Will Pate's Blog - Peek into a mind of boundless curiosity
'Video' Category

Queen Rania Using YouTube For Cultural Dialog

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Queen Rania Al Abdullah of Jordan is using a YouTube channel to engage in cross cultural dialog. Her first challenge is to break down stereotypes about the Arab world by calling on people to submit their own to her, which she will then answer.

“I want people to know the real Arab world. To see it unedited, unscripted and unfiltered. To see the personal side of my region. To know the places, and faces, and rituals, and culture that shape the part of the world I call home.”

I love seeing social media used for positive change, and I can’t think of a better one than more dialog between Westerners and Arabs. We have so much to learn about each other. It would be great to see someone do the flip side for the Arab world.

I remember passing a TV in Tanzania and cringing because it was just one gangster rap video after another. Violence, misogyny, crass materialism and drugs on repeat – just change up the guy getting the close ups every 4 minutes. It was disheartening to hear that those videos were the primary cultural lens on through which many people in Africa saw us. No wonder so many thought so poorly of us, or came to our side of the world and struggled to fit into our social norms.

It’s great that so many people all over the world now have satellite TV, but often it’s hard to cut through the noise and get a clear picture of what life is really like where those signals come from. And the internet is just a network of cables until we use it for good like Queen Rania is doing. Here’s hoping more people that want to change the world start adopting these tools that have so much potential.

commandN #128

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Amber and I chat about CBC hearts BitTorrent, Comcast is watching you, and Jeff teaches you how-to calibrate your television.

This video was originally shared on blip.tv by commandn with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs license.

Kanye West Sci-Fi Videos

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Kayne West did some mashup videos of his own songs on his most recent album, Graduation, with classic sci-fi movies. I love these to no end.

Stronger – Akira

I Wonder – Tron

Good Morning – 2001

City and Colour – Waiting

Monday, February 11th, 2008

I’m really digging the new single from City and Colour, the acoustic side project of Alexisonfire’s Dallas Green. Yet another awesome musician from Canada. :)

Gen Y Growing Up Online

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

PBS Frontline has a new episode called Growing Up Online, about how the internet and connectedness is changing our experience in a radical way. Unfortunately I can’t embed the video here for you to watch, but you can watch the full program online, and it’s well worth the time.

If you want to understand the generation gap between us Gen Y kids and our Baby Boomer parents, you can’t beat this show. You can literally see in the eyes of the parents their fear at how fast their kids are evolving, their frustration at the amount of their kids lives kept private from them but made public on the internet, their media-fueled paranoia about child predators, the pain of realizing their son used the internet to get the know how and the support he needed to take his own life before he was old enough to drive a car. Kids are changing too fast for their parents to possibly keep up, and that’s not a good feeling.

This documentary really hit home for me. The show opens with teens bringing their computers to a friend’s house to have video gaming LAN parties on a Friday night. That was me only few years ago. My best friends in high school were part of one of the top ranked clans in the world for the popular tactical first person shooter game Counter-Strike. One time crammed a few dozen kids and their computers into every nook and cranny of my parents’ house for a whole weekend of gaming and caffeine. We even created a website where we blogged about our mischievous teen exploits, which we thought was secure, until one day I walked into the computer room at lunch and everyone had it up on their screens. We learned our lessons at the very beginning of the adoption curve, before the stakes got too high.

I spend a lot of time working with Gen X folks, I’m almost always the youngest person in any team. At 25, I often feel closer in culture to the teenagers in this documentary than my colleagues who are 30 plus. It’s become clear to me that current education and work structures are not well prepared for us Gen Y folks and our quirks. I’m hoping that will lead us to become a generation of entrepreneurs, of game changers.

Internet society researcher extraordinaire Danah Boyd does an excellent job in the documentary at cutting through the smoke about teens online. Her research papers are a great way to dig deeper into that subject, if you want more information.

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