Showing posts with label citizen journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label citizen journalism. Show all posts

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Not-so-common wealth

Delhi, 2010. History in the making.

This years commonwealth games have caught a lot of media attention and publicity…and with good reason, too. The tremendous media and public uproar that occurred following the exposure of photographs depicting the living conditions of the games villages was humiliating for India, to say the least. Photographs that made media headlines showed leaky toilets, stained washbasins and dirty beds – all intended for visiting athletes. What followed was an embarrassing international condemnation of India and the Indian government, inevitably established by the refusal of several athletes to participate in this year’s commonwealth.

But there’s another side to every story. Truth is, India has come a long way. What really exists in the country’s capital today are stadiums, arenas and villages of international standard. First class and quality products created and hosted by a ‘third world’ nation. But nobody ever told us that.

Thank heavens for blogs, facebook and youtube. The past three weeks has seen a complete shift in media representations of the commonwealth games. Thousands of Indians, enraged by the negative publicity that India was garnering went on a rampage of pro-India propaganda, determined to show the world what else was really happening. They were citizen journalists empowered by new media. Bloggers going on frenzy and filmmakers with a new found passion. My Facebook news feed for the past half a month has been clogged with groups, videos, photographs and status updates all showcasing and rooting for the newer, cleaner, more developed India. Possibly for the first time in the Indian context has the indi-media and non-mainstream broadcasts engaged so many people and elicited such a response.

Today, (finally!) all the Indian mainstream media have hopped on the bandwagon and are on a pro-India rampage.

Thank you, new media. On behalf of all the Indians of the world, thank you.


Sunday, September 26, 2010

News, news, news.

New media offers us so many more options to news. News has transformed from a push into a pull media, where the individual has more control. Years back news was only fed to us at certain times of the day. Imagine only having access to current events in the daily news bulletins or the arrival of your Herald in the morning. We are spoilt with the immediacy and convenience of news in todays society.

New media now allows us to access news whenever we want to, via our phones or laptops. There are online news papers as equivalents, eg. New Zealand Herald (www.nzherald.co.nz/). - these even eliminate us even having to purchase a paper. Countless websites provide news reports, even your favourite social networking sites such as Twitter or Facebook can provide a news element. These sites can go even further by providing an aspect of 'citizen journalism' one which provides the citizen to take part in the news reporting. This participatory journalism can be seen in sites such as Indymedia (http://www.indymedia.org.nz/) I think this is a great idea. Being able to put your opinion forward is a total highlight of this kind of news.

Sometimes it is hard to beat the traditional forms of news. The familiarity is reassuring. It is sometimes exhausting searching for relevant or unbiased news articles in the world wide web. Often you are faced with information overload. A case of having to much info on offer. Offline news gives it to you short and sweet, but new media offers so much more variety.

They both have their advantages. In the online world you can personalise and pick and choose what you think is newsworthy. I like having the options. I love knowing technology is there for me if I wish to have news that way.