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For the past several years I have been working with Deep Dish
Television to collaborate with the Independent Media Centers, Free
Speech TV, Pacifica radio producers, and local and global movements
for justice and democracy. We have tried to provide information
and creative response to events and situations here in the United
States and around the world.
During the U.S. presidential conventions of 2000 we initiated
live daily broadcasts via satellite and internet to community radio
and PEG (public, educational and government) cable television stations.
We provided twenty hours of live up-to-the-minute news available
in a way never before: news that was not funded and/or produced
by transnational corporations. The format was Democracy Now!
A popular daily program on Pacifica network, hosted by Amy Goodman
and Juan Gonzalez, now extended to television, through a network
of several hundred community stations built up over the years by
Deep Dish Television and the Net, especially in collaboration with
the Independent Media Center movement. (http://www.indymedia.org)
We had planned to initiate an on-going Democracy Now! series
in 2002, when we had raised enough money. Our first money came in
August 2001 and was $30,000 from the Threshold Foundation. We put
it in the bank and planned to raise at least $400,000 more before
we started. After September 11, we decided to use those first funds
to begin right away with breaking news from Ground Zero. $30,000
is a tiny amount to launch a daily national news service. We trusted
that people would value this service in a time of tragedy and terror
and that this would ensure that the program would continue once
it got started.
Operating out of Down Town Community Television (DCTV) within
the exclusion zone in Lower Manhattan, in the midst of the dust
and rubble from the tragedy, we were able to provide a two hour
daily program bringing the voices and images of the tragedy to a
growing audience. The U.S. public needed to get beyond the sentimental
and the maudlin, beyond the harsh battle cries, jingoism and chauvinism
of commercial television. We have been able to bring historians,
artists, peace activists, families of victims, muckrakers, visionaries,
risk-takers, academics and "just folks". In short, a wide variety
of opinion and commentary has been brought to bear on this on-going
global crisis. For the first time in U.S. history, there is an authentic
national live progressive television network, reaching a potential
audience of 30 million. Letters, phone calls, and e-mails of appreciation
have proven the importance of this initiative.
This project has been possible because of the tactical media collaborative
infrastructure which has been built up over the years:
- the vital local radio community (licensed and unlicensed
stations)
- the embattled but surviving Pacifica Foundation's
national network of radio stations in five major population
centers
- the network of community television stations (PEG)
- video collectives such as Paper Tiger, Big Noise Films, Whispered
Media, Headwaters Action Video Collective, Sleeping Giant Video,
Video Active the independent media centers (IMCs/http://www.indymedia.org)
founded in Seattle in Oct 1999, now in over eighty locations
world wide
- legions of progressive computer code writers and
"hackers"
- the research, data collection and outreach of media
critics such as Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (http://www.fair.org)
and Media Channel (http://www.mediachannel.org)
- the non-commercial
DBS channels, such as Free Speech Channel, mandated through
activist organizing (www.freespeech.org)
These loosely woven tactical elements depend on a variety of technologies
which have made inter-connection and multi-media collaboration possible:
first of all, the Internet, which, besides its usual function for
list serves, research and email, can transmit packets of audio and
video to be broadcast in a matter of minutes; but also powerful
portable machines: cell phones which can provide up-to-the-minute
information from international sources, lap tops which can host
entire editing studios, small still and video cameras with newly
improved resolution, search engines which instantly sift through
decades of facts, powerful radio stations the size of a walkman
receiver, and "air" ports which can bring bandwidth to entire neighborhoods
and empower collaborative offices and research centers.
For the most part we are using these
electronic toolsoriginally developed for corporate mass marketsto fight capitalism. These tools are made in repressive and polluted
factories by virtual slaves of global capital.
Is another world possible? Consumer electronic machines are popular
because of their active inter-active connective features, creative
software and handy down-home applications, much of it designed in
collaborative workshops. The internet itself, despite its military
origins, developed in an atmosphere of collegial sharing and collaboration.
The ultimate challenge will be to make a world where the industrial
production sites are as collaborative and open, as dynamic and aware,
as creative and consensual as our own privileged exchanges. That
is what democracy will look like.
Sites:
http://www.democracynow.org
www.indymedia.org
http://www.papertiger.org
http://www.mediachannel.org
http://www.alliancecm.org
http://www.fair.org
http://www.crisinfo.org/live/index.php
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