Archive
AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile Crew members at Raise the Red Lantern Event at W2 Culture + Media House for W2 – 112 West Hasting in Vancouver Downtown Eastside
AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile Crew members wearing DTES CAN T – Shirts ( a Core Member of W2 ) livestreamed and provided mobile media coverage at Raise the Red Lantern Event at W2 Culture + Media House for W2 Community Media Arts using Nokia Cameraphones especially Nokia N86, Nokia N95 and Nokia N97
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Below are photos of our great Crew members of AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile 🙂
AHA MEDIA is very proud to announce Fearless City Mobile Event Coverage of Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson at W2 Culture + Media House on Wed Feb 10, 2010 and “Raise the Red Lantern” on Sat Feb 13, 2010
The Fearless City Mobile Project crew members of W2 were very excited to be do mobile media documentation and helping to archive the historical day through using social media and new media tools to get the word out of all the great arts, cultural and media events happening at W2 Culture + Media House on Wednesday Feb 10, 2010! 🙂
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Below is a photo of Hendrik Beune of Fearless City Mobile Project in front of W2 Culture + Media House at W2
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Below is a photo of Hendrik Beune, April Smith, J-Hock and Peter Davies of Fearless City Mobile Project anticipating our Mayor Gregor Robertson to do the Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
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Below is a photo of J-Hock and Richard Czaban of Fearless City Mobile Project discussing camera angles to best cover the event. Fearless City Mobile is alway proud to be part of the action and help support W2 Community Media Arts
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Below is a photo of our Press Conference Stage at W2 Culture + Media House
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Below is photo of Irwin Oostindie, Executive Director of W2 welcoming everyone
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Below is a photo of Irwin Oostindie of W2, together with Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson
Fearless City Mobile Project members still remember when Gregor Robertson came out and met with us back when we first started our project a few years ago. Fearless City Mobile is very honored to be recognized warmly by our Mayor and we thank him for his support of us always!
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Below is a photo of Mayor Gregor Robertson with April Smith – Fearless City Mobile Project Coordinator
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Below is a photo of Stephen Hill and the rest of Fearless City Mobile singing a rousing and much inspiring Fearless City song!!! Not only does Fearless City Mobile do great mobile media, we can sing too!!
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Below is a photo of Richard Czaban showing the Fearless City Mobile crew photos and videos of local Vancouver Downtown Eastside events
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Fearless City Mobile will be covering “Raise the Red Lantern” event on Saturday Feb 13, 2010 starting from 9pm onwards. Come celebrate with us at W2 Culture + Media House!
Raise the Red Lantern
~ A Tiger’s Tale
| Host: | |
| Type: | |
| Network: |
Global
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| Start Time: |
Saturday, February 13, 2010 at 9:00pm
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| End Time: |
Sunday, February 14, 2010 at 2:00am
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| Location: |
W2 Culture + Media House
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| Street: |
112 West Hastings
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| City/Town: |
Vancouver, BC
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Feb 13th marks the eve of Valentine’s Day and Chinese/Lunar New Year. Let’s usher in the
Year of the Tiger together amidst all that will be happening in Vancouver on this much anticipated weekend. Please join us at W2 for an evening of offerings.
Some of you may remember the great space(s) of W2 where El Papa Chango played last November. W2 recently celebrated its official opening and will be the first ever independent social media center created to help non-accredited media journalists and bloggers cover the Olympics. Raise the Red Lantern will also be the after-party for Artwalk Vancouver happening throughout the DTES. Sure to be many streams of people creating one very diverse mix.
For more info on W2:
http://www.creativetechnology.org/
We are pleased to announce the performing artists joining us this night.
The players:
Lesley Ewen – thespian extraordinaire
Dawn Zoe – ephemeral chanteuse
Babette Santos & Stephanie Pintar –
fanning the dance
live painting by Jordan Bent:
http://www.jordanbent.com/
more tba
followed by DJs
Deano (Sunshine Coast, BC)
One of Left Coast’s best-kept secrets, Deano is a dj/producer that has been playing shows for the past ten years. He plays eclectic sets that get the party BOUNCIN. He also happens to be
a master carver. We are stoked to have him in Vancity.
http://www.myspace.com/deanowomp
DJ Mazeguider (aka Jeet K)
When not speaking to the Senate and helping to put a stop to absurd legislation, Jeet K can be found behind the decks rockin the electro, techno and glitch hop. Jeet K has been involved in Vancity’s underground music scene as both producer and MC since the 90s and a dj for the past six years.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQgsCeuFu_M
opening set by Patricia
Patricia played out years before, under the moniker Kriyatrix. For this set, expect something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue.
Visuals by Sammy Chien & Patricia Kim w/ Fearless City Mobile
Sammy is a media artist, filmmaker and VJ. He has created live visuals for concerts, interactive installations and new media dance performances. He will be performing real-time generative images, triggering by movement and sound.
http://soar.is2.net
*Fortune readings by Dragan. Hidden deep withing the labyrinthine spaces of W2, look for a man with cards (by donation).
doors at 9pm
performance 10-10:30
djs Deano & Mazeguider 10:30 onwards
112 W. Hastings (and Abbott)
$10 (!) at door only
19+ event
“The Tiger is one of the most beautiful creatures on the planet, and is feared and revered in equal measure. It features in many Asian cultures as a manifestation of courage, power, passion and royalty. The Tiger symbolizes the female Yin energy as opposed to the Yang male energy of the dragon. Ancient Chinese believe that the markings on the forehead of tigers resemble the Chinese character for “Wang”, or King. In Imperial China, where the dragon is the insignia of the emperors, the tiger is the military emblem of the highest supreme commanders of the army symbolizing fearlessness and victory. The Tiger also represents earth, while the dragon represents Heaven. The powerful and stealth prowess of the Tiger inspire the martial art movements of many Kung-Fu masters.”
Those who are skilled in combat
do not become angered.
Those who are skilled at winning
do not become afraid.
Thus, the wise win before they fight
while the ignorant fight to win.
Sun Tzu, “The Art of War
AHA MEDIA thanks Gary Shilling for his article “Tactics for Democratizing Media During the Olympics and Beyond” in Vancouver Observer
AHA MEDIA thanks Gary Shilling for his article below
Tactics for Democratizing Media During the Olympics and Beyond
Hendrik Beune walks into the cafeteria at the Carnegie Centre in Vancouver, scratches his cell phone number on his business card and passes it over to me. The back of the card has an imprint: Bioluminous Solutions = ethological reporting! (his exclamation mark). He explains its meaning as, "Observing how something relates to its environment is like finding sources of light in the dark." Beune and April Smith are directors of AHA Media, self-described hyper local citizen journalists. "My wish", Smith says, "is that AHA Media be a democratic system that is made for messages from the Downtown East Side." Smith and Beune have deep ties to the community in the Downtown Eastside (DTES) of Vancouver. They believe that the democracy of information, new media, and social media are good things for this community of marginalized residents. "We can support each other by showing what is happening in the DTES and broadcast it out on a local level, national level, and to the world," says Smith. They both agree that this is especially important during the Olympics. John Douglas, a poet working with AHA Media doesn't have much faith in CanWest and other mainstream media portraying what will be happening on the streets of Vancouver during the Olympics. "According to them, the 'world is coming here to party'. My take on that as a veteran Single Room Occupancy inmate is that the rich 5% of the world are coming here to party." Single Room Occupancy (SRO) accommodation in the DTES is in disarray. Douglas explains that he lives in a building where there is no security. Anything of value that is left in his room will be taken the moment he leaves. Given the opportunity, he'd like to put his poetry online, but he won’t risk having a computer. Beune sees bridging the digital divide in the community a key for reaching those in SROs and aboriginal youth. The W2 Community Media Centre in the massive Woodwards redevelopment is helping bridge the divide. The result of persistent of strong community advocacy, W2 is poised to become a cultural hub for the arts, community groups, and residents in Vancouver. Construction delays have slowed the opening of the Centre in the heritage portion of the development, and in the interim it operates out of a space across the street. They're in the process of getting ready for the Olympics. "W2 is all about using intelligent tactics to provide a place for Vancouverites to tell their stories", says Irwin Oostindie, executive director. Although partially embedded in the Olympics in their relationship with the Cultural Olympiad, they are comfortable with the dialogue that will result from the games. "We're an independent cultural institution that provides guaranteed access for its citizens for training, access, broadcast, and sharing their stories," says Oostindie. With partners in alternative, independent, and citizen journalism, they expect to be here long after the Olympics leave. Global marquee events such as the Olympics create complex tensions within a host city such as Vancouver. This tension is manifest on the streets of the city, within the venues of the site, and in the critical and celebratory conversations that take place around the event. Beune believes there will be demonstrations at the Games about free speech, and media activist groups have plans to be there. Franklin Lopez moved to Vancouver in 2005 just as he got a job with Democracy Now in New York. But he fell in love with the mountains and came back. He is helping organize people to cover the protests. Lopez has ties into the activist community and experience at a number of convergence type events such as the upcoming Olympics. He's involved with the Vancouver Media Coop and is setting up media spaces to support incoming media independents. "As part of the activist community", he notes, "We have ties that have developed over the years that connect us into what is happening on the street. Just like mainstream journalists have relationships with the police, and corporations." Lopez has mentored Smith and other members of the AHA Media Group. She’s grateful: "Frank's been instrumental in us forming AHA Media. He said get online, be independent, report on issues, and the stories that you want to tell. And don't be afraid of what people say. It can be good, bad, it can be ugly. If you get a reaction, it means you've done your work." In addition to his work with AHA Media, Beune sits on the board of the Pivot Legal Society, and is part of the legal observer program created in partnership with the BC Civil Liberties Association. There are about 200 people trained to observe and record situations with video and still photography. Besides supporting alternative media, Hendrik sites another important task: "We have a particular interest in looking out for 'agent provocateurs' as they are called. They are people put into the protests to create a ruckus. Then the authorities move troops in and create even more chaos derailing protest. So, whenever they disrupt us, we are going to hold them responsible." It's only natural to expect alternative media to emerge around the Olympics, but community media is not a new phenomena. Sid Chow Tan has volunteered within community television for nearly 25 years. According to Tan, "Canada has played a central role in the development of community television and is considered by many to be the birthplace of community broadcasting." The Canadian Broadcast Act clearly states that our broadcast system is to be composed of public, private, and community elements—essential for maintaining and enhancing our national identity and cultural sovereignty. The community trust of the right to broadcast is currently under the control of major cable operators in the country. Eight hundred million dollars in public money has been handed out to cable companies over the past 10 years, with approximately $60 million going to Rogers and Shaw in Metro Vancouver. And yet, these companies have little accountability to the community. Tan is dismayed, "There is no logic when community programming produced by volunteers is only available by subscribing to a corporate service." Cultural institutions such as W2 are looking to fill the gap left by the increasing corporatization of community media. When it opens in the historic Woodward's building, the W2 Community Media Arts Society will be operating a multipurpose multi-platform media arts facility, including live performance, print, radio, television and new media. "We're looking at building a media centre for the citizens of Vancouver. We'll be here in 2010 and 2020 and beyond," says Oostindie. As mainstream media focuses on counting gold, silver, and bronze medals, community media in Vancouver looks to document the voice of the people within their neighbourhoods. Beune cautions, "The IOC has no responsibility to any legacy, they're not affected by the neighbourhood and they don't value the assets of our community. We want to stress the benefits of people working together. My philosophy is be happy with what you've got. If you have enough be content. If you have more — share." The stories gathered by the community will be plentiful and shared with the world.
April Smith of AHA MEDIA is very honored to be featured by Gillian Shaw – Digital Life Writer for The Vancouver Sun Newspaper on Christmas Eve 2009
By GILLIAN SHAW
23 DEC 2009 DIGITAL LIFE
As it comes time to wrap up 2009, I wanted to share the story of a journalist who has inspired me this year.
A citizen journalist – April Smith, who is making an impact not only for her work chronicling the news and stories of Vancouver’s inner city but also for giving back to her community by mentoring others.
April didn’t graduate from any journalism program. Hers was truly the school of hard knocks and her background one of hardship.
I first met April at WordCamp Whistler last January. She was a grad of the Downtown Eastside’s Fearless City Mobile project, which helped residents and artists of the neighborhood learn to tell stories through mobile media.
At the time April said the experience had been ‘life-changing.’
“I have moved from one side of the tracks to the other,” she told me.
The other side of the tracks was pretty ugly. It was a life of homelessness and struggling to survive on the streets.
April shares her story with eloquence and honesty that is all the more compelling because it is free of self-pity. Her optimism for the future is what comes through loud and clear.
You can listen to Vancouver’s CBC radio did with April. And you see her at work in an episode of With Glowing Hearts the Movie. She is @AprilFilms on Twitter.
WGHthemovie.ca -April Smith storyline from Andrew Lavigne on Vimeo.
The mentoring April received is being returned to the community many times over with the creation of AHA Media, a fledgling new media company started by April along with Hendrik Beune and Al Tkatch – AHA coming from the first letters of their names.
April is teaching and mentoring others in the Downtown Eastside, sharing her skills and enthusiasm in the hope of offering alternatives that will help improve lives.
April lives in a single room in the DTES and carries out her work and volunteering on a shoestring budget – no shoestring might be too generous to describe it. When I talk to April on the phone, I know that it’s using up precious minutes that she must buy to recharge her cell phone. I recently found out that the Nokia video phone that April was using in her work was borrowed and had to be returned. So I asked her what she needs to carry on.
While it has been a tough year for media organizations, not many list food and warm clothing on their wish list, but those are among the items AHA Media, which does volunteer peer training at the LifeSkills Centre near Oppenheimer Park, is seeking for its DTES neighbors.
The organization also needs: FIDO Pay as You Go Phone Cards for cell phones, digital cameras, SD memory cards, laptop and desktop computers, video cameras and audio equipment.
If you have any of these things kicking around, consider sharing them with others who will pay it forward many times over.
Hendrik Beune of AHA MEDIA and his gift “Under the Sea” quilt for his parents 60th Wedding Anniversary in the Netherlands!
For Hendrik’s parents’ 60th wedding anniversary coming up!!… He bought an original work of art for them: It is a quilt, a beautiful wall-hanging, depicting a tropical fantasy scene that is called “Under the Sea“.
Under the Sea: Sandi Bajcar
Laurel Birch panel. Machine practice piece. 30,000 stitches, maybe more.
Hendrik would like to present it to his parents as coming from the Beunes in Canada (including his daughters). He selected it because it struck him right away as being very beautiful and fantasy rich. and hopes that his parents will feel a connection through this piece for the reason that they all shared a very close connection to the sea.
“I have bought an original work of art for them: It is a quilt, a beautiful wall-hanging, depicting a tropical fantasy scene that is called “Under the Sea”. I hope that they have a good spot for it in their new apartment. At the end of the hall, near the bathroom door, I would envision to brighten up an otherwise dark and uninteresting cul de sac.”
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In this photo is Hendrik Beune and Peter Davies of AHA MEDIA with Lisa Fox Valdes of Downtown Eastside Centre for the Arts admiring the over 30,000 stitches that went into the making of the “Under the Sea” quilt
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In this photo and video Hendrik Beune speaks with Lisa Fox Valdes of Downtown Eastside Centre for the Arts where they auctioned Under the Sea as part of the Fabric Arts Program 2009 – Community Quilt Project in October
Hendrik Beune says:
I would like to present it to my parents as coming from the Beunes in Canada (including my daughters). I selected it because it struck me right away as being very beautiful and fantasy rich.
I hope that my parents will feel a connection with us through this piece for the reason that we all shared a very close connection to the sea.
My parents helped me to get through university and become a marine biologist. Hence my daughters were conceived practically on the sea shore, where we also lived and worked for many years (12 in my case).
These years were formative for my daughters, because it brought them into close contact with Mother Nature at an early age. I hope this will carry through into their adult lives and result in a respect for nature that most City born children never have the direct connection and experience of.
For my oldest , this is certainly true: She has often said that she wanted to become a marine biologist. The mermaid in this picture reminds me of my daughters’ early childhood, as we traveled to town in a small boat on a weekly basis and were on the beach practically every day.
The mermaid in the quilt represents my daughters!
I will recount the above story to my parents as I present them with the quilt for their 60th Wedding Anniversary! 🙂




























