UEA plant science breakthrough could help crops cope with climate stresses

A study led by the University of East Anglia (UEA) is the first to reveal how plants make an “anti-stress” molecule called dimethylsulfoniopropionate, or DMSP.

It shows that while most plants make DMSP, high-level production of this molecule allows plants to grow under stress, for example in salty conditions at the coast.

Researchers studied a species of saltmarsh cordgrass – Spartina anglica – which produces high levels of DMSP, and then compared its genes with those from other plants that mainly produce the molecule at low concentration, including barley and wheat crops.

The study also shows that plants can be grown under other stressful conditions, such as drought, when they are supplemented with DMSP – or if plants are created that make their own DMSP.

This approach could benefit crops in nitrogen-poor soils and help improve agricultural productivity amid the challenges of climate change.

Prof Jon Todd, of UEA’s School of Biological Sciences, said: “Excitingly, our study shows that most plants make the anti-stress compound DMSP, but that the saltmarsh grass Spartina is special due to the high levels it accumulates.

“This is important because Spartina saltmarshes are global hotspots for DMSP production and for generation of the climate-cooling gas dimethylsulfide through the action of microbes that breakdown DMSP.”

Lead author Dr Ben Miller, also from UEA’s School of Biological Sciences, added: “This discovery provides fundamental understanding about how plants tolerate stress and offers promising avenues for improving the tolerance of crops to salinity and drought, which is important for enhancing agricultural sustainability in the face of global climate change.”

The team included scientists from UEA’s School of Biological Sciences, School of Chemistry, Pharmacy and Pharmacology, and Ocean University of China.

The research, published in the journal Nature Communications, was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC).

‘I felt this film was my duty’: director Mati Diop on Dahomey, about the return of looted African treasures

What thoughts would go through the mind of a king exiled from his country for more than a century? What if that monarch took the form of a wooden statue boxed up for transportation from France to west Africa? Would he worry about recognising his native land? Perhaps his musings might turn to the abstract: “Within me resonates infinity.” It would be a challenge for any film-maker to choose an inanimate object, however resonant, as her philosophical protagonist and narrator – but French-Senegalese director Mati Diop does just this to powerful effect in her new feature Dahomey.Part documentary, part visual and sonic poem, Dahomey follows a consignment of historical artefacts as they are returned by the French government to their source in the former African nation of Dahomey, now Benin. This year’s winner of the Berlin film festival’s top prize, the Golden Bear, Dahomey is the latest triumph for Diop, 42, who for a decade and a half has been a much-admired presence in world cinema, first as an actor, then as a director. She made a memorable acting debut in 2008 in Claire Denis’s hypnotic urban reverie 35 Shots of Rum and later became the first Black female director to have a feature in competition in Cannes. That was 2019’s visionary Atlantics, a story of young Senegalese men who attempt the perilous journey to Europe by boat – only to return as ghosts.View image in fullscreenDahomey tells of another return. Here, the journey back to Africa is that of a set of royal treasures – controversially, a mere 26 items among several thousand looted by troops after France’s 1892 invasion of Dahomey. Sitting in the library of a central London hotel, in town to present her film at the BFI London film festival, Diop explains in French that while the restitution of these artefacts began in 2021, she had already been contemplating a fiction feature on the theme for some years.“It was going to be about an African mask telling its own story, from being captured to the day it comes home – and in between, the experience of exile in Europe. I was about to start writing – then I read that the royal treasures would be returned.”Diop has talked about Dahomey as “un film d’anticipation” – which in French could mean a science-fiction movie. Indeed, there is something extremely futuristic and techno-conscious about the film, not least in the way that that statue – a “bo”, or power figure, of the Dahomeyan king Ghezo – delivers its voiceover in electronically processed tones.But Diop also means “anticipation” literally, she says, because she never expected the items’ repatriation to take place in the foreseeable future. “I saw it happening in 2070 or 2080, I couldn’t imagine it earlier – nothing in French or European politics suggested we were ready to recognise colonisation as a crime against humanity.”Learning that the statues and other artefacts would return to Benin, Diop realised that she needed to get to work fast and film their transportation: “I felt it was my duty.” She was helped by the Senegalese writer and academic Felwine Sarr, co-author of a study on restitution commissioned by the French president, Emmanuel Macron. Sarr helped oil the wheels with the Benin government, Diop says: “They understood that I needed to be with the works all the time in order to tell the story from the statues’ point of view – and they understood that this wasn’t the government’s film. It had to be my film – and they respected that.”A key section of Dahomey shows a debate that Diop organised among Beninese students, who discuss the significance of the artworks’ return. Their comments cut to the heart of Dahomey’s broader theme – notably when one young woman, a native speaker of the Fon language, says that when she learned about her own culture, it was in French.View image in fullscreen“It’s important to hear those words coming from the continent itself,” Diop says. “There’s a limit to how much you can hear the word ‘colonialism’ from academic work – sooner or later, you have to hear it from the people who live with its consequences.”Diop has known Africa since early childhood. She was born in Paris to a French mother and a Senegalese father – singer-guitarist Wasis Diop, for whom Mati shot an atmospheric music video in 2021. It was her mother who took her on regular visits to Senegal as a child.“I’m very grateful to her, because otherwise I’d be like many mixed-race people, disconnected from a part of myself. The way things work in France for the descendants of immigrants, everything is organised so that you renounce your double culture. At 25, I had to fight to find the African part of me.”Diop grew up in Paris’s eastern 12th arrondissement in an area she describes as “not working class, not bourgeois either – très boring”. She now lives in southern Paris’s Chinatown district, studded with high-rises. She made a short there during the Covid pandemic, In My Room; showing Diop alone in her 24th-floor flat, musing on solitude and her late maternal grandmother, and modelling assorted Miu Miu frocks, the work – commissioned by the fashion label – remains one of the most effective films of the lockdown period.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionAs a teenager, she dreamed of being a singer. “I really wanted to be a star – if you want to sing, you don’t just want to do it in your bedroom.” She went on to work in sound and video production for the stage, but made her breakthrough on screen, acting in 35 Shots of Rum. She plays Joséphine, the daughter of a Paris train driver and a figure rarely represented in cinema: a young Black female intellectual. Diop admits the role closely resembled her, but would have preferred it if Denis had offered her a role more like Béatrice Dalle’s in the director’s blood-steeped art horror Trouble Every Day. “That’s the kind of film I wanted to be in!” she laughs. “Now I’m very proud of playing Joséphine – but back then, I wanted to do the opposite, quelque chose de plus trash!”You can imagine that Diop could have achieved out-and-out stardom if she had wanted. She cuts a striking figure, her discursive confidence matched with lean beauty and angular elegance: she emphasises her points with expansive hand movements, often keeping one arm clasped round her waist. In fact, she only appeared in a handful of features – mostly on the further fringes of art cinema – before deciding that acting was not for her.“I realised that it was a predatory world dominated by white men of a certain age and I found that terrifying. I couldn’t articulate it at that age because I didn’t have the intellectual or political tools. Deciding to be behind the camera rather than in front of it was a way of protecting myself – keeping control, not being simply an object of desire.”Among several shorts that Diop directed was 2013’s A Thousand Suns. Shot in Dakar, it was a celebration of her uncle, the director Djibril Diop Mambéty, who died in 1998 and who enjoys high status in African cinema for his hallucinatory visuals and absurdist sensibility. “I realised it was important for me to start my cinema where he stopped. Perhaps if he had continued to make films, I wouldn’t have become a director. I chose to take on his legacy.”His work, she says, is “absolutely singular – impossible to imitate”. But some have tried. Mambéty’s best-known film, the 1973 classic Touki Bouki, contains one of African cinema’s most famous images: a young couple on a motorbike, handlebars embellished with a horned cattle skull. When that was pastiched by Beyoncé and Jay-Z to promote their 2018 On the Run II tour, Diop declared herself sceptical, with a sharp comment on “the unbearable lightness of the mainstream”.“Did I say that?” she says when I remind her. “The mainstream is completely part of my culture, I’m more anti-elitist – I hate any hierarchy between high culture and popular culture, that’s very French.” But, she says: “I was amazed how casually Beyoncé appropriated [the image] – that’s so American, so dominating. If she’d had the decency to mention the name of the film, a million people could have discovered it. I still like listening to her music, though.”Diop’s current plans are very much focused on Africa: she has set up a production company in Dakar, with a view to working with young African film-makers. As for French society now, and what current political tendencies might mean for future, more extensive returns of African treasures, Diop remains wary.“The choice that Europe seems to be making is a drift towards fascism. Maybe the left will reinvent itself in reaction to that. And maybe then, the discussion about restitution will be taken up again and in 2070 we’ll be living in a different world.”

Laydson Group Review: Why Knowing Your Business Destination Matters More

Is it correct to assume that you are looking for a secure environment to evaluate a variety of trading experiences?

On the other hand, would you agree that you are reluctant to use risky strategies? Not a challenge! Laydson Group will support you. Moreover, it is your fundamental responsibility to outline the business-related matters that are so crucial that they have the potential to alter your decision to make money online.
This demonstrates how Laydson Group’s finance stage makes effective use of these remote deals.

Identifying Important Elements:

To work together, you must create a profile on Laydson Group’s business platform, which provides dependable entry points for cross-border cash transactions. Always provide your data, agree to the stage’s plans, and complete any central procedures that may be required. You have now lost the opportunity to learn more about this website. These tiers provide active methods, transparent evaluation instruments, pay plans, and additional elements to assist you in taking control of the foreign exchange market and making wise trading decisions. Many people can trade esoteric transactions.

Looking for Feasible Options:

This form of trade is a terrific option for individuals who are active in the business community and handle funds to conquer new hurdles. Clear evaluation makes the cycles easy to grasp so you can trade on the profitable platform. You can display the amount and mention the sort, accessible cash matches, and their normal trade prices for your organization while you are present on the official site of Laydson Group. It is fairly typical on most new exchanges to organize wagers.

Systematic Functions of Laydson Group:

In any event, there is no actual necessity for an expansion of Laydson Group’s authority trading domain. On various trading stages, you can construct take-benefit thresholds and stop-trouble requirements to automatically cancel your trades when predetermined expenditure thresholds are met. These gadgets aid in obtaining benefits and lowering predicted expenses. It is vital to undertake a thorough investigation of the new business sphere. To find possible trade and establish doors, carriers generally apply the primary strategy, which is associated with advanced yet easy technical applications. The actual transaction on this website, assures verifiable exchange movement by developing relationships with facilitated financial risks and reducing disputes by boosting exchanges.

Bottom Line:

In the end, it can be claimed that access to the most central and liquid financial market in the world is made possible by Laydson Group’s revolutionary exchange design. Being the most evolved trading website, it lets people fulfill their criteria, no matter what community they belong to. As you get the simplicity offered by the afforded trading stages, individual shops can invest substantial sums of money to enter the market. People with various money-making targets can join this stage which is limited to them by major financial foundations because of this feature. This section opens up a market that was previously locked off to retail customers by influential business circles.

MP: Shifting Dairy Science College to Ujjain will be injustice to Jabalpur, says Vivek Tankha 

Bhopal, Oct 19 (IANS): A proposal for shifting Dairy Science and Food Technology College, sanctioned for Jabalpur, to Ujjain has stirred a controversy in Madhya Pradesh. The institution was supposed to be established under the supervision of Nanaji Deshmukh Veterinary Science University in Jabalpur and a portion of land was also identified in 2019. However,…

Business owner in Barrow undertakes 12-hour sewing marathon for charity

Jenny Fazackerley, who runs Jenny Stitches on Dalton, will be completing the challenge from noon on Thursday, November 7 as part of the Big Sew Off 2024.

All the money raised will be going to the national fundraiser, which is once again supporting Mind, a mental health charity.

Read more: Jenny’s Stitches opens new shop in Barrow’s high street | The Mail (nwemail.co.uk)

Whilst Jenny sews for 12 hours straight, she is hoping that plenty of other people will come on the day and join in with their own projects.

She added: “12 hours is a long time so feel free to pop in for a coffee and a chat to show us some encouragement

“Cash donations will be accepted on the day and online donations can be made via our donation page.”

There will also be a raffle on day, with ticket sales helping boost donations and, for those who cannot make it to the hub, parts of the marathon will be live streamed across social media.

 

Georgian National Academy of Science celebrates 70th anniversary of CERN

Georgia: The National Academy of Sciences of Georgia hosted a conference to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).Alexander Tsuladze, Minister of Education, Science and Youth, President of the National Academy of Sciences of Georgia, Academician Roin Metreveli, President of the Council of the European Organization of Nuclear Research Kostas Fontas, Rector of Technical University of Georgia David Gurgenidze, Rector of Tbilisi State University named after Ivane Javakhishvili Two Jaba Samushia, representatives of CERN, Georgian academics and scientists.
The conference participants summarized the results of joint projects, discussed the steps taken to strengthen the existing partnership, and discussed prospects for future cooperation.
Alexandre Tsuladze addressed the attending community, congratulated the delegation of the European Organization for Nuclear Research on its 70th anniversary, and focused on the importance of long-term cooperation with CERN for the development of science in Georgia.

He said, “It is proud that, after many years of fruitful partnership with the European Organization for Nuclear Research, Georgia is contributing to the success of the largest global scientific research ongoing at CERN.”
“I hope that this cooperation will be strengthened even more and that we will make positive progress on the way to Georgian Associate Membership in CERN, which will give Georgian scientists, students, school teachers and pupils even more opportunities to deepen their knowledge and carry out international-level research,” Alexander Tsuladze mentioned.

“We will not waste our efforts in supporting and promoting young researchers of the Scientific Society of Georgia,” he added.
The President of the Council of the European Organization for Nuclear Research also addressed the event participants. He supported the minister and expressed his full readiness to strengthen the partnership.
It is worth noting that Georgia and the European Organization for Nuclear Research have cooperated for over 30 years, during which many Georgian scientists have continued their research at CERN.
Scientists from the Technical University of Georgia and Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University participate in the organization’s activities. Specifically, Georgian scientists are involved in two of CERN’s four main experiments: ATLAS and CMs.

In 2023, a Cooperation Agreement was signed between the Government of Georgia and the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) on cooperation in the field of education, training and technology and knowledge transfer, which includes the participation of engineers and researchers in CERN exchange programs, implementation of summer student programs, academic and technical personnel Training the flame, supporting the transfer of knowledge and technology, advanced therapy Sharing experience in the field, implementation of programs to upgrade public school teachers and more.

Iranian scientist appointed as chair of a Global Olympiad Committee

This Tehran-based Sharif University professor, who was previously selected as the head of the International Scientific Committee of the World Computer Olympiad, announced the new position on Twitter.
In his tweet, Sharifi Zarchi, who returned to teaching at Sharif University after being dismissed, stated, “I have been unanimously elected as the Chair of the International Scientific Committee for the International Olympiad of Artificial Intelligence (IOAI).”
“The committee consists of 18 professors and AI specialists from various countries around the world. The second IOAI will be held in China next summer,” he explained.
According to the Tehran-based Entekhab news outlet, the appointment marks another significant milestone in Sharifi Zarchi’s illustrious academic career, demonstrating his expertise and leadership in the field of artificial intelligence on a global stage.
Sharifi Zarchi’s appointment is expected to further elevate the standards and impact of the IOAI, it added.
The IOAI is an esteemed global competition that brings together top AI talents from around the world.
The upcoming event in China marks the second edition of the Olympiad, highlighting the growing importance of AI in academia and industry.

Avantika Vandanapu’s age, height, movies, family, net worth, and more

Avantika Vandanapu is an actress and model from the United States. She is widely recognised for portraying Karen in the musical Mean Girls and has appeared in popular films such as Senior Year, Oxygen, and Big Girls Don’t Cry. Though young, she has captured a global audience, and many are curious about the actress’s personal life and career.Avantika during the “Mean Girls” premiere at AMC Lincoln Square Theater (L). The actress during the premiere screening event for Spin (R). Photo: Arturo Holmes, Valerie Macon (modified by author)Source: Getty ImagesTABLE OF CONTENTSAvantika Vandanapu’s age has drawn the attention of many of her fans. She started her acting career in 2016 when she played the role of Mahesh Babu’s cousin in the Indian Telugu-language family melodrama Brahmotsavan. She is also a dancer and won second place in the reality television series Dance India Dance L’il Masters in 2014.Profile summaryFull nameAvantika VandanapuGenderFemaleDate of birth24 January 2005Age19 years old (as of 2024)Zodiac signAquariusPlace of birthUnion City, California, United States of AmericaCurrent residenceNew York, United States of AmericaNationalityAmericanEthnicityIndianReligionHinduSexualityStraightHeight5’8″ (173 cm)Weight108 lbs (49 kg)Hair colourBlackEye colourBrownMotherAnupama Reddy ChintalaFatherSrikanth VandanapuSchoolChallenger School, Granada Hills Charter High SchoolCollegeColumbia UniversityProfessionActress, dancer, modelSocial mediaInstagramFacebookRead alsoBlac Chyna’s net worth: How rich is the model today?What is Avantika Vandanapu’s age?As of 2024, the actress is 19 years old, having been born on 24 January 2005. She was born and raised in Union City, California, United States of America. Avantika Vandanapu’s family Avantika Vandanapu was raised in Union City, California, in an Indian Telugu-speaking family. She is the daughter of Anupama Reddy Chintala and Srikanth Vandanapu. The actress is of Indian descent. Her mother is from Hyderabad, and her father is from Nizamabad. What university does Avantika go to?According to her LinkedIn profile, the American actress attended Challenger School. She joined Granada Hills Charter High School in 2018 and completed her secondary education in 2022. She is currently a student at Columbia University, where she is pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in Cultural Anthropology. She joined the institution in 2024.Top-5 facts about Avantika Vandanapu. Photo: @avantika on Instagram (modified by author)Source: OriginalHow did Avantika become famous?Avantika Vandanapu started her career as a ballet dancer. She became famous in 2014 when she won second place in the Zee TV dance competition in the reality television series Dance India Dance L’il Masters North America.Read alsoMeet Laurence Fishburne’s daughter and actress Delilah FishburneIn 2015, she entered Telugu Cinema. Her first role in Telugu cinema was as Mahesh Babu’s cousin in the 2016 film Brahmotsavam. The same year, she appeared in the movie Manamantha and Premam. She started gaining more fame and transitioned into Hollywood films.In 2021, the actress had her first lead role in the Disney Channel Original Movie Spin. She was so excited to get a lead role in the film. In a 13 August 2021 interview with Good Morning America, Avantika said she felt pressured because it was her first lead role in an American movie, but the cast and crew made her feel comfortable.I did feel pressure also, considering this is my first lead role in an American film. Though aside from it being a Disney channel, I did feel a little bit pressured, but I think the cast and crew and everyone were so great, and that made me feel so comfortable, and my nerves kind of stamped wanting to make our community proud …so I also think it propelled me to put a lot more effort…I think they were good nerves. Read alsoEdge’s wife’s biography: What happened to Beth Phoenix?Her fame increased even more when she was cast as Karen Shetty in the 2024 teen musical comedy film Mean Girls. The film is about a new student, Cady Heron, and the elite group of popular girls called the Plastics. According to her IMDb profile, the dancer has 20 acting credits. Below are Avantika Vandanapu’s movies since the beginning of her acting career.MovieRoleYearBrahmotsavamMahesh Babu’s cousin2016ManamanthaMahith’s Friend2016Praja Hakku: People’s Rights Avantika2016PremamYoung Sindhu2016Babu Baga BusyAnitha2017Rarandoi Veduka Chudham Young Bhramaramba2017OxygenAvantika2017Agnyaathavaasi: Prince in Exile Daughter of Sampath Raj2018MoxieChem Class Girl2021SpinRhea2021BoomikaAvantika2021Senior YearJanet2022Mean GirlsKaren Shetty2024TarotPaige2024What is Avantika Vandanapu’s net worth?Read alsoJoanne Whalley’s biography: Get to know Val Kilmer’s wifeAccording to Seema.com and Kemi Filani News, the American dancer has an alleged net worth of between $500,000 and $2 million. Her primary source of income is her acting career.Avantika Vandanapu during a NYC Instagram Creator Screening of “Mean Girls” at the Midnight Theatre. Photo: John Nacion (modified by author)Source: Getty ImagesAvantika Vandanapu’s height and weightThe American dancer is approximately 5 feet 8 inches (173 cm) tall and weighs around 49 kilograms (108 lbs). Where does Avantika Vandanapu live now?According to her Instagram bio, the American actress resides in New York, United States of America. She has also lived in Los Angeles, California.FAQsDue to her rising popularity, Avantika Vandanapu, the actress, has sparked much interest in every aspect of her life. Below are some frequently asked questions about her.When was Avantika born? She was born on 24 January 2005.How old is Avantika Vandanapu? The American model is 19 years old as of 2024.Is Avantika an actress? She is known for popular movies such as Spin, Mean Girls, and Tarot.Where are Avantika Vandanapu’s parents from? Her mother is from Hyderabad, and her father is from Nizamabad. They are both Indians.What does Avantika Vandanapu study at Columbia? She is studying for a Bachelor of Arts in cultural anthropology.What languages does Avantika speak? According to an interview with 123telugu.com, the actress speaks English, Hindi and Telugu.Read alsoAge, partner, height, salary and profiles of Refiloe Jane, Banyana Banyana’ captainAvantika Vandanapu’s age is one of the most frequently searched questions on the internet. The actress, 19 years old as of 2024, has created a name for herself in Bollywood and Hollywood entertainment. She started acting at an early age and is now widely recognised for landing roles in popular films such as Mean Girls and Spin. READ ALSO: Who is Lindsay Lohan’s sister Ashley Kaufmann? Details into her personal life Briefly.co.za recently published an article about Lindsay Lohan’s sister, Ashley Kaufman. Lindsay Lohan is a famous actress, singer-songwriter and businesswoman. Her sister Ashley was born in Florence, Montana, United States of America.Ashley Kaufman attended Auburn University, earning a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Master’s degree in Childhood Education. Her mother is Kristi Horn Kaufman, a massage therapist. Discover lesser-known facts about Lindsay Lohan’s sister, Ashley. Source: Briefly News

My Life in Culture: Filmmaker Danielle ‘Dani’ McCormack

The last thing I saw and loved… L’Opera in the South of France. It’s a dining experience where they put on amazing performances. The dancers and costumes were incredibly sexy. The whole thing was very entertaining with most people dancing on the tables and chairs by the end of it. 
The book I keep coming back to… A Course in Miracles. My favourite spiritual text for helping me get out of my ego and into my heart. 
I find inspiration in… everything. I could watch a slug trying to cross the path up close and feel mesmerised. 

My favourite film is… The NeverEnding Story. The most perfect example of the hero’s journey in a movie in my opinion. 
My career highlight is… I love street art so I can’t talk about my favourite art installation for legal reasons!
The song I listen to to get in the zone is… “Holding Out for a Hero” by Bonnie Tyler. It reminds me I need to be my own hero. 
The last book I recommended is… Love is Letting Go of Fear, a spiritual book by Jerry Jampolsky. 
I never leave the house without… my sparkle. It’s an acronym I made up to remind me of the intentions I want to live by; smile and surrender, peace and presence, alignment, releasing the past, kindness, love, energy. While I may leave the house with these great intentions, the results can sometimes be disastrous. 
The piece of work I still think about is… I spend a lot of time thinking about and studying the origins of the bible. As one of the most influential works in human history, I am fascinated by finding out who actually wrote each of the different books within the bible, trying to discern how factually correct they are and, most importantly, determine how God was supposed to have verified that these are their actual words and rules they allegedly want humanity to follow. 
My dream cast would be… I think a movie with all the Disney princesses grown-up would be so fun. Miley Cryus, Ariana Grande, Selena Gomez, Olivia Rodrigo, etc. 
The best advice I’ve ever gotten is… if you want inner peace you need to learn how to forgive. It’s the message of the film The Key, but like most spiritual wisdom, it can feel incredibly hard for me to actually do sometimes but I do feel better when I can actually forgive. It can be even harder to try and forgive ourselves for our own transgressions. 
The art that means the most to me is… anything that Banksy does makes me smile. 
My favourite moment in this film is… around 12 minutes and 45 seconds in when the heroine returns from her quest a changed person. 
The most challenging thing about being in film is… the tenacity you need. If you want to make a film, it’s a multi-year-long quest where you will face so much rejection, people throwing tomatoes at you, setbacks, delays, being let down and possible starvation but you just have to stick to your vision and sparkle. 
If I wasn’t a filmmaker, I would… hopefully be trying to help the planet in another meaningful way. Gary Renard, a spiritual teacher, told me we won’t have world peace until we all have inner peace so finding ways to make a peaceful and loving world really interests me. 
The magic of film to me is… that you get immersed inside the world of someone’s imagination and there is usually an interesting lesson to be learned. If they can make you laugh, smile, inspire you or change your mood, that’s even better.