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>  A Special Request That Did Help DF And It's Members', National journalist Edie Magnus' 2 Yr Depression Documentary. | Add To Bookmarks
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Lindsay
post Jul 14 2007, 06:56 PM
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A special request that could and did help all of us.

National journalist Edie Magnus working on a depression documentary.

QUOTE
As you know, DF takes our members’ privacy very seriously and does not generally allow researchers to solicit members in any way. However, I have received one request that I feel has the potential to further our cause and reduce the stigma of depression. The request came from Edie Magnus, who is a prominent news correspondent here in the United States. She is working on a documentary about depression and was directed to our site as an example of a community that offers support to young people suffering from depression. It is entirely up to you whether you wish to contact Edie directly, but I did want to pass along this opportunity, as I think it could do such good for all of us who suffer from depression and related mental illnesses.

Here is Edie’s request in her own words, and how to contact her:

QUOTE
“If you are a teen or young adult who has battled depression - and who has
overcome feelings of rage or violence, or thoughts of suicide - I would like
to talk to you. I'm a television journalist researching a documentary about teens and depression for public television. I'm reachable at ediemagnus@verizon.net or 917 991 6727. All conversations treated with absolute confidentiality and the utmost sensitivity.”

And here is a little bit about Edie if you are not already familiar with her:

“Edie Magnus has been a correspondent for Dateline since 1996.
Magnus has covered numerous stories, ranging from the capture of Wichita’s notorious BTK serial killer, to the conviction of Martha Stewart. She also reported on a documentary about the story of Kendra Webdale, a young woman who was pushed in front of an oncoming New York subway by a man suffering from severe schizophrenia, and an award-winning story about a little boy who underwent a groundbreaking bran surgery in Australia, which helped to persuade doctors to start doing the operation here in the United States.

Previously, she was the anchor of MSNBC’s NBC News @Issue, which provided NBC News anchors and correspondents a forum to discuss important news topics of the day.

Prior to joining MSNBC, Magnus covered the media and information industries for CBS Evening News with Dan Rather, reporting on the news and entertainment industries, the Internet and other new media. Before that, she was a correspondent for Eye to Eye, the CBS primetime newsmagazine from December 1992 to August 1995.

From April 1991 to December 1992, she was the CBS News health and medical correspondent, reporting regularly for the CBS Evening News. She joined CBS in April 1990 as a general assignment correspondent in New York. She was also co-anchor, with Robert Krulwich, of the Friday editions of America Tonight from October 1990 to March 1991.

Magnus has an extensive background in television reporting and anchoring. She was a principal anchor for USA Today: The Television Show for one year. She served as an anchor for ABC’s World News This Morning, and she did the news segments for Good Morning America. Magnus was also an ABC News correspondent based in Chicago from August 1985 to January 1987.

She and her husband Bob Mayer, a television producer, live in Hastings-on-Hudson, with their two sons.

© 2007 MSNBC Interactive”


--------------------
Be Well....

~Lindsay ♥, Forum Super Administrator
Founder, depressionforums.org


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DF member since Dec 2001

----
"I cannot make my mark for all time...those concepts are mutually exclusive.
"Lasting effect" is a self -contradictory term. Meaning does not exist in the future, nor do I.
Nothing will have meaning, "ultimately."
Nothing will even mean tomorrow what it did today. Meaning changes with the context.
My meaningfulness is in the here and now. It is enough that I may be of value to someone today.
It is enough that I make a difference now." ~Lindsay



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Lindsay
post Jul 14 2007, 07:01 PM
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QUOTE
As you know, DF takes our members’ privacy very seriously and does not generally allow researchers to solicit members in any way. However, I have received one request that I feel has the potential to further our cause and reduce the stigma of depression. The request came from Edie Magnus, who is a prominent news correspondent here in the United States. She is working on a documentary about depression and was directed to our site as an example of a community that offers support to young people suffering from depression. It is entirely up to you whether you wish to contact Edie directly, but I did want to pass along this opportunity, as I think it could do such good for all of us who suffer from depression and related mental illnesses.

Here is Edie’s request in her own words, and how to contact her:

QUOTE
“If you are a teen or young adult who has battled depression - and who has
overcome feelings of rage or violence, or thoughts of suicide - I would like
to talk to you. I'm a television journalist researching a documentary about teens and depression for public television. I'm reachable at ediemagnus@verizon.net or 917 991 6727. All conversations treated with absolute confidentiality and the utmost sensitivity.”

And here is a little bit about Edie if you are not already familiar with her:

“Edie Magnus has been a correspondent for Dateline since 1996.
Magnus has covered numerous stories, ranging from the capture of Wichita’s notorious BTK serial killer, to the conviction of Martha Stewart. She also reported on a documentary about the story of Kendra Webdale, a young woman who was pushed in front of an oncoming New York subway by a man suffering from severe schizophrenia, and an award-winning story about a little boy who underwent a groundbreaking bran surgery in Australia, which helped to persuade doctors to start doing the operation here in the United States.

Previously, she was the anchor of MSNBC’s NBC News @Issue, which provided NBC News anchors and correspondents a forum to discuss important news topics of the day.

Prior to joining MSNBC, Magnus covered the media and information industries for CBS Evening News with Dan Rather, reporting on the news and entertainment industries, the Internet and other new media. Before that, she was a correspondent for Eye to Eye, the CBS primetime newsmagazine from December 1992 to August 1995.

From April 1991 to December 1992, she was the CBS News health and medical correspondent, reporting regularly for the CBS Evening News. She joined CBS in April 1990 as a general assignment correspondent in New York. She was also co-anchor, with Robert Krulwich, of the Friday editions of America Tonight from October 1990 to March 1991.

Magnus has an extensive background in television reporting and anchoring. She was a principal anchor for USA Today: The Television Show for one year. She served as an anchor for ABC’s World News This Morning, and she did the news segments for Good Morning America. Magnus was also an ABC News correspondent based in Chicago from August 1985 to January 1987.

She and her husband Bob Mayer, a television producer, live in Hastings-on-Hudson, with their two sons.


--------------------
Be Well....

~Lindsay ♥, Forum Super Administrator
Founder, depressionforums.org


Forum Super Administrator

DF member since Dec 2001

----
"I cannot make my mark for all time...those concepts are mutually exclusive.
"Lasting effect" is a self -contradictory term. Meaning does not exist in the future, nor do I.
Nothing will have meaning, "ultimately."
Nothing will even mean tomorrow what it did today. Meaning changes with the context.
My meaningfulness is in the here and now. It is enough that I may be of value to someone today.
It is enough that I make a difference now." ~Lindsay



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Guest_SarahN_*
post Jul 15 2007, 06:31 AM
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I think this is a wonderful opportunity for our members. I am glad Mrs. Magnus found depression forums and we are able to help her with her research.

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Guest_SarahN_*
post Jul 15 2007, 10:10 AM
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What a great opportunity, I hope members will respond to her research nod.gif

It think it would be great if more people are made aware of depression to better understand what we go through!


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Avery
post Jul 16 2007, 12:15 PM
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It would be so awesome to help educate people about depression and mental illness in general. There is so much ignorance and negativity from society about mental illnesses. I dropped Edie an e-mail offering to help, so we'll see if she responds. Either way I know I'd want to watch this documentary.


--------------------
"I'm not crazy. I'm just a little unwell."


"I guess some people are just born with tragedy in their blood."


"Will I lose my dignity? Will someone care?
Will I wake tomorrow from this nightmare?"


"I get plenty of exercise jumping to conclusions."
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outrigger
post Jul 16 2007, 04:40 PM
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Is it someone who has problems, is overcoming them, or has overcomed them?

Too bad I suck at interviews, um....uh..well....
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TwilightZephyr
post Jul 18 2007, 07:05 AM
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Hmmm....I guess 26 is not really a young adult and definately not a teen....least I still look young...lol.

Does sound like a good opportunity though.


--------------------
"If I could tell the world just one thing
It would be that we're all ok
And not to worry because worry is wasteful
and useless in times like these
I will not be made useless
I won't be idled with despair
I will gather myself around my faith
for light does the darkness most fear
My hands are small, I know,
but they're not yours they are my own
but they're not yours they are my own
and I am never broken "

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EveningRain
post Jul 18 2007, 04:58 PM
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I emailed her the day before last, but I haven't gotten a response yet. Do you suppose she may already have everything/everyone she needs?


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complexity_defin...
post Jul 22 2007, 06:58 AM
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I copied, pasted and saved her information, not sure I will actually get the nerve to send a message though. laugh.gif
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Shauny
post Jul 22 2007, 07:51 AM
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I'd love to help, but unfortunately for Edie, I'm British. I'd send an e-mail, but you said Americans only, right? Plus, I've not entirely overcome my problems. I may have gotten past the worst parts, but I am still pretty depressed. Otherwise, I doubt I would be posting here!
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slw
post Jul 22 2007, 12:01 PM
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I have sent her an email and had several back & forths with her.
My son is 18 and suffers from anxiety, depression, insomnia, and sometimes paranoia.

She was very nice & very interested.

I'm not sure my son would talk to her, he's having a bad time right now & I haven't discussed it with him yet.
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eddie
post Jul 22 2007, 12:13 PM
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Wow, what an excellent opportunity. I hope lots of young folks respond to her. I wish I'd known about this kinda thing when I was a depressed teenager. Then again, I wish that I/we had had the internet back then, to find out about stuff like this. smile.gif
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Shauny
post Jul 22 2007, 04:45 PM
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Oh, there are ways of seeing American TV from here.
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Shauny
post Jul 24 2007, 01:10 PM
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There are ways, actually. I'm pretty sure there are Internet sites that allow you to stream American broadcasts. I also know some Americans who have a TV card, and the ability to stream TV over webcam. :P Though I doubt they'd be willing to do that at the time it's on.

...Or we could simply have someone record it and get it to us. Though I'm not sure if it's legit.

This post has been edited by Shauny: Jul 24 2007, 01:11 PM
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slw
post Jul 24 2007, 02:33 PM
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I don't know if it's been mentioned already -- or if anyone else made the connection & asked -- but I live in Virginia & it was a natural question for me.

I asked her if she was going to cover the VA Tech shooting that recently happened and she said it would be part of it.
How the shooter slipped through without getting any help.
How parents think they know their kids but many teenagers have a secret life that we don't know about.

She said she is the process of choosing all the subjects so I'm guessing this won't be the whole thing, but thought ya'll might be interested.

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Lindsay
post May 16 2009, 01:37 PM
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It has been almost two years in the making....Thank you Edie Magnus ~Lindsay

QUOTE
April 20th, 2009
The Film: Exploring the Emotional Lives of Teenagers
Edie Magnus, Executive Producer

Attached Image


Dr. Chris Lucas, head of child psychiatry at New York University’s School of Medicine, says it best:

“People only seem to pay attention when there is a major event and when a large number of kids die suddenly together. Whereas kids are dying all the time through gun violence or…though suicide, and there is not much attention paid to that.”

This is precisely how we began to pay attention to all the unheeded cries for help: it was just after the massacre at Virginia Tech, where so many young people had died suddenly, that we began researching teenage mental illness and rage. Soon, the bigger story came into focus: All over America, kids were dying by their own hands in far greater numbers than those killed by an enraged school shooter. Experts we spoke to characterized this as two sides of the same coin: violence turned inward, or unleashed upon others. Both are the end result of a terrible path that too many kids are on – and one that few of the adults in their lives recognize or understand.

In the nearly two years since we started looking into adolescent mental health, we’ve interviewed scores of experts on depression, anxiety, anger and teen suicide. We entered chat rooms and left postings on a number of Web sites devoted to these topics – and are grateful to the many young people who reached out to tell us their stories. Of the many statistics included in Cry for Help, there is one that stands out: that young people experiencing mental illness like depression and anxiety can go for many years (estimates range from 6 to 23 – which obviously puts them well into adulthood) before they are diagnosed and treated. That’s a lot of silent pain and suffering going under the radar.

Increasingly, schools across the country are feeling compelled to get a handle on the mental health of students. In Cry for Help, we were afforded extraordinary access to two high schools trying two different approaches – which we followed in real time throughout a school year. One of these schools was Hamilton High in Ohio, which had lost four teens to suicide in less than a year’s time.

To us, it seemed the school was using the “It Takes a Village” approach to help students in the wake of the suicides, and to encourage them to open up about their own issues. Teachers, administrators and counselors at HHS volunteered to take part in a series of initiatives that were direct and personal — to find students in emotional pain, to assure them they were not alone, and to offer time and resources to get them additional help if necessary.

The other school we profile is Clarkstown North High School in New York, which launched an equally ambitious effort to reach young people where so many of them now “live” — online. The program allows teens and their parents to seek out information anonymously through a special mental health and suicide prevention Web site. The theory here is that rather than trying to find the few kids most at risk (which the program’s creator, a New York psychiatrist, Dr. Lucas, likens to finding a needle in a haystack) the goal should be to improve the mental health of the entire student population. In other words, the rising tide lifts all boats.

A young woman named Stacy Hollingsworth gave us invaluable insights into what it feels like to be severely depressed and hide it from the outside world. Her parents were like so many others: they thought they knew their child. The lessons they learned and Stacy’s own account of her journey to the brink of suicide and back are important for anyone who is — or plans to be — raising a child.

There is so much that we in the adult world don’t know about what our kids are saying and feeling. Cry for Help gives us a chance to listen, and opens a window into their world. Their stories, and the disturbing statistics on teen suicide, are a clarion call for all of us to start paying more attention every day.

- Edie Magnus, Executive Producer

The PBS documentary "Cry For Help" aired April 29th, 2009.

Depression Forums is indeed listed as one of the teen and parents resources for websites and hotlines on A Cry For Help Website.
Thank you DF Members for emailing Edie and talking with her. Thank you Edie Magnus.
.


--------------------
Be Well....

~Lindsay ♥, Forum Super Administrator
Founder, depressionforums.org


Forum Super Administrator

DF member since Dec 2001

----
"I cannot make my mark for all time...those concepts are mutually exclusive.
"Lasting effect" is a self -contradictory term. Meaning does not exist in the future, nor do I.
Nothing will have meaning, "ultimately."
Nothing will even mean tomorrow what it did today. Meaning changes with the context.
My meaningfulness is in the here and now. It is enough that I may be of value to someone today.
It is enough that I make a difference now." ~Lindsay



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Coop
post May 17 2009, 07:53 AM
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Cry For Help - Hamilton High
The PBS Special Aired April 29th, 2009 Executive Producer, Edie Magnus



Part 1



Part 2



Part 3



Part 4



Part 5



Part 6



Part 7



Part 8






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Lindsay
post May 18 2009, 01:19 PM
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April 6th, 2009
The Film: Production Credits

Produced by
Edie Magnus
Mary Murphy

Written by
Edie Magnus
Mary Murphy

Directed by
Mary Murphy

Director of Photography
Rich White

Edited by
A.M. Baluzy

Associate Producers
Molly Knight Raskin
Alicia Byrdsong
Laura Chapnick

Additional Camera
Scott Winters
David Dellaria
John Borst
Rob Weir

Sound
Jack Norflus
Rick Albright
Tim Dutton
David Baumgartner

Additional Editing
Becka Slade
Lynn Vance

Online Editor
Jaroslaw Ziaja

Production Assistants
Angelica Hester
Zachary Green

Additional footage provided by
Associated Press
Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office
WCBS
WETA

Special Thanks
Hamilton High School
Clarkstown North High School
Ossining Public Library

Project Manager
Rekha Menon

Legal
Shari LaPayover

Publicity
Kellie Specter
Gloria Park

Board of Advisors
Alison Malmon
Dr. Richard A. Friedman
Mark Goulston

Senior Producer
Scott Davis

Executive Producer
Edie Magnus

Executive-in-Charge
Stephen Segaller

Executive-in-Charge
Neal Shapiro

This program was produced by Thirteen which is solely responsible for its content.

© 2009 WNET.ORG

FUNDING PROVIDED BY
Estate of Marya Sielska
Irene Ritter Foundation
Judy Collins
Leon Lowenstein Foundation
Donna and Phil Satow
Marion E. Kentworthy-Sarah H. Swift Foundation

Additional funding was provided by More than 3,000 members of Thirteen


--------------------
Be Well....

~Lindsay ♥, Forum Super Administrator
Founder, depressionforums.org


Forum Super Administrator

DF member since Dec 2001

----
"I cannot make my mark for all time...those concepts are mutually exclusive.
"Lasting effect" is a self -contradictory term. Meaning does not exist in the future, nor do I.
Nothing will have meaning, "ultimately."
Nothing will even mean tomorrow what it did today. Meaning changes with the context.
My meaningfulness is in the here and now. It is enough that I may be of value to someone today.
It is enough that I make a difference now." ~Lindsay



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quietCherub
post May 23 2009, 04:45 PM
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Just want to say that watching this video really hit home for me. That was me!!! In middle school, high school... I wish there had been some type of program to help me when I was that age... I certainly would have gotten help sooner, and probably had a much more fulfilling high school and college career...


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Trying to save myself, but my self keeps slipping away...
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