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Media coverage and framing of road traffic safety in India. Medhavi Gupta, Inayat Singh Kakar, Margaret Peden, Elena Altieri, Jagnoor Jagnoor. BMJ Global Health. March 2021. Media coverage of road traffic collisions (RTCs) may influence preventative action.
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Safe Transportation Research and Education Center (SafeTREC)...
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Wie is Hit The Road? Hit The Road - Traffic Media is een nieuwe uitgeverij die zich toespitst op leermiddelen en ondersteunend materieel voor het behalen van het rijbewijs. Nu ja, helemaal nieuw zijn we niet, want onder de naam EPYC ontwikkelen we al meer dan tien jaar oefenplatformen en interactieve multimedia en e-Learning rond het verkeer.
Sep 28, 2020 · That’s why the Active Travel Academy has drafted media reporting guidelines which we hope broadcasters and publishers will adopt, just as they have adopted guidelines for reporting on suicide or ...
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Jul 10, 2023 · Hotspots for pedestrian deaths — road corridors roughly a half-mile long with relatively high rates of deadly pedestrian-vehicle crashes — are more likely to be near commercial zones, have speed limits over 30 mph and have traffic volumes greater than 25,000 vehicles per day, according to January 2021 research published in The Journal of ...
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By Tara Bennett
Posted: Apr 22, 2022 1:30 pm
Hit the Road opens on April 22 in N.Y.; May 6 in L.A.
Discovering new cinematic talent is always exciting, but it usually involves a “diamond in the rough” artist who portends a lot of potential for what they’ll do next in their career. In the case of Iranian writer/director Panah Panahi and his theatrical debut, Hit the Road, it’s actually a bit staggering to witness an assured filmmaker come right out of the gate with such an accomplished piece that is both intimate yet cinematic.
Wisely, Panahi makes the film all about the journey and not the destination, as the reason for the trip is vaguely framed as having to do with Farid. No one discusses it in depth, and when the youngest curiously brings it up here and there, everyone deflects and says Farid is leaving to marry but he’ll be back someday. There’s clearly more to the story, but the movie isn’t concerned with revealing those details. Instead, it’s focused on the feelings churned up by a family that is moving towards a life-changing goodbye. The impending separation permeates the piece, eliciting the entirely relatable dread felt by any family watching a child go off to college, war, or just their adulthood.
What could have been a real downer of a story in other hands is instead the opposite. Panahi captures the drive with the lens of a documentarian, naturalistically showing the barely contained chaos of a long car ride stuffed with people who both love and annoy the crap out of one another. When the adults give into small moments of melancholy, the rambunctious kid is there to swing the tone back to the absurd so nothing gets maudlin. Conversations about grade school crushes and Batman ping about the car with no rhyme or reason but they are unfailingly interesting and reveal plenty about each of the characters. The route puts them in contact with some unexpected strangers who add some scope to the dynamics of the family, which keeps the interior of the car from getting stale.
Easy Rider
Thelma & Louise
Logan
The Blues Brothers
Little Miss Sunshine
Planes, Trains & Automobiles
Hit the Road is a masterful debut film for writer/director Panah Panahi. His skill at capturing this bittersweet chapter for this family so naturalistically, yet cinematically is breathtaking at times. The chemistry of the actors, who all give top-tier performances, is so potent that there isn’t a moment where you don’t believe they are an actual f...
Jan 28, 2020 · Despite an ever-rising number of pedestrian and bicyclist deaths on U.S. roads each year, there’s no widespread public pressure to improve road safety — a situation influenced by how news articles about auto-pedestrian/bicyclist crashes are written, said Tara Goddard, Texas A&M assistant professor of urban planning.
Jun 1, 2022 · Though vehicle miles traveled decreased by 11% in the United States in 2020, traffic fatalities rose 6.8%, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). An estimated 38,824 people died. The trend continued in the first nine months of 2021, with deaths rising 12% compared with the same period in 2020.