Streetfilms & Streetsblog: The First Ten Years
This summer, Streetfilms and Streetsblog celebrated our 10-year anniversary, and to mark the occasion, we created this film looking back at how our reporting and videos have changed streets in New York, the U.S., and cities all over the world.
This film showcases only a small portion of the work that thousands of volunteers and advocates have put in. It begins with the NYC Streets Renaissance, a collection of organizations that banded together in 2005 to rally people around the idea that streets can change, by showing best practices from other cities and photosimulations of what NYC streets could become.
You’ll see clips from important Streetfilms like the series on Bogota’s Bus Rapid Transit and Ciclovia, as well as recaps of how Streetsblog influenced transportation policy at City Hall, defended the work of transportation commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, and put pressure on Albany to stop raiding transit funds. Getting closer to the present day, we look at why Streetsblog’s coverage of traffic crashes matters, the new generation of elected officials working for better streets, and what’s next for advocacy in NYC.
A note: This Streetfilm runs about 15 minutes, but if we had the resources it easily be a 90-minute feature documentary. Apologies to anyone left on the cutting room floor and topics not addressed, but perhaps someday we’ll be able to make that film!
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Clarence EckersonDirector
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Clarence EckersonProducer
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Aaron NaparstekProducer
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Ben FriedProducer
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Mark GortonKey Cast
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Aaron NaparstekKey Cast
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Janette Sadik-KhanKey Cast
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Gabe KleinKey Cast
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Ben FriedKey Cast
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Clarence EckersonKey Cast
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Leah ShahumKey Cast
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Project Type:Documentary, Short
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Genres:Environmental, Transportation, Documentary, History, New York City
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Runtime:14 minutes 33 seconds
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Completion Date:November 14, 2016
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Production Budget:5,000 USD
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Country of Origin:United States
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Country of Filming:Colombia, Denmark, Netherlands, United States
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Language:English
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Shooting Format:Digital
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
Clarence Eckerson, Jr. is frequently referred to as “the hardest working man in transportation show biz” for his dedication to making difficult, wonky concepts more accessible and entertaining to the general public. He's been documenting advocacy transportation for over 15 years and produced nearly 850 Streetfilms since 2005, which have been viewed cumulatively at least 13 million times. His work has been featured in thousands of written articles, blogs and broadcast television media. He has spoken at over 100 events worldwide.
With no formal video training or education in an urban planning field, Clarence attributes much of his accumulated knowledge to never holding a driver’s license. 99% of all footage he shoots is by bike, foot, train, or bus, which gives his filmmaking a unique, see-it-as-it-happens feel. His favorite Streetfilms are Bogotá's Ciclovia, Groningen: The World’s Cycling City and Portland’s Intersection Repair.
He loves living in Jackson Heights, Queens with his wife Fátima, and his young son Clarence, III, whom he’s excited to watch grow up with diverse, exciting transportation options and fewer cars thanks to his hard work.
With climate change being a world reality, some of the battle for changing our planet lies with making our cities support a wide range of transportation options (transit, bicycling, walking, car share, bike share and more). Streetfilms has always sought about best practices worldwide and attempted to spread the word through our films, which are free for anyone to screen and promote in their advocacy.