Two years ago, a YouTube member named MadV—who silently performs magic tricks while wearing a Guy Fawkes mask—put up a short, cryptic video. He held his hand up to the camera, showing what he'd written on his palm: "One World." Then he urged viewers to respond.
The video was just 41 seconds long, but it caught people's imagination. Within a few days, hundreds of YouTube users had posted videos—shot on webcams, usually in their bedrooms—displaying their own scrawled messages: "Don't quit!" "Tread gently." "Think." "Carpe diem." "Open your eyes." And my favorite, "They could be gone tomorrow!"
Soon, MadV had inspired 2,000 replies, making it the most-responded-to video in YouTube's history. MadV stitched them all together into a long, voiceless montage, and it's quite powerful. All these people from across the globe convey something incredibly evocative while remaining completely mute.
So here's my question: What exactly is this? What do you call MadV's project? It isn't quite a documentary; it isn't exactly a conversation or a commentary, either. It's some curious mongrel form. And it would have been inconceivable before the Internet and cheap webcams—prohibitively expensive and difficult to pull off.
This is what's so fascinating about online video culture. DIY tools for shooting, editing, and broadcasting video aren't just changing who uses the medium. They're changing how we use it. We're developing a new language of video—forms that let us say different things and maybe even think in different ways.
Here's another example: a new trend on Flickr called the long portrait. These are short videos in which the subjects simply stare into the camera. The first time you see one, it's unsettlingly intense. The subject's gaze—staring at you—totally discombobulates the normal voyeuristic payload of a photo. It's also a lovely comment on the hyperkinetic style of today's world: Slow down and look at something, will you!
What's happening to video is like what happened to word processing. Back in the '70s and early '80s, publishing was a rarefied, expert job. Then Apple's WYSIWYG interface made it drop-dead easy, enabling an explosion of weird new forms of micropublishing and zines. Laptop audio editing did the same thing, giving birth to the mashup and cut-and-paste subgenres of music. Then there's photo manipulation, once a rarefied propaganda technique. Photoshop made it a folk art.
In a sense, you could argue that even after 100 years of moving pictures, we still don't know what video is for. The sheer cost of creating it meant we used it for a stiflingly narrow set of purposes: news, documentaries, instructional presentations.
Now the lid is blowing off. The Internet has shown us that video is also good for mass-distributed conversation—as with Talmudic response chains on YouTube or Vimeo, or even the super-short Twitter-like blurts of video on Seesmic. I know people who use Skype for virtual closeness, leaving a video channel to their spouses open all day long while they work. They're not even looking at the feed or talking; it's like emotional wallpaper. Who would have thought of doing that with a $10,000 videoconferencing rig?
Marshall McLuhan pointed out that whenever we get our hands on a new medium we tend to use it like older ones. Early TV broadcasts consisted of guys sitting around reading radio scripts because nobody had realized yet that TV could tell stories differently. It's the same with much of today's webcam video; most people still try to emulate TV and film. Only weirdos like MadV are really exploring its potential.
A bigger leap will occur when we get better tools for archiving and searching video. Then we'll start using it the way we use paper or word processing: to take notes or mull over a problem, like Tom Cruise flipping through scenes at the beginning of Minority Report. We think of video as a way to communicate with others—but it's becoming a way to communicate with ourselves.
Etiquetas: video, videoconversaciones, wired
Etiquetas: caso mobuzz, lacomuna.tv, MBO
vía: Fumero, Espiritusanto
Programa:
Sesión técnica bibliotecas de la Comunidad de Madrid-2 de diciembre 2008
Dirección: Biblioteca Regional de Madrid Joaquín Leguina C/ Ramírez de Prado, 3.
Salón de Actos
Coordinación técnica: Pilar Domínguez. Subdirección General de Bibliotecas de la Comunidad de Madrid; Elvira San Millán, documentalista de Extensión Universitaria y Política Social de la Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, doctoranda Instituto de Humanidades y María Luisa Medrano, profesora departamento de Economía de la Empresa de la URJC
Mañana:
9-9h30 Presentación, entrega de documentación
Pilar Domínguez CM
María Luisa Medrano profesora URJC
Elvira San Millán URJC “La aplicación corporativa de la web social a los servicios de información”
Lucía Martínez sección de adquisiciones Universidad de Oviedo. “Aplicaciones 2.0 en las plataformas comerciales y open access”
9h30 -10h15 “Licencias libres, software libre”. Grupo de investigación software libre Jesús Barahona Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Javier de la Cueva abogado nuevas tecnologías http://derecho-internet.org/
Moderador: José Ramón Pérez Agüera profesor UCM
10h15-10h30 José Antonio Santos profesor URJC “Derecho al honor y libertad de expresión y de información en los blogs”
10h30-11h José Ramón Pérez Agüera profesor UCM “ Qué es la Web semántica”
Descanso 11h-11h15
11h15-12h15 “Libro y edición digital 2.0. Literatura y nuevas licencias digitales”
Javier Celaya dosdoce.com vicepresidente de la Asociación de Revistas Digitales de España; bubok .com Ángel María Herrera evoluziona.com
literaturas.com Ignacio Fernández
Blognovelas.es Ángel J. Blanco
webcomic Ramón Redondo http://www.geekinlove.com/
Moderadora: Pilar Domínguez Subdirección General de Bibliotecas CM
12h15-13h15 Jorge Serrano Masmedios.com “Tecnologías de Biblioteca 2.0 aplicadas al desarrollo de interfaces de recuperación de información y Opacs bibliotecarios”
13h15-14h15 “Privacidad en las redes sociales: riesgos y oportunidades”
Ildefonso Mayorgas networker Thursday.es , Ícaro Moyano www.tuenti.com/, Roberto Heredia director general www.11870.com/, Pablo Fdz. Burgueño abogado www.abanlex.com/, Luis Cisneros abogado www.x-novo.com/
Moderador: Emilio Márquez, networkingactivo
Comida
Talleres web social 10-12h50
Talleres sesiones paralelas (se establecerá un descanso)
- “Podcast” Jaime Manera profesor Marketing URJC 30 minutos
-“Webcómic” Ramón Redondo boom.es geekinlove.com/ 20 minutos
-“Wikis” Miguel Vidal enciclopedista de la Wikipedia e investigador de la URJC. 40 minutos
-“Plataformas de vídeo para Internet” Blanca Pérez Bustamante profesora URJC y videoartista whiteemotion. 20 minutos
-“Blogs corporativos. Microblogging”, Juan Luis Polo territoriocreativo.com 30 minutos
Tarde:
15h15-16h45 “Empresa 2.0 y contenidos digitales”
Buscadores Miguel Orense http://blog.kanvasmedia.net/
Eventos 2.0 Amelia San Millán IBM eventos
Marketing 2.0 social media Juan Luis Polo territoriocreativo.com
Contenidos digítales vídeos 2.0 Jaime Estévez agoranews.es
Web móvil y marketing Diana García Martínez Mobext.mobi Havas Digital
Second Life y otras plataformas virtuales Wilhem Lappe consultor tecnológico
Moderador: Octavio Rojas Director de comunicación online de Edelman
Descanso
17h-18h Nieves González Universidad de Sevilla bibliotecarios 2-0.
“Bibliotecarios mirando a la comunidad con unas gafas 2.0”
18h-19h “Realidades y Mitos de la web social”
Antonio Fumero antoniofumero.blogspot.com bloguero e investigador biotecnologías, Ismael Elqudsi Havas Digital, Fernando Polo domestika.com abladias.blogspot.com, Nieves González bibliotecarios2-0.blogspot.com, Jorge Serrano Masmedios.com
Moderador: Óscar Espíritusanto periodismociudadano.com; comunicacionciudadana.org
Clausura: Subdirección General de las Bibliotecas de la Comunidad de Madrid.
Entrega de diplomas de asistencia.
Con la colaboración, por parte de la Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, del Vicerrectorado de Comunicación e Información, Instituto de Humanidades y Departamento de Economía de la Empresa.
agosto 2006 octubre 2006 diciembre 2006 enero 2007 febrero 2007 marzo 2007 abril 2007 mayo 2007 junio 2007 julio 2007 agosto 2007 septiembre 2007 octubre 2007 diciembre 2007 enero 2008 febrero 2008 marzo 2008 abril 2008 mayo 2008 junio 2008 julio 2008 agosto 2008 septiembre 2008 octubre 2008 noviembre 2008 diciembre 2008 enero 2009 febrero 2009 marzo 2009 abril 2009 mayo 2009 septiembre 2009 enero 2010 marzo 2010 abril 2010
Suscribirse a Entradas [Atom]