Nov. 13, 2009 It’s fitting that The Laramie Project premiers locally tonight in San Mateo on Friday the 13th, as the theater production resurrects a haunting melancholy on the ‘unlucky’ and fateful day young Matthew Shepard was kidnapped, severely beaten and left to die suffering for six days tied to a fence on the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming. Reason for the hate crime? He … [Read more...]
The Laramie Project: Using Media to Teach Tolerance 10 Years Later
Filed Under: Advertising, Emerging trends & STEM, Growing up too soon, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Misogyny & Racism, People Shaping Youth, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity, Viral & Buzz Media Tagged With: APA, brutal slaying, diversity, Epilogue Part 3 Laramie, Erase-Hate, gay, gay rights, Greg Pierotti, Habbo Hotel, hate crimes, history, Homecoming assault, homophobia, human rights, InfoBus, intolerance, killer, Laramie Wyoming, Lgbt, living history, Matthew Shepard, media-literacy, Moises Kauffman, MSF, murder, October 12, participatory learning, reach and teach, sexuality, support, teaching tolerance, Tectonic Theater, Tectonic Theatre, teens, The Laramie Project, theater as journalism, tied to fence, tolerance, tolerance.org, victims of violence