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'Vlog' Wild
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Last fall, approximately 2.5 million Americans watched Jon Stewart call Tucker Carlson a "dick"; not because CNN's Crossfire had such a large viewing audience (only a half million tuned into the show itself), but because they could access Stewart's uproarious appearance on a slew of videoblogs, or "vlogs."
In the world's other high-profile democratization, the global democratization of media, vlogs appear to be the next stage. Whether by adding amateur video to blogs or by making video the focus, vloggers open windows into worlds, establishing direct lines of communication with content at once compelling and completely unfiltered by mainstream media.
Vlogs enable viewers to glimpse a checkpoint in Israel's West Bank, view services at black churches of the Mississippi Delta in 1968, or watch Jesse Jackson and busloads of Ohioans rally on Capital Hill against the results of the 2004 presidential election.
Then there's the lighter fare: a vlogger's aesthetically pleasing walking tour of a city set to music, or highlights from the U.S. Army's 230th birthday celebration in Cambridge, MA. Vlogs can be raw or edited, synched to soundtracks or featuring a narrator, but by nature, they create far more stimulating narratives than standard forms of print media. And, for the first time, this footage is becoming widely accessible for audiences throughout the world, fostering participatory journalism.
Jay Dedman, a prominent vlogger who co-founded the Yahoo Video Blogging Group, called the addition of video to blogs an obvious move. "Videoblogging is getting popular because people want to communicate with each other through video," Dedman said, adding, "Many people don't want to write about their lives, they want to show their lives." The only question that remains is whether vlogs will become as powerful a tool as their blog counterparts, both for politicians seeking grass roots support and citizen journalists alike.
Aside from the aforementioned Jon Stewart/Tucker Carlson exchange, another episode from last December's Tsunami disaster shows what can happen when the right footage is loosed upon the blogosphere. According to Rich Karlgaard of Forbes.com, vlogs like Australia's Waveofdestruction.org received one million hits per week during the disaster from people who wanted to see firsthand accounts of the chaos wrought by tidal waves. In fact, mainstream television networks, unable to get their crews to the disaster sites, relied primarily upon the amateur videos -- shot by tourists and posted on vlogs -- for their own broadcasts.
Politicians have already begun to appreciate the broad reach and the minor league price tag of vlogs -- though Dedman believes they'll be more effective in local political races. "A local candidate who is not financially backed or recognized by the major parties can now get [the] word out through video," Dedman explained. "He or she can have a conversation with people through the videoblog. No longer will candidates need to rely on TV time."
Two local politicians who have recently started vlogging are Boston city councilor John Tobin and New York resident Andrew Rasiej, who is running for Public Advocate in New York City. Even if you have no idea who either candidate is, their vlogs will provide voters with a fast, effective way to engage in the political process. Watching Rasiej head down to New York's city hall on the subway to speak out at a city council hearing for the city to receive a wireless internet connection is far more compelling than simply reading a summary of the hearing's minutes. Not surprisingly, both politicians are proponents of free public wifi, which would greatly enhance a city's capability to access and download vlogs, not to mention enable more people to create vlogs of their own.
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