diarRHETORICS.com - stream of conscious

November 10, 2008

Obama - We the People - social media social sculpture - involving artist in imagining the future together, the future is watching and waiting for us

We the People - social media social sculpture - involving artist in the imagining the future together, the future is watching and waiting for us

excerpt from note to Obama Transition team http://change.gov/page/s/contact

“ We are to guard against ourselves; not against ourselves as we are, but as we may be; for who can imagine what we may become under circumstances not now imaginable - Thomas Jefferson to Jedidiah Morse 1822 ” more Thomas Jefferson food for thought quotes

Obama needs to engage we the people if we are going to have a creative and humane society we artist need to be part of the conversation along with other stake holders in imagining the future - both on and off line - especially now that the government trust and economic melt down has created an even larger gap between rich and poor between the haves and the have nots - we need to energize individuals to feel like they are important and can do something in their/our own way in our/their own back yards too, to make a difference and one way is to have conversations with we the people and for we the people to do our part for the future we have to be fearless and stop pretending we are zombies and going along to get along even though we know its wrong - we have socially meaningful dialogs between ourselves and our leaders who are us about what concerns us and not just talk and complain but do something about it and flap our wings and change the direction or create a storm but put into action things which are not harmful to each other and to our planet our home - we have to be better guests - the future is watching and waiting for us

food for thought
geo geller
geo@InsutlantForHire.com
a consultant gets paid and tells you what you want to hear an insultant doesn’t get paid and tells you the truth

October 2, 2008

commentary: Politics of Poverty, who res-skews the rescueeeer

 don’t you just love it - i call it the politics of poverty - the poor have to bail out the rich - and the guy who ran one of the largest brooookerages is the guy who wanted 700 billion to play with no strings attached (3 page proposal) to bail out his cronies - the latest sweetened bailout is now 450 pages pure electioneering spin for the public soap opera - these guys in congress and big business and media are poor looooosers who want a bail out or else they will take the rest of us with them on their bumpy road to humpty dumpty meltdown land anyway - and just to refresh your memory these were the very same guys a few years ago who made it hard for the working folks to file for bankruptcy - there is more to this then meets the eye and why is this happening around election time i ask myself in you -  so who res-skews the rescueeeer

on the Politics of Poverty - there is a reason why there is so much poverty - “We the People” who make up this IdiotCracy/DemoCracy/Media-oh-Cracy on the backs of  the poor people the workers, the soldiers, the drones - we are like toilet paper - they use us up and throw us away - look at the people coming back from wars - the poor don’t want to be poor they not lazy they are some of the hardest workers around - they often work themselves to death and when i lived in brasil in 1992 people would work hard and at the end of the day would still not have made enough to feed their families - and with the price of this manufactured chaos of oil, food prices, banking meltdown its the poor around the world who feel it the most - this 700 billion buy out is also on the backs of the poor and the middle class if you haven’t figured out who the tax payers are - but the point is somebody benefits from poverty, war, violence, fear and its not “We the People” - it is said that the trade of kings was in war and propaganda - we have to stop pretending we are zombies and stop going along to get along -  and flap our mouths and wings and say what we know in our hearts - the power of one person is more then the power of none -

Thomas Jefferson knew very well that this was going to happen and wrote and spoke about it even on his death bed - he worried for us the children of the future

” We are to guard against ourselves; not against ourselves as we are, but as we may be; for who can imagine what we may become under circumstances not now imaginable - Thomas Jefferson to Jedidiah Morse 1822 ”

“I will not believe our labors are lost. I shall not die without a hope that light and liberty are on steady advance.” –Thomas Jefferson to John Adams, 1821

“We are bound, you, I, and every one to make common cause e even with error itself, to maintain the common right of freedom of conscience,” Thomas Jefferson to Edward Dowse, 1803

more food for thought from Thomas Jefferson quotes
http://emperorsnewclothesproductions.com/jefferson/

July 21, 2008

commentary: shelly palmer’s - end of broadcast tv

commentary: shelly palmer end of broadcast tv

hmmm shelly - i think we have to ask ourselves also who is wearing the emperor’s new clothes? - i think the traditional media - tv broadcasting world and governements and biz included have been believing in their own propaganda for so long they can’t believe it ain’t reality and now with the internet and broadband they don’t know what to do - today i read the outrageous amounts the media is getting from the election process its not a bottom line affair - we are re-inventing ourselves and we the people are taking back the future and what i think Thoreau said “we need to learn what we need to teach” and what i believe we need to learn from the so called social sculpture - social media movement is that the we vs them is fractured and that we are them and them are we and social media resonates with “we” as in we the people - the traditional goal keepers, gatekeepers goal is control while the “we” goal is engagement being involved, we the people get this intuitively - and so it’s not only the end of broadcast tv its traditional top down management by fear that is threatened

Winston Churchill once said, “The farther you look back, the further you can see into the future.”

“ We are to guard against ourselves; not against ourselves as we are, but as we may be; for who can imagine what we may become under circumstances not now imaginable - Thomas Jefferson to Jedidiah Morse 1822 ”

geo

June 25, 2008

Commentary: blogging revolution by Roy Greenslade - guardian.co.uk

Commentary: blogging revolution by Roy Greenslade - guardian.co.uk

my comment response to Roy Greenslade - Why journalists must learn the values of the blogging revolution as posted in the guardian online - June 25, 2008 9:02 AM - click here to go to article

i think of blogging as the power of one is more then the power of none and is more akin to the flapping of butterfly wings which can not only change the direction of a storm it can cause one - the media and journalism has lost a lot of credibility as Thomas Jefferson said he would rather see a strong press then a strong government -

blogging represents the voice of the people of the future of what one might call an internet nation that has no leaders, no borders, no gatekeepers not driven by top down management of fear or censorship or at least its one person who feels compelled to respond to something and say it to whom ever might stumble on it at any point in time -

i resonated with your secular priests commentary and how journalist and the media owners have not only “dominated the conversation” but i believe often help make up the so called news which has become the views and the conversation too -

we have a short attention deficiet dis-order for news because the media rarely keeps the conversation alive more then a short news cycle - plus we are addicted to fear and to the fear of not belonging - thanks to the media we get out daily dose - but i ask myself in you do we really know what is going on - do we trust the media to give us the info and let us decide - but what the media and government and our leaders don’t know is that we are only pretending we are zombies to go along to get along and others like bloggers for now are able to speak their thoughts - but we all know inside ourselves that we know we are not fools and fooled - we know that things are not what they appear to be -

or as i like to put it - we call this a democracy but maybe its more an idiotcracy where big biz is king, gov is queen and media and religion are the mistress - they go where ever power goes - but when i asked michael wolff of vanity fair what he thought of that he said they are all one and the same and as danny schechter in his film and book WMD - weapons of mass deception - are an indictment of media as co-conspirators in the war on iraq in the USA were i presently reside - but i wonder what people of the future will say about us too

to echo your quote below

“…journalists, especially print veterans like me, are so suspicious of bloggers. We have spent our lives dominating conversations. No, that’s wrong of course. We did not converse at all. We lectured. We provided the information that people feasted on in order to hold their own conversations.”

as a doc filmmaker doing a number of doc including on the media and propaganda called Who’s Wearing the Emperor’s New Clothes - if so many people believe in something how can it be wrong - i often ask people what is not propaganda? and as a doc filmmaker i also realize we all have a point of view and bloggers though part of the uncontrolled mass are more likely to represent at least their own point of view rather then the owner or the media’s or biz or gov or religions agenda

but actually while we are at it in our present oil flexing its muscles crisis - oil dictatorship world coup we are all hostage to big oil and the oil brokers who make the prices too - as long as we are dependent on one product to power our world we are all hostages even the holy idiotcracy has a big brother watching over them

food for thought

i think we need to re-invent ourselves sooner then later and maybe the blog-oh-sphere will lead us to the promised land of dreams

be well

geogeller
diarRHETORICS.com

April 14, 2008

commentary: food for imagination - Reporter Gives up Everything

excerpted from email i sent to some of my friends romans and filmmakers

Subject: knock knock food for your imagination -  Reporter Gives up Everything  to Tell a Story
yo and so

this piece of the rainbow of possibilities is from al tompkins of poynter institute - see below below
(editors note:) what got my attention is not only the compelling filmmakers doc and back story and passion but also maybe the lines between the line the short form docs including, aka journalism, and long form docs are being blurred as people who are interested in something lead the story line by following the story as it winds its ways down the yellow brick road of their imagination and dreams - and maybe what we really need to be thinking of is how we are going to experience the media in the future and to prepare to re-invent ourselves and the future and how we think and look at the future; where individuals are not limited by the sound bytes and spin of the gatekeepers as todays traditional news becomes more and more a media-ah-cracy and somebodies views and agenda - we need to take back the media take back the future or as danny schechter in his own private revolution and in my doc MyOwnPrivateRevolution and danny’s auto-me-oh-my-graphy that i shot maybe 15% of says “we have to put “me” back in Me-dia i think we need to put “WE” back in MEdia or WEdia and take out the Weeds out of wedia - oh well, i digress or regress or something like that - enough of my thoughts see for yourself what i mean and if you don’t see yourself or wish you saw yourself in the story below well read it again until you do (end note)

read below

be well

geo

 art of living is making your life an art

 art = caring for the imagination
from al tompkins

   TV Reporter Gives up Everything to Tell a Story

In these days of newsrooms “downsizing,” I hear so many journalists searching for a higher purpose. They wonder if the work they have done to this point has been worth the strains it puts on families and even their own health.

I want to tell you the story of TV reporter Barry Simmons (http://www.journalismfellowships.org/fellows/2006/spring/simmons.htm) , who gave up a solid steady job at a fine TV station, WTVF (http://www.newschannel5.com/)  in Nashville, Tenn., to chase a story that he felt the world needed to see and hear. Along the way, Simmons learned a lot about himself, about prioritizing and about the meaning of life.

This is how Simmons describes the story on the project’s Web site (http://www.sonsoflwala.com/) , which features a documentary trailer:

 Milton and Fred Ochieng’ are two brothers from Kenya whose village sent them to America to become doctors. But after losing both parents to AIDS they are left with a heartbreaking task: to return home and finish the health clinic their father started before getting sick. Unable to raise enough money on their own, the brothers are joined by students, politicians, and a rock band who launch a fund raising drive among young people across the United States. “Sons of Lwala” follows Milton and Fred on their incredible journey as they find a way, despite all odds, to open their village’s first hospital.

 I interviewed Simmons via e-mail to learn more about the project:

Tompkins: How did you meet Milton and Fred?

 Simmons:  I met Milton at a Nashville coffee shop while I was still a reporter for WTVF-TV. I thought at the time he’d make a great feature, but as I learned more about his story I realized I’d never be able to fit the scope of his journey into a minute-thirty package. It was during that initial meeting, actually, that I first considered leaving my job and seeing where the story might take the two of us.

 What was it about them that you saw as more than a daily story by a local TV station?

 Simmons:  I saw a lot of different textures in their story that you just can’t cover in a news piece. There was grief and pain, but yet there was also courage, nobility and even a little hilarity. The thing I love about this story is that it plays against the stereotype that all Africans are miserable back home and would jump at the chance to get out. Yet the Ochieng’ brothers  long for home, and even though they’ve been embraced by everyone from Sen. Bill Frist to Bruce Springsteen, at the end of the day they’d just as soon spend time with their family in Lwala. They understand community in a way that most Americans do not, and I think they offer us poignant models that we would do well to follow.

 The other reason I chose the documentary format is that it would allow for a larger audience to see it and afterward, perhaps, join Milton and Fred on their journey to provide alternative health care in Kenya. The documentary is, in essence, a fund-raising platform for the brothers to keep the clinic open. This was my contribution: I’m not a doctor, so I can’t heal their village directly; but I am a storyteller, and I can inspire people to donate enough money to hire doctors who can! We as journalists wield an extraordinary tool to motivate people — through words and pictures. As I turned 30 I realized that, come what may, I wanted my legacy as a reporter to be one of finding redemption in the mess and heartbreak of everyday life.

 How did you make the decision to quit your journalism job and follow this story? What did you envision it would all lead to?  Simmons:  I envisioned, quite rightly, that it would lead to poverty. Even with the partnership with my old station, I took a lot of expenses on the chin. What got me started, though, was a fellowship called the International Reporting Project (http://www.journalismfellowships.org/)  at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C., which allowed me to spend two months researching and then travel to Kenya for five weeks of filming. This fellowship made it a little easier to walk away from my job. But after the three-month fellowship was over, I was on my own. And once I returned to Nashville, I had to scramble to find money: applying for foundation grants, taking some freelance production work and dipping deeper into savings.

I’m still digging out of debt, but my primary concern is funding the clinic. Last week — after a year of planning — we hosted an extraordinary preview screening of the documentary attended by an audience of 1,800 that raised over $200,000 for the clinic. One day when my son asks me what I did with my early career, I’d much rather tell him that I served people in need than that I made a bunch of money and won awards. Of course, now that I think about it, I suppose it would be nice to be able to tell him both.

 It seems to be next to impossible to capture American attention about issues involving Africa unless a celebrity is involved. How is this story different? How has the public responded to this story?

 Simmons:  When you inject a celebrity into a story it tends to overshadow the real characters and shatter the intimacy of the true story. With Milton and Fred, I had all the material I needed to put the hook into audiences: these brothers are so funny, so endearing, so heart-breakingly earnest that you find yourself pulling for them throughout the film. People love stories about people, and I was careful to make this story about Milton and Fred –  not necessarily about Africa, poverty or global health. Those elements are certainly in the film, but only as they relate to the brothers and their journey. That’s how you make people care about these important issues: you place them within the context of a good story and the lives of characters that you come to love.

 Now that you have completed the documentary, what’s next? How do you get this story in front of a national or world audience?

 Simmons:  I’m looking for the next story. Until then, I’ll be taking the documentary to film festivals, beginning with the Nashville Film Festival
(http://www.nashvillefilmfestival.org/)

later this month. I’d love to find a distributor to share the story with a television audience. There’s also been considerable interest from about 20 colleges and universities to bring the film on campus to show students. I’ll begin manufacturing DVDs soon to sell on our Web site so we can begin a sort of grassroots distribution.

 What did you learn about yourself, about journalism and about humankind while working on this project?

 Simmons:  So many lessons learned, but one thing that stands out is the realization that humility is a prerequisite for service. It is one thing to sweep into a village, dig a well in the spirit of pity, fly out before you’ve even met anyone and say you’ve saved Africa. This doesn’t work: the continent is littered with the detritus of those efforts because no one bothered to actually ask these villagers what they wanted in the first place. What I observed — and what I tried to capture in this documentary — is the spirit of partnership between Lwala and those raising money in America. By allowing the villagers to build the clinic themselves and to decide how the money would be spent, the partners in the West empowered them to save themselves and retain the dignity they deserve as our brothers and sisters.
You can contact Barry Simmons at:  barry@sonsoflwala.com .

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