Jackson Mississippi and the New Media Institute
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Last week I was at the New Media Institute in Jackson Mississippi, put on by the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC) and hosted at Mississippi Public Broadcasting.
NBPC is one of the 5 minority consortia in public broadcasting (the others are Native American, Latino, Pacific Islander, and Asian American), and Executive Director Jacquie Jones pioneered the idea a year ago of putting together a week-long training and convening event for minority media producers focused on technology and new tools and platforms.
I missed the inaugural meeting last year in Boston (in my own backyard at WGBH too), so I was really glad to be able to join for at least a day and a half this year.
PRX was well represented. John Barth came down to co-present a session on reversioning documentary film for radio/podcasting. The Talent Quest got props in a CPB speech, and I helped facilitate a meeting with NPR, PBS and the minority consortia about diversity and collaboration for future public media.
There was a mix of panels and presentations, but the main activity of the Institute was the work of 9 different teams of young producers working with mentors and spending a mostly sleepless week creating digital media projects from scratch for debut and discussion on the last day. Jackson and surrounding areas provided the raw material, and the teams came up with a dazzling variety of projects, from video podcasts, online games, Google earth media mashups, and web-based narratives. The final dinner on Friday featured a raucous final presentation and celebration of the projects (Leslie Rule has posted some of them here on the PBS MedaShift blog).
John and his co-presenter Grant Clark (a producer at BET) talked about the possibilities for repurposing documentary film into audio for podcasting and/or radio. They were given a tough one to start with, Linda Goode Bryant’s “Flag Wars” - a narrationless and impressionistic film about gentrification in Ohio. There are certainly easier examples of films with more two-way interviews, introductions and voice overs that would lend themselves well to an audio-only version, but it was interesting nonetheless to hear a draft version that still captured the intent of the film.
Of course there are excellent examples of audio narrative with no narration - work by Joe Richman (here’s Joe on “The Invisible Narrator”), Jay Allison, Dave Isay among others - but it takes ingenuity and planning and is much harder to achieve with material gathered for another purpose.
Grant and John’s basic point is that there are opportunities for reaching new audiences, cross-promoting film and television releases, experimenting with form, and making use of the extra footage and material that every project accumulates. There are also potential collaborations with radio producers who bring a complementary set of skills.
No doubt documentary film and radio are two very different beasts, but it would be an interesting creative challenge and a potentially a source of valuable new audio work to start reversioning a few.
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