01 February 2010

Video no longer reliable?


Video has been among the most reliable media for communications, but are recent spoofs changing that?

TV has long been a powerful medium. Because videos often show somebody talking, they are very believable and have usually been taken at face value. There downside has traditionally been limited access, with politicians and other 'newsworthy individuals being hand-picked by TV journalists, and aggressive editing and selective quoting leading to a soundbite culture and a limited focus on simple messages.

YouTube and other video sites promised to change that by enabling individuals and, increasingly, organizations to make statements to the world directly.

The documentary film 'The Yes Men Fix the World" celebrates the exploits of a pair of spoofers who use fake media releases, websites, speeches and, increasingly, video, to fool the news media and to shame companies and politicians about sensitive issues.

The Yes Men continue to make a splash, most recently creating a fake website for the Davos World Economic Forum. http://www.we-forum.org

Of interest here is the use of fake video, splicing real footage with alternative soundtracks of famous figures such as Queen Elizabeth II and the French and German prime ministers. Gaining particular fame - or infamy - is the fake interview with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, as a follow-up to the fake statements at COP15.

It will be interesting to see if this approach becomes popular among other activists, and thus how it might impact on communications, including the use of video. As desktop editing tools increase in sophistication, such 'disinformation' devices might expand. This may lead to new devices to authenticate videos and other materials, but also create an even more skeptical public.

27 January 2010

Communicators help with Haiti crisis


Communicators are among those responding to the crisis in Haiti following the 12 January earthquake. The Internews network is running a campaign called 'information saves lives' to raise funds to rebuild domestic media in Haiti. Internews is working with local media to assess their needs and acting as a link between providers of aid and local media.

Internews is a founding member of the Inter-Agency Group on Communicating with Disaster Affected Communities (CDAC) that includes UNOCHA, agencies such as the Red Cross and Save the Children, and other media assistance providers such as the BBC World Service Trust and the Reuters Thomson Foundation. UNOCHA has charged Internews as the lead agency on the ground to coordinate CDAC members’ humanitarian information and media assistance activities in Haiti.

Internews is producing a radio programme, Nouvelles-Utiles (News You Can Use), which is re-broadcast by local media, many of whom lost personnel and equipment in the earthquake. The programmes are available here, in Creole:
http://www.internews.org/InfoSavesLives/haiti_radio_programs.shtm

Elsewhere, the UN Mission for Stabilisation in Haiti (MINUSTAH), flew in tonnes of equipment to establish a radio network broadcasting in Creole and French to keep people informed, help them locate aid and essential services and start to recover their lives. The broadcasts are available here:
http://www.minustahfm.org/live.html

20 October 2009

Get noticed without talking

InDev Jobs, a recruitment website focused on the development sector, offers some useful tips on using 'non-verbal communication to market yourself'. Some of the points are fairly obvious - a smile when you meet somebody - but always worth remembering.
Read more.

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