The story of Gabura, launching tomorrow

From tomorrow, you’ll able to watch ‘From Daily Life to Disaster’ – an interactive online documentary about the impact of climate change on a small village on Bangladesh – via oxfam.org.uk.

Viewers can choose which stories they find most interesting, watch them and watch it a number of times from different perspectives. ‘Gabura’ contains extraordinary footage of cyclone Aila as it hit, plus snapshots of life in a village experiencing the terrible effects of climate change.

The project aims to show the impact of climate change on a community in a sensitive and innovative way ahead of crucial climate talks in Copenhagen this December.

Come Dine With Me gets a real-time boost

I said that there would be a few curveballs during NaBloPoMo, so here’s the first; Come Dine With Me, the Channel 4 cooking phenomenon, is set to launch a ‘social media extension’ for its show on November 9th.

I’d have thought they would have teamed up with ‘two screen’ specialists Mint Digital, but have instead chosen to bring in Monterosa Productions to create what looks like a real-time interactive platform. It will allow viewers to ‘rate, slate and debate’ while they watch the show live, as well as play an online game to correspond.

If you’re based in the UK, the final four episodes of the current series will act as a trial for this new initiative, with a view to extending into 2010.

 

 

 

Berlin, Berlin…

I’ve been in Berlin for the past two days for the Global Online Giving Marketplaces annual meet-up. I’d been invited to come and talk about ‘all things digital’, focused mainly on my work with G20Voice, Global Cool and WCAFI, as well as suggesting ways to interact better with a younger digital generation.

Last night I met some of them at the Betterplace loft, which is ‘hosting’ the session this year. I chatted to some of the founders, and was really impressed with how technically switched on they were. They told me how they act almost like a ‘dating site’ for donators and charities. Anyone can join the network, submit a request for money or support and wait to see who responds. Other people can go to their profile to verify that the user is kosher, and provide a ‘recommendation of trust’. Fantastic. The team is also coming to the UK soon to talk to ‘some people’ about how to gather up people’s unused loyalty card points, and turn them into something valuable for those in need. It could work really well, I never use mine.

This morning for the main panel session I used Prezi for the first time, which went very well (after some initial issues with photos becoming very pixelated, and a few WiFi hitches at the location).

I talked about ways in which the digital space alleviated philanthropy (easier to get involved, you can see where your money is going, there’s an opportunity for people to get involved that have never been able to and it closes gaps between ‘politics’ and ‘public’). Then outlined a few trends, inspired by Adam Kleinberg’s megatrends piece on iMedia Connection (mass collaboration, globalisation, a sense of urgency to fix the planet’s problems, the ‘now’ mentality and a mistrust in corporations). I also covered how I think marketplaces (or anyone for that matter) can reach out to a ‘new digital generation’ (its not ‘where’, it’s ‘who’, give people the tools to do it themselves and set your content free).

Finally, I rounded off with a quick overview of how blogging has changed the coverage of large political summits (before nothing was in real-time, everything was broadcast one-way, languages were restricted to the countries accredited to send journalists and coverage was generally very policy heavy). I also referenced that I didn’t think seasonal campaigns worked well when trying to build a relationship with a blogger, and that there’s a need for a single contact to manage most projects (or a community manager perhaps).

On the panel with me was Daniel Grotzinger from controversial ‘become a homeless person’ game pennergame.de, who sparked a lively debate about the ethics of his company. At first, he was just trying to build a games company, but it has steadily become more about making people aware of their actions. It drew attention to the issue, and now both the company and its users donate money to relevant charities.

Reinier Evers, the founder of Trendwatching.com was also very interesting, talking about ‘Generation G’ – or generation giving. He spoke at length about the concept of ‘status’ being so front of mind when people donate, which I think is actually something marketplaces need to capitalise.

All in all, it’s been a really insightful day. Berlin is beautiful and cosmopolitan (it was snowing when I landed), but maybe next time I’ll have more of a chance to look around!

TckTckTck announces The Fresh Air Centre

Today’s NaBloPoMo is dedicated to the news that TckTckTck’s latest effort to unite with other NGOs and fight climate change as a unit, has now launched. The group has announced that for COP15 in Copenhagen, they’ll be covering the Summit from ‘The Fresh Air Centre’, a rapid response digital media hub.

The Fresh Air Centre will be made up of two spaces; a smaller one behind the security perimeter, and a larger, more open space downtown. The first is open to accredited bloggers, communications staff, and digital campaigners, the second a larger collaboration and community area. 

Avaaz, 350.org, WWF Int, Greenpeace Int, Oxfam Int, NRDC, and UN Foundation are already confirmed to take part, as well as bloggers from Huffington Post, ThinkProgress, Treehugger, OneWorld, GlobalVoices, WonkRoom, ClimateProgress, Adopt-a-Netogiator, WorldChanging.org.

Want to get involved? If you are a blogger, apply to join here (some subsidies are available, especially for bloggers representing the global south and diverse communities). The same goes for NGOs, especially those sending digital media people (especially if involved in rapid response channels like e-activist lists, Twitter and Facebook groups or home page content).

Very exciting…