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W2 MEDIA MAKERS’ WORKSHOP at W2 Woodward’s Meeting Room for 7th Annual Downtown Eastside Heart of the City Festival in Vancouver on Wednesday Nov 3, 2010
Workshop
W2 MEDIA MAKERS’ WORKSHOP
Wednesday November 3, 7pm-9pm
W2 Woodward’s Meeting Room
250–111 W. Hastings
Come visit the first part of the new W2 community media centre opening at Woodward’s and learn about media production opportunities. From 7pm to 8pm Sid Tan and Irwin Oostindie will introduce community television production opportunities and W2’s new community TV studio in the basement of Woodward’s. Then from 8pm to 9pm learn about W2’s new radio program that mixes up the voices of W2 members, current affairs and artist perspectives on inner-city life and the world around us, www.creativetechnology.org. Free
AHA MEDIA is very proud to help provide social media coverage of the 7th Annual Downtown Eastside Heart of the City Festival in Vancouver from Pre festival events starting Wed Oct 20, 2010 through to the Main Festival during Wed Oct 27 – Sun Nov 7, 2010
http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com
AHA MEDIA is about exploring mobile media production through New Media cameras. For a better quality version of video or for additional footage, please DM April Smith @AprilFilms on Twitter or Facebook.com/AprilFilms
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http://www.twitter.com/AHAMEDIA
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AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile films people’s thoughts of Story Box projects at W2 Storyeum in Vancouver Downtown Eastside
AHA MEDIA and Fearless City Mobile films people’s thoughts of Story Box projects at W2 Storyeum in Vancouver Downtown Eastside
At the heart of the City’s Great Beginnings Initiative is the desire to go back to its roots and give each of the founding neighborhoods something to talk about. In one such community, the DTES Story Box Project highlights its rich and storied cultural diversity through oral and written tradition. Unique object/artifact boxes illustrate stories from various voices which are intermingled to create a new and visceral experience.
The Storybox Project at the Surge Festival is the sensational finish to a process that involved over eighty members of DTES community based writing groups who developed their individual stories utilizing personal artifacts as inspiration and illustration. The manifold stories held common threads bound to universal themes. StoryBox at Storyeum presents five such themes as representative of the powerfully spoken words by the most demo-diverse voices working in concert with some of Vancouver’s brightest lights in media arts.
In this video, Irwin Oostindie, Stephen Lytton and Councillor Heather Deal speak on Story Box Project in Surge Festival at W2 Storyeum
In this video, Hendrik Beune and Anne Marie Slater view projections at Story Box Project in W2 Storyeum
In this video, Hendrik Beune is a featured interview in a movie at Story Box project at W2 Storyeum in Vancouver DTES
Below is a photo of Clyde Wright and Holly Boyd standing in front of Story Box description on the wall
Below is a photo of Jorge Campos, Quest Kabuki, Clyde Wright and Holly Boyd in front of W2 Storyeum
In this video, Erin de Zwart shares her thoughts on Story Box project at W2 Storyeum in Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES)
In this video, Clyde Wright and Holly Boyd shares their thoughts on Story Box project at W2 Storyeum in Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES)
In this video, Sid Tan shares his thoughts on Story Box project at W2 Storyeum in Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES)
CCAP – Carnegie Community Action Project presents Community Vision for Change for Vancouver Downtown Eastside
CCAP – Carnegie Community Action Project presented their Community Vision for Change for Vancouver Downtown Eastside to a packed auditorium in Carnegie Centre
Below are livestream videos taken by a Nokia N97 mini cameraphone
Below are photos of speakers and supporters who endorse the CCAP Vision of Downtown Eastside.
Please click on any of the following thumbnails to enlarge the photo 🙂
(With great thanks to Peter Oeder, Board Member of VANDU for helping out with photography)
Below is a photo of Wendy Pedersen speaking to Media about CCAP’s Community Vision for Change for Vancouver Downtown Eastside
Below is Leslie Murray and Hendrik Beune looking at the community mapping process
Below is Sid Tan speaking with brothers David and Leslie Murray
Below is Teresa Vandertuin speaking with J-Hock
Below is Terry Hunter with Sid Tan
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.
AHA MEDIA went on an exclusive tour of W2 Community Media Arts Centre with the Sennheiser Sound Tour as they visited Vancouver!
AHA MEDIA went on an exclusive tour of W2 Community Media Arts Centre with the Sennheiser Sound Tour as they visited Vancouver!
AHA MEDIA is very proud to be the first mobile new media and social media company from Vancouver to see the very beginning of the W2 Community Media Arts Centre from the ground up!
Sennheiser Sound Tour http://www.sennheisersoundtour.com

While you may not have heard about Sennheiser, you soon will. Sennheiser is a famous amongst music professionals for providing the most authentic sound and this summer, the Sennheiser Sound Tour will be spreading the sound about their incredible headphones across North America. With a team of 6 guys and a team of 6 Girls – there is goingto be some fun!
What Sennheiser stands for
We create the greatest and most exciting sound experience for people worldwide – whether at home or out and about; on stage or behind the DJ console; in a museum or in a concert hall. It is our ambition to enable people all around the world to enjoy a unique sound experience. Approximately 2000 Sennheiser employees in 90 countries around the globe work as a team in a constant effort to fulfil this promise.
For more than 60 years the name Sennheiser has stood for the highest quality products and customised solutions across all areas of sound recording, transmission and reproduction. As one of the world’s leading providers of integrated solutions for electro-acoustic products, systems and services we constantly set ourselves the challenge of developing creative answers which satisfy the requests and requirements of our customers.
Below is ( Left to Right)
Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour, April Smith of AHA MEDIA/W2, Irwin Oostindie, Executive Director of W2 Community Media Arts, Po of Sennheiser Sound Tour, Sid Tan of ICTV/W2

The following videos are by April Smith of AHA MEDIA on a Nokia N95 mobile cameraphone generously provided by W2 Community Media Arts. April is passionate and skilled in making Nokia films by exploring mobile media production through the camera lens of a cellphone. For a better quality version of this video, please DM April Smith @AprilFilms on Twitter.
Below is ( Left to Right)
Back: Sid Tan of ICTV/W2, Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour, Irwin Oostindie, Executive Director of W2, Po of Sennheiser Sound Tour
Front: Lani Russwurm of DTES CAN/W2 and April Smith of AHA MEDIA/W2

Below is Po and Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour http://www.SennheiserSoundTour.com

Below is Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour, Irwin Oostindie of W2 Community Media Arts and Po of Sennheiser Sound Tour chatting together.

Below is Po and Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour walking through the beginning of W2 Community Media Arts Centre

We thank Po and Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour for touring W2 Community Media Arts Centre 🙂
Sennheiser Sound Tour http://www.sennheisersoundtour.com
W2 Community Media Arts http://www.creativetechnology.com
Thanks to Po of Sennheiser Sound Tour http://www.sennheisersoundtour.com

Thanks to Adrian of Sennheiser Sound Tour http://www.sennheisersoundtour.com

Please see all 211 photos of Sennheiser Sound Tour visiting W2 on both our Flickr sets
First set has 163 photos
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ahamedia/sets/72157621993006603/
Second set has 48 photos
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ahamedia/sets/72157622116660280/
Thanks to Sennheiser Sound Tour http://www.sennheisersoundtour.com and W2 Community Media Arts http://www.creativetechnology.org
AHA MEDIA is pleased to produce mobile media of 6 videos on Youtube and 211 photos on Flickr for you!























































