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When most law students see a class labeled "Documentaries and the Law" in the course guidebook, they assume it's part of a collection of classes for those interested in becoming entertainment lawyers. In Professor Regina Austin's classes at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, however, nonfiction filmmaking is viewed as a tool with which every attorney should be familiar. Austin is the director of the Penn Program on Documentaries and the Law, through which she currently teaches two core courses and oversees a Media Lab where law students make their own films. The program's main
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Christian faith and the gay community are seemingly incompatible concepts, with the religious right fomenting bigotry and spreading fear, using the Bible and the pulpit as weapons to marginalize gays and lesbians. In For the Bible Tells Me So, filmmaker Daniel Karslake examines this faith-based issue both though the personal stories of five Christian families, all of whom struggled to reconcile their faith with loving their gay children, and the observations of well-respected religious figures about how biblical scripture is interpreted and misinterpreted. For the Bible Tells Me So opened at