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Visionaries Wanted

by John 14. October 2008 16:27

                                           KCM launched a co-op program earlier this year entitled Visions of Kenosha.   It airs weekdays from 5:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m. and features quiet images of Kenosha's natural and man-made surroundings.   This program belongs to everyone: that is, anyone who's able to contribute video to it may be considered to join its pool of producers.  

Its purpose is to help ease TV viewers into their day in a quiet, serene way.  Contributors are asked to videotape Kenosha's parks and attractions sans on-air talent or voice-overs.  If human beings are in the video, they should be in the background and not the focus of the shot.  If music is used, it should also be of a serene nature.   Think tinkling piano keys, soft flute music, or perhaps a solo oboe.   Use of ambient sounds--birds chirping, frogs croaking, crickets chirping--is highly encouraged.

Cameras used for this program should be either mounted on a tripod or otherwise stationery.   Pans, tilts, and zooms should be kept to an absolute minimum.   Think of these actions as salt-and-pepper.   A little bit seasons the meal.  Too much destroys it.   

Each shot can be thirty seconds or more in length.   We're not making MTV videos here.  

Ray Forgianni of Harbor Market of Kenosha recently called this programming, "visual perfume".   I like his description.

With autumn wearing its finest colors these days, now is a great time to become a visionary for Kenosha TV by becoming a producer for the co-op program, Visions of Kenosha.   

Send a postcard from home

by John 13. October 2008 17:48
I Took The Handmade Pledge! BuyHandmade.org

 Two years ago, local historian (and former Kenosha TV Committee member) John J. Hosmanek published a collection of Kenosha postcards through Arcadia Publishing.  This book proves that postcards are not only a form of communication, they're a window to our past, a reflection of our community, and pieces of art. 

While you can buy a postcard from your neighborhood malt shop, the truest treasures are homemade.  Artlink Contemporary Art Gallery in Fort Wayne, IN also appreciates handmade pieces as it invites artists from around the world, including Kenosha, WI, to submit postcards, created in any medium, for display in their gallery from December 12th to January 14th.  There's no jury for the art and no fees.  There is also no designated theme, so draw that giant halibut, if you wish, or paint a postcard-sized picture of a streetcar.

Postcards will not be returned.  Artlink will sell these cards with proceeds benefitting Artlink's exhibitions.

All participating artists' names will be posted on Artlink's website.  To download a postcard mail art prospectus from Artlink, click here.

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Making Friends

by John 13. October 2008 13:30

                           While driving around the bottom edge of Lake Michigan a few years ago, headed for Michigan, my radio drifted from station signal to station signal until it settled on the voice a preacher (of unknown denomination) who had a simple message to his sermon: "To make friends, you need to be friendly."    His edict was simple, but too often unheeded.  How often do we wait for someone else to share a good word or perform a good deed, before we're compelled to react and do the same?  

Kenosha Community Media has its hand extended to the Kenosha area, welcoming everyone to become a part of the community conversation.  KCM exists to provide a public service.   This service includes the training and tools that allow citizens to express themselves through the magic and medium of community television.   Our staff and many citizen/producers have also worked to create video programming for local organizations, including programming to raise awareness of our area animal shelters and children's programs at the Kenosha Public Library.  Several local talk shows--Kenosha Today with Scott Barter; Shakin' Up Kenosha with Dennis Shook; and Just Talkin' with Jason Rimkus--welcome local guests from our business, organizational, and political communities.  KCM has worked to become good friends with the community it serves and will continue to develop new ways to broaden and enrich community conversation on issues that are important to Kenosha and to showcase our community's talent, activities, and events.

As a part of this effort, in 2009, KCM will launch its KCM Friends campaign, inviting citizens to become Friends of KCM not only as producers of video/TV programming, but as PBS-style sponsors of local programming, and also as volunteers to help KCM provide better outreach to local organizations (and to the general population) and to assist KCM in its day-to-day operations.   More details on this effort will be available in November/December and at KCM's upcoming annual meeting on November 14th.   

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KCM Friends

Video Production Course Available to Public

by John 1. October 2008 09:29

Got something to say or share?  Want to learn a new skill or start a new hobby?  Do you wish to promote your nonprofit organization?  Kenosha Community Media and Carthage's Enrichment and Continuing Education program are offering an Applied Video Production course in October/November.    Course dates/times are Saturdays, October 25, November 1, and November 8 from 8:00 AM-3:00 PM.   

In this course, you'll receive classroom and hands-on instruction in TV studio production, field production (camcorders), and video editing.   This course takes place at the Kenosha Media Center, 1403 Washington Road, and at a Carthage computer lab.   Once you complete this course, you may use the Media Center's resources (TV studio, camcorders, video editing) to create your own noncommercial programming.   KCM provides airtime on Kenosha TV 14 (Time Warner Cable), which reaches about 26,000 subscribers in Kenosha and more in the Town and Village.  

Absolute beginners and experienced videographers are welcome.   Course is open to adults who reside in the City of Kenosha, Village of Pleasant Prairie, and Town of Somers.   Representatives of organizations in these areas are also welcome to register and attend.  They do not need to reside in these areas if they are representing their organization, which has a physical address in the City, Village, or Town.   Cost is $45 for City residents who are cable TV subscribers (Time Warner or AT&T).   Proof of cable subscription required.   Cost is $50 for Town and Village residents or persons who do not subscribe to cable TV.

To register, please call (262) 551-5924 for Lynn Dahl, Carthage's Enrichment & Continuing Education Coordinator.

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Public Access TV To Possibly Shut Down in L.A. and Madison

by John 29. September 2008 15:45

In the heart of the media world, the City of Los Angeles, through California State legislation, appears to be shutting down public access television operations by the end of this year.  Read and hear more about this action at Full Disclosure.net

A little closer to home, the City of Madison's Mayor Dave Cieslewicz recently mentioned an idea to remove funding for WYOU, Madison's public access TV channel, and direct these funds instead to Madison City Channel, broadcaster of City meetings and civic activities.  As reported in the Madison paper, Isthmus, by Vikki Kratz, the Mayor's goal "is not to kill WYOU, but to find efficiences.  Kratz quotes the Mayor: "I understand WYOU provides a service.  I want to discuss with them if there's a way to do it differently."   WYOU has since launched a petition for the Madison area to save its station.

Entry revised 10/01/08.   Since this blog was posted, Madison's Mayor announced he would not cut funding to WYOU in 2009, but would seek to cut it by 50% in 2010, and to cut funding entirely in 2011.    Read and view more on this story at WYOU.

Entry revised 10/03/03.  Los Angeles isn't the only California city in which public access TV faces extinction.   In Ventura County, public access TV operations to the City of Ojai face the end of operations by year's end.  As reported on the Ojai Valley News Blog by Nao Braverman, "Public access cable services provided by Time Warner, which have dwindled over the years, will be terminated at the end of December, according to Time Warner’s spokesperson Patricia Fregoso."

 

I Have Seen Public Access TV Future . . .

by John 11. September 2008 12:59
. . . and its name is Denver Open Media.  Geoff Daily at App-rising.com wrote an excellent article recently about activities in Denver, CO to "develop a model for PEG access (public/educational/government) access centers that introduces new efficiencies through automation and open source software, and that redefines what it means to have a community channel".  It applies opportunities used by the public to upload their videos to YouTube and other online locations to the arena of PEG access television.   Denver's access TV programming schedule is determined by its viewers, who are invited to vote on the shows they enjoy.  This feedback determines the programming schedule on the TV channel.   This voting procedure has had its challenges in Denver, but its staff is working to make it fair and efficient.

Read Any Good Books Lately?

by John 5. September 2008 08:42

Read any good books lately?   My knowledge of the Civil War has been pretty slim; still, I'm reading with a great deal of interest Michael Shaara's novel The Killer Angels, which tells through the voices of the men who fought at Gettysburg a fascinating tale not only of a battlefield in the War Between the States but also on brotherhood and, conversely, the warring instinct ingrained in us.  It's a tale not only of our history; it's also relevant to our current age.  The Civil War Museum has chosen The Killer Angels as its first book for discussion by its Media Club.

On the Kenosha TV 14 series Shakin' Up Kenosha, host/producer Dennis Shook visits with author/rail enthusiast John Doyle about his new book, Kenosha On The Go.  Doyle is past-president of the Kenosha Streetcar Society, Inc. and one of its founders.   His book offers a photo history with captions on Kenosha's trains, buses, trolley-buses, and streetcars.  Through the prism of local transportation, Doyle offers a unique glimpse of our city. 

Shakin' Up Kenosha was also recently featured in the Daily Kenoshan.   More comments on Shakin' Up Kenosha from a discussion forum at the Daily Kenoshan may be found here.  Thanks to this 24/7 online interactive news vehicle for recognizing Kenosha Community Media/Kenosha TV 14 and Mr. Shook's wonderful TV series.  

Both books, The Killer Angels and Kenosha On The Go, are available at your Kenosha Public Library.  You can also find The Killer Angels at the Civil War Museum gift shop, and Kenosha On The Go at Museum gift shops and at select Kenosha retailers. 

Is Public Access TV Still Relevant?

by John 2. September 2008 10:40

Recently, New York radio station WYNC posed the question: “In the era of YouTube and other citizen media like blogs, online social networks, and wikis, is public access television still relevant?”   What's your opinion?

An article by Josh Goodman at Governing.com reports, “one could argue that public access TV has outlived its usefulness. In the era of Internet video, anyone with a digital camera or cell phone can broadcast his musings around the globe with minimal effort.”  In a Concord Monitor article, Georgia Tech professor Hans Klein says, “I'm a sympathizer. But it hasn't worked. It's hard to find someone whose life is not touched by Internet-based community media.”

Others continue to find tremendous relevance today in public access TV. Cliff Jacobs of Queens (NY) Public Television writes, “The Borough of Queens is the most ethnically diverse community in the United States. Mainstream television can not cater to the needs of such a diverse community. QPTV's independent producers create programs for our multi-cultural community. Without these multilingual programs, many of our viewers would be devoid of a lifeline to their community.”

Several years ago, Public Access of Indianapolis published an online profile of media activist George Stoney in which Mr. Stoney argues that the Internet has not replaced public access TV. “It's getting the attention of a lot of people, but it doesn't replace the need for group action,” he said. “So much of the Internet is individual stuff.” He adds, “So many people have their own cameras, but even if they have editing software on their computers at home, they lack the kind of group discussions and leadership that makes their stuff look competent and carry a full message.”

Lauren Glen-Davitian, Executive Director of Cambridge Community TV commented last year (after winning the George Stoney Award for Humanistic Communication), “Free speech is more than just shouting out into the wilderness . . . Just because you can post something on YouTube doesn’t mean you have free speech.”  Her interview appeared in an article by Ken Picard for Seven Days--Vermont's Independent Voice.

Our own organization Kenosha Community Media, Inc. has only recently stuck its toe into Internet-waters with development of a Web site, an e-newsletter, YouTube videos, and this blog, but these features—while they certainly can be improved upon and added to—do not replace, but instead enhance, KCM's purpose to provide a community conversation among citizens of Kenosha, Pleasant Prairie, and Somers, WI on ideas, issues, services, events and activities that are important to them and our community.   

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