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Posts Tagged ‘video’

Karen TV is go!

April 27th, 2009 Andrew No comments

A Karen child from the village of Pilokkhi in Thailand near the Myanmar border

The Karen community, for whom 2009 is ancient history, will celebrate the year 2748 this December. Australia is host to a growing number of Karen who arrived here as refugees having fled their homelands in Burma.

In 2007, or rather, 2746, we began working with the Melbourne based Cultural Development Network on an internet video production series, Homelands, for young people from the Karen and Sudanese communities. The idea is to co-produce video pieces discussing their perceptions of homeland with other young people from Karen and Sudanese communities abroad, and where possible, those still living in refugee camps on the Thai-Burma border and / or Kenya and the Southern Sudan respectively.

This afternoon I worked with a group of Karen young people who have formed a web development team to start the work of producing a site that will support, develop and promote collaborative video production amongst themselves and young Karen abroad.

They arrived with a draft plan for their website, however it had not included any scope for supporting the video production project. What it did provide though, was a clear outline of information flows that would inform, guide and promote the project. It just needed the Homelands components added.

I showed them through Vibewire, SlumTV and EngageMedia. As I talked through each of these projects Homelands Project Officer, Kirsty Baird, logged onto a chat room on karen.org and found someone involved with the Karen community in California who not only makes videos but was keen to gather up stills and videos from Karen living there. The pieces were starting to fall into place.

Curiously, Vibewire seemed less representative of an online community of young creative people than I recall. EngageMedia will no doubt become the host platform for Homeland videos and SlumTV demonstrates what is possible when a clear framework is provided up front! SlumTV make no bones about what they do. They teach kids in slums how to make videos and screen them.

The next step was to ensure we could get a website up and running quickly – a site that would be easy to use, a site that supported not only the Karen’s vision, but a collaborative environment from which videos can be produced from. I showed them through Wordpress and got their lead web person, Friday, to set up a free Wordpress blog and Karen TV was born! It is but a humble beginning…

By the end of the workshop we had everyone signed up as contributors. We covered some basic publishing techniques in Wordpress, found a design template everyone was happy with and put together a small production team to re-design a header image.

It was a terrific outcome.

We have momentum!

I left the Melbourne Multicultural Hub, wandered up to a Korean grocery store, picked up some supplies for dinner and walked home in the rain. 

Photo: A Karen child from the village of Pilokkhi in Thailand near the Myanmar border. By Brian Adler, Public Domain, Wikipedia.

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DIY Video on YouTube

September 12th, 2008 Andrew No comments

Unaware I was being video-taped, I was amused to find my talk at the DIY Video track at iSummit up on YouTube… this piece includes other presentations which were all quite amazing in fact!

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Categories: Journal, Video Slam Tags: , ,

Blogging the iSummit

July 31st, 2008 Andrew No comments

That I would blog, or prepare a report at this time, when there are several people dedicated to recording the iSummit is likely an exhausting prospect. Thus, this article, a sampling of articles and reports on the sessions I’d been involved with. Three for now… let’s see how many more turn up before the close of the summit.

Fair and legal reuse of video

Composed by Simon Dingle covering the DIY video session, 31 July, this was a kind of roundtable sharing experiences in the use of CC rights management in various film / screen initiatives.

Grokking the Asia Commons

Simon covers the Asia Commons session, 30 July, that resulted in the following:

  • developing case models/studies on the commons
  • building a distribution network for asia (e.g. for multimedia contents)
  • how to share presentations
  • sharing strategies on advocacy

Live Blog: Asia Commons Meeting

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Categories: Journal Tags: , , ,

Identifying The Commons

July 29th, 2008 Andrew No comments

I’ve arrived in Sapporo with Sarawak still heavy on my mind. Feeling good though… and optimistic despite the challenges ahead.

I’m here to produce the joint iCommons and APC micro doc, Identifying The Commons. Here’s a brief description:

The notion of what constitutes the commons has broad interpretations. So to does the information commons. This video will enquire into what is considered an information/knowledge commons through a series of short interviews conducted at the 2008 iSummit in Sapporo Japan.

The end result is a video resource for the iCommons and APC, additionally supporting the APC Strategic Priority Scoping paper, Growing the Global Information Commons.

For more information on this project, refer to our uber wiki!

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Producing Sarawak Gone

July 16th, 2008 Andrew No comments

A small team left Kuching for what turned out to be an 18 km trek visiting four remote Bidayuh communities affected by the Bengoh Dam development.

It was epic!

I’d not taken many notes on the trek itself, spending much of my time behind a video camera… and given the context of the trip, there are several stories I could tell.

Should I attempt to recount the forest soon to be drowned, walking into the heart of this region, opening out to me as if I were on a planet best described in detail by the author, Iain M Banks? Or the Kampongs (villages), which, to my urban eyes, were much like an apparition, the first of which could have come from J. G. Ballard’s, The Drowned World.

The Kampongs and the stories inherited there could consume a tome of works unto themselves, but I had little time for listening and with few people around and the focus of our mission being about land rights, it was not possible to absorb at length what will soon be lost.

To give you an idea, a very scant idea of what where I’d been, peruse the photos and these few posts:

Producing the series on a miniDV cam (thanks Paul W) has helped immensely, however, I can see the value in recording straight to disk or memory card for these kinds of projects.

Either way, little to no budget DIY projects are based on the notion that you use what you’ve got and make the most of it. I think you’ll find the results pretty good… at least I’m happy with the material I came back with and now with editing in full swing, the results are starting to talk for themselves.

For information on the series:

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Categories: Journal Tags: , , ,

On The Edge of Wrong

July 13th, 2008 Andrew No comments


On the Edge of Wrong #3 from andrew garton on Vimeo.

Earlier in the year I shot a series of shorts at the Cape Town based On the Edge of Wrong free music festival. The completed set of five are now online.

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Sarawak Gone

July 11th, 2008 Andrew No comments

Sarawak Gone on locationWe’re producing a self-funded micro docs series titled Sarawak Gone entirely on location.

Sarawak Gone explores four remote Bidayuh communities accessible by foot within an hour’s drive from Kuching, capital city of Sarawak, Malaysia. They will lose their livelihood, traditional lands and culture, their rights and heritage with the development of the controversial Bengoh Dam project.

Sarawak Gone is a micro docs series intended to raise awareness to the denigration of the rapidly dwindling societies on the island of Borneo, the native land titles at stake and the rapidly decreasing habitats for protected and endangered flora and fauna.

Micro-docs are short, 5 – 10 minute documentaries designed for online distribution and portable media devices and laptop screening events.

For more information read Rengah Sarawak or the project description on our wiki.

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Categories: Sarawak Gone Tags: ,

Talking APC [draft]

June 16th, 2008 Andrew No comments

At the 2007 APC Council Meeting Frédéric Dubois (APC Communications Team) and I shot a random selection of Council Members (those who we could find in between meetings) to provide us with a 30 second snapshop of what APC meant to them.

Here’s a rough cut that’s yet to be further trimmed, titled, etc.


Talking APC [Draft] from andrew garton on Vimeo.

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Categories: Journal Tags: ,

dotSUB matures

May 16th, 2008 Andrew No comments

Two years ago I saw a presentation of a subtitling translation tool for online videos at the first iCommons Summit. At first dotSUB appeared rather crude, but it worked. This morning I had a look at where they’re at, having heard they’d worked on a large translation project and was mightily impressed with where they’d got to.

Here’s an example video that comes with 22 completed translations… that’s 22 individual languages that a mix of volunteers and professionals have contributed to.

Read more about what dotSUB have to offer.

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Categories: Video Slam Tags: , ,