Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Students in Monterrey create their own blogs


Here are some examples of blogs created by students at the Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León in Monterrey for an Olympics of Digital Journalism.

You can get the idea of some of the possibilities for publishing not only words but photos, slideshows, video and graphics.

This entry has a light-hearted cartoon about the twin worries of contracting dengue or human influenza.

The blog rehiletee showcases student artwork.

The blog Jovenomía focuses on getting a debate going.

The blog Sugiere-me also is a space for debates.

Get over the fear, get started

It´s fairly simple to start a basic blog using Wordpress or Blogger. Get a friend to help you get started.

What I tell journalists is to start the blog and gradually add elements as you learn more. A blog can evolve over time and become more and more sophisticated.

My own blog has gone through several transformations. Some of the early work is a little embarrassing because it´s so simple, but it´s a learning process.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Students talk about expressing themselves through photography

Listen to My Pictures - Foto Class - Guadalajara, Mexico from Josh Meltzer on Vimeo.

In this video of 13 minutes, a half-dozen photography students describe how they are using cameras to capture the world as they see it.

Josh Meltzer, a newspaper photographer on sabbatical as a Fulbright Fellow in Guadalajara, taught the class and invited other professionals to work with the students.

As you can see, the students produced some exceptional work using very simple digital cameras. In the interviews you´ll get an idea of what they were trying to say with their work.

Stereotyping, biting satire and youth culture: Nacos vs. Fresas

Part of youth culture is deciding who´s in and who´s out. This is not new. And it creates culture clashes. It has to do with how young people dress and talk, the music and movies they like and how they spend their time.

In Mexico today, it´s about the Nacos and the Fresas. Here´s a video that makes fun of the mannerisms and tastes of both.



What do you think about these stereotypes? What kind of video would you make about other young people at your school? Satire is by its nature nasty. It demeans people. Would you want to make that kind of art?

Nothing new about the clashes

In the Broadway play and movie "West Side Story," the art form is not satire but musical tragedy, and its setting is New York City in the 1950s.

The two gangs that are battling each other are the Sharks, who are from families of Puerto Rican immigrants, and the Jets, who are from working class white families.

In the end the clashes lead to violence and death, just as they did in Shakespeare´s play "Romeo and Juliet," which "West Side Story" draws upon.

Featured in the newspaper

The Guadalajara Reporter, an English language newspaper here in the capital of Jalisco, recently did an article about the cultural phenomenon of Nacos and Fresas.

"From the dandies of the early 19th century to greasers, punks, teddies, mods, hicks, Goths, thugs and metrosexuals, social stereotyping has forever been part of our culture, says the Reporter.

"Mexico’s naco and fresa phenomenon is a societal chasm that accentuates two ends of the cultural spectrum. It’s also sprouted a rash of jokes and a now famous cartoon series on YouTube."



Art isn´t always pretty. Often it highlights the dark side of human nature.

What did you like or dislike about these videos?

Friday, January 15, 2010

Young Mexicans have few job prospects

A recent article in the daily newspaper La Jornada talked about how Mexico´s adolescents are among the most forgotten groups in society.

Academics at the National University (UNAM) blame this on the lack of public policies, family crises and the fact that staying in school doesn´t help one´s job prospects.

An estimated 7 to 9 million adolescents in Mexico are neither employed nor in school. In Mexico City, about half of all adolescents are in that category.

Even a student who graduates from high school or obtains a college degree has no guarantee of getting a job, according to authorities quoted in La Jornada.

In many families, one parent has left home to find work in another state or country, which means the young people don´t get the guidance they need.

As a result, many young people enter the informal economy, which means street vendors, casual labor in construction, housemaids, washing cars and other types of unstable employment.

In the building where I live in Guadalajara, a 16-year-old boy works as the caretaker and gardener for a small salary. He dropped out of school to work.

In some cases, adolescents get into illegal activities, such as the drug trade. Grafitti on a wall in Culiacán, Sinaloa, expressed the attitude of some who go that route: "I prefer to die young and rich rather than old and poor".

Street art and street events thrive in Mexico

A website called Arte Callejero in Mexico City is all about celebrating street art and street events.

The site says it is aimed at improving the quality of life in cities.

This wall painting, next to a downspout, was taken from the website. With the country´s war on organized crime and druglords, Mexicans see military vehicles and heavily armed soldiers all over the cities and countryside.

Street art, graffiti, murals or whatever you want to call these works bring popular expression into a public place. Art isn´t just in museums.

This painting of a lady, with its elaborately painted frame, is on a busy pedestrian walkway in Mexico where it´s designed to make people stop, look, think and maybe be moved.

This is one of several examples from the website of paintings done in broken-down buildings in Monterrey. The artists evidently are trying to add something beautiful to something ugly.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Hispanic students produce online news in Spanish, English

Hispanic students at California State University at Northridge publish their own multimedia web page and blogs, called El Nuevo Sol, with stories in Spanish and English.

Above is a screenshot from a blog on performing arts called Trendz LA that is part of the site.

Jóvenes indocumentados luchan por educarse from Jessica Retis on Vimeo.



Students produced a multimedia package, with video and text in Spanish, about the struggle of undocumented students to get an education in the U.S.

Another student blog, called AmericaTropical, has articles by students in both English and Spanish on a variety of topics. Here´s one in Spanish on the laws to prevent hate crimes.

A Mexican professor with a vision

El Nuevo Sol is the project of Professor José Luis Benavides, a native of Mexico City who left in the 1980s to get his master´s and doctoral degrees at the University of Texas.

California State already has a student publication in English, called the Sundial, but Benavides wanted to develop a news medium for the Hispanic students in his classes, many of them with Mexican heritage.

Multilingüe, multimedia y multicultural


His vision is to train Hispanic students to work in the many Spanish-language media outlets in Los Angeles, whose Hispanic population is 48%, and elsewhere in the U.S. To do this they must develop the skills to be, in his words, "multilingüe, multimedia y multicultural."

He offers courses in Latino Journalism and advises students on the El Nuevo Sol website.

Professor Benavides´s project serves an important need because many Spanish-language news outlets in the States have a difficult time recruiting journalists with the required language skills.

Here´s another example of a student´s multimedia package, this one an audio slideshow about the language barrier.

Las barreras del lenguaje from Jessica Retis on Vimeo.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Mexican journalism student makes his mark

Jorge Tirzo, a 20-year-old journalism student at the Monterrey Institute of Technology in Mexico, has managed to make a name for himself online.

In the photo above, he is showing a class of professional journalists the website that he and a group of fellow students launched. The site is now defunct, but Jorge has a blog called Cosas Imposibles 3.0, which is a lighthearted look at his explorations into literature, art, technology and journalism.

Jorge is also working with an environmental organization called Pronatura to publish video podcasts produced by students. He regularly posts items about journalism and culture on his Twitter feed.

I invited Jorge to participate with professionals in a course at the Digital Journalism Center (Centro de Periodismo Digital) because he has some skills and experience online that the veterans don´t. He also had shown some initiative in launching various projects and getting involved in activities outside the classroom.

The truth is that veterans and beginning journalists have a lot they can learn from each other.

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