TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE #9- DIGITAL LESSONS FROM L'AFFAIRE PETRAEUS
"If a C.I.A . Director can get caught, then its pretty much open season on everyone else."
- Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director of the Electronic Privacy Center in the New York Times, 14 November, 2012
L'Affaire Petraeus has been unfolding for the past week, and, like many others, I have been trying to make sense of what now seems to be a private matter that has spiraled wildly out of control thanks to what appears to be misconduct on the part of some FBI agents and the power and speed of digital technology. There was an excellent article in the New York Times today that raised what, for me, is the central issue here: internet privacy.
There are some important lessons here for all internet users.
For example, we now know that FBI agents, for reasons known only to them, decided it was worth spending taxpayer funds to investigate some supposedly nasty anonymous e-mails ( I have not seen them, but according to John Miller of CBS, they were not " threatening", so they could not be considered criminal ) sent to a very well-connected private citizen from Florida who had a "friendship" with an FBI agent, who clearly wanted to get to know her a lot better. Somehow this FBI agent managed to convince his superiors to investigate the matter, and they proceeded to track down the e-mails to the computer of the now- famous-for-fifteen-minutes Paula Broadwell. The FBI agents then somehow managed to get a subpoena to impound Ms. Broadwell's computer, and investigate the contents, in the process discovering her apparently explicit correspondence with David Petraeus, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. This discovery suddenly transformed what had been a private squabble between two civilian women into a major national security issue, and led to the resignation of Mr. Petraeus, even though no one has accused him of breaking any laws or other misconduct.( Since Mr. Petraeus was C.I.A. director at the time of the murder of the American Ambassador to Libya in Benghazi, there has been speculation that these incidents are somehow related, and that Mr. Petraeus resigned to avoid testifying before a congressional committee investigating that attack- however, one must assume that Mr. Petraeus knew full well that he could be compelled to testify even if he had resigned, so that does not seem likely - at least at the moment)
However, as columnist Roger Simon pointed out yesterday, Mr. Petraeus could certainly be accused of being oblivious to a fundamental law of internet security: namely, there is no such thing as security on the internet anymore. Most of us know that our office e-mails are not private, and can be read by our bosses; however, the term private e-mail is an oxymoron, since either private hackers or, as we have seen, the government can gain access to your accounts and put whatever is there in the public or legal eye. Now we all know ( I hope!) that hacking is illegal, and that there are limits to what the government can do - though after this story, I wonder what those limits are nowadays. The second amendment protects us from illegal search and seizure, and there are certainly limits to what the government can do on your property. These limits might vary, but the essence is that evidence obtained through an illegal search cannot be used in court. Likewise, evidence obtained through an illegal wiretap cannot be used in court. However, in l'affaire Petraeus, one could argue that the investigation of the e-mails sent to Ms. Kelley was unwarranted, and that the seizure of Ms. Broadwell's computer was illegal, and that therefore none of this should have happened. But it did, and, as they say, that horse is out of the barn, with sad consequences for many of those involved.
In my previous post, I discussed some of the issues raised by Wikileaks. One can rest assured that the US State Department and other government institutions are going to be a lot more careful in what they write and, above all, in how they store their information.
So, at the risk of stating the obvious: There is no such thing as privacy on the internet, and users would be well advised not to have anything on their computers that could cause them problems, either legally or personally. That means on your "private accounts" as well as your business accounts.
The fact that a man of Mr. Petraeus' stature and experience choose to ignore these realities, even after Wikileaks, boggles the mind. All of the correspondence in question was written on his private g-mail account.However, the conduct of the FBI in this case is even more troubling. It will be interesting to see how FBI officials attempt to justify both the origins and the subsequent snowballing of a case in which there has yet to be any talk of criminal malfeasance of any kind, and I am very glad the American Civil Liberties Union has their eyes on this case.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE -PUSSY RIOT AND JULIAN ASSANGE
After nearly five years as Chief of the MONUSCO Video Unit in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, I retired last month from the United Nations to devote myself to a fulltime study of the broader implications of the digital revolution the world is now experiencing. And, freed from the shackles of speaking for the United Nations, I can now express myself a bit more freely, which is exhilarating, to say the least.
I love the United Nations, but when it comes to media, the organization remains mired in the Stone Age of Print. There are far too many senior managers who do not yet understand that the Digital Revolution is a fast- moving phenomenon that will become of increasing importance,as digital technology develops in leaps and bounds. This is unfortunate, since creative and intelligent harnessing of digital technology is essential to successful promotion of developmental efforts around the world.
Over the past few weeks, there have been a few well publicized examples of this phenomenon:
The Pussy Riot Phenomenon: Regardless of what one thinks of their music ( by punk standards, it is actually pretty good ) self-described punk feminist band Pussy Riot has successfully drawn worldwide attention to some of the less attractive aspects of the Russian government under Vladimir Putin by getting themselves arrested for performing their anti-Putin " punk prayer" in the sepelchure of one of Moscow's most famous Orthodox cathedrals. The performance did not last very long, but their followers managed to document the event and the subsequent arrest, and put the video on YouTube, where it went viral. Celebrities like Yoko Ono, Madonna and Paul McCartney all wrote">Open Letters asking that the band members not be prosecuted, and the media eyes of the world were focussed on the Moscow courtroom when the judge read the verdict, pronouncing all three band members of what sounded like mediaeval charges of blasphemy,and sentencing them to two years in jail. It did not hurt that the three band members are all attractive and articulate young women, well versed in Russian avante-garde culture, and none of them showed any sign of intimidation.
By this act of artistic self-sacrifice in the tradition of the Constructivists, Dadaists and Surrealists,
Pussy Riot managed to expose the brutal and doctrinaire side of the Russian regime, and one can only salute their courage, as well as their creative savvy. Prior to this incident, the band was totally unknown, and hadn't even released a single. Now, thanks to intelligent use of digital media, Pussy Riot is a global brand which has already enjoyed a lot more than their Warholian fifteen minutes of fame. Prior to digital media, the event would have been quickly covered up, perhaps becoming an underground legend at best, but otherwise banished to the vaults of obscurity like past victims of Stalinist oppression .Given the relative success of this very political protest, one can expect to see
variations on the Pussy Riot theme elsewhere in the world in the near future.
The Julian Assange Debacle in London:
The 2012 Olympics in London were, by nearly all standards, a great success, and generated much good will for the host nation around the world. However, in the weeks that followed, the diplomatic debacle created by British Foreign Minister William Hague's bellicose threats to unilaterally revoke the diplomatic status of the Ecuadorian embassy did much to dissipate this hard- earned goodwill, particularly in Latin America.
The Ecuadorians' transgression was to provide diplomatic sanctuary to the notorious digital rogue and founder of Wikileaks, Julian Assange. As is well known, Mr. Assange decided to electronically publish a devastating videotape of an American helicopter cold bloodedly killing Iraqi civilians in Baghdad after the American invasion. What made the video devastating was that it was shot from the helicopter's perspective, with live sound of the callous banter between the pilot and the crew as they pulled the trigger. At the time of the massacre, the official American position was that the helicopter has reasons for firing on the civilians, but this position became completely untenable after the publication of the video, which had been the property of the Defense Department.
and there was a war of words between them and Mr Assange, who appeared to relish the limelight.
The conflict escalated, and finally Mr. Assange published a huge archive of previously classified State Department correspondence. While there were no earth-shattering revelations, there was a lot of diplomatically embarrassing scuttlebutt, as one might expect from internal correspondence on external matters. Nonetheless, there were many intriguing tidbits that continue to surface from time to time in
mainstream media, which has shown no compunction in publishing items from Wikileaks.
The State Department was, of course, predictably furious, and there were many threats regarding
some prosecution of Mr. Assange. However, Mr. Assange, being an Australian citizen not living in the United States, was not subject to normal American jurisdiction, and there has been a real debate regarding what laws he has actually broken, if any. After all, freedom of the press has been a fundamental of American democracy, and publishing leaked documents from the government has
been a tradition in the American media for a long time. Perhaps the most famous example in recent years was the leaking of the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg to the New York Times, which published them in their entirety. The Pentagon Papers were an internal history and assessment of the Vietnam War which contained much that was at odds with the official narrative that had been spun by the government, and the Pentagon went after both Mr. Ellsberg and The New York Times with all the legal means available. Ultimately, The Times prevailed; the publication of the documents was considered acceptable, while Mr. Ellsberg's leaking of the documents as an employee of the Pentagon was not.
In the Assange case, there are legal similarities, but the treatment of those involved has been much harsher. Bradley Manning, a very young Army private, has been charge with leaking the documents, and has been held in solitary confinement ever since. There has been a remarkable lack of transparency
in this case, and many have expressed concerns about the future of Mr. Manning, There has been no indication of any action taken against those responsible for allowing a low level member of the military such unlimited access to important classified material of this kind, which is the heart of the matter.
Thanks to digital technology, anyone can send a huge amount of material around the world in a very short period of time, so it would seem prudent to limit such access to only those with appropriate clearance. Furthermore, America's partners are dismayed that the government can be so sloppy as to allow one individual such unlimited access. and it will take time for the State Department to regain their confidence. Foreign partners will be a lot more careful in what they reveal to their American colleagues.
Meanwhile, Mr. Assange has done his best to create public support for his plight by portraying himself as a martyr to the cause of a free internet. In the process, he has had some falling outs with his former
colleagues at Wikileaks, who find him something of a glory hog, and clearly feel the focus should be
on the issue of internet freedom, and not Mr. Assange himself. This became difficult when Mr. Assange
found himself the subject of an investigation by the Swedish police on sexual assault charges stemming from two incidents during his residence in Sweden, where internet freedom is a cause celebre, and Mr. Assange something of a celebrity.
Mr. Assange's subsequent flight to England is a matter of record, as are the Swedish government's attempts to extradite him to be interrogated on the sexual assault charges. Mr. Assange claimed that the Swedes were acting on behalf of the American government, and feared that, once he was in Swedish custody, that they would extradite him to the United States to face criminal prosecution for the Wikileaks case. This argument seemed to have some validity; Mr. Assange has never been charged
with any crime in Sweden, and, upon closer inspection, the alleged sexual assaults would not be
categorized as crimes in nearly any other country in the world other than Sweden. While sexual assault is a serious matter, it is also worth noting that Sweden was on the verge of criminalizing looking at a woman as a sexual object in the 1980s. Furthermore, there have been some cases of high level Swedish tax evaders residing publicly in England without fear of extradition. And, of course, there
is the famous case of the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, whom the British refused to extradite to Spain on the request of Spanish prosector Balthazar Garzon for prosecution for crimes against humanity.
So, when the British courts decided that Mr. Assange could, in fact, be extradited to Sweden, Mr.
Assange sought and received diplomatic refuge at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. President
Correa of Ecuador explained that he had invited the Swedes to conduct their interrogation of Mr.
Assange at the embassy, and they refused. As a result, President Correa decided they had a hidden
agenda, and gave Mr. Assange political asylum. The political blunder committed by British Foreign
Secretary William Hague when he then threatened to invade the embassy to seize Mr. Assange is
a matter of record. Clearly, he had not anticipated the strong response from a united South American
community, who no longer wish to be treated liked banana republics, and who have certainly not forgotten The Falklands War.
Regardless of what one thinks of Mr. Assange, the continued denials by both the Swedes and the
Brits that this is not all about Wikileaks ring pretty hollow these days. As was the case with Pussy Riot,
the powers-that-be have seriously underestimated the power of the internet, and are making things worse for themselves by trying to publicly punish representatives of the internet avant-garde for the crime of public embarrassment. As the great Marshall McLuhan presciently said," The medium is the message," and, as the authoritarian rulers deposed during the Arab Spring discovered, trying to control the internet is like trying to stop the ocean with your hands. However, as we have seen, the powers-that-be are not ready to give up their efforts.
What this means for freedom of expression and democracy in the developing world will be explored in future blogs.
A luta continua!
mainstream media, which has shown no compunction in publishing items from Wikileaks.
The State Department was, of course, predictably furious, and there were many threats regarding
some prosecution of Mr. Assange. However, Mr. Assange, being an Australian citizen not living in the United States, was not subject to normal American jurisdiction, and there has been a real debate regarding what laws he has actually broken, if any. After all, freedom of the press has been a fundamental of American democracy, and publishing leaked documents from the government has
been a tradition in the American media for a long time. Perhaps the most famous example in recent years was the leaking of the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg to the New York Times, which published them in their entirety. The Pentagon Papers were an internal history and assessment of the Vietnam War which contained much that was at odds with the official narrative that had been spun by the government, and the Pentagon went after both Mr. Ellsberg and The New York Times with all the legal means available. Ultimately, The Times prevailed; the publication of the documents was considered acceptable, while Mr. Ellsberg's leaking of the documents as an employee of the Pentagon was not.
In the Assange case, there are legal similarities, but the treatment of those involved has been much harsher. Bradley Manning, a very young Army private, has been charge with leaking the documents, and has been held in solitary confinement ever since. There has been a remarkable lack of transparency
in this case, and many have expressed concerns about the future of Mr. Manning, There has been no indication of any action taken against those responsible for allowing a low level member of the military such unlimited access to important classified material of this kind, which is the heart of the matter.
Thanks to digital technology, anyone can send a huge amount of material around the world in a very short period of time, so it would seem prudent to limit such access to only those with appropriate clearance. Furthermore, America's partners are dismayed that the government can be so sloppy as to allow one individual such unlimited access. and it will take time for the State Department to regain their confidence. Foreign partners will be a lot more careful in what they reveal to their American colleagues.
Meanwhile, Mr. Assange has done his best to create public support for his plight by portraying himself as a martyr to the cause of a free internet. In the process, he has had some falling outs with his former
colleagues at Wikileaks, who find him something of a glory hog, and clearly feel the focus should be
on the issue of internet freedom, and not Mr. Assange himself. This became difficult when Mr. Assange
found himself the subject of an investigation by the Swedish police on sexual assault charges stemming from two incidents during his residence in Sweden, where internet freedom is a cause celebre, and Mr. Assange something of a celebrity.
Mr. Assange's subsequent flight to England is a matter of record, as are the Swedish government's attempts to extradite him to be interrogated on the sexual assault charges. Mr. Assange claimed that the Swedes were acting on behalf of the American government, and feared that, once he was in Swedish custody, that they would extradite him to the United States to face criminal prosecution for the Wikileaks case. This argument seemed to have some validity; Mr. Assange has never been charged
with any crime in Sweden, and, upon closer inspection, the alleged sexual assaults would not be
categorized as crimes in nearly any other country in the world other than Sweden. While sexual assault is a serious matter, it is also worth noting that Sweden was on the verge of criminalizing looking at a woman as a sexual object in the 1980s. Furthermore, there have been some cases of high level Swedish tax evaders residing publicly in England without fear of extradition. And, of course, there
is the famous case of the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, whom the British refused to extradite to Spain on the request of Spanish prosector Balthazar Garzon for prosecution for crimes against humanity.
So, when the British courts decided that Mr. Assange could, in fact, be extradited to Sweden, Mr.
Assange sought and received diplomatic refuge at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. President
Correa of Ecuador explained that he had invited the Swedes to conduct their interrogation of Mr.
Assange at the embassy, and they refused. As a result, President Correa decided they had a hidden
agenda, and gave Mr. Assange political asylum. The political blunder committed by British Foreign
Secretary William Hague when he then threatened to invade the embassy to seize Mr. Assange is
a matter of record. Clearly, he had not anticipated the strong response from a united South American
community, who no longer wish to be treated liked banana republics, and who have certainly not forgotten The Falklands War.
Regardless of what one thinks of Mr. Assange, the continued denials by both the Swedes and the
Brits that this is not all about Wikileaks ring pretty hollow these days. As was the case with Pussy Riot,
the powers-that-be have seriously underestimated the power of the internet, and are making things worse for themselves by trying to publicly punish representatives of the internet avant-garde for the crime of public embarrassment. As the great Marshall McLuhan presciently said," The medium is the message," and, as the authoritarian rulers deposed during the Arab Spring discovered, trying to control the internet is like trying to stop the ocean with your hands. However, as we have seen, the powers-that-be are not ready to give up their efforts.
What this means for freedom of expression and democracy in the developing world will be explored in future blogs.
A luta continua!
Sunday, February 19, 2012
TED's DIGITAL JUNGLE -21ST CENTURY CONTENT REQUIRES 21 ST CENTURY FORM
21st CENTURY CONTENT REQUIRES 21ST CENTURY FORM
TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE#7
Have not updated blog in a while, since we have been very busy developing new formats for our Congolese programming. Am happy to say that the result, MONUC REALITES, a weekly magainze show, is now up and running, and has been a hit, both with the Congolese as well as our supervisors. ( see www.YouTube.com/MONUCVIDEO )
The challenge was common enough- – how to put accross the MONUC message to the Congolese TV audience – but our solution has been a radical one. No longer are we employing a style that mimics what documentary scholar Patricia Aufderheide rather devastatingly terms:” regular documentary – a film with sonorous, “voice-of-God” narration, an analytical argument rather than a story with characters, head shots of experts, leavened with a few people-on-the-street interviews, stock images that illustrate the narrator’s point( often called “b-roll” in broadcasting, perhaps a little educational animation and dignified music.” ( DOCUMENTARY FILM -A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION, p. 10)
This is the kind of “educational” film that became in vogue during World War II, thanks to John Grierson and the March of Time. and has been popular in institutional circles ever since. One of the major attractions of this approach is that it allows the bosses to closely scrutinize the text of the narration, and thereby control the content.
Or so they thought. I became painfully aware of the flaw in this premise some 30 years ago when some fellow screenwriters did a series of tests and discovered that many spectators paid no attention to the words being spoken, and were actually more influenced by the quality of the unseen voice delivering the lines. (Chalk up another victory for Marshall MacLuhan!) Of course, the music and the visual package were also important.
It never ceases to amaze me how many so-called media professionals appear to be oblivious to these realities – the most recent example being the esteemed former Vice-President’s exercise in didacticism which actually won him a Nobel Prize. While I have been preaching everything he said ( and a lot more!) for the past 35 years myself, I was stunned at the low level of media awareness displayed in the final product. ( and, as a Swede, I still cannot understand how they can give a Nobel Prize to a movie!)
Anyway, it took us a few months here to develop our new format. The goals was to create a vehicle which could relay reportages from the front lines in the eastern Congo to the entire country. The first task was helping our bosses to understand the technical realites of the Congo – bandwidth being what it is here, we cannot adhere to the 24 hour news cycle. Futhermore, getting around this huge country can be very time-consuming, particularly when covering events in remote areas. of which there are many.
Finally, we agreed on a magazine-style format inspired by CNN BACK STORY, with reportages from reporters on location introduced by an in-studio presenter. Our expert graphics designer provided a very cool look for the program, and we managed to find several excellent Congolese on-camera reporters to work both in the field and in the studio,
The ultimate compliment has come from the Congolese broadcasters, who air MONUC REALITES now in prime time, and we have received a lot of positive feedback. My favorite, perhaps, came from a Congolese cameraman who asked one of our Congolese cameramen how many cameras we used to shoot the program.
(The secret answer: one!)
The bottom line is that we are now producing what I would call ” good propaganda ” – we are putting out a worthy message, but in a form that the intended audience finds pleasing, and therefore wants to see,
©2011 Ted’s Digital Jungle
TED's DIGITAL JUNGLE - JACK OF ALL TRADES, MASTERS OR NONE
Ted’s Digital Jungle
The Revolution That is Not Being
Televised
JACK OF ALL TRADES, MASTERS OF NONE –
OR ONE MAN BANDS
For lovers of the auteur theory,
digital video must be the answer to their prayers. Now, at last, a
filmmaker can control his ( or her)own work from first draft script
to final cut. However, in my view, this is a very mixed blessing.
While it is wonderful that virtually
anyone with access to a digital camera and a computerized editing
system can make a film which can be projected on a large screen ( a
big kick for me!). one cannot assume that the works produced will be
worth watching.
My years of experience in film have
television have taught me one thing: everyone needs an editor ready
to tell you to “kill your darlings”, as they used to say in
Hollywood.
Anyone who has ever tried to make a
film knows how easy it is to fall in love with a shot or an idea, and
how difficult it canbe later in the editing suite to admit that the
shot or scene does not work at all.
The bottom line: any writer, no matter
how great, needs an editor, and so do filmmakers.
Like traditional filmmakers, I divide
production into three phases – pre-production, production and
post-production – or writing, directing and editing. While I know
there are young Mozarts out there who can compose masterpieces on the
fly, the rest of us have to slog through these three phases and hope
something worthwhile results. And personally, I have found that the
results are best when there are at least one strong mind in charge of
each phase – and that those 3 minds do not all belong to the same
person. ( I know what you’re thinking, but even Orson Welles,
Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini, et omnes, had collaborators!)
Even as a screenwriter, I always
preferred to work in a team in which one person was the creator and
the other was the editor. If I was the one coming up with ideas, then
I was able to be completely right-brained and uninhibited, and let my
partner be the left-brained wet blanket. Many great Hollywood
scriptwriters worked in teams – Billy Wilder, the Epstein brothers
and many others – and they did so for a reason.
Nowadays, of course, it is all too easy
for a digital filmmaker to bypass the writing phase altogether, but
this is a recipe for disaster. Like trying to build a house without a
blueprint,
As the immortal Akira Kurosawa said,”
It is possible to make a good movie from a good script, but it is
impossible to make a good movie from a bad script..”
It goes without saying, of course, that
,without any script at all , a train wreck is all but guaranteed.
The bottom line is that great films
cannot be made by one-man ( or one-woman!) bands, and that film
remains a collaborative medium, even in the Digital Age.
As my great directing teacher Janos
Hersko from Stockholm’s Dramatiska Institutet said when asked about
the difference between a painter and filmmaker:” When you are a
painter, you get an idea and put it on canvas. When you are a
filmmaker, you get an idea and then you have to get 50 idiots who
don’t give a damn to do it for you..”
SOME NOTES ON DIGITAL INTERVIEW
TECHNIQUE
We have recently been working on an
oral history of the MONUC mission, which is about to become 10 years
old. Much running around trying to make appointments with busy
people, but things have gone surprisingly well, and now we have
completed our principal shooting, with only a few pick-ups remaining.
We have also been editing as we shot, and I wrote a fairly structured
treatment before we started, so we had a pretty good idea of what we
wanted – or needed – from each interviewee.
However, this begs the question`; how
much should one try to control the interviewee in an attempt to get
the subject to say what you want – or in a way one wants?
A lot depends on the subjects.
In this case, we are talking about
knowledgeable professionals with whom we already have some rapport.
Generally, they want to see the questions of time, since they want to
be prepared. This is fine with me, since the last thing we want to do
is ambush anyone with surprise questions. However, there is also the
question of what constitutes a good delivery.
Some people, like Barack Obama, are
naturally gifted speakers who can talk about just about anything and
make it sound interesting and spontaneous. And there are others who
are not .
For television professionals, the
latter are the challenge, of course. Getting people to relax in front
of the camera is easier said than done, especially if the subjects
have some knowledge of the medium. In the proverbial journalistic
hatchet job, a skilled television professional can make virtually
anyone look bad. FOX NEWS is a blaring case in point. ( or, as the
great Swedish playwright August Strindberg once said: ” Be careful
what you do to me – you may be in my next play!”)
So , the first thing is to establish
trust. This is an art, and not easily taught. Some people just
inspire more trust in others. However, clearly one has to be both
relaxed and professional,as well as courteous while demonstrating a
gentle mastery of the entire situation. The sound, the lighting,
the composition, and some direction regarding appearance and movement
work wonders. Ideally, the interviewee should feel he or she is in
the capable hands of well-intentioned professionals, and should not
be afraid to ask questions regarding how his or her performance might
be improved.
The second step is to get the person
talking, and then to keep the camera running until they finish. Most
people will need to warm up a bit before they hit their stride, and
then the pearls begin to emerge. I try to avoid interrupting people
unless there is some technical disaster – and even then, I will
generally let the subject decide to cut.
I suppose my thinking here is a bit
influenced by own experience of writing and, later, teaching writing.
As most writers know, there is no magic formula for writing. The
trick is simply to start writing, and then stick with it until
something good happens.
I find the same is true with speech.
Once people get started, they end up saying all sorts of interesting
things – a fact well known by police forces around the world (
which is why lawyers advise their clients to say nothing in trails
and depositions- that seemingly harmless small talk can open the
door to all sorts of unpleasantries!)
For this reason, I try to avoid overly
clever questions, and instead prefer to stick to open-ended humble
queries asking the subject to enlighten us about his or her field of
expertise. People are going to say what they want anyway, and nobody
likes clever questions that require too much thought.
From my teaching experience, I know
students hate quizzes, and I think the same is true of most people. (
I remember substitute teaching a literary history class for a
colleague who had broken his league. When I told the students what
had happened to the unfortunate man, and said that he would not be
back for the rest of the term, they applauded! I was shocked, and
then learned that my colleague had a habit of giving quizzes on
minutiae in the stories the students had read)
Similarly, I don’t know of anyone who
enjoys being deposed in a civil suit, or , worse,being cross-examined
in a criminal case. I have only had the first experience, thank God,
and can only say it is an exhausting experience. (When you like
talking as much as I do, it is very hard keeping your mouth shut, but
that is what you have to do in a deposition)
For me, the best thing is to let the
subject get on a roll, and then ask some follow-up questions. in the
process, hopefully he or she will say something you can use in a
natural, spontaneous fashion.
This approach may burn a lot of tape,
but these days, tape is just about the cheapest part of the
production. When I was studying film directing in the early 80s at
Sweden’s Dramatiska Institutet, it was just the opposite – we had
the most incredible equipment imaginable in the Swedish Film
Institute studios, but could barely afford any film!
We were hardly alone in this dilemma –
the same was true in Eastern Europe, where most of our teachers had
learned their craft. The result was that our productions tended to be
extremely well-planned and organized, with as little as possible left
to chance. Under these conditions, it was pretty difficult to think
about doing real documentaries, with shooting ratios of 20:1 or more
– something like Marcel Ophuls’ classic THE SORROW AND THE PITY
must have cost a fortune!
Nowadays, however, great documentarians
like the Australian Dennis O’Rourke can spend months getting people
to reveal themselves talking to the camera in films like CUNNAMULLA,
and the results are extraordinary. I had the good fortunate to meet
Dennis in New York when CUNNAMULLA was shown at the Margaret Mead
Festival; he explained his technique was simply to spend time with
people, and then tape his chats with them. He does his own
camerawork, so essentially the films are dialogues with the subjects
as they describe their lives. Dennis does not pretend to be
invisible, but tries to be as. unobtrusive as possible. He ends up
with a lot of material, of course, which he then looks at and makes a
preliminary edit, saving the material he likes on external hard
drives.
Then he goes on to make the final cut.
Needless to say, without digital
technology and the liberation from the shackles of Eastman Kodak,
none of this would be possible!
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©2011 Ted’s Digital Jungle
Friday, February 3, 2012
TED's DIGITAL JUNGLE - INFORMED CONSENT- A HOT POLITICAL POTATO
INFORMED CONSENT , A VERY HOT POLITICAL POTATO!
It is no secret that Sexual Violence here in the DRC is a huge problem ‚along with a host of others. From a Multimedia perspective, the subject raises some troubling issues, and we had a first-hand encounter with one a few weeks ago.
The American filmmaker Lisa Jackson, who made a film about rape in the DRC a few years o ago ( one none of us here has seen, since no one seems to have a copy, even though the production was made with MONUC support and was shown to the Security Council in NYC, was also on HBO) returned to ostensibly screen her film in the home villages of some of her victims.
Since Ms. Jackson was making no effort to cover the faces of the victims, this was an immediate problem for us, since our Human Rights Division has a policy of not showing rape victims' faces images available for public viewing, and the very idea of showing the film in the victims' home villages, where the perpetrators might be still living, seemed to be to be both reckless and totally irresponsible.
Of course, we support freedom of the press, but in this case Ms. Jackson was again asking for our assistance. The fact that she had not gone through proper channels in doing so didn't help her case, as well as the fact that she seemed to be using the screenings to surreptitiously be shooting a sequel didn' t help either.
After all, the DRC is a sovereign nation, and we are but invited guests here; we certainly do not want to be supporting an activity that would be illegal in most countries we
could think of, so we withdrew our support as soon as we found out what was going on.
Ms. Jackson promptly left the country, with loud proclamations ( having not seen her film, I cannot comment on it, but she does a very good job of promoting herself) that she would return to Kinshasa to show her film to the National Aseembly and on a national TV channel. I would pay good money to see that encounter, since her most recent visit aroused the ire of one of the DRC' s largest Human Rights organizations, who accused
her of treating the rape victims like they were animals in a zoo.
From what I have seen of Ms. Jackson' s blog, I have to agree with them.
Defenders of Ms. Jackson say that she has the victims' written consent, but our Human Rights Division would argue that there is a big difference between consent‚and informed consent.
In other words, Individuals might agree to allow their faces shown, but not be aware of the potential consequences; furthermore, here in the DRC, there are many desperate people who would agree to anything under the sun for a suitable fee.
Written consent, has no validity , per se.
But you are denying the victims the right to bear witness!‚Ms. Jackson's defenders then protest, ignoring the fact that the victims can bear witness on camera, but not for commercial distribution,. And have done so on occasions when we could guarantee that the material would only be shown internally.
Interestingly enough, many of these victims said the only thing that could help them would be peace and the elimination of the armed groups who were preying upon them. And a surprising number of these victims of sexual violence were men, a fact which undermines the gender-based advocacy of Ms. Jackson and others such as Eve Ensler.
Ms. Jackson claims that measures were taken to provide funds for re-location of victims if they were subsequently in danger, but that is pretty callous coming from someone who lives in New York, because we know the victims will not be coming to New York to stay with her. And anyone who knows anything about Third World village life knows the home village and their families are the world for these woman, and that once they leave, they have little or nothing.
Writing as a filmmaker, I think no work of art, however, spectacular or importat, can justify putting lives in danger, so I find Ms. Jackson's actions both irresponsible and reckless.
She might then reply she is an advocate, which presumably would provide her with special license, but then I would reply that the notorious King Leopold of Belgium also claimed to be an advocate for the people of the Congo, and was responsible for much of this country's tragic history,
Self-proclaimed advocacy might play well in some circles, but is no excuse for inhumane exploitation of fellow humans, no matter where they are. And exploitation is what we are talking about, since Ms. Jackson has built her career on this one production, and she seems to enjoy the festival circuit.
What goes around comes around ‚and I don't expect to see her here again .
Blogroll
o Claudia Abate <http://www.postconflictdev.org>
o Fred <http://fredalways.blogspot.com>
o Ian Wiliams <http://www.deadlinepundit.>
o Iara Lee <http://www.caipirinha.com>
o MONUCVIDEO <http://www.YouTube.com/MONUCVIDEO>
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TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE -TOWARDS A DEFINITION OF DOCUMENTARY FILM
TOWARDS A DEFINITION OF DOCUMENTARY FILM
While documentary film is a universally recognized cinematic form, an agreement on exactly what is, and what is not , a documentary film has been elusive throughout the course of cinematic scholarship from the early 20^th century to the present day. Indeed, the definition has often been the subject of heated controversy, and remains so today.
For example, the noted American cinematic scholar Bill Nichols posits that documentary film is a representation of reality`‚ as the title of his major work on documentaries ( REPRESENTING REALITY) would indicate.
However, one of the problems inherent in Mr. Nichols' definition is that the definition of reality itself has been a classic conundrum for philosophers since ancient times, and has yet to be resolved. And in the cinematic world, the issue of accurate portrayal of reality has been a political hot potato since the days of Dziga Vertov and Sergei Eisenstein.
Perhaps the great Federico Fellini had the answer when he was castigated by ideologues for having abandoned the principles of Neorealism in films like LA STRADA and LA DOLCE VITA ( not to mention 8 1/2 !) . Mr. Fellini simply said he was showing other realities in these films, and
they were real enough to him ‚ e basta`!
Finis origine pendet, as the Romans used to say ; the end depends upon the beginning . Most film historians would categorize the early works of the French Lumiere Brothers as documentary‚ since they were motion picture images of daily life at the time - workers leaving a factory, a train arriving at a station, soldiers on military drills ; there has never been any suggestion that the Lumiere Brothers staged any of these events for the camera. ( for the purpose of this discussion, we shall ignore the few comic skits they did which were obviously directed)
In short, there appears to be a critical consensus that the Lumiere Brothers 'work was puredocumentary, and that the Lumiere Brothers were the first documentary filmmakers.
The American critic James Monaco went a step further, using the Lumiere Brothers'films as an example of Cinematic Realism, contrasting their films with the films of their French contemporary Georges Melies, whose work he defined as Expressionist.
According to Monaco, Cinematic Realism meant that all creative expression was in front of the camera, and that camerawork was as unobtrusive as possible, with the absence of special effects or the kind of cinematic trickery Melies was famous for.
Cinematic Expressionism, therefore, gave free license to image manipulation behind the camera.
Monaco then proposed that all subsequent cinematic work would fall into one of these two stylistic categories. However intriguing, this Theory does not resolve the issue of a definition of documentary, since it is entirely possible to conceive of a documentary that is realist in subject but expressionist in execution!
Writing as a filmmaker myself, I would suggest that an operational definition of documentary film is more useful than any definition based on content . In other words, the key is the process rather than the end product.
Accordingly, I would like to propose the following, with apologies to my friends at DOGME:
1) A DOCUMENTARY CANNOT CONTAIN STAGED OR RE-CREATED MATERIAL:
This means, for example, that all those wonderful historical documentaries done by the BBC et al, are not documentaries if they have actors playing the roles of historical figures; they may be excellent /docudramas, /but they are not documentaries.
This is critical, since any clever filmmaker can easily re-create an event which completely misrepresents what actually happened. A mountain-climbing film a friend once did for National Geographic comes to mind; in the film , the heroic mountain climber proved incapable of conquering the intended peak in the Himalayas, so a more attainable summit in Scotland was found which he could then annoint with the
American flag while beating his chest and proclaiming his victory over mother nature.
Similarly, an otherwise excellent film like Errol Morris 'THE THIN BLUE
LINE is also not a documentary, since it employs the device of re-created events. This unfortunately puts it in the category of TV shows like COPS - or what a friend of mine from Miramax once described to me as reality-based programming.
I prefer the term /reality-based programming to describe all the reality-based shows that are so popular on television, like SURVIVOR, etc, since they are all unabashedly staged, for maximum impact, to the term docu-soaps,which I find a bit misleading.
Now I know some documentary historians are going to come at me with the example of the legendary Robert Flaherty, who is alleged to have staged scenes in NANOOK OF THE NORTH; if this is indeed true, then I would be the first to admit that Flaherty crossed the line.
But since he poor man was trying to make a pioneering film in the Arctic with the most ancient equipment imaginable, so I would grant him a lot more poetic licence than I would to some contemporary shooting in Sony HD with the latest in Arctic gear, etc!
And, as Ingmar Bergman once said, paraphrasing T.S. Eliot: The great artist does not borrow ‚he steals!
A more controversial historical example is presented by Leni Riefenstahl's TRIUMPH OF THE WILL, which, politics aside, is a masterpiece of technical perfection. However, close inspection of the production reveals a good deal was, in fact, staged for the camera; indeed, a case could be made that the entire rally at Nuremberg was staged for Ms. Riefenstahl' s benefit, which would make the film a huge industrial, if not one of the biggest commercials ever made.
And since we now know that she shot the whole event the year before in a dress rehearsal, I certainly would not call it a documentary.
( in l fairness to Ms. Riefenstahl, however, I think her magnificent film on the Berlin Olympics certainly passes the test, and is an extraordinary documentary. One can hardly blame her for having so many cameras and such a crew of masterful cameramen and technicians!)
2) CINEMA VERITE IS AN IMPOSSIBLE IDEAL:
Since I cut my cinematic teeth working as an assistant cameraman with some of the great practitioners of cinema verite in New York City , I find this a bit difficult to write, but the bottom line is the presence of cameras affects behaviour in human beings around the world.
And not just in humans ; we did a program on gorillas in Virunga Park in the DRC Congo a few years ago, and my cameramen told me that he thought the gorillas were actually posing for the camera! Skeptics should check out Barbet Schroder's KOKO THE TALKING GORILLA these animals are not as dumb as some people think
New camera technology is, of course, making the cameras smaller and quieter all the time; the new Canon is truly amazing in this regard ‚ and what can one say about the I-Phone 4S ??
We have come a long way since the 16 mm Eclairs ,Arriflexes, Auricons and Nagras that I started with 40 years ago. Obviously, we are lot more invisible than we used to be ‚ but unless we are working with hidden surveillance cameras, our own presence is still
a huge factor, and we can never be “flies on the wall.”
Nontheless, I still love watching documentaries, and I love making them.
Blogroll
o Claudia Abate <http://www.postconflictdev.org>
o Fred <http://fredalways.blogspot.com>
o Ian Wiliams <http://www.deadlinepundit.>
o Iara Lee <http://www.caipirinha.com>
o MONUCVIDEO <http://www.YouTube.com/MONUCVIDEO>
o MONUCVIDEO <http://www.facebook.com/MONUCVIDEO>
o MONUSCOVIDEO <http://www.YouTube.com/MONUSCOVIDEO>
o MONUSCOVIDEO <http://www.Facebook.com/MONUSCOVIDEO>
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FORM VS. CONTENT
FORM VS. CONTENT
When I worked as an adjunct professor of English and Speech at New
York's Fashion Institute of Technology a decade ago, I always used to
end the term with a written debate on form vs. content in media. The
class was divided into two teams, and each student could his or her own
media - film, theatre, print, music, fashion, architecture, design,
fragrance, sex, politics, etc.
There were no right or wrong answers ; the whole point was to help the
students learn how to argue a position.
Conventional wisdom supported content, but the FIT students proved hip
enough to understand the big picture. After all, branding is a
phenomenon that began in the fashion industry. and most of these
students knew how much money is spent every year to create brand
awareness. And some students even knew that Burberry had created a line
of baby clothes to addict the defenseless toddlers to Burberry plaid.
Likewise, these students knew that the fragrance industry spends more on
designing bottles with sex appeal and ads that share the fantasy than it
does on actually developing the contents of the bottle ‚ the fragrance
itself.
Many of my students were East Asian, and East Asian culture has always
valued process as much as actual product. In other words, the way you do
something is just as important as what you actually do. Of course, this
is the diametric opposite of the popular American ideals of winning
is not everything, its the only thing, nice guys finish last, and never
give a sucker an even break ( thank you WC Fields!)
However, there are other American cultures with affinity for these Asian
values. I remember interviewing representatives of 10 different Native
American nations in Stockholm, Sweden, as a correspondent for Rolling
Stone during the first UN Conference on the Human Environment in 1972.
Their message: we are all connected by the air we breathe.
And when I asked David Monangaye, Spiritual Leader of the Hopi
Nation,and the American equivalent of the Dalai Lama, why he had come to
to Stockholm, he answered: To teach the White Man how to live with the
earth..
This was a transformational experience for me, to say the least, and
provided me with both a spiritual modus operandi and a polar star which
has served me ever since.
Now, almost 40 years later, I can look back and say there has been some
progress, There are, of course, a lot of people who are now saying the
world is coming to an end in 2012, but to them I say that I have bene
expecting the world to come to an end in one way or another since the
late sixties, and , lo and behold, we are still here ( at least I think we are!)
And I do believe the words of a German theatrical performer who used to
do a play for children about the history of the world which ended with
him giving the kids seeds and encouraging them to go out and plants
trees. When I asked him what if the world came to an end, he answered,
without missing a beat:No big deal. As long as we do our best in this
lifetime, the world will be better the next time around.‚
So, to all my faithful readers, best wishes for a Happy, Healthy and
Safe 2012 and Year of the Dragon
Blogroll
o Claudia Abate <http://www.postconflictdev.org>
o Fred <http://fredalways.blogspot.com>
o Ian Wiliams <http://www.deadlinepundit.>
o Iara Lee <http://www.caipirinha.com>
o MONUCVIDEO <http://www.YouTube.com/MONUCVIDEO>
o MONUCVIDEO <http://www.facebook.com/MONUCVIDEO>
o MONUSCOVIDEO <http://www.YouTube.com/MONUSCOVIDEO>
o MONUSCOVIDEO <http://www.Facebook.com/MONUSCOVIDEO>
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TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE #1
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