OMG 3v1l h4x0r
In the Austrian newspaper Der Standard, there was an article today, about a Tirolian man, who attached a radio scanner to his computer and used it to listen to the communications of emergency services.
Trapped girls call for help on Facebook
You are lost in a stormwater drain and cannot find your way out. You have your cell phone with you. Do you call emergency services for help? No, it's 2009, so you update your Facebook status and hope one of your friends is online and happens to see your status message at the time.
A Case of Crappy Journalism
While going through my daily routine of reading several news sites and blogs, I came across a simple example of the journalistic landscape that we readers must navigate nowadays.
The same news item, reported by two different news platforms. That of elections in Venezuela.
Let us have a look at the BBC's approach:
... and then compare it to another news platform:
I selected these two news platforms simply because the difference in reporting-focus stuck out to me while reading them.
The BBC article puts a heavy focus on gains made by the Chavez opposition, leaving no doubt that as far as the BBC is concerned, Chavez is viewed negatively.
In this way, the reader is encouraged to develop a negative association with Chavez.
The gains made by the opposition are displayed as a positive development, and the fact that the title solely mentions the opposition is testament to this.
On the other hand, if we look at the Al Jazeera article, even in the title, we see a balance. Both gains made by Chavez allies as well as gains made by the opposition are given equal coverage. The reader is left with the freedom to make up their own mind.
The article by Al Jazeera is neutral and does not reek of subliminal goading.
Quite simply, we as readers, are faced with very crappy journalism on a daily basis. This, in an era and environment where the biggest names in the mass media industry claim to be objective, neutral and professional.
It is annoying, because it wastes time. As someone who is aware of this fact, I take my time reading articles and analyze them while I do so.
I have become allergic to hidden and often cheap attempts at presstitution.
This example is by no means complex. It is merely a sign of our times. Balanced coverage in journalism is a distant mirage.
Goodbye suckers: how not to do it
After having been sentenced to twelve years in prison for shooting a youth of foreign origin and paralysing him in the process, an Austrian doctor decided to commit suicide in his prison cell. Before that, he wrote a suicide note wherein he confessed to other racism-based attacks as well as a high profile bombing of a Mosque in Vienna.
Contrary to his plans however, he did not expire in glory, and is now being grilled by investigators concerning his other crimes.
Ezra
As part of it's Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking, UN.GIFT organised screenings of several films dealing with the subject.
I opted to watch EZRA, by Nigerian director Newton Aduaka.
The secrets to success, in my opinion, are modesty and realism. Ezra fulfills both requirements. The film tells the story of young children, amongst whom is a boy called Ezra, who are kidnapped by rebels and taken into the jungle to be trained as soldiers. Several years later Ezra finds himself forced to deal with his past while facing a 'Truth and Reconciliation Commission'.
I did not know what to expect as I was not familiar with the directors work, however I was pleasantly surprised. The film is mellow and strikes the right balance between some action and story development.
There was no apparent bias. All sides in the conflict were portrayed in honesty and fairness. Unlike American films, the viewer is not goaded and encourage to generate either hate or sympathy with the protagonists through the use of emotional tricks. You are left with the freedom to make up your own mind.
So if you, like me, are sick of the fakeness and exaggeration in Hollywood films then you will really enjoy Ezra. The actors, while unknown to me suited their roles superbly, the viewer is not forced to muster all their strength, verging on exhaustion, to achieve the willing suspension of disbelief. You are not pestered with multi-millionaire actors trying to be sensitive to the lives and tragedies of normal human beings they cannot relate to.
Definitely worth watching.
Production: France /Nigeria /Austria 2007
Directed by: Newton I. Aduaka
Running time: 103min
Europa der Religionen- Dialog statt Ausgrenzung
Heads up on a discussion round to be held in Vienna:
Europa der Religionen- Dialog statt Ausgrenzung
Sonntag
24.2.2008
11:00 UhrBurgtheater
Dr. Karl-Lueger-Ring 2
1010 WienDiskussion mit Michael Bünker, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Halleh Ghorashi, Tariq Ramadan
Moderation: Gerfried Sperl, Der StandardDie Reihe ist eine Initiative von Allianz Kukturstiftung in Zusammenarbeit mit dem IWM, dem Tanzquartier Wien, dem Burgtheater und dem "Standard". Karten für 7,- bzw. 5,- Euro sind an der Burgtheaterkasse erhältlich. Tel. 0043/ 1/ 514 44-4440
Link: IWM

