Friday, May 7, 2010

JRN 423 Final Project

Here's my final project for 423. I wanted to try something different with my video, and unfortunately it fell through as a whole. I had several sources drop me on short notice, or just refuse outright. As it is, I used what I had, what was originally going to only be a small portion of the video, and made it my final. Here it is. I have a couple mistakes to fix, so I'll probably update this post in a week or so.

Up in Smoke from Sean Proctor on Vimeo.




Copy: (written very quickly)
On May 1, 2010, Michigan joined 25 other states, including much of New England, by enacting a statewide smoking ban in all enclosed places. The bill, signed into law by Governor Jennifer Granholm on Decemeber 18, 2009, bans smoking in all indoor, enclosed workplaces, as well as outdoor patios of bars and restaurants. The only places exempt from the ban are cigar bars, retail tobacco stores, private homes, company vehicles, and Detroit's three casinos' gambling floors.
The law is aimed toward cutting down on the health hazards of secondhand smoking in areas where it would otherwise be difficult to avoid it. The risks of secondhand smoke are well documented, ranging from the possibility of cancer, to lung problems such as asthma, or infections. It is estimated that 53,000 nonsmokers per year are killed by secondhand smoke, making it the 3rd leading cause of preventable death in the U.S.
"Personally, as a bartender and a nonsmoker, I think it's great not having the smoke around," said D.J. Blizzard, bartender at The Bird Bar & Grill in downtown Mount Pleasant for the past eight years. "I'm all for people having the right to do whatever they want, and as a private business you should be able to choose, but meanwhile, I don't think it will effect us that much."
"I just found out about the smoking ban," Mount Pleasant resident Archie MacGillivray said, "but I don't know, I have mixed feelings. It's nice that there will be a cleaner environment for everyone to hang out in--I'm a father, so obviously I think about my kids--but then there's the other side of it. Basically, I don't have to be in the smoke, I can always change my behavior by leaving a smoking environment. I see the good, but I see how it limits personal freedoms on a lot of different levels."
Livonia freshman Nick Armes has been smoking for one year, and he is against the ban. "All these places have the property rights, they can make their own rules. And here comes the government saying 'we're talking over your company and making the laws for you.'"
"I think it's unfortunate overall, because ultimately, when you get to the point, I think it's a property rights issue. It's not so much for or against smoking, but for and against personal choice, especially entrepreneurial choice." Andrew Petrevics, a Redford senior, said. "We've tried prohibition before with alcohol and it doesn't work, I think it's rather unfortunate and quite dangerous."

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