YouTube: Social Conscience
YouTube has been around for almost ten years now. (Which means it'll be heading up to big school soon...)
When it first started I don't think the creators Hurley, Chen and Karim had any idea that it would eventually earn them almost $400million each, change the face of file sharing and be responsible for the pressure sores on several million teenagers' backsides, caused by an overdose of PewDiePie or Smosh.
(Actually, the story goes that YouTube started because these three PayPal employees were having difficulty getting the video of Janet Jackson's boob falling out at the 2004 Superbowl, for anyone who hasn't seen the image, check here).
But the impact of YouTube is even greater than that. It is being used regularly to combat crime, to raise awareness and to bring people together.
Remember Brian Bates, video vigilante. I mentioned him back in May, as the guy who's made it his mission to catch people having sex with prostitutes in public places. Then there's the guy who caught a toilet paper litterer: it's not a major crime, but still it's toilet paper...
What YouTube does is let people share their experiences, and name and shame any offenders. You can argue among yourselves about whether that's a good thing or a bad thing. But it is what it is.
YouTube can be a force for good, or a force for bad, depending on how you use it. If you use it to make the world a better place, then everybody wins.
Local News
West Cumbria might be a long way from the big cities, but that doesn't mean it doesn't have value. Romar Innovate Ltd (up at Hensingham), is helping the fight against Ebola by making protective suits for the doctors and nurses who are treating the sick and the dying. Without those suits (which are disposable, and staff can go through four or five a day), there is a much greater risk of the doctors and nurses becoming infected themselves.
The lesson is that you don't have to live in Manchester or London to make a difference, people right here in Copeland are saving lives.
The full story is here
And Finally...
Seeing as how it's Halloween today, here's a video of a prank going wrong. Awesome.
"If you are silent about your pain, they'll kill you and say you enjoyed it."
Zora Neale Hurston
Friday, 31 October 2014
Thursday, 16 October 2014
Politics isn't dull...
There was a time when I found politics boring. It was until
I turned 18 at the earliest (which is a bit of a problem when you realise that
I studied Government and Politics at A-level — I got grade E).
It wasn’t until I was able to vote that I became even slightly
interested.
But even as a child there was one thing about politics that
I loved: a TV programme called On the Record. Well, not the programme, just theopening credits.
Now, you have to remember I’m talking about a pre-satellite
TV world, when we had 4 channels to choose from, and on Sunday’s you could
watch gardening programmes, religious programmes or news programmes; so a giant
crocodile rampaging across the UK was one of the highlights of the day.
I’ll be honest though: when the credits were over I turned
it off. The crocodile was the only thing I found interesting.
My question is: why is politics boring? The word just means ‘of the people’. So
anything to do with people is really politics. Not just on a world level, but
in every house.
Adults at home get annoyed because you haven’t done your
jobs? That’s politics.
You complain that you get too much homework from school?
That’s politics.
You get your brother or sister in a headlock because they’re
a butthead. Even that’s politics.
It’s not boring, it’s life.
Sometimes what makes it boring is the people representing your
views. Like Rep. Lloyd “Ted” Poe, who is
so boring he sends his own grandson to sleep during discussions of domestic
violence.
Domestic violence isn’t boring, it’s a horrible situation
where people live in fear, where rage and anxiety make a massively unhappy
home. But Ted Poe manages to make it
sound irrelevant. (I encourage you to
stop watching the kid flopping about in the background and listen to what Ted
actually says, because it’s pretty horrible).
Then there’s the guy with a voice like a dalek, who’s doing
his party no favours by speaking publicly (and the interviewer isn’t much
better). What they’re actually talking about is important, because it’s
referring to the Irish Prime Minister having no authority — basically because
he’s in the seat but isn’t representing the people, and that’s his job!
And people not doing their jobs isn't funny, well, not often.
One final thing to remember -- you can stay out of politicians' lives forever if you're careful, but politicians won't stay out of yours...
Friday, 3 October 2014
Beach cleaning fail
I think it’s fair to say that the beach clean last week was
a bit of a bust. Many thanks to Jacq and
Mandy at Shackles Off who gave up part of their Saturday to pitch in on
Seascale Beach. Unfortunately, there
were a couple of better things on that day: Egremont Crab Fair
and teenage apathy
I know it’s hard to motivate yourself. I get that:
I was a teenager too.
Eighteen years
ago.
(Wow, that’s a depressing thought).
But an even more depressing thought is what’s going to happen
to the world if we keep turning our backs on the problems.
And I’m not just talking beach cleaning here…
The Time for Change group successfully campaigned for a
referendum on how our borough should be run, at the referendum the public chose
to elect (i.e. vote for) the next mayor, but so far no-one seems to want the
job.
No-one wants to try and fix the problems in Copeland.
I want you to check out this song by Turin Brakes, it’s The Sea Change (beaches again…) but it’s about more than that, it’s about the fact
that we can only expect someone else to fix the broken things for so long,
before eventually we have to be that someone else, we have to fix whatever’s
broken.
Why not today?
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