This blog - I'm Wes Rehberg - is dedicated to what I'm up to in writing, art, activism, and critical thinking...
Sunday, May 27, 2012
SALGO ADELANTE ....
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
BACK TO NOVEL "STRINGER" - and scoping literary outlets
Also looking at other outlets for two poems that have been "declined." Maybe I'll rework the rejected flash nonfiction piece "Fidel's Gift" too a bit, reconsidering the journalistic style I used. Got to think about the notion that such a style isn't considered "artistic," though.
There are more than 800 literary magazines out there.
Monday, May 21, 2012
SUBMITTED, DECLINED, PUBLISHED IN MAY THUS FAR
Four declines, five pending, two poems and a book published
(Chart as of May 14 - updates below)
Submitted again on May 26:
"Orbits" - Poetry - to The Pedestal Magazine
Declined on May 26:
"Orbits" - Poetry (Status change from In-Progress)
Declined on May 22:
"The Smile Hasn't Left" - Poetry (in chart above as In-Progress - status change)
Published:
Book: "Opening the Gate" via Wild Clearing: short stories, poems, on Amazon
Two Poems: "Alien Bones," "Tick Tock" in The Rusty Nail
NEW MORNING TO KEEP ON IN
I'm fascinated by the will to create, to write, to bring forth art.
So many songs sung by artists who compose them or cover them, fine musicians who ply the cafés, bistros, local scenes, side stages, online video outlets. Poets who publish their own chapbooks or in web literary magazines or just read in local settings. Storytellers who dramatize wherever some may listen. Visual artists and sculptors who may find a gallery, but if not, still persist and show in open markets. Actors, playwrights, dancers who use the streets or may find a stage. Craft people who find niches everywhere to display what they do. I imagine the profusion of those working and am awestruck.
This very moment even.
And I love to create, to write, to film at times, to photograph, to publish as well, so it goes on. The agony, the discovery, the journey, the connection with something within from which comes form and content influenced by what the senses have discovered exterior to me. That inexplicable will to shape something new.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
AT THIS AGE . . .
The thing is to just keep on writing despite rejections, or fears of these. As one poet I know wrote, the demand for books, or any creative piece for that matter, is far lower than the output of works created by those who pursue their craft. Even in the digital era.
Monday, May 14, 2012
WRITTEN, SUBMITTED, PUBLISHED IN MAY THUS FAR
Three poems: "Orbits," "Looking," "Semblance"
Flash Nonfiction: "Fidel's Gift"
Novel: "Stringer" - in progress
Short Story: "Jail Birds"
Submitted:
Flash Nonfiction: "Fidel's Gift" to Flashquake
Short Story: "Scooter" to eFiction
Two poems: "No Wind, No Keel," "The Smile Hasn't Left" to Future Cycle Press
Published:
Book: "Opening the Gate" via CreateSpace (Self-published) short stories, poems
Two Poems: "Alien Bones," "Tick Tock" in The Rusty Nail
(As of May 14)
Notice on May 15
One poem rejected - "No Wind, No Keel"
Notice on May 20
Flash Nonfiction rejected - "Fidel's Gift"
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Monday, May 07, 2012
"OPENING THE GATE" NOW ON SALE ...
http://www.wildclearing.com/gate.html -- check it out --
Opening the Gate
Short Stories and Poetry by Wes Rehberg
Authored by Wes Rehberg"Opening the Gate" is a collection of five short stories and five poems by author Wes Rehberg, some which include fictionalized biographical elements and as well draw from his experience as a print journalist and social justice activist. Titles of the short stories are "The Enduring," "The Fog," "Scooter," "Tina's Nicaragua Story," and "Jail Birds." Two of the poems have appeared in the literary journal, The Rusty Nail. "Alien Bones" and "Tick Tock.""OPENING THE GATE" PROOFS ...
Saturday, May 05, 2012
"JAIL BIRDS" REDUX -- FINAL DRAFT
Friday, May 04, 2012
SYNOPSIS FOR "JAIL BIRDS"
"Jail Birds" is a first-person fiction short story about a prison minister who reflects on encounters with men accused and convicted of homicides, his differences with church doctrine, his troubles as a church pastor, especially after a trip to the Mideast, and the realization he comes to - first draft completed.
Tuesday, May 01, 2012
TWO POEMS PUBLISHED ...
SACRED CABIN, SACRED EARTH
This mountain and others nearby are considered the high peaks of Broome County in upstate New York, in southeastern Broome through which the Susquehanna River flows on its winding journey to Chesapeake Bay in Maryland. Its terrain has been quarried for bluestone shale, including our 5-acre site, the quarriers often independent locals eking out a living. It has also been logged, though portions of the area are protected woodlands, and it now is the target of natural gas exploiters because it is lies within the northern sector of the vast Appalachian Marcellus Shale deposit, the gas reachable through the shale layers by the toxic drilling method called hydrofracturing, fracking for short.
Our piece of land bares its ancient history in the shale outcroppings that show through the soil, its native history in the sense we have that it feels and seems all too apparently to have been a worship site, a spiritual space, and its so-called American history in the dirt road that passes by, in the logging and quarrying evidence, in the nearby few neighbors, mostly of European descent, in the nearby dwindling dairy farms, and in the constant efforts of speculators to exploit its surface and depths for wood, stone and fuel.
Yet, and there is a yet, for our time here it will remain sacred in the presence of its history and what we still may be able to share and preserve, with it, in its transfiguration.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Monday, April 16, 2012
STORIES OF COMPASSION AMID DESPAIR
Friday, April 13, 2012
JAILBIRDS STORY, HEAVY METAL, MR. BOJANGLES
I also thought about Jerry Jeff Walker's song Mr. Bojangles, who liked to dance, and in his cell "jumped so high, jumped so high, then he lightly touched down ..."
Thursday, April 12, 2012
BRASS ...
Might add a couple of other pieces -- still in process
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
CUBA VISIT AND A U.S. PENALTY ...
Monday, April 09, 2012
"JAILBIRDS" -- fictionalized nonfiction short story
Its tentative beginning is this:
"The guard brought me to a tiny room with a wooden table and two chairs, opened the door, showed me the button to push if I needed help, and told me to take a chair. He walked toward the county jail wing where an itinerant young man was behind bars, accused of murdering a boy, 13-years-old. The charges indicated that the accused killed the boy after he keyed a scratch on the imprisoned man’s car door. I was there because he requested a prison minister ..."
Thursday, April 05, 2012
"TINA'S STORY" draft completed
Read the story aloud at "Wide Open Floor" at the Barking Legs Theater in Chattanooga, TN. It moved ...
Tuesday, April 03, 2012
"OPENING THE GATE"
The content may change as I work through this ... still very formative, especially the quality, but I'm learning, with help from the Chattanooga Writers Guild workshops.
Also, I'm recirculating "Down Home With Dalton," 74-minute documentary film about Dalton Roberts, songwriter, performer, storyteller, and former Hamilton County county executive in Tennessee. This was filmed with songwriter-performers Martha Ann Brooks and Donnie Jenkins. This will be available shortly through Amazon.
Saturday, March 31, 2012
PROCESS EQUALS ...
Friday, March 30, 2012
THE CURSE ...
Saturday, March 24, 2012
SUSPENDED ANIMATION
Thursday, March 15, 2012
"RUSTY NAIL" TO PUBLISH 2 POEMS - BOOK IS ON AMAZON
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
BACKGROUND FOR "POLITICAL GRACE" IS FIRST-HAND ...
Monday, March 12, 2012
"POLITICAL GRACE: THE GIFT OF RESISTANCE" NOW ON SALE ...

My paperback "Political Grace: The Gift of Resistance" is now available for purchase at this Create Space link and soon at Amazon.com -- Check it out ! ... Synopsis viewable at Create Space as well -- And, links for purchase and a synopsis are also viewable on its own web page here on our site ....
Sunday, March 11, 2012
"THE FOG" - Short story -- first page ...
The fog. Enoch felt secure in its midst.
It muted city sounds. It was a cloak that left the sensation that he was connected, like with a visible spirit, yet separate, suspended.
He always seemed to himself a little distant, out of place. Yes, he played with others, stickball in the schoolyard, punchball, stoopball, roller hockey on the streets, was even good at it. But there was a division between all this and himself that he knew but couldn't fathom.
“Maybe it’s my name,” he thought, walking down narrow 208th Street to a corner candy store -- “Enoch Jubal.” Some his age would call him “Jewboy.”
“Or maybe it’s just me,” he’d think.
Actually, his Hungarian-born grandfather was a Catholic, his grandmother a Lutheran, and Enoch a skeptical communicant in the Catholic church. His grandfather had an Austrian name, Rothpauer, but his drinking buddies called him “Rummy.” “Rummy Jewboy,” the young boys would say, teasing maliciously, when Enoch let on about his grandfather’s nickname.
“Or, maybe I’ll never know,” he thought.
Walking in the fog that day, a wisp of mist rose from the street’s manhole covers. Sewer smell. It carried. He let himself feel enveloped by that too...
Monday, March 05, 2012
MAKING THE SONG ...
Sunday, March 04, 2012
"SCOOTER" OPENING - SHORT STORY
Thursday, March 01, 2012
THE MAZE PHASE . . .
One short story completed, a novel started as well as another short story and a large amount of Scandinavian and other noir reading plus Joyce Carol Oates and Annie Dillard, research into markets plus hooking up with the Chattanooga Writers Group and one of its fiction writers gatherings.
Style and character - and fearlessness, going forth with that in the foreground at the moment conscious of storytelling too but not formulaic. My voice, too. On paper... I know what it feels like, even imagine it complex, and am in awe at the way some authors can distill that complexity and unwind it in long lucid passages. Or defer it intermittently throughout a work thematically along with other themes similarly intermittent, woven.
So now it seems the first phase of this new way to me to be creative has passed. A slight pause to look at the maze from above, then back to it.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
IN THE PROCESS OF PUBLICATION ...

Monday, February 27, 2012
WAS SHE A "SUBJECT" OR AN "OBJECT"?.
"Everybody knew what she was called, but nobody anywhere knew her name. Disremembered and unaccounted for, she cannot be lost because no one is looking for her, and even if they were, how can they call her if they don't know her name?"
Saturday, February 25, 2012
THE ENDURING
Friday, February 24, 2012
SCATTERED...
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
RANDOM REFLECTION ....
Thursday, February 16, 2012
DRAFT PASSAGE FROM "THE ENDURING" - A Short Story
Draft excerpt from my short-story "The Enduring" ...
With winter nearing, Elijah occupied himself with the woodpile, often supplied by Malcolm, easily handling the maul, sing-songing a string of thoughts while splitting logs.
“Chop, chop, the chopping block. Mock me, sucker, I’ll knock your clock. No way, no way, you’ll get away. Chop, chop, the chopping block.”
He’d also unchain the dogs and daily walk with them in the woods, feeling like he set them free, himself free, feeling connected to something along the trails and long-abandoned logging roads that would settle him.
“Free, free, run for the sun. Dogs are gunning it on the hunt. This way, that way, anyway now. Free, free run for the sun.”
#
It wasn't entirely unexpected, a day in that looming winter that etched itself in Malcolm's mind as another defining moment in his life. It had a particular eerie vibration that chilled him, that he could feel sweeping across an ancient upcropping of tree-covered bluestone shale like a wild spirit in the wind. Still it seemed sudden, the sisters sensing it too, electric. They looked up at the sky, low dark gray clouds moving much more swiftly than the gray masses above them. Heralds of foreboding.
Both the sisters and Malcolm heard the vehicle coming up Claw Valley Pike, the tires in the loose gravel and dirt, coming from the direction of the Pennsylvania border. ...
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
PERSONA, PLOT, PROTAGONISTS
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
CHARACTER SKETCHINGS FOR "SCOOTER" - short story
Title - Scooter
Key Characters:
MADELAINE KRUTCHER - Hate this thang, what, quad cane, fallen again, don't they know I'm a Red Hat girl, damn legs swollen again - cat tripped me, Snookie lick my face, Nippy, you're ignoring me - want me to have a motorized wheel chair, little ramps on my hardwood floor - feel me, feel my skin, feel it all - nobody touches me - I'm the nice one with cute little dogs, lots of cats, and here I am fallen by the litter boxes, full, elbow in one, doctor says at my age, what, 68, need a health care worker, if he's a man OK, otherwise, skip it. Rhonda comes to clean, but not this week, only when she wants. Drink, drink, drink, drink, I need a drink, a man, Horace is gone, other one too, husband, what was his name. .. age makes you forget but how could I forget that. .. Rusty, Rusty was lusty, dead too. Oh. .. can't get up. Oh no, not Rusty, Russell.
BILLY DAISY - Floating, didn't need a license for the scooter in this state, feels like riding on rubber, frame liquid, flowing, rocking, rolling, what speed, who could tell, so high, shimmer shimmer, up to Cliff's and Samantha's, cooking it, smoking it, out again, book me, fuckers, I'm out again, nobody I am, nobody but the scooter under my legs, swirling. Could see that little lady down in the hollow from the yard where Cliff shot golf balls into the hollow, using an iron, where the hell did he get them from, he called them goof balls, funny man. Little lady on the back porch with a bottle, must be vodka, got to pay her a visit. Place might be warm, this one's cold, electricity water turned off, candles, love the flickering, what they doing now those two. Little lady want a visitor? I'm the one the swat team snared when I tried to kill myself after I scared off my lady friend in that house by the state park, shit, one year is all they took from me, then rehab, what fools, what a joke. Little lady, I got a rap sheet, I'm bad, you want bad?
RHONDA STILLMAN - Calls me her friend, tightwad bitch doesn't pay me enough to clean up all that cat crap, but she's a worry the way she's started carrying on, in a way I got to keep an eye on her, but I got enough troubles, don't need hers, she'll get what she wants, can pay for it, but what neglect, how could she not see that, downsliding like she is.
CLIFF BREADSWORTH -
SAMANTHA JENSON -
NEIGHBORS (to be named) -
SHELLY ROSE - neighbor - Madelaine worries me, no doubt needs groceries, bright lady bright eyes bright humor (is it an act? There's a dark side) - what a mess her place fine furniture, could be elegant, probably was once, wants to know about the revolver in her drawer.
CAROLYN CORTRIGHT - next door
ROBERT SKILLEN - property owner where meth couple lives
Firefighters etc -
EMTs -
Police -
THE CHARACTER IS PRIMARY FOR ME
Annie Dillard - herself
Lisbeth Salander - Stieg Larssen
Harry Hole - Jo Nesbo
Janie Crawford - Zora Neale Hurston
Frank McCourt in "Angela's Ashes"
Deanna Wolfe - Barbara Kingsolver
Lew Archer - Ross Macdonald
Hazel Motes - Flannery O'Connor
Ignatius J. Reilly - John Kennedy O'Toole
Beloved - Toni Morrison
Lancelot Lamar - Walker Percy
Francis Phelan - William Kennedy
William Least Heat-Moon - himself
Annislee - Joyce Carol Oates
Anonymous
Elias Chacour - himself
UPDATING BLOG - VIDEO CURIO THEATER & WRITING
Friday, May 06, 2011
EXCERPT - COA CHATTANOOGA BUS LINE HISTORY TRIP
Tuesday, May 03, 2011
iPHONE EDITED - APISON TN TORNADO DESTRUCTION & AID
Tuesday, April 05, 2011
"ANOTHER WAY TO PUT" - title segment of video album
"DOWN HOME WITH DALTON" - a video album documentary
Thursday, November 11, 2010
"War Is Over" sung by The States ("When War Is Done")
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Bluegrass, Brakhage, Breakage and Brouillage Redux - a lens cleaner
Bluegrass, Brakhage, Breakage and Brouillage Redux - a lens cleaner - to keep the other eye open in the midst of doc shots and sketches ... my harkening way way back to when it was then ... 3 minutes
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Y-CAP Juvenile Offenders Garden Work With Disabled Adults
Y-CAP began a juvenile offenders garden project in Chattanooga as part of work to help them develop positive behaviors and share their work with disabled adults who live as Orange Grove Center residents. This rough video excerpt from my developing documentary film sketch offers a view of that project. Four minutes, by Wes Rehberg, Wild Clearing.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Friday, July 30, 2010
"Uneven Surfaces: A Cuba Reverie"
Monday, July 26, 2010
Downtown Street Dancing - Chattanooga TN
Tuesday, June 08, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Phenomena, Sprirituality and Design
I'm amazed amid all the devastation at the failure to grasp the extent of the intimacy of interconnectedness in the phenomena we share, as a phenomenologist (logos embracing both rationality and spirituality) and one who feels a kinship with what is loosely called the spiritual.
My rational self sees a design at work in the interconnectedness of phenomena as science seeks to comprehend the design and reason it out, work out methods and measures.
The design, however, is a priori, and as far as I understand design, it too has an a priori. Mutation is part of the design, the method - so is probability and randomness.
I can't escape the notion of design per se and can't explain how it, in itself, came to be. It's here that I make the Kierkegaardian leap, keeping in mind what he called "the cunning of oblivion."
So I try to value what is, as both immanent and transcendent, recognizing the gray matter limits -that valuing, to me, is "spiritual."
Thursday, February 11, 2010
MAKE SURE THEY'RE CLEAN - an experimental video rant on injustices ...
Saturday, September 05, 2009
ENOCH'S DECISION: THE FOG
THE FOG
The fog, somehow Enoch felt secure in its midst. He always seemed to himself a little distant, out of place. Still he played with others, stickball in the schoolyard, punchball, stoopball, roller hockey on the streets. But there was a space between all this and himself that he knew but couldn't fathom.
“Maybe it’s my name,” he thought, walking down narrow 208th Street to a corner candy store. “Enoch Jubal.” The Irish and Italian young people would call him “Jewboy” while the neighboring Jewish community ignored him - he didn’t go to temple. Actually, his Hungarian-born grandfather was a Catholic and his grandmother a Lutheran and Enoch was a communicant in the Catholic church. His grandfather had an Austrian name, Rothauer, but his drinking buddies called him “Rummy.” “Rummy Jewboy,” the young people would say, teasing maliciously, when Enoch let on about his grandfather’s nickname.
In the fog along the street, a pungent mist rose from the manhole covers in the road, sewer smell. “Enoch!,” a boy’s voice called. It was Barry, a Jewish friend he sometimes played with, though Barry's mother didn’t approve. Barry was up in a maple tree. “Where ya goin’?” “Down to Dinks.” Barry couldn’t go so he said, “OK.”
This was well before the Long Island Expressway cut a channel through his neighborhood and just a little later than World War II, which Enoch followed somewhat in the news from third grade on, remembering Franklin D. Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech on the radio after Japanese planes bombed Pearl Harbor. He also remembered the atomic bomb's first tests at Alamagordo, New Mexico and Bikini Atoll and the question about whether a chain reaction would uncontrollably erupt throughout the world. He recalled too the brown B-47 bombers flying low overhead in Queens en route to the war, the blackouts, the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, V-E day when the Allies finally defeated Hitler's armies and neighborhood people ran out into the night to celebrate with shouts, banging pots and pans, and V-J Day, when Japan surrendered. It was also before the so-called Korean conflict and President Harry Truman's decision to deny World War Ii hero General Douglas MacArthur's trenchant desire to pursue retreating North Korea invaders across the 38th Parallel.
Though by now beginning to fail in school, Enoch knew all this and more in his young years. Homework was out of tbe question for him in the three-rooms he shared with his mother, brother and grandparents, especially the times when his grandfather came home drunk. These times became worse after the war when his grandfather was out of work when his job ended as foreman at the Farmingdale plant that built P-47 fighter planes. It would be a couple of humiliating years before he'd find work again, this time as a machinist in the Lilly Tulip cup factory in Queens. Enoch's mother Stephany, was the mainstay support with her cartoon job at Paramount during that difficult time.
So Enoch felt separate in the fog on his walk to Dinks. When challenged by other boys to fight, he wouldn't, to the hoots of "chicken!" He wouldn't steal candy bars at Dinks either, though he liked to look at woman's bodies in magazine and comic pictures, feeling a surge between his legs. "You gonna buy one of those?" Jim Dinks would ask. "No, I want a candy bar," Enoch replied. He first felt that surge in the park when he was shinnying on the angled bars that held the swings upright. "Don't you dare ever do that again" his mother said when he told her about the feeling. He thought, "You should talk," knowing how she'd be propped up reading in a sheer nightgown in her chair bed while he and his brother went to bed on a fold-down sofa in the same room.
Coming out of Dinks, Enoch saw the fog was dissipating. If he could only disappear with it, he thought.
© 2009 Wes Rehberg
Friday, August 28, 2009
ENOCH'S DECISION
ENOCH’S DECISION:
Enoch wondered why he never ran away. Sitting on the city park swing, he knew he had to go home soon, a couple of blocks away, a small house near his high school, where he and four others lived in a three-room flat on the second floor.
His brother would probably be home already. They rarely spent time together. His mother would be arriving shortly after a subway and bus ride from Manhattan, where she worked on animated cartoons. His grandmother would be making supper, maybe roll-em-ups from flank steak, bacon and parsley, with egg noodles, after a day of playing solitaire, drinking beer and reading romance stories. It was payday, so his grandfather would be at a tavern in the poorest part of Bayside, downing shots with beer chasers.
On payday, sometimes Enoch would have to ride his ancient bicycle to the tavern to tell his grandfather that dinner was ready. Drunk, his grandfather was unpredictably violent, so it was a daunting task. Enoch, isolated but maturing at age 12, would use the bike so he wouldn’t have to ride home in his grandfather’s old Dodge. “Gramps, it’s time to come home,” he’d say softly, to the still powerful and bulky figure seated at the bar. The answer would be a cackling laugh, sarcastic and angry at the interruption.
Enoch knew his grandfather’s violence well, having been punched hard enough to slam into a refrigerator so it would rock, and picked up and thrown against a wall. He also knew the man, now in his late 50s, had a sweetness to him, a contradiction Enoch tried hard to reconcile. But over and over he wanted to escape, to flee, sometimes taking the same route into Manhattan his mother used, riding subways into the Bronx, into Brooklyn, uptown and downtown, walking streets in “the city,” or pedaling his decade-old second-hand bike to Crocheron Park, to walk along the Little Neck Bay waterfront.
Another occasional escape was early morning bus rides to a city golf course, where he would take his small bag of clubs, a gift from Jared, his deadbeat father, and find some duffers to play with at a dime a hole. Enoch usually left the links with a dollar more than he arrived with, the other golfers surprised. He could break a hundred and probably should have stayed with the game but didn’t. The little bit of money he got from this, from shagging golf balls at a private course, and from schoolyard knock-rummy helped fund his forays, including his special solitary trips to a midtown Horn & Hardart’s Automat in “the city” to buy a pot of beans, a hotdog, a piece of pie and coffee, most all enclosed in compartments behind little glass doors that opened when you inserted coins. Enoch was a frequent truant from school.
On the park swing, Enoch said to himself, “Time to go home.” The swing, rocking slightly, stopped and he stood up and walked past Joe, the parkman, closing up shop, past the crabtrees he had climbed while younger, down the slope to the sidewalk where he learned to ride a bicycle, across the street where the Q28 bus was parked so he knew his mother was home, and down the working-class street of closely clustered houses, some two-family like his. Running away would be put off for another day.
His grandfather’s old Dodge was not parked on the street, so he hadn’t arrived yet. Sometimes Enoch, out after dinner, would return to see the sedan there and feel the radiator to detect whether it was still warm, which would mean his grandfather, drunk, would still be up and seated at the kitchen table, ranting. Enoch probably wouldn’t be doing the same thing this particular evening.
“Enoch,” his grandmother said as he climbed the stairs to the second floor. “Go get your grandfather.” He looked at his mother, at the kitchen table in a pastel blue knit dress, drinking tea, and heard his brother in the living room where all three slept, and said “OK.”
© 2009 Wes Rehberg
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
WIDOW OF POISONED NUCLEAR WORKER WANTS JUSTICE
Widow of Poisoned Nuclear Worker Wants Justice from Wes Rehberg on Vimeo.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Cherokee Forest Sketch: The Bald River Wilderness Area
Janine Anderson Dies After Championing Sick Nuclear Worker Cause
Wednesday, July 08, 2009
"I Want His Justice" - Jan Lovelace - 18 seconds
Draft introductory segment of interview with Jan Lovelace regarding her husband Harry's death after working at the Oak Ridge TN nuclear complex, where thousands have won claims for toxic and radiological poisoning - 18 seconds
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
An Ex-Prisoner's Predicament: No Job, No Home
Saturday, January 03, 2009
TVA Coal Ash Spill: Video Sketch of River Damage
A video sketch of coal ash spill damage to the Emory River in Tennessee, result of a coal ash slurry pond dam break from the Kingston Coal Power Plant that spilled into the river and surrounding community ... also an encounter with a local deputy who tried to stop filming -- filmed by Wes Rehberg, Wild Clearing
Monday, December 29, 2008
CIVILIAN CASUALTIES IN BATTLE ARE APPALLING
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Facebook video and photo posts
Thursday, November 20, 2008
MEMORIAL FOR MEMORY
An 9-minute experimental film/video on memory, its reliability, abstraction and feeling. Filmed by Wes Rehberg, Wild Clearing
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
"THE HEARTLAND SPEAKS" -- 7-minute video of gathering, rally, arrests at military air show in Salina, KS
The video is from the Salina, KS, Heartland Speaks gathering, rally and arrests -- see post below for details -- this is the YouTube version, which may be more accessible.
Monday, October 20, 2008
Heartland Speaks: Rally and arrests at military air show
Thursday, October 02, 2008
"What We Make Disappears..." (Between the Ice Ages)
What We Make Disappears ... (Between the Ice Ages) from Wes Rehberg on Vimeo.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
BETWEEN THE ICE AGES ... FAITHFUL ... to the creative spirit
Between the Ice Ages: ... faithful ... from Wes Rehberg on Vimeo.
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
THE EXPOSED: ATTY LISTS PROBLEMS IN US HELP FOR SICK NUCLEAR WORKERS
THE EXPOSED: Atty lists problems in US help for sick nuclear workers from Wes Rehberg on Vimeo.
Attorney Frank Gerlach details problems in the U.S. program to help sick nuclear workers under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness and Compensation Program, in this preliminary video clip for the documentary exposed. He spoke at a meeting of the Portsmouth/Piketon Residents for Environmental Safety and Security in Ohio -- co-founded by Vina Colley, a sick former worker at the USEC Portsmouth nuclear enrichment plant. Gerlach represents sick workers in their efforts to obtain compensation and medical aid from nuclear plant contamination through the program administered by the U.S. Dept. of Labor. Filmed by Wes Rehberg, Wild Clearing
Thursday, September 18, 2008
THE EXPOSED: INTERVIEW WITH MIKE DRIVER, SICK NUCLEAR WORKER
THE EXPOSED: Interview with Mike Driver, sick nuclear worker from Wes Rehberg on Vimeo.
Saturday, September 06, 2008
THE EXPOSED: SICK OAK RIDGE NUCLEAR WORKERS DETAIL FRUSTRATIONS
During an interview for our documentary "The Exposed," three former Oak Ridge nuclear workers spoke of their frustrations with obtaining medical help and compensation through the U.S. Department of Labor, charged with helping such workers through the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 (EEOICPA) -- working video clip filmed by Wes Rehberg, Wild Clearing ...