7 places we think we know, 7 news stories we think we understand
A 35 minute video which examines how the global media has manipulated particular news stories to create specific stereotypes about certain places. It contrasts two styles of presenting news that have at their root two opposing value systems e.g. scrolling subtitles text reminiscent of mainstream news outlets like CNN, with a guerrilla news filmmaking style adopted by grassroots media organisations like Indymedia who provide up to the minute alternative news to the mainstream. Each video location presents true and false images and facts about that specific country.
SOUTH AFRICA: 9 JULY 2000
The day President Mbeki denied that HIV virus causes AIDS.
AFGHANISTAN 7 OCTOBER 2001
The day of the first US bomb strikes against the Taliban
DARFUR: 31 JANUARY 2005
The day the UN refused to describe Darfur crisis as a genocide
NEW ORLEANS: 1 SEPTEMBER 2005
The day after President George Bush Junior celebrated VJ day while Hurricane Katrina was destroying New Orleans .
TIBET: 30 SEPTEMBER 2006
The day of the Nangpa La Pass shootings when 18 Tibetans including children fleeing Tibet were shot Chinese Border Security services
AUSTRALIA: 13 FEBRUARY 2008
The day Prime Minister Kevin Rudd apologized for the mistreatment of Aboriginal peoples.
HAITI: 12 JANUARY 2010
The day a catastrophic earthquake killed over 100,000 people and left 2 million orphans in Haiti.
http://www.axisweb.org/seCVPG.aspx?ARTISTID=9891
http://www.lux.org.uk/collection/artists/grace-ndiritu
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