Posts Tagged ‘Gaslight’

Gaslight: September in Media History

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Sept 4, 2002: Kelly Clarkson was voted as the first “American Idol,” and the reality show stepped forward as a force to be reckoned with in the music and television industry. The fan following she gained from “Idol” led Clarkson to a double-platinum debut album and six Top 10 hits on Billboard. Eight years later, the reality television show is preparing Season 10, which will premiere on Fox on January 12, 2011. However, the show is currently in a stage of transition, with Simon Cowell having left the judging panel and a revised age limit rule, stating that contestants can be as young as 15. “American Idol” may also be waning in popularity, as Season 9 closed with the lowest-rated finale in the history of the show. Overall viewership has dropped 8.25% since 2006, and sales of debut albums by show winners have also plummeted.

Sept 19, 1982: In an email thread about physics and jokes, Carnegie Mellon University professor Scott E. Fahlman invented the emoticon. He suggested that jokes and sarcastic remarks made over email be indicated with a :-) and that non-jokes be designated with its opposite, :-( . Since then, emoticons have evolved so that many sentiments can be suggested, using a wide variety of letters and punctuation marks, nearly all of which can be found in any number of emails from my mother.

Sept 26, 1990: Just twenty years ago, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), announced the NC-17 rating for movies. Previously, an X rating was applied to films to keep moviegoers under the age of 17 from watching a certain film, but some filmmakers were interested in creating “edgy” and “sophisticated” films that went beyond an R-rating. They didn’t like the stigma that an X-rated film is pornography, and since X had already been trademarked by the pornography industry, the MPAA needed a different nomenclature. However, many theater chains that won’t screen X-rated movies will also not screen NC-17 movies, so in practice the two ratings are functionally similar.

Gaslight: July in Media History

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

July 14, 1995: On this day just fifteen years ago, researchers from the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits officially christened MPEG Layer 3 technology with the file-name extension of mp3. In development since the early 1970s, mp3 changed the world of music forever because of its ability to efficiently maintain high standards in compressed audio files. In other words, mp3 allowed people to begin storing music on their personal computers, enabled CD ripping and also meant faster download times from the Internet. Today, there are thousands of mp3-related devices available worldwide which are used to store, sort and play music.

MP3 also ushered in an era of change for the music industry, which continues to struggle in a marketplace where the practice of buying a CD is taking a backseat to downloading and sharing music instantly, cheaply and illegally. Multi-million lawsuits have been launched by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) regarding copyright infringement, royalties to artists and labels, illegal file sharing and piracy not only of mp3 files themselves but also of the technology used around them. On the flip side, the mp3 format has allowed millions of people to connect with and discover new music, and it means that you can listen to your music virtually anywhere–it’s been a long time since you had to sit by your stereo to hear your favorite song. The pros and cons of the mp3 are emblematic of so much media technology today which may make some things easier, but also demands that we make responsible choices about how to use it.

July 21, 2007: It is difficult to overstate the ubiquity of the Harry Potter franchise, and on this day in 2007 the series came to its literary end. In its first 24 hours on sale, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows sold a record-breaking 8.3 million copies just in the United States. The books may have contributed to increased literacy rates , and author J.K. Rowling has used their appeal to support numerous charities worldwide. The series has spawned films, a theme park, companion books, fan sites …you name it. It seems our media landscape will always have a place for the boy wizard.

Robert Tappan Morris

July 26, 1989: Robert Tappan Morris becomes the first hacker prosecuted for spreading a computer virus. Then a graduate student at Cornell University, Morris claimed the worm was intended as an experiment to find out how big the Internet really was. However, an error in the code programmed the virus to continue replicating itself, ultimately infecting more than 6,000 university, research and military computers. In 1990 he was sentenced to a $10,050 fine, 400 hours of community service and three years of probation. Today he is a teacher and researcher at MIT, and thousands have followed in his footsteps as enterprising hackers in their own right.

Gaslight: March in Media History

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

March 10, 1949: Mildred Gillars, aka “Axis Sally,” American broadcaster for Radio Berlin during WWII, is convicted of treason. Born in Portland, Oregon, Gillars pursued an acting career in New York City, and although she did get work, she didn’t realize the success of her dreams. In 1935 she moved to Germany to teach English, but eventually was hired by Radio Berlin as a broadcaster, which gave her a chance to flex her acting muscles. She referred to herself as “Midge on the mic” but was dubbed “Axis Sally” by the American allied forces who listened to her broadcasts. Her radio program was called “Home Sweet Home” and typically tried to weaken the morale of US soldiers with suggestions that their girlfriends and wives back home were being unfaithful. However, her most famous broadcast was “Vision of Invasion,” a play about a woman who dreamed her son had been killed at sea crossing the English Channel, complete with exceedingly graphic sound effects of the exploding ship. To boot, it was aired just one month before the D-Day invasion. When she was being prosecuted for treason, it was largely this broadcast which was used as evidence of her crime (though her oath swearing allegiance to Germany didn’t help her either). Finally, on March 10, her heavily covered, soap-opera trial which also detailed her romance with German serviceman Max Otto Koischwitz, ended with a sentence of 10-30 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. She served 12 years and became a kindergarten music teacher when released.

March 25, 1954: RCA begins production of color television sets. Retailing for $1,000 each, the sets came after an intense war in the 1940s between RCA and CBS about development of the color field sequential system which was to be used as the broadcasting standard, and the system’s compatibility with existing black and white television sets. Also complicating matters was the ban on color television sets was the ban on color set production which began in 1951 with the Korean War–the need to allocate funds to the war put a halt on the development of color receivers. But, RCA eventually had its day, and we’ve never watched TV the same way since.

Jack Paar

March 29, 1962: Jack Paar hosts “The Tonight Show” for the last time. After five years of hosting and ultimately creating the late-night talk-show format still used today, Paar left because he wanted to spend more time with his family and escape the press with its ruthless coverage of his internal quarrels with NBC executives and other stars in entertainment. He was replaced by Johnny Carson, who remained the show’s host until May 22, 1992.

Gaslight: February in Media History

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Milai cartoon

Cartoon by Sam Milai for the Pittsburgh Courier

In honor of Black History Month, The LAMP dedicates February’s Gaslight to African American pioneers in news media.

February 3, 1947: Percival Prattis becomes the first African American news correspondent admitted to the press galleries of both the United States House of Representatives and the Senate. In addition to his work as a journalist, Prattis was a civil rights leader working to advance the African American press. A veteran of World War I, Prattis joined the Pittsburgh Courier in 1935, became editor in 1956 and retired in 1962. He has been noted for his ability to unify black newsmen behind the fight against discrimination of African Americans in the press, particularly in the years around World War II. Prattis’ ability to directly observe Congress allowed him to report on government proceedings with firsthand knowledge of events, and he could apply his unique perspective as an African American veteran and leader of the early movement for civil rights.

February 8, 1944: Before Percival Prattis integrated the Congressional news galleries, Harry S. McAlpin integrated the Washington press corps when he became the first African American admitted to a White House press conference. McAlpin was advised against going to the press conference by Paul Wooten, reporter for the New Orleans Times-Picayune and President of the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA). Wooten informed McAlpin that he was not welcome in the press conference, that he would be given the notes taken by others in attendance for use in his reporting, and was told he could join the WHCA if he agreed to stay out of the press conferences. However, McAlpin attended the conference in the Oval Office anyway, and made a point of stopping by President Theodore Roosevelt’s desk. The President shook his hand and said, “I’m glad to see you McAlpin, and very happy to have you here.”

Malvin R. Goode

Malvin R. Goode

February 13, 1908: This is the birthday of Malvin R. Goode, who became the first African American television news correspondent for ABC in 1962. It happened that the lead ABC correspondent was on vacation during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and Goode was called upon to report in his absence. His 1995 obituary in the New York Times notes that Mal Goode was recommended to the position by his friend Jackie Robinson, and anchor Peter Jennings considered him a mentor. Before going on television, Goode worked at the Pittsburgh Courier while Percival Prattis was there, and continued the fight for civil rights long after his retirement from ABC in 1973.

Gaslight: January in Media History

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Matt DrudgeJanuary 17, 1998: A major milestone in online journalism was reached on this day, when blogger Matt Drudge reported on The Drudge Report that Newsweek magazine had killed a story about President Clinton having an affair with a young White House intern. Newsweek reporter Michael Isikoff had been investigating the story for almost a year, but at the last minute, the magazine decided not to bring it to press due to questions of credibility regarding the recorded telephone conversations between Monica Lewinsky and Linda Tripp. Drudge was tipped off by a source within Newsweek, and posted his item online around 11.30pm PST, before any other news outlets could go to print in the morning. The actual breaking of the news highlights many of the issues surrounding online journalism today–Drudge had no editor, and was willing to publish an item even though the source was questionable. However, perhaps it was the very lack of bureaucracy and politics within a mainstream media news outlet that allowed Drudge to publish; after all, he had little to lose if the story was false, whereas the future of Newsweek would have been in peril. Plus, Drudge was able to report the story in the middle of the night, and readers around the world could get the news instantly, long before the morning paper arrived or television news crews could convene for another broadcast. When the story turned out to be true, news outlets around the world were faced with the reality of a changing digital landscape for journalists and their readers.

Eisenhower in one of his televised news conferences

January 19, 1955: Another pivotal moment for Washington journalism occurred when President Dwight D. Eisenhower allowed the first televised presidential news conference from the White House. Before this time, the American people could only learn of the President’s remarks through reprints in newspapers by other journalists. Television allowed people to engage more closely with the President and the issues at hand, since they could now hear and him speaking for himself right in their living rooms. Although it wasn’t until John F. Kennedy’s administration that presidential news conferences were televised live, Eisenhower took an important first step towards increasing the level of transparency between the federal government and the public.

Image from parody of "The Raven" from "The Simpsons"

January 29, 1845: On this day, one of the best-known poems by one of America’s best-known poets was published when Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” graced the pages of the New York Evening Mirror. Poe’s piece about a man lamenting the loss of his beloved Lenore has fascinated generations of readers with its macabre story juxtaposed against a singsong rhyme structure, and it has been the subject of more than a few parodies.

Gaslight: November in Media History

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Tina Fey and Seth Myers picket at Rockefeller Center.

Tina Fey and Seth Myers picket at Rockefeller Center.

November 5, 2007 marked the first day of a strike by the Writers Guild of America-West and WGA-East which lasted one hundred days. The main issue was the compensation received by writers, which was meager when compared with large studio profits, and also how writers were to be compensated for reality and online content. The WGA strike is significant for many reasons: It was a clear turning point in the business of digital media, cost Hollywood billions of dollars, and drew attention to the plight of thousands of people working behind the scenes of media which most of us take for granted as being free (not to mention illegally downloadable). On February 26, 2008, a new contract was ratified by the union, and writers went back to work with new rights and protections. However, that contract is up in 2011, and a lot can happen between now and then in the world of media and entertainment. The issue will linger as long as we have an Internet, but the WGA strike  represented the arguably first big shot across the bow of the online media business.

On November 13, 1969, United States Vice President Spiro Agnew gave a speech in Des Moines, Iowa, accusing the nation’s television networks of using bias and distortion in their reporting. He further urged viewers to “register their complaints on bias through mail to the networks and phone calls to local stations.” Agnew lamented that the media was dictated by a small group of men, informing the opinions of an estimated 40 millions Americans who watched the nightly news, and who had recently seen several newsmen harshly critique President Nixon’s November 3 speech on Vietnam minutes after it was delivered. Forty years later, this event is especially significant amid the conflict between Barack Obama’s White House and Roger Ailes’ Fox News, with White House Communications Director Anita Dunn saying that the Administration is “not going to legitimize them as a news organization.” Then, as now, the White House was trying to define the meaning and purpose of news, and possibly reign in an independent and free press. In both cases, it seems, the Presidents might have been wishing that Americans were just a little more news literate.

The Hollywood Ten with their lawyers

The Hollywood Ten with their lawyers

November 25, 1947: A group of ten screenwriters and directors, known collectively as “The Hollywood Ten” are fired from their jobs in the first systemic Hollywood blacklist. Alvah Bessie, Herbert Biberman, Lester Cole, Edward Dmytryk, Ring Lardner, Jr., John Howard Lawson, Albert Maltz, Samuel Ornitz, Adrian Scott and Dalton Trumbo were all held in contempt of court one day prior for refusing to testify before the House of Un-American Activities (HUAC). Ultimately, 41 artists were called to testify, and over 320 people were eventually added to the blacklist that kept them from working in Hollywood. HUAC feared that these artists were  Communists, imbuing their work with propaganda designed to recruit members to the Communist Party. Those who refused to “name names” of anyone they knew who might be a Communist were added to the list, leaving many prominent voices silent, livelihoods destroyed and promising careers cut short. Those who did testify were despised by many of Hollywood’s elite, including Elia Kazan, who, when honored with the 1999 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Academy of Motion Pictures and Sciences, was met with protest; many Oscar attendees refused to stand when he took the podium to accept the award. The blacklisting of the Hollywood 10 was a pivotal moment in American cinematic history, both acknowledging and condemning the power of film.

News from The LAMP! Our October Illuminations Newsletter

Friday, October 9th, 2009

LAMP Logo

The LAMP Illuminations
October 2009
In This Issue
Spotlight: Claire Mysko
Highlight: Update on Flip and The LAMP!
Gaslight: October in Media History

Happening now at The LAMP…

Mt Hope

The LAMP is off to a busy start for the 2009-2010 school year! We’re doing a short-form documentary program at the Brooklyn Prospect Charter School, and Family Video workshops at the Mount Hope Housing Company in The Bronx. We’ll also be presenting at the Business Development Institute’s Nonprofit Social Communications Case Studies on October 28 at New York University. And, watch your email for an invitation to a very special event!

Spotlight: Claire Mysko
Claire MyskoThis month, we interviewed author Claire Mysko, co-author of “Does This Pregnancy Make Me Look Fat? The Essential Guide to Loving Your Body Before and After Baby.” Released this month, Claire and Magali Amadei (former model, now mom and body image activist) tackle the body issues many women experience before and after pregnancy, some of which are exacerbated by a baby-crazed media. An award-winning expert on body image and self-esteem, Claire gave us an inside look on how the book was developed and why having a positive body image is especially important for new and expecting mothers. Read our complete interview with Claire, or simply buy the book!

Highlight: Update on Flip and The LAMP!

Flip Spotlight logoSince February, The LAMP has been a member of the Spotlight Program with the makers of the bestselling Flip Video Camera. When you donate one camera for $150 to The LAMP, Flip will throw in a second to match! Now, the program has upgraded to include the Flip Ultra with 120 minutes of recording time. When you buy a Flip for The LAMP, you know that your donation will make an immediate impact. Flips are an easy way for students to create and edit their own short films and snapshots, plus they help us document our work. If you’re interested in making a donation, just send us an email for more information!

To help us continue our services as New York City’s only nonprofit organization giving free media literacy workshops to parents, youth and educators, please consider a small tax-deductible donation. Your donation goes to work immediately supporting workshop equipment, supplies, and administrative and facilitator fees.

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The LAMP recommends: “Does This Pregnancy Make Me Look Fat?”

Book cover

In a world of “baby bump watch” and  “get your pre-baby body back!” headlines, it’s no surprise that 88% of pregnant women worry about how pregnancy will change their bodies and self-esteem. Now, body image experts and authors Claire Mysko and Magali Amadei have responded with their new book, “Does This Pregnancy Make Me Look Fat? The Essential Guide to Loving Your Body Before and After Baby.” We love it for cracking the media veneer of what really happens to a pregnant woman’s body, and Publisher’s Weekly loves it too: “The concepts and solidarity here should prove valuable for millions of American women.” Check out The LAMP’s exclusive interview with Claire Mysko, and buy the book!

Gaslight:
October in Media History

October saw the death of one American media icon, and the birth of another. Want to learn more? Check out this month’s Gaslight entry!

Rock Hudson

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