.” We’ve gotten to the point where food products have more rights than we do as individuals. Corporations are getting too much power. Their only interest is profit. That profit is leading our society to a bad place. The similarities to what happened in the financial meltdown are all too frighteningly similar.

Can government make changes at the corporate level?
Unfortunately there seems to be such a paralysis in government these days. I think Eric Schlosser’s analogy about tobacco is a really important one. We were up against really powerful corporations, and ultimately they had great connections to government. But when we began to learn that nicotine really wasn’t good for us, we were eventually able to put laws in practice that could tax and charge the real price for that product. I think as we start to understand these high, unseen costs, hopefully we’ll start to put the real price on cheap food. We’re paying for it with our tax dollars for subsidies and we’re paying for it with our tax dollars for health care.

So it’s a combination of individuals and better laws?
Right. I think on one level we can do it individually by eating in season, going to farmers markets, buying local, buying organic, reading labels, buying less processed [foods]. But as Michael Pollan says, we need to create a fair and balanced playing field where the carrots are as cheap as the chips. I would say we have an élitist system where we’re encouraging poor people to eat food that’s just unacceptable by unfairly pricing it.

Do you think it’s a matter of people not knowing the true costs of a cheap meal or do they just not have many other choices because chips are cheaper than broccoli?
I think it’s a product of people not knowing. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that there’s been a concerted effort on the part of the industry to keep the consumer disconnected from their food. All the advertising that goes into promoting healthy food which is made up of sugar, salt and fat — it’s very confusing to navigate this system, and it’s done on purpose.

How do we get people to eat in season?
There are a few levels, one is as consumers become more conscious, hopefully we can force these grocery stores to start labeling. Where does the food come from? Is it from South America? Is it from China? Who makes it? What’s in it? And as we start to get this information, it’ll become easier and easier for consumers to start to make choices. In Food Inc., we’re not telling people what they should eat. We’re saying people should have the right to know what they eat. And they should know the consequences of what they eat. Cigarettes are now labeled: This is damaging to your health. This food is really no different. You cannot afford health care in this country and continue the same food system that we have. (See pictures of the world’s harvests.)

You’ve mentioned that you’ve tried being a vegetarian and that you’re also sometimes a “flexitarian.” What’s your status now?
[Laughs] I haven’t really tried being a vegetarian to be honest. Personally, I want to eat food that’s grown fairly. I’m trying to eat things that are in season. I’m trying to buy it from local sources whenever possible. Cooking at home is one of the great answers. Eating with your family is one of the greatest things we can do. We’re going to have better food, and we’re going to have a better social situation than eating while driving in your car.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1968873,00.html#ixzz1hVfSxkZq

 

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Let The Pain Begin

Torture Scene for Law Abiding Citizen

Wouldn't It Be Nice If We Could Treat Criminals Like This.

Several days before Christmas, Michael L. Plumadore, a man with a criminal background brutally killed Aliahna Lemmon, a 9 year old girl who was being cared for along with her two younger sisters by Plumadore.

What makes such a fucking piece of shit like Plumadore hurt a kid is beyond my comprehension but what makes me feel remotely positive about this incident is the fact that justice will be at the hands of other convicts since our legal system sucks, after all, they let Plumadore out after charges of sexual misconduct with a 13 year old.

Clyde then takes him captive at the warehouse, straps him onto a table with a blood pressure system and injects him with adrenaline so he won’t pass out. Then, Clyde shows Darby a picture of his wife and daughter and turns a video recorder on before he avenges their murder by slowly dismembering Darby, cutting him into 25 pieces that includes his arms and legs, his penis, his eyelids and finally his head.

 
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Posted by on December 31, 2011 in An Eye For An Eye

 

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Law Abiding Citizen

Law Abiding Citizen

Sometimes a Man's Justice is the best Justice

During a violent home invasion, Clyde Shelton (Gerard Butler), an engineer, witnesses the murder of his wife and daughter at the hands of Clarence Darby (Christian Stolte). During their trial, prosecutor Nick Rice (Jamie Foxx) informs Clyde that the case against Darby is weak due to botched forensic evidence and that Clyde’s testimony alone is insufficient to prove either suspect’s guilt. Nick, against his own will, is forced to strike a deal, which is that Darby will give testimony that will send Darby’s accomplice Rupert Ames (Josh Stewart) to death row and in exchange, he pleads guilty to third-degree murder, for which he will only serve three years in prison. Knowing that Darby is the actual killer, Clyde is left feeling betrayed by both Nick and the justice system.

Ten years later, Rupert tries to maintain his innocence but is executed by lethal injection, although rather than this being painless, his death is slow and agonizing. Investigations show the equipment used to deliver the lethal injection was tampered with and upon discovering the words “you can’t fight fate” written on one of the canisters, Nick and the authorities suspect that Darby had been the culprit and they converge on his home but escapes when he receives a mysterious phone call from a unknown person warning him to flee. The unknown caller then directs him to a waiting patrol car with a sleeping officer and directs Darby to drive to a designated spot outside a warehouse. After forcing the policeman to drive there, Darby is about to shoot him with his own gun but instead, he ends up incapacitated with a tetrodotoxin via the booby-trapped gun while the unknown caller/policeman reveals himself to be Clyde, who is now a violent sociopath and was actually setting a trap for Darby.

While Darby is paralyzed, Clyde then takes him captive at the warehouse, straps him onto a table with a blood pressure system and injects him with adrenaline so he won’t pass out. Then, Clyde shows Darby a picture of his wife and daughter and turns a video recorder on before he avenges their murder by slowly dismembering Darby, cutting him into 25 pieces that includes his arms and legs, his penis, his eyelids and finally his head. Finding Darby’s corpse, Nick, his assistant Sarah Lowell (Leslie Bibb), Detectives Dunnigan (Colm Meaney), Garza (Michael Irby) and the authorities realize that Clyde was behind the killings and arrest him as the chief suspect but he eventually confesses his guilt before offering a full confession in exchange for a new mattress in his cell, which Nick reluctantly agrees. Nick gets a phonecall from his wife (Regina Hall), who tells him to come home as their daughter has accidentally watched a DVD of Clyde killing Darby. On the next day, Clyde represents himself at his hearing before Judge Laura Burch (Annie Corley) but is appalled when he is granted bail and lashes out at her over this and instead, he is held in a contempt of court. Granted his mattress, Clyde confesses both to murdering Darby and to switching the drugs used in Rupert’s execution. He next demands a meal consisting of pasta, asparagus and a porterhouse steak, along with his iPod, by exactly 01:00pm the next day in exchange for revealing the location of Clarence’s missing attorney (Richard Portnow). Due to the warden’s (Gregory Itzin) multiple checks, Clyde receives his meal at 1:08pm, as a result, the detectives arrive too late to save the attorney, who had been buried alive with a limited air supply. Meanwhile, Clyde murders his cellmate with the bone from his porterhouse steak and is sent to solitary confinement as a result. Nick confronts Clyde about the killing and questions whether his wife and daughter will feel good about him killing in their name but it backfires when Clyde insists that because they’re dead, they can’t feel anything.

Sarah finds evidence connecting Clyde with the Department of Defense. Nick and District Attorney Jonas Cantrell (Bruce McGill) learn from a CIA contact (Michael Kelly) that Clyde was a technical genius who facilitated assassinations, a brilliant strategist specializing in eliminating targets through unconventional means without being within the target’s vicinity (one of his devices was a flechette/necktie design that was made with carbon fiber and choked a terrorist to death). After Judge Burch is killed by an exploding cellphone set up by Clyde, he and Nick engage in a war of words while it turns out that rather than the killings being for revenge, it is actually for the failure of the justice system. In exchange for showing Nick how he is killing the key players that were in Darby’s trial, Clyde declares that unless he is cleared of all charges and released by the next morning at 06:00am, he will “kill everyone”. When his demands are not met, five members of the staff and Sarah are killed by bombs planted within their cars’ gas tanks soon after 06:00am but investigators find Nick’s car has not been tampered with. Meanwhile, the mayor (Viola Davis), alarmed at the deaths of the district attorney staff, assigns protection details to Nick and Jonas. After meeting with the mayor and getting his family to safety, Nick confronts Clyde about the killings and tells him if he had tried to convict Darby for murder, he and Ames would both go free. Clyde says that Nick didn’t even try to help Clyde’s case. Clyde also says if Nick had tried and failed to convict Darby, he would have accepted his honest loss. Nick and Jonas later attend Sarah’s funeral. While leaving the cemetery their convoy is ambushed by a weaponized bomb disposal robot, killing Jonas.

The already irate mayor meets with Nick who offers to resign, but the mayor refuses to accept his resignation and instead appoints him as the acting District Attorney. Nick receives information from Sarah’s boyfriend Chester (Sarah had traced Clyde’s property purchases), leading to a garage owned by Clyde next to the prison, where he and Dunnigan discover a tunnel leading to the solitary confinement cells along with surveillance equipment, weapons, and disguises. They realize that Clyde tunneled into the prison during the ten years prior to his arrest, and deliberately had himself sent to solitary confinement so that he could come and go and commit his string of killings while the authorities believed him to be locked up. Clyde’s plans indicate that he has gone to Philadelphia City Hall. Disguised as a janitor, he places a cellphone-activated suitcase bomb in the city hall with the intention of assassinating the mayor during a security meeting with city officials. Nick rushes to city hall and finds the bomb but the bomb disposal specialist is unable to disarm it, and they cannot evacuate the building for fear that Clyde is watching.

Meanwhile, Clyde returns to his cell via his tunnel and finds Nick waiting for him. He questions whether Nick wants to make one last deal, but having finally begun to understand what Clyde has been trying to teach him, Nick reveals that he doesn’t make deals with murderers anymore. Clyde exults at having finally changed Nick’s ways. Nick cautions him against activating the bomb, but Clyde does so anyway. Nick seals the cell door and flees the building while Dunnigan seals the hatch to the tunnel. Clyde then realizes that they have placed the bomb under his bed and locked it with handcuffs but he sits staring at the bracelet given to him by his daughter before the bomb detonates, killing him while Nick walks away.

In the end, Nick and his wife watch their daughter perform on stage.

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2011 in An Eye For An Eye

 

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Michael L. Plumadore: A piece of human fucking garbage.

Michael L. Plumadore

Michael L. Plumadore: A piece of human fucking garbage.

Michael Len Plumadore, the man accused of killing and dismembering 9-year-old Aliahna Lemmon at his home in Fort Wayne, Ind., has been on the run for 11 years for battery of a Florida law enforcement officer.

Florida Department of Correction records show that Plumadore, now 39, fled the state after he was sentenced to a year in prison in May 2000. Details of the incident in Miami Beach weren’t immediately available.

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2011 in Criminals

 

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Aliahna Lemmon Murdered

Aliahna Lemmon

Aliahna Lemmon

A trusted family friend who confessed to police that he bludgeoned to death a 9-year-old Indiana girl in his care then dismembered her just days before Christmas was formally charged Friday in the killing.

Michael Plumadore, 39, was charged in Fort Wayne with murder, abuse of a corpse and removing a dead body from the scene in the Dec. 22 death of Aliahna Maroney-Lemmon.

Allen County prosecutor’s office chief investigator Danielle Edenfield said the charges will be read to Plumadore in jail, where he was being held without bond. An initial court hearing on the formal charges is scheduled for Wednesday.

Edenfield said she couldn’t comment on a possible motive before the case went to trial.

Plumadore had been looking after Aliahna and her two younger sisters because their mother was sick. He had looked after Aliahna’s dying grandfather and her family had considered him a trusted friend and neighbor.

According to court documents, Plumadore told police he hit the girl repeatedly in the head with a brick on the steps of the trailer where he had lived with her grandfather. He then put the girl’s body inside trash bags and stuffed it inside a freezer in the trailer.

Plumadore told authorities that he later used a hack saw to dismember her body.

She was reported missing Dec. 23, and on Saturday, more than 100 emergency workers searched the rundown trailer park in the north of Fort Wayne where Plumadore and Aliahna’s family lived.

Police questioned Plumadore several times over the weekend and arrested him on Monday, at which point he told police that he had hidden Aliahna’s head, feet and hands at the trailer and discarded her other remains at a nearby business. Police obtained a warrant to search the trailer and found the body parts.

Allen County Coroner E. Jon Brandenberger has said he won’t be able to determine the cause of death until further tests are completed, including microscopic findings and toxicology results.

The prosecutor’s office said the investigation is continuing.

Plumadore had earlier faced a preliminary charge of murder, and the Allen County Prosecutor’s Office said in a news release that the charges filed Friday do not “preclude the filing of additional charges.”

The standard prison sentence for a murder conviction in Indiana is 45 years to 65 years. The other charges each carry maximum sentences of three years in prison.

Allen County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Mike McAlexander told The News-Sentinel Friday that his office had not dismissed the possibility of seeking the death penalty against Plumadore.

Plumadore has a criminal record in Florida and North Carolina that includes convictions for trespassing and assault, and an Indiana conviction for forgery.

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2011 in Crimes against Children

 

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Ayla Reynolds Missing: Police Suspect Foul Play In Maine Girl’s Disappearance

Ayla Reynolds

huffingtonpost.com: Associated Press writer Clarke Canfield contributed to this report.

PORTLAND, Maine — Police investigating the disappearance of a toddler from her father’s central Maine home two weeks ago said Friday they believe foul play was involved, but investigators tried to remain optimistic even as the job of law enforcement officials becomes more difficult with each passing day.

Waterville police Chief Joseph Massey announced Friday night that the case “has evolved from the search for a missing child to a criminal investigation.”

In a statement, the chief said the conclusion about the disappearance of 20-month-old Ayla Reynolds was based on evidence that has been gathered over the past two weeks, but he didn’t elaborate. He said state police would take the lead on the investigation.

On Friday, a team of evidence technicians from Massachusetts joined Maine State Police at the Waterville home where Ayla was last seen and was reported missing by her father.

“All of our efforts continue to locate Ayla. Although this is beginning the third week, we remain hopeful,” Maine Department of Public Safety spokesman Stephen McCausland said. He declined to say what the technicians were looking for.

Ayla’s father, Justin DiPietro, told police he last saw her when he put her to bed the night of Dec. 16. He reported her missing when she was nowhere to be found the following morning.

Before she vanished, Ayla was wearing green polka dot pajamas with the words “Daddy’s Princess” on them and had a soft cast on her broken left arm. Extensive searches of woods, waterways, fields and private properties around Waterville, a city of 16,000 residents 20 miles north of the state capital, Augusta, have failed to turn up anything.

The day after Christmas, investigators announced a $30,000 reward, the largest ever for a missing person case in Maine, for information leading to Ayla’s whereabouts.

McCausland on Friday declined to discuss whether any of the 300-plus leads had borne fruit for investigators. He also declined to talk about suspects or evidence that has been gathered. He said DiPietro and Ayla’s mother, Trista Reynolds, of Portland, were cooperating with investigators.

There were news reports Friday that two cars seized from the Waterville home were returned to DiPietro and an unidentified woman. McCausland declined to confirm those reports.

Investigators put up crime scene tape at the father’s home last week. Outside the home, about 75 miles from Portland, a pile of teddy bears and stuffed animals were piled at a makeshift shrine.

Ayla was placed in her father’s care while her mother was in a substance abuse rehabilitation program, which she completed.

Trista Reynolds, making an appeal on national television on Thursday, said that she had questions for DiPietro but that he had not returned her calls since their daughter went missing. She previously raised concerns about Ayla’s treatment while in her father’s care after the girl broke her arm, which police said happened in an accidental fall. She had no further comment Friday night, her sister said.

DiPietro couldn’t be reached for comment Friday night. The Associated Press has been unable to find a telephone listing for him, and he has not been at his home, which is empty.

A few days before Christmas, DiPietro, addressing the public for the first time, said in a statement he had “no idea what happened to Ayla or who is responsible.” He said his family and friends would do “everything we can to assist in this investigation and get Ayla back home.”

“I would never do anything to hurt my child,” he said Wednesday in another statement.

Former FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt said Friday that the odds of finding a child lessen if he or she isn’t found within the first day or two of disappearing. But he said there’s always reason for optimism, noting that there are even rare cases of missing children who turn up years later in someone’s care.

“If you don’t get this child back real quickly, you know that it gets harder and harder,” he said. “But you can’t give up hope.”

Scott Bernstein, founder of Child Recovery International, a New York City-based organization that helps find missing children, agreed the first hours of an investigation are key in tracking down missing children as young as Ayla. Although the situation looks bleak, there’s still room for hope, he said.

“One percent hope – but I’ll go for that 1 percent hope,” he said.

After Ayla went missing, law enforcement officials likely divided their investigation into two parts, one team looking at people with access to her, such as relatives and family friends, and another group looking at the potential for an abduction by an outsider or stranger, Van Zandt said. Under both scenarios, he said, the odds are that the person who took Ayla knew something about her or her family.

Strangers’ abductions of children do occur, but they’re rare, accounting for only 105 to 115 children out of 750,000 to 900,000 missing-persons cases each year in the United States, Van Zandt said.

Van Zandt, who has worked similar cases, said Ayla’s disappearance, which once had more than 80 searchers and law enforcement officers involved, has been difficult for law enforcers as well as for distraught family members.

“As an FBI agent working these cases, you never turn off the emotional porch light,” he said. “You always leave on the light with the hope that the child will come home again.”

___

Associated Press writer Clarke Canfield contributed to this report.

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2011 in Crimes against Children

 

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