Posts Tagged: media


30
Oct 09

Even the Dems are down with graffiti

I came upon this lovely video by graf artist Saber (thanks to the rabid publicity machine that is FOX news).  It was a finalist in a health care reform video challenge launched by Obama and Co.

healthcare for all

Public Option Please is also holding an art contest for health care reform, with entries due Nov. 7th.

Public Option Please is calling for entries of visual artwork that use positive messaging to convey and encourage national dialogue around the importance of a Public Option in Healthcare Reform. Artwork themes should include: Public Option, Healthcare for All, Heal Ourselves and Heal the World, Healthcare and Social Justice, Transforming the Future of Healthcare, Healthcare as a Human Right.

For more details, check out the website.  You can also look at the submissions on their FB page.  To the left, just one I like.. by Steve Alfaro.


29
Oct 09

The ugly face of headline news

sentenced
Richmond High School student is gang-raped outside of her Homecoming Dance.  When I first learned about this, my immediate suggestion was that everyone who participated and watched should be locked up in the worst possible conditions, preferably castrated first.

But if only it could be so simple.  The national media, smelling blood, is rolling in to the drumbeat of its condescending, caffeinated finger-pointing frenzy.  Yea, they only come out in droves to communities like Richmond when something really, really bad (aka “headline material”) happens.

We all want to see justice for this poor girl and her family.  There’s no excuse for beating and raping a 15 year old girl.  The guys who partook and watched are some sick individuals.  But I can’t help but feel increasingly uneasy with the discussion, which is sure to get more bloodthirsty as the days go on.  Especially as the ages of the suspects start rolling in– 19, 15, 16, 17.  The minors will be tried as adults and face potential life sentences.  The media has begun pawing about, as they usually do, for people to blame– school officials?  The parents?  Hip hop?  Stricter “policing” is already being instituted around the school–as if treating children like they are already in prison is the solution–and then the media will dust off their hands, scurry out of town and promptly forget about Richmond until something horribly “newsworthy” happens.  Hit-and-run journalism, how I hate you so.

NBC Bay Area has triumphantly pointed out that on-campus cameras were not working and that security guards were told to leave early.  The solution?  “The school board is now replacing the security system with a $1 million digital security system.”  Meanwhile, ABC and CNN are channeling the (legitimate) rage of students and staff toward school officials.  But isn’t it a bit funny that the media is so quick to implicate the easiest targets and never themselves?   Did they all zone out when students and staff lashed out against the press for being such vultures (which SJ Mercury News covered, ABC handily dismissed in one line and I’ve yet to see reported on anywhere else)?  From SJMN, Richmond High senior Norma Bautista says:  “We are not criminals…we are going to make a change. Everything they say about us — that we’re animals, that we’re not a community — we are a community. Why are they focusing on the negativity?”

She’s got a point.  Where’s the coverage for the amazing work that people–youth programmers, students, teachers, gang interventionists, community organizers, parents and so on–are doing every day?  How come the long-term solutions worked toward by people who know and care about Richmond don’t get the national coverage and support they deserve (but the catchy quick-fixes hysterically prescribed by the press do?) As James Meeks writes in the Chicago Tribune concerning Derrion Albert’s murder (which only happened 1 month ago but has been effectively wiped off of the national radar), “We like to point to irresponsible kids and uncaring parents. But what about a society that won’t lift a finger to do anything about the crumbling, disastrous school system that all of these kids, victims and violators, come from? …No one wants to be held accountable, but the blood of every child is on our hands.”

That includes the media, which has a lot of say in defining what the frameworks, problems and solutions will be.  So can we please get a little more investigation into the context and not just the graphic aftermath of this horrible crime?  This includes but is not limited to: the condemnation of rape but not of rape culture, the proliferation of California’s youth prisons at the expense of rehabilitation centers and public education, etc etc.  The headlines aren’t as punchy, the solutions probably cannot be captured in soundbites or in less than 500 words, and the villains are not always so clear…but in the long term, this might be more conducive to ending the cycle of violence than installing higher fences and more security cameras ever could.


22
Oct 09

Outside, inside and around

guardians

IMG_2203robot
Ocean Beach and cool work at White Walls SF– which is having a stencil show through Nov. 7th.  Yea… that to the left there… that’s a stencil.  And that to the top… that’s shaded with PEN.  I’m awed, jealous and intimidated all at once.

On an unrelated note… I love YouTube!  Okay so I’m a late bloomer here… but as of late, I’ve been staring at code for what feels like eons at a time.  Silence is deafening when it’s just you and a set of letters and symbols that appear harmless, but are actually out to destroy you.  I drained the not-so-deep vaults of Pandora and listened to podcasts till the shrill, caffeinated voices of experts spewing their opinions on the day’s events were haunting me.  Desperate, I turned to YouTube.  Here, I vegged to the wise and soothing voices of Angela Davis, Mumia, and Noam Chomsky.  And Russell Peters.  And Keri Hilson.  And Maxwell.

Anyhoo, the point is this: I’ve been awakened to the college/life education that is YouTube.  There’s no college involved, and I never left my chair.   I also rediscovered my 5th grade anthem.  Thank you, YouTube.


13
Oct 09

Somehow this man is still on the air

Lifted from RaceWire.  Mm, good ol’ Lou Dobbs… hate and lies, my favorite formula for journalism today.  He’s not racist btw, he opposes all of the “ethnics” equally.

Nobody has done more to spread hate and lies than Lou Dobbs, who spouts his anti-Latino vitriol into American living rooms every night. His words are dangerous. Late last year, the Southern Poverty Law Center reported an increase in hate crimes targeting Latinos for a fourth straight year leading to a 40% rise in the four years since 2003.

But momentum is growing to push Dobbs off the air. Tell CNN to flush Dobbs.

Join Colorlines and Racewire and click here to sign the Basta Dobbs pledge.


7
Oct 09

The aesthetic of colonialism

dropular screenshot

I like media sharing sites.  My favorite place to overdose on hip?  Dropular.  By now, I’ve pretty much learned to block out the glossy nudies for pretentious assholes to jerk off to sexploitation of white women high-budget porn.  Which is probably the nicest way I can put it.

However, when I see photos of children and adults from the 3rd world alongside images of naked titties, cars, and furniture, I throw up a little in my mouth.  Apparently Southeast Asian families are the hottest thing since vintage gadgets and band posters.  In an attempt to understand who is responsible for this shit and why they think it’s okay, I’ve done some digging on my favorite haunts (mostly Flickr and Wikipedia) and also pulled from my good old-fashioned edumacation and life experiences.

First off, I understand that many of these photographers are well-intentioned and see themselves as helping the people in their photos.  They claim to raise awareness and also seem to be interested in ending poverty, in an abstract and patronizing sort of way.  And I get that not every photographer is necessarily exploiting their subjects.  Photography, film and art in general are valuable components to broader actions one might take to pursue justice.

That being said, there’s a fine line between art and exploitation, activism and voyeurism.  Too often, I feel like artists with good intentions fall flat because they don’t substantiate their work with context, critique or action (an artist statement with links to a few Western charities doesn’t count).

So what I’d like to know is: besides running amok and taking photos of poor people (which directly benefits you more than it does anyone else), how are you doing your part?  Do you work actively to highlight not only peoples’ tragedies, but their lives as actual people with families, personalities, and voices of their own?  Do you  spend an equal amount of time documenting resistance to exploitation (there’s a lot of that) and the crimes that perpetrators of poverty continue to get away with (lot of that too)?  How much compensation does each photographed person receive?  Do they receive a cut when and if you cash in on their images?  And by compensation, I mean the actual worth to you and not the amount that others have gotten away with paying.

By raising awareness, do you mean you stick your photos on Flickr with a link to your portfolio, or that you work proactively to educate yourself and others about poverty, the dynamics of power between and among the 3rd and 1st worlds, the continued pillage of the 3rd world via rampant cultural commodification and exploitation of labor and resources (which Western artists have historically engaged in and continue to benefit from)?  What are you doing to ensure justice against poverty in your own country?

Miners, Plan ColombiaSome might say this is unrealistic.  There’s only so much one person can do, and that much is true.  But there are artists who’ve managed to do it (to the left, a clip from Plan Colombia by the Beehive Collective– and I think we can all agree that “raising awareness” is much harder than skipping into the jungle with a camera, donning indigenous garb, and otherwise engaging in practices that are at best silly, and at worst exploitive.  Not to mention that high-minded talk needs to be accounted for; you either take responsibility or ditch the preachery and proudly own up to being a trendy 1st world thief.

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