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unmediated

 

August 01, 2006

(Thanks, Paul Lamb!)

Joe Garafoli writes in the San Francisco Chronicle about the appearance online of phone videos from both sides of the conflict in Lebanon and Israel.

Julien created BloggingBeirut.com 18 months ago as a romantic pursuit -- a way to share the beauty of his native Lebanon with a woman he met in graduate school in New York. That relationship dissolved, but last week BloggingBeirut was getting 400,000 hits a day after Julien, who asked that his last name not be published, posted video shot on cell phones of his beloved hometown now ravaged by war.

In a town in northern Israel last week, 16-year-old Guy Naveh posted footage on the video-sharing site YouTube.com that he shot with a digital camera from the balcony of his family's apartment. He wanted friends in other parts of Israel and relatives in the United States to sense the panic people feel when an air raid siren blows. More than 9,000 people have seen Naveh's video, including a friend of his who wanted to shoot a video, too, Naveh wrote in an e-mail, "but his mother don't want him to go outside."

"When you watch a video you can almost feel what the camera man did," Naveh wrote. "And when you read a text ... well ... you need to use your imagination."

Video-sharing technology is revolutionizing how people far from the battlefield understand the latest Middle East war. Experts predict that the edgy, personalized clips being passed around worldwide soon will influence traditional broadcast news by infusing it with the passion of citizen journalists, who are reporting as rockets crash onto their neighborhoods.

From popular video-sharing sites like YouTube to amateur blogs floating in the Internet ether, viewers are seeing footage shot by the shaky hand of someone living where the bombs are falling in Israel and Lebanon -- and they are feeling their fear. This type of street-level, first-person footage, or guerrilla filmmaking, has been seen less from citizens of Iraq or Afghanistan, experts said, because the technology infrastructure and power supply is inferior to that in the more prosperous Israel and Lebanon.
...

As for the credibility of video floating around the Internet, Global Vision offers this advice to journalists on its Web site, www.globalvoicesonline.org:

"Quote from any blog at your own risk, just as you quote from any source at your own risk. And as with any source, anonymous blogs must pass a much higher credibility threshold than blogs whose authors make their identity public and their allegiances clear."

How to find them

URLs for videos and videobloggers mentioned in this article:

Mohammad Soubra's video can be found at: www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=msoubra

Guy Naveh's video can be found at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-nEphWmM0M

Julien's blog can be found at: www.BloggingBeirut.com

Jaron Gilinsky's report from Haifa can be found by searching Current TV's site, www.current.tv/pods/news/PD03937

Global Voices Online is at www.globalvoicesonline.org

E-mail Joe Garofoli at jgarofoli@sfchronicle.com.



Originally from Smart Mobs, remediated by yatta on Aug 1, 2006 at 06:34 PM