Innovation Ecosystem

Speaking up, speaking out, being heard in the digital world

Community forum on Wednesday, April 23, at 5:30 p.m. at AS220

A community forum, "Speaking up speaking out, being heard in the digital world" will be held on Wednesday, April 23, beginning at 5:30 p.m. at 115 Empire St. in Providence, hosted by AS220 and convened by ConvergenceRI.

By Richard Asinof
Posted 4/7/14
With the pending sale of The Providence Journal, the conflicts around news coverage, point of view, and information flow in the digital world we live in here in Rhode Isalnd become a critical factor to participation in decision-making in our community. Coupled with the recent Supreme Court decision striking down limits to campaign contributions, a decision that Bill Moyers termed “All the free speech you can buy,” the role of an engaged community – and access to information and data – become that much more vital.
Culturally diverse communities will soon be the majority in Rhode Island. Why has the business community failed to promote cultural diversity as economic advantage moving forward? [That may be changing, hopefully. Laurie White of the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce recently posted a link to Color Magazine’s article, “America’s Next Chapter is Hispanic.”]
How can engaged communities change the way that news is reported and the way in which elected officials make decisions? Can it counteract the financial interests who seek to control the flow of information? The pushback on the new guidelines for statins is one example. So, too, is the development of an online community of parents battling PANS/PANDAS.
How does Twitter change the political equation? Jim Hummel, who describes himself as an “equal opportunity ambusher,” described the behavior of Twitter by some local reporters on the Dan Yorke radio show recently: “You would think the press is a bunch of teenage girls…” Beyond reporters, who is paying attention to what is being tweeted? Do their editors actually read what is being said?
In a recent incident, Sen. Joshua Miller confronted an aggressive, disruptive reporter from a non-mainstream media outlet, who was unabashedly promoting a pro-gun agenda and harassing an elderly veteran with a different opinion. Miller swore at him and the video went viral. Miller apologized, but since then, websites for his businesses have been hacked and damaged, he has received numerous personal threats, and he has reported receiving virulent anti-Semitic attacks. The state police are investigating. While the cursing episode has been covered extensively here in Rhode Island, the disparaging attacks against Miller have received little media attention here in the Ocean State. The attacks on Miller have crossed a line – and may have broken numerous laws. The community needs to speak up – from all sides of the political equation – and say that bullying personal attacks in the digital world will not be condoned. Hateration gets no toleration.

PROVIDENCE – A community forum, “Speaking Up, Speaking Out, Being Heard in the Digital World: When all the news doesn’t fit into print,” will be held on Wednesday, April 23, beginning at 5:30 p.m. at 115 Empire St., hosted by AS220 and convened by ConvergenceRI.

The forum will feature Steve Klamkin from WPRO, Phil Eil from The Providence Phoenix, Erika Niedowski from AP [invited, not yet confirmed], Nancy Thomas from Tapestry Communications, Dr. Pablo Rodriguez from Latino Radio, Bill Ostendorf from Creative Circle, Jennifer Toone Corrigan from In Toone Communication, and Reza Corrine Clifton, digital storyteller. Richard Asinof, founder and editor of ConvergenceRI, will serve as moderator.

The format will begin with about 30 minutes of discussion by the panelists before opening it up for dialogue and conversation with the audience. The conversation/forum will be recorded and curated. The evening is free and the audience is encouraged to speak up and speak out.

Why?
The news and the flow of information – and who controls that flow – is rapidly shifting. The pending sale of The Providence Journal has magnified the conflicts in Rhode Island about speaking up, speaking out, being heard.

Whose voice is it, anyway?
The way we talk – or don’t talk – with each other has redefined our sense of community in the mobile, digital world we live in.

Or you for it, or against it?
It’s easy to become victims of false, simplistic dichotomies – us vs. them, young vs. old, liveral vs. conservative, tweeps vs. non-tweeps – tensions and divisions that the news media often seek to exploit to sell their news/advertising products.

What does it mean to belong to a community?
It is a Facebook group? Or a Linked In network? Or a Tweet Deck? Is community a connection to share resources? Or a neighborhood of engaged people? An online network? Do face-to-face conversations – and interviews – still have as much currency as a tweet and a text?

Who’s the audience?
The struggle to be heard and to participate in decision-making is still very much about equity, justice, narrative and culture – who gets what, how and when.

What’s the message? Is it entertainment or news? Is it education, or self-promotion?
At the root are important economic, cultural and political challenges:
• What is an engaged community in a digital world?
• What happens when traditional news sources – and power elites – attempt to control the flow of information?
• How has access to date become an issue of equity, changing the way decisions are made?
• How important is it to chase the ephemeral rabbit – and never catch it – on the 24/7 breaking news treadmill?
• What happens when you are selling, not sharing?

How can you tell the difference between advertorial, native advertising and news content?

For more information, contact Richard Asinof at asinof@convergenceri.com.

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