Joh
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Newsletter from the Time for Unrest team today. (Sorry, no link, as it was an email.)
Thank you for your support these amazing past two weeks of our broadcast premiere on PBS's Independent Lens and our worldwide debut on Netflix. We have been absolutely blown away by your support on social media, the success of your house parties, and by the amount of people you have helped us engage throughout the world!
We just wanted to share some highlights from these last two weeks and the impact your support, organizing, and generosity have had.
Media coverage
Our PBS and Netflix premieres have dramatically expanded the reach of Unrestand its impact campaign, garnering new coverage from the Wall Street Journal, Vogue, Pacific Standard Magazine and Bitch Media.
What's exciting about this new coverage is that it's the first time Unrest is being discussed in conversation with other movements and forms of media, whether it's placing it in the context of disability rights (and the long-running debate over the social v. medical model of disability), the growing representation of chronic illness on screen or the larger cultural meaning of stigmatizing and marginalizing people living with ME:
While we tend to think of illness narratives as personal stories only, Unrest hints at a larger cultural epidemic: namely, the widespread denial or discounting of that which is other to us, a phenomenon that we see everywhere from the streets to social media to our political landscape. Who reading this hasn’t been trolled or gas-lighted, had a very real and personal experience discounted, or been told that something is “all in their head”?...
...What if we didn’t wave away that which we do not understand and turned toward, instead of away from, even those things that we feel we do not suffer from ourselves?
– Je Banach, Vogue
House Parties
Over the course of the past month, in addition to hundreds of thousands tuning in, over one hundred households around the world took part in our official house parties program. From Helsinki to Los Angeles, friends and neighbors gathered together to watch Unrest, share experiences and mobilize to take action. Your screenings were fruitful and constructive, community-building and awareness-raising. We cannot thank you enough.
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Deborah Main’s house party in Austin, Texas.
You opened up your homes to friends, neighbors, medical professionals and politicians and in the process, began vital conversations about why it’s #TimeforUnrest. In these intimate spaces, you bore witness to each other’s experiences and rallied together to sign petitions, fundraise, and enlist allies. House parties have already sparked further screenings at medical schools, fundraising for advocacy and research, and led the creation of new support groups and local advocacy initiatives! Now that we are on Netflix, hosting a house party is easier than ever. (To host a public screening, go here.)
Host a house party
Twitter Marathon
The day of broadcast, we mobilized influencers on Twitter, organizations, and leaders in our ally communities of disability rights, chronic illness, women's rights, science and healthcare communities to talk about Unrest over the course of a 12-hour "Twitter marathon." Our broadcast hashtag, #UnrestPBS had over 24 million impressions, and reached over 6 million users.
Guests of our Twitter marathon included New Yorker writer Meghan O'Rourke, gospel hip-hop artist Trip Lee, and disability rights activists Alice Wong, Dominick Evans and Ady Barkan.![]()
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Here, for example, is Ady talking about how he is trying to make meaning after his ALS diagnosis:
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Support #MEAction + #TimeforUnrest
Over the next many months, we are going to be consolidating our efforts by bringing Unrest's ongoing outreach and education efforts under the same house as the organization that launched the #MillionsMissing campaign and supports patients and advocates around the world – #MEAction, the US non-profit organization I co-founded. We'll be communicating in the coming weeks about what this will mean and more ways for you to get involved in the movement.
The enormous success and reach of Unrest has been made possible by an army of volunteer organizers but also a team of dedicated staff. If you would like to help us keep growing and expanding the reach of this movement, please support our future home, #MEAction, by making a donation today.
Donate now
Take Action
Even if you didn't attended or host a house party, you can still help out by taking these actions:
Sign the NIH Petition
Sign the Global Petition
Call Francis Collins
People are hearing us, because of you. Thank you!!
In solidarity,
Jennifer Brea, Laurie Jones & The Unrest Team
Can get enough of Unrest? Here are even more highlights
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Erin Sweeney’s house party in Newark, New Jersey.
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April Thompson’s house party in Washington, DC.
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Jen Taylor’s house party in Hagerstown, Maryland.