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Show C-4 The Park Record CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM PARK CITY FILM.ORG Pulitzer Prize winner will speak New York Times’ Jodi Kantor broke Weinstein story Submitted by the Park City Institute THE FAVOURITE JAN JAN JAN "A deliciously diabolical comedy" -The Washington Post 18 19 20 Fri Sat Sun Rated R 8pm 8pm 6pm Underwritten by Julie Hopkins, KW Real Estate JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE, PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Get your subscription to The Park Record! Mail or Home delivery within Summit County (Includes a free Sunday Tribune and e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $56 2 Years $98 Mail delivery outside of Summit County (Includes a free e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $80 2 Years $138 Home Delivery within Salt Lake, Utah, Davis, Wasatch Counties (Includes a free e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $80 2 Years $138 Call us today and ask for Lacy 435.649.9014 The Park City Institute presents Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Jodi Kantor, at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 18, at the Eccles Center for the Performing Arts. Kantor will discuss how she, along with her colleague, Megan Twohey, broke the story about Harvey Weinstein’s alleged sexual abuse of women — in locations as far away as Cannes and Rome, and as nearby as the Stein Eriksen Lodge in Deer Valley. The story ran in the New York Times at the end of 2017. Kantor’s work has revealed hidden truths about power, gender, technology, politics and culture. “This is an important conversation for every community. Because parts of the investigative reporting Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey did, in order to break this story, happened in our own backyard, it is a privilege to have this award-winning reporter on our stage to discuss it,” said PCI Executive Director Teri Orr. “This story is a great example of the power of investigative journalism — it launched the #MeToo movement. Kantor is able to provide insight on the culture shift we’re seeing across industries, and in every corner of every community in America.” Kantor will take the audience behind the scenes of investigative journalism, showing how she and her colleagues expose secrets that have been hidden for decades and what makes a story impactful. In exploring the resonance of the Weinstein investigation, Kantor will also address topics such as common patterns and means of intimidation, as well as why so many women are now finding their voices and why people are Continued from C-1 Winter will speak The L.A. Times crossword puzzle “PASS” By PAUL COULTER Across 1 Brewer’s need 5 “In the Land of Israel” author Oz 9 Barbershop tool 14 Cremona artisan 19 Skunk River city 20 Hardly a revealing style 21 Quiet partner 22 Domed-top structures, perhaps 23 Imminent wordplay warning? 26 Peter, Paul or Mary 27 “Aladdin” prince 28 Astronomy Muse 29 Disney’s Cruella De __ 30 Many a Degas 31 Oil sources 33 “Is my account settled?”? 36 Drive-__ 37 Types 39 Parmenides’ home 40 Apiece, in scores 42 Others, in Latin 43 You’re looking at one 44 “Sunday Night Football” network 47 Nervous draft choice? 51 1982 sci-fi film 52 “Mon __!” 53 Field of study 54 Workbench attachment 55 Getting on 56 Scary fairy tale beast 57 More mean 59 Film festival entry 61 Half a luau serving? 62 French season 63 Agency that regulates test cheating? 68 Sched. uncertainty 70 Really digging 72 Oldest Musketeer 73 Became aware of 75 Kind of guy you can count on 76 Bit 78 “I, Claudius” role 80 A silly stunt may be done on one 81 Cabinet dept. 82 Swarm 83 Very first ATM password? 86 “Dropped” ’60s drug 87 European capital 88 Fruity cocktail word 89 “Comprende?” 90 Space opening 91 International economic coalition 93 Link warning letters 96 Popular disco era pastimes? 100 Moves unsteadily 103 Heads off 104 According to 105 Shark hanger-on 108 “What’s __?” 109 Make a mash of 110 No longer be comprehensible ... and, with its first word divided in three parts, a hint to how to read this puzzle’s title 113 Young conger 114 Public commotion 115 Logician’s link 116 Former gen.’s status 117 Orchestra section 118 Signs of the future 119 Running goal Wed/Thurs/Fri, January 16-18, 2019 finally listening In October of 2017, she and Twohey broke the story of Harvey Weinstein’s decades of sexual abuse allegations. Their work helped ignite the #MeToo movement, shift attitudes, and spur new laws, policies and standards of accountability around the globe. Together she and their colleagues, who exposed harassment across industries, were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, journalism’s highest award. Kantor and Twohey also received a George Polk Award, the McGill Medal for Journalistic Courage from the University of Georgia, and honors from the Los Angeles Press Club and the Canadian Journalism Foundation. Along with other members of the Times sexual harassment reporting team, they were awarded the IRE Medal, from Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc., the Batten Medal from the American Society of Newspaper Editors, a Scripps Howard Award for Impact, a special citation from the Goldsmith Awards of Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center and the Matrix Inaugural Incite Award from New York Women in Communications. Before then, Kantor’s article about the havoc caused by automated scheduling systems in Starbucks workers’ lives spurred changes at the company and helped launch a national fair scheduling movement. After she and David Streitfeld investigated punishing practices at Amazon’s corporate headquarters, the company changed its human resources policies, introducing paternity leave and eliminating its employee ranking system. The article Kantor wrote about Harvard Business School’s attempt to change its climate for women provoked a national conversation about women in business schools. Her report on working mothers and breastfeeding inspired two readers to create the first free-standing lactation suites for nursing mothers, now available in hundreds of airports and stadiums. For six years, Kantor wrote about Barack and Michelle Obama, delving into their ideas, biographies, family, marriage, faith and approach to the White House. Kantor’s best-selling book “The Obamas,” about their behind-the-scenes adjustment to the jobs of president and first lady, was published in 2012. Writing in the New York Review of Books, Ezra Klein said, “Jodi Kantor’s ‘The Obamas’ is among the very best books on this White House.” Kantor, a contributor to CBS This Morning, lives in Brooklyn with her husband, Ron Lieber, and their two daughters. closer to civilization – in the hills of Hollywood – in 2013, as documented in his “Ghost Cats” story. “When I was a kid, my grandma lived in L.A. and I would go on pony rides up at Griffith Park, and I felt there was a mountain lion there in the past,” he said. “So I had this goal of illustrating the fact that cougars were hanging around the outskirts of L.A.” Winter’s ultimate goal was to get a photo of a cougar with the lights of America’s second largest city or with the Hollywood sign in the background. His friend, Jeff Sikich, whose work includes catching and applying tracking collars on the mountain lion population in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, thought he was crazy, and cited variables like the busy freeways that sit between Santa Monica and Hollywood. “But then, a bobcat camera caught an image of a mountain lion in the Hollywood hills, and I had to figure out how to get one of my own,” Winter said. Like he did for the Nepalese snow leopard, Winter set up a series of camera traps, and after more than a year, he got his image. The trials he faced this time were more human in nature.“The biggest challenge was not getting the photo, but rather, how do I keep from getting my cameras stolen?” Winter said. “I had three of my four cameras stolen. The one that didn’t get stolen was set up on an animal trail, and not a human trail.” In spite of his career photographing big cats, Winter said he didn’t start off as a nature photographer. “I was interested in people,” he said. “When I was seven, my father gave me my first camera, and during that time, there were a lot of things going on like the Civil Rights movement.” Winter saw photos of the movement in magazines like Life and National Geographic, and when he was 8, he made up his mind to become a photographer. “I realized photography could change the world, so I decided I wanted to be a National Geographic photographer when I grew up,” he said. Even when he was hired by National Geographic in 1991, Winter didn’t know a thing about wildlife photography. “I didn’t take my first animal photo until I was 34,” he said. “Now, 20-plus years later, I’m still doing it.” COURTESY OF THE PARK CITY INSTITUTE Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Jodi Kantor will speak about the Harvey Weinstein sex abuse story and investigative reporting on Saturday. Park City Institute will present the event. Jodi Kantor When: 7:30 p.m., Friday, Jan. 18 Where: Eccles Center for the Performing Arts, 1750 Kearns Blvd. Cost: $29 Phone: 435-655-3114 Web: parkcityinstitute.org Get all the latest Park Record updates. 120 “Anything __?” Down 1 Comedy club chorus 2 Breakfast choice 3 “... shall not __ from the earth”: Lincoln 4 Atlanta-to-Miami dir. 5 Love abroad 6 Half a ’60s quartet 7 Beasts of burden 8 Spanish ayes 9 Planet shape: Abbr. 10 Best Buy buy 11 They may be shot in rafts 12 Eyelike openings 13 Ballpoint, e.g. 14 Tested for gold, say 15 Really bad atmosphere 16 Justice confirmed under Bush 43 17 Workplace cartridge contents 18 Basketry fiber 24 Puffy clouds 25 Kind of acid in red wine 30 Turning whiter 32 Biblical debarkation point 34 Estrada of “CHiPs” 35 37 38 41 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 55 58 59 60 61 64 65 66 67 69 71 74 75 76 Big name in Argentine politics Breaks “Night” author Wiesel Flood deterrent Annoying criticism Romantic evening extension Thiamine deficiency disease It could be a mere nod Decline Talks from Cicero Took offense at Acute “What a long week!” Classic O’Brien noir film Bothers Nasdaq debut How many TV shows air Private nonprofit: Abbr. Ran into The Carpenters’ soloist Shopping list entry Calvary inscription Relatives of b’ars? Arabian Peninsula port or its gulf Crag Least occupied Come together Rears 77 Friend of Claudius I 78 Common opening time 79 “A Visit From the Goon Squad” Pulitzer winner Jennifer 83 Crude gp.? 84 MLB leader in career saves 85 Virgil subject 87 Clunky old cars 90 Concurred 91 Aplenty 92 Designed to fit tightly 94 Herb commonly in five-spice powder 95 Removes forcibly 96 Mill output 97 Elementary seed 98 Audacity 99 Fact 100 Fiji’s eastern neighbor 101 Cereal grass disease 102 Bjorn Borg, e.g. 106 Barely gets, with “out” 107 Bog 110 BART stop 111 Simon & Garfunkel’s “__ Robinson” 112 “... __ he drove out of sight”: Moore SUDOKU |