Archive for December, 2009

Time is running out–help The LAMP reach its fundraising goal!

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

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Time is running out to help us reach our fundraising goal for 2009!
Donate to The LAMP today, and help us reach our goal of $2,850–enough to buy three new editing stations! Already, The LAMP has taught over 500 students, but with more equipment we can continue to grow and reach more communities in need of basic media literacy. When you support The LAMP, you’re investing in our on-the-ground efforts to empower New Yorkers living in a world where media is dramatically changing the way we learn, work and interact with others. Support The LAMP, and you’re for a media-savvy student, for a more involved parent, for an innovative and modern educator. Support The LAMP, and you’re for a critical mass.

Make your 100% tax-deductible donation now!

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LAMP workshops make a difference for students!

Louis and Lenox
“I’ve noticed advertisements a lot lately.
I pay attention to them. [I've learned]  that advertisements are for getting people to want to buy more. I think it’s important for children to know about advertisements more than anything… so they know what’s around them, in their community.”
–Lenox, age 19, The Bronx; student of The LAMP’s Family Video workshop sponsored by Mount Hope Housing Company
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LAMPcamp 2009
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Our Latest LAMPlit: Check Out The News!

Friday, December 18th, 2009

The LAMP has added another LAMPlit resource guide to its library! Check out the news! is written by Katherine Fry, Ph.D., Education Director and Professor of Media Studies at Brooklyn College. Dr. Fry has spent years studying news literacy, and recently has been traveling to conferences to speak on the subject to other communications professionals.

So, what is news literacy? It’s the ability to think critically about the news, and the way you find out about what is reported in the world around you. It helps you form your own opinions, and become a more active media consumer. Instead of believing whatever a news outlet tells you, you’ll be thinking for yourself about how, why and where you get the news that shapes your life and your everyday decisions. Download Check out the news! for free today, and you’ll never see news in quite the same way again.

Give the gift of media literacy in 2010!

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Media literacy can change lives.
Each week, the average youth watches a full 24 hours of television. Recent studies show that without skills to think critically about media like TV, young people are more likely to smoke, become obese and do worse in school. When you donate to The LAMP, you invest in our programs bringing free media literacy training to hundreds of New York City youth, parents and educators.

Donate now!

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“I hope we have more awesome experiences like this!”

Digital Remix students“This workshop was an awesome experience because we learned how to use iMovie and how to edit commercials…
We learned how to use sound, text, pictures, movies, and special effects on iMovie to create a remix of the commercials. [LAMP Education Director] Katherine [Fry] was talking about a special program called The LAMP (Learning About Multimedia Project) where she taught us about how commercials have hidden messages and how some can lie to persuade people to buy their product…I thank everyone in MOUSE Sqaud for an awesome experience on that day. I hope we have more awesome experiences like this!”


–Yvette, age 19, Queens; student of The LAMP’s “Digital Remix” workshop sponsored by MOUSE

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See LAMP students in action!
LAMPcamp 2009
Click the image above for a video about our first-ever summer program, LAMPcamp, and browse student work.
The LAMP is on:

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Are “spend to save” deals worth it?

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Even though we’re already on the third day of Hanukah and there are only ten shopping days left until Christmas, the email offers keep coming in. Ever since the week of Black Friday, my in-box has been filled with special “deals” from just about every online retailer I have ever used. The message is about the same–20% off on this, free shipping on that–and I’d be lying if I said that I hadn’t taken advantage of any of them. However, the ones that trip me up are ones like the Sephora offer pictures at left. The email starts off telling me that I’ve got $15 free to spend on anything I want, which sounds good. I enjoy make-up. But then, my marketing/media literacy kicks in and tells me that there has to be a catch; nothing is ever really free. I read a little further, and sure enough, I have to spend $35 in order to save $15.

So, holiday shopping tip number three: Beware of “spend to save” deals. (Missed our earlier posts? Check out holiday shopping tips one and two.) Offers like this are tempting, and can be useful depending on your shopping plans, but they can also bring you to spend more than you may have originally intended in order to pass the  threshold of, for example, $35. You buy what you set out to buy, but then your basket totals only $30, so you throw in something else just to get the deal. Yes, you’re saving money, but you also had to make an extra purchase and are now saddled with some extraneous item, just so you could say you got a bargain.

Again, sometimes “spend to save” offers can be genuinely useful, but think carefully before you buy. Remember that the job of advertisers and marketers is to create need. Before you enter the ring and start shopping, make sure you’ve thought ahead so that you, and not the advertisements, are in control.

–Emily Long

The Salahis, Facebook and the Power Wall

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Michaele Salahi getting friendly with Joe Biden

Michaele Salahi getting friendly with Joe Biden

Like everyone else, I couldn’t help but hear about Michaele and Tareq Salahi. On Thanksgiving morning, I was eating breakfast with my parents in the hotel where we were staying, and that same bit of footage–Michaele and Tareq enter, wave, walk; Michaele holds him back for another camera opp–played over and over again. At first I didn’t realize the magnitude of what had happened; that this was a major security breach and not just a publicity stunt or a misdirected invitation. Then reading online today in the New York Times, I learned of still another sin the Salahis committed–they put the pictures up on Facebook!

Now, aside from the obvious stupidity of publicizing pictures of yourself posing with leaders of the free world at a very exclusive party to which you were not invited, I have to say I disagree with part of David Segal’s criticism. He points out that by posting photos on Facebook, the Salahis erred by making public the traditional, time-honored Power Wall (i.e., physical wall of photos of yourself with important people). The Power Wall used to exist only in offices or homes, but not anymore. Years ago, if a photo was to be seen at all, it had to be printed, so the print itself was not a big deal. Now, choosing to print a photo indicates that it is something special, and so the pictures you display in private are carefully curated by you or someone close to you. For the purpose of striking awe in someone sitting across from your desk, a traditional Power Wall is still effective, but the days of owning your image are long gone. That client can walk out of your office, find you on Facebook or Flickr, and see any old picture they want; the word ‘authorized’ means very little. Your real power wall is on Facebook, and you demonstrate power by making sure you are not tagged in photos you don’t like. One would think this would be understood in an Administration which was put in place due largely to its wielding of social media.

While a large part of this has to do with social media and technology, another part of this has to do with media itself. One of the basic points of being media literate is understanding the power of imagery, which is something we generally take for granted. The Salahis certainly did. I have plenty of friends who have posted photos on Facebook from the time they met a famous actor, shook the hand of Barack Obama as he campaigned for President, and even one friend who snapped a shot of herself with the Dalai Lama, but the difference is that no rules were violated in the process. It’s really the very well-known context of Michaele Salahi’s shot with Joe Biden that makes it so inappropriate to share, and the fact that she shared it demonstrates idiocy, naivete, lack of foresight or all of the above. But if Biden–or any other White House officials who allowed personal cameras into the event–didn’t think that photo would turn up later, he was not much better.

–Emily Long

Warning: This blog post has been digitally enhanced

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Perusing the New York Times this morning, I came across another piece about the idea that digitally altered photographs for advertising should be labeled as having been retouched. The idea is that if we’re told that a photo of a model isn’t “real” then we might not feel as bad about our real-world physical flaws and quirks. France has a law on the table that, if passed, would require all retouched photos to carry a disclaimer, just as tobacco companies have to explicitly print on their product that it is extremely hazardous to health.

Henri Robin and a Specter by Eugene Thiebault (1863)

"Henri Robin and a Specter" by Eugene Thiebault (1863)

This brings me back to a photography exhibit I saw a few years ago at the Metropolitan Museum of Art here in New York called “The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult.” Over 120 ’spiritualist’ photographs were pulled together beginning from the 1860s depicting ghosts visiting the living, physical manifestations of thoughts, dreams and feelings, and spirits appearing in seances. The photographs, though stunning, are fake. They were made by manipulating a wet photographic plate, but appeared in newspapers, journals and parlors across the country as evidence of ghosts and spirits. William Mumler, generally regarded as the pioneer of spirit photography, made a fortune selling these photos, but lost it all to legal costs incurred during the 1869 trial accusing him of fraud. The charges were eventually dropped due to lack of evidence by the prosecution, though the judge claimed he believed the photos were indeed fraudulent. Still, spirit photography continued for many more decades. The point here is that, almost from the dawn of photography itself, people have been manipulating images with no disclaimer.

How different are Mumler’s photographs from digitally altered advertising photographs of today? In both cases, an image is produced that is meant to inspire emotion of some sort in the viewer. That image is then sold to the masses, who may or may not think to ask questions about how such an image is made. Virtually all photos taken today are retouched in some way, whether to correct red-eye, brighten colors, correct skin tone or alter lighting. Many of these photos hang in museums as pieces of priceless art. The question is, where do we draw the line–should digitally altered still lifes also carry a label stating that they were touched up? And, when looking at a picture of an impossibly beautiful person, would a label really keep you from beating yourself up because you don’t look like the Photoshopped model? Ultimately, the label only scratches the surface of what really should be done, which is to educate people about how and why media images are made.

Happy Holidays from The LAMP

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

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The LAMP needs your help!

This holiday season, The LAMP needs your help during our annual fundraising drive. Our goal is to raise $2,850–enough for us to buy three new Macbooks to use in our workshops. With us, these computers are more than just laptops; they’re portals to teaching youth, parents and educators how to be critical media consumers. As a fully registered 501(c)3 non-profit organization, all of your donation is tax-deductible, and every little bit helps us reach our goal. Click below to donate!

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Favorite Workshop Moment:

D.C. Vito

LAMPcamp“My favorite workshop moment took place during LAMPcamp. During our session with the male LAMPers, we explored how the media defines what it means to be a man. A couple of students were taken aback when we showed them footage of Wesley Snipes in Blade, followed immediately by scenes of him as a drag queen in the movie To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar. This opened up a spectacular discussion about what really does make a man, and how stereotypes are reinforced or challenged. A lot of the students said it really changed the way they look at men in media.”
–LAMP Executive Director, D.C. Vito

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