Tuesday, July 22, 2014

The Power of Media: Using Entertainment for Social Change

We’ve all had the experience of falling into the lives of lovable characters and scintillating drama. Personally, my addiction to the Vampire Diaries and Scandal has me hiding away from friends, bars and daylight for days at a time. We all garner that bit of shame after a Netflix-binge, crouching away into dusky corners like a dieter with brownie still smeared across our faces. We know it’s not the best use of our time, not enriching, not meaningful; but slap me stupid, it’s addictive.

Which begs the questions: what if it could be a good use of our time? Enriching? Even meaningful?

In 1969, Miguel Sabido noticed just this. In Peru, Simplemente Maria captured the hearts of viewers nationally. When Maria, the star of the soap opera, went to literacy classes, enrollment soared across the country. When she got married, more than 10,000 gifts arrived at the Church where it happened. Sabido noticed the power of this soap opera to use a popular, entertaining medium to create a positive cultural change, and thus Entertainment-Education was born. And 45 years later, PCI Media Impact (a non-profit specializing in international communications for social change) is utilizing it to change the world.

Entertainment-Education is about 70% entertainment, 30% education. The order is important- generally speaking, entertainment-education initiatives aim to create interesting plots, dynamic characters and dramatic twists, often focusing on these aspects long before introducing any sort of ‘message’. Nobody wants to be preached to, especially when receiving their dose of good old-fashioned dramatic fantasy.
While there are many programs internationally, and some in the US, that are specifically structured to do this, there are soap operas and dramas that do raise questions about social norms without an overt intention to do so, and that is what makes them effective.

Take HBO’s The Newsroom. Driven by complex interactions among a complicated boss, a quirky twenty-something, and awkward incestuous interoffice dynamics, this drama has all the makings of a good story. But it also addresses serious issues surrounding modern media and the media’s role in confronting the errors of our policies and politicians. It raises real and dynamic discourse surrounding the responsibility of media to disseminate information that is contextualized, aware of its bias and ultimately responsible to its audience.

The Newsroom plays an integral role in shifting the narrative by encouraging its viewers to question the legitimacy of our media outlets.  The show also demonstrates how the responsibility of these organizations falls on us, their audience, affecting our opinion, shaping our democracy and sometimes even fueling conflict itself.

Most shows have some element of social discourse – the foundation for real social change; without it, the storylines would not be engaging and relatable. Shows like the Newsroom are well thought out (Aaron Sorkin, you genius, you) and present intentional commentary catered towards an intelligently-engaged audience, and some do not (although I’d argue that the Vampire Diaries has a pointed message that high-schoolers are actually blood sucking demons who probably won’t make it past the age of eighteen). Then there are the shows that are specifically catered on altering social norms, and those are the ones changing the world, one episode at a time.

One such is the telenovela Mucho Corazon, or A Lot of Heart, produced by PCI Media Impact, together with the State Government of Chiapas, Mexico and more than 25 partners.  The show reached over ten million viewers in Chiapas and across Latin America. This soap opera, which was written by two prominent Mexican writers with significant experience scriptwriting for telenovelas, focused on the story of Maruch, a young indigenous woman living in a rural community. Throughout the episodic drama, Maruch is faced with issues of harassment, corruption, racial and gender discrimination, lack of opportunity due to social class, an absent mother and an alcoholic father.

This show was wildly popular- so much so that it is still being rebroadcasted by 23 television stations across Latin America and by two separate stations in the U.S. that cater to Mexican-Americans.  The focus on character, story line and dramatic engagement led individuals to identify with the characters and scenarios in this show, forgetting that they were actually learning anything in the process.

The impact? Apart from a delicious pleasure at the characters’ triumphs and tribulations (which prompts hurling things at the television and writhing on the couch), 74.2% viewers were concerned with the rampant rates of violence against women, versus 55.7% of non-viewers, not to mention significant discrepancies between viewers and non-viewers in terms of the level of awareness about indigenous discrimination and girls’ education.  

And it all started with a television show. Indeed, one of the best mediums for change has already crept into our households and the households of billions of people around the world in the form of a box (albeit, an ever-thinning box).

But as we all know, serial dramas aren’t the only way we connect (and space out).

Music is an influential medium (I can still recall every word of Baby One More Time from elementary school), and utilized in a conscious way, it can be a powerful mechanism for change. It is unique in that it’s a cultural phenomenon that has the ability to transcend the boundaries of cultures. Nobody forgets Aretha Franklin’s Respect and MJ’s Thriller. Music has been changing opinion, emotion and drug use for centuries. And there’s plenty of it telling us great things.

There’s also a lot telling us to gyrate.

Personally, I prefer the woman-power music (like Miranda Lambert’s Gunpowder and Lead, where she tells the story of waiting for her abusive lover with a shotgun), but the other edge of that violence and sex -addled sword (and there’s plenty of it) is prominently featured in popular music (thank you, Pitbull and Ke$ha: “I have 'em like Miley Cyrus, clothes off, Twerking in their bras and thongs, timber
Face down, booty up, timber”). And music has become a sword- messages commonly focus on violence, sex and degradation, but we all like to twerk to it so we don’t bother to comment.

Alas, there is another way. Lady Gaga’s Born this Way is a good example of promoting self-confidence. Every country song ever has a lyric about Jesus, being neighborly, or loving America (see Tim McGraw’s Southern Voice for all three). And there are those that deliver social commentary for sure (Black Eyed Peas’ Where is the love?).

Enter the coolest hipco star to grace modern music, Takun J – a Liberian rapper who, in partnership with PCI Media Impact, UNICEF, THINK (Liberia) and more than ten partners, has recently released a music video of his hit song, Song for Hawa, which tells the story of a Liberian girl who was a victim of sexual assault.

Rape is a virtual epidemic in Liberia, with statistics ranging from 60-80% of women victims of sexual violence, including rape, in the nation. With almost four million people, the number of women assaulted is astounding. To address this issue, Takun J has used his fame as Liberia’s most prominent rapper to propagate anti-rape and gender equality messages.

Through his music, Takun J won “Best Hip Co Artist of the Year” by the Liberian Entertainment Awards and is encouraging girls to get their stories out, simultaneously discouraging sexual assault and de-stigmatizing its victims. Indeed, his popularity has been rising all the way to the policy level, where he was named “Anti-Rape Ambassador” by Liberia’s Ministry of Gender and Development.

The Vampire Diaries and Timber have their appeal- they are fun distractions that allow us to escape into a different world (and after a long day, I for one have no desire to think). But through the use of Entertainment-Education, we can get the benefits of these campaigns how we want to: with our asses stapled to the couch and our brains on slow-mo.


And if that’s the case, then the only question left is this: what change in the world do you want to see, and what time is it on?

Friday, November 15, 2013

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Check out this story on Tapestry about food and togetherness:


History Made Real: Vintage Photos in Color

This awesome article shows a series of black and white pictures that have been "colorized." It really brings history (hi-story... it often seems like a story rather than a reality) into something that looks like it could be happening in our streets. Check out this car crash in Washington D.C. in 1921:


It certainly seems close to life now, not just an incident 92 years ago. For the rest, check out the article here.

The "Perfect" Female Body- Mannequins and Plastic Surgery in Venezuela

This is a really great video showing how mannequins are changing, along with Venezuelan women's ideas about their bodies, culminating in a trend of plastic surgery. I find it interesting how different the  "perfect body" is in Venezuela compared to the U.S., but how similar the conception of needing to conform is.

While the Venezuelan ideal emphasizes large breasts and a big butt, boob jobs soar as women seek out larger and larger breasts (note the woman at the end, saying that she will probably get more than one surgery so that she can increase her breast size further) and more perfect bodies.

The man speaking in this video, who is part of the Miss Venezuela pageant, takes pride in the "perfect woman" rather than the natural one. It is not her inner beauty that matters- he says that inner beauty is merely something made up by ugly women to justify themselves. Nor is it her natural beauty- he talks about the need for women to conform to the ideal he's created and finds no benefit in staying natural; artificial is better if it makes the woman "perfect".

It's alarming to think that people like this can shape the concept of what an entire country of people view as beautiful. Indeed, the women in this video agree they need surgery. And looking in the U.S., it makes sense that boob jobs, liposuction, diets, waxing, threading, facials, manicures, implanted eyelashes and a million other beauty procedures exist to help us fulfill our ideal.

As an American, I think that we can never be thin enough (until we're too thin- "Oh, she needs help," says the person who told you you're fat six months ago), our breasts need to be large (this is inherently a contradiction, since breasts are composed of mostly fat), and our skin and hair care need to reflect our youth (brazilian waxes, flawless baby skin, long, fluttery eyelashes). Our concept of beauty is just as flawed and impossible to reach.

On the upside, looking at a similar problem elsewhere, though with a different vision of "perfect," emphasizes how subjective beauty really is. In the past, fat women were considered beautiful because it displayed their wealth (since they could eat enough and do very little physical labor). In Venezuela, the emphasis on a curvier woman contradicts the American dainty woman ideal. So if beauty is really subjective and cultural, we have the ability to recreate what we call beautiful, and that gives us all the power.



Thanks to Upworthy for the reference!