Category Archives: My Movies

Brewster Kahle at the Creative Commons Launch

Complete with new and exciting reasonable file sizes!
Below are links to a high resolution and low resolution QuickTime movies and audio MP3 file. Let me know if you need another format.
Brewster Kahle and son, Caslon, at the Creative Commons Launch

Brewster Kahle at the Creative Commons Launch – 25 MB
Brewster Kahle at the Creative Commons Launch – 14 MB
MP3 of Brewster Kahle at Creative Commons Launch – 5 MB

DJ Spooky At The Creative Commons Launch

Here is DJ Spooky’s presentation at the Creative Commons Launch last Monday night.
I know these are big files guys, but I’ll be posting some lower-quality versions a little later today. (These are up now on my index at: http://www.lisarein.com/videoindex.html#spooky.)
(DV experts — please email me directly at lisarein@finetuning.com with suggestions about how to compress these files smaller — I’m committed to perfecting my technique for this stuff!)
I’ll be releasing an MP3 of the music too (from the Birth of a Nation Remix). — And yes, Paul Miller (DJ Spooky) gave me his permission to redistribute all of this stuff into the public domain, so no worries there!
So remember – don’t try to play these in your browser — right click (pd) or click and hold (mac) to download these files to your hard drive and play them from there.


First part of DJ Spooky’s Presentation
Second part of DJ Spooky’s Presentation
Birth of a Nation Remix w/ DJ Spooky talk afterwards

DJ Spooky Holding Up The “AdBusters” Flag

Lessig, Barlow, Valenti at Creative Commons Launch

I’ll be putting up a movie every day this week: Lawrence Lessig, John Perry Barlow and Jack Valenti today, DJ Spooky Tomorrow, Brewster Khale and (mini-brewster), Craig Newmark, Aaron Swartz and Vicki Bennett as the week goes on…
(Lower resolultion versions available now.)
First Part of Larry’s speech (92.4 MB)
John Perry Barlow and Jack Valenti speeches (75.2 MB)
Second Part of Larry’s speech (78.6 MB)

Video Footage of Nancy Pelosi’s Celebration Party

I finally finished transcribing the speeches and organizing my video footage from Nancy Pelosi’s Celebration Party on November 23, 2002 in San Francisco, California.

I say to people “you can take any issue or you can take any day of the week, and there is a case to be made against the Republicans.” But let’s just take yesterday.

Yesterday, Congress adjourned without passing unemployment benefits for Americas workers — who worked hard, played by the rules, lost their jobs through no fault of their own but because of the downturn in the economy.

On December 28, 800,000 hard working Americans will no longer have their benefits because the Republicans refused to pass that. There was even a compromise from the Senate, which we still controlled up until yesterday, that said: ‘Let’s extend the benefits until February at least to give people a chance past the holidays and the rest.’ They absolutely refused.

The Democrats said ‘We’re going to hold up the adjournment of Congress so that we cannot leave until you pass these benefits.’ They said ‘you can bring the Congress back here every single day from now on. We’re never going to pass those benefits.’ That’s who the Republicans in Congress are…insensitive to the concerns of working families in America.”

Movies and Pictures from Nov 18, 2002 Anti-War/Anti-Feinstein Protest in San Francisco

I’ve uploaded my video footage from the Anti-war in Iraq/Anti-Feinstein protest in San Francisco Monday, November 18, 2002.

As always with my news video footage, everything is Dedicated to the Public Domain.

Lisa Rein’s Movies and Pictures From the November 18, 2002 Anti-war/ Anti-Feinstein Protest in San Francisco

I’m working on a better interface and a comprehensive index so folks won’t get lost in the quagmire of my rapidly-expanding library of video footage.

I’ll also have some technical notes up soon to help explain how to install the software required to get the movies to run on various platforms for you non-uber techie folks.

I also still need to re-encode everything as MPEGs capable of running on unix-based operating systems.