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| Flying: Confessions of a Free WomanExploring the modern female life April 9,
 2008 3:56:23 PM 
This documentary mini-series by Jennifer Fox (An American Love Story) is a personal memoir of, as she puts it, “this modern female life.” Juggling two lovers (one married, one tolerant of polyamory), Fox has a pregnancy scare that prompts her to explore being single, childless, and 42. She “passes the camera” among friends in her Manhattan loft and in her various ports of call as an educator. Pat, the singer with chronic pain after removal of a brain tumor, and L’Dawn, the divorced mom embroiled in a bitter court battle with her ex, are two of her circle of co-conspirators. It’s tempting to dismiss Fox’s soul searching as solipsistic whining, given her affluent lifestyle, her 20 years of therapy. But as she scrutinizes sexual autonomy among Cambodian prostitutes and South African victims of genital mutilation, she reveals humility and empathy. At six hours, with its deliberate pacing and thoughtful editing, Flying makes for an absorbing viewing experience. 353 minutes | MFA: April 17-19
|   FLYING: Jennifer Fox goes beyond solipsistic whining.
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  Boston TV kills A&E coverage
  Our correspondent takes a walk on the Wildlife-Removal side.
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  Some Things at Trinity
 
				
					
					
							 What is driving the widespread movement pressuring Hillary to drop out, even though she is very much still in the race?
  How did BU's research facility go from slam dunk to almost sunk?
  Courage vs. abuse
  Style and substance, hold the meat
  Trying to find some meaning in ace biz-boy columnist Steve Bailey’s move to London
  How Stepford politics rule Beacon Hill
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