update!
September 3rd, 2009

and I’ve been up to…
…post-production for a documentary that will air on the History Channel. That’s all I can say for now. But the subject is amazing and I am incredibly excited about it!
… directing my own short documentary. I was given the opportunity to film (with a Flip MinoHD, the smallest HD camera available- it’s the size of an iPod) right here in Brooklyn. I will be editing it over the next few weeks, and hope to have something to show soon.
…working at the Food Bank For New York City. Approximately four million New Yorkers experience difficulty affording food, and the Food Bank’s soup kitchens and pantries serve 1.3 million-pretty staggering numbers.
In some triggerhappymedia-type news, the world’s oldest Sunday newspaper, The Observer, may be closing with speculation that it will be replaced by a mid-week magazine. As magazines stateside are faltering or failing, it’s interesting that Guardian News and Media would go that route.
In the meantime, I expressed my love for the current Observer Magazine (tucked away in every Sunday edition) to my friend who arrives today from London. She has been collecting them for me week by week in case they are, in fact, the best of the last.
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Trigger: Guardian Media admits The Observer may be closed
interview on censorship
April 16th, 2009
Index on Censorship is Britain’s leading organization promoting freedom of expression. Founded in 1972 by a group of writers, journalists, and artists, Index publishes a quarterly magazine and maintains an excellent website dedicated to censorship issues.

In 2003, I interviewed then editor Judith Vidal-Hall. Our conversation has only become more relevant with the passage of time. Last week Obama advanced new arguments in defense of the warrantless wiretaping program authorized by Bush days after September 11th.
Jenny Montasir: How did Index on Censorship change after the fall of communism?
Judith Vidal-Hall: The magazine went off the market for a brief period after the wall came down and communism collapsed. And people said you’ve done a fantastic job, we don’t need you any more. Money was withdrawn and the magazine went off the market for a time. What we really did was re-think the word “censorship.” There was a perception that censorship was something that happened “out there” and that it was something done by the communist state. But while the generals had gone in South America, the dictators had not in South Africa. So there was still the old-fashioned censorship. Ideologically, communism was no longer the great enemy. There was a huge sort of freedom of access, but suddenly economics became a problem.
JM: Like the ownership of the papers?
JVH: Precisely- those who were there to buy the papers. So you basically get the old apparatus are the only ones who’ve got the money. Or you get the mafia, or you get foreign owners. Like Bertelsmann in Germany who is now the biggest media group in Europe, or Robert Maxwell who bought a lot of papers in the Czech Republic and Beirut and indeed in Israel. So money and the ownership and the particular perspective of an owner could be a problem. We really thought that censorship was about any silence- any voice that could not break through the silence to get out. So we’ve done issues on madness, we’ve done issues on migration. We published the literature of small migrant groups and minorities in [the United Kingdom] because for them to find a publisher, for their voice to be heard, is extremely rare and difficult. We’ve done an issue on the Roma or the gypsies of Europe because they again are very much abused.
JM: So instead of just banned writing Index began to give a platform to people who would not otherwise be heard?
JVH: I think its very much that. It’s giving a voice to minorities, to groups or to people for whom access to media is denied for whatever reason. I also want to say to you that though it’s true that we had this watershed in 1991, I think 9/11/01- ten years later- I’m coming to realize personally more and more, that in a sense is another watershed. And what do I mean by that? I mean that I find freedom of expression, freedom of any kind has always had a certain relative quality. But I suppose we take as the gold-standard the First Amendment of the United States as an institution which is absolutely, categorically establishing freedom of speech and excluding interference. The next best thing to that would be Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights where the person has the right to give and to receive information free of hindrance. So if you take those as the gold-standards, then I think at the moment we’re hearing arguments that should cause concern. Yes, Article 19- BUT- and the but seems to be things like would you allow Al-Jazeera to say all these things it wants to say? Would you want to allow all these Arab-Americans to go free to write what they like in their e-mail and say what they like on their telephones? So I think to some extent- though I don’t think there’s a rigid line- I’m getting the feeling very strongly that even on the side of the angels, the free expression line, people are temporizing more. Yes, of course the First Amendment- BUT. And what it’s doing is targeting much more than before certain people under the disguise of terrorism. Things are being allowed to happen: access to e-mail, listening in on telephones, general surveillance. It has been happening with much more frequency. So I think in a way, post-9/11 is another period like post-1991 where we have to watch very carefully and guard what we have.
JM: Who reads Index on Censorship?
JVH: I’m afraid the audience is relatively old, relatively wealthy- sort of the higher catacombs. But I comfort myself by the fact that the issues which are distributed free go to Eastern Europe, and to academic institutions. In Africa, they go much more to schools, libraries, so that every copy that goes, you will have maybe ten, twenty people reading it. Obviously the language means that our audiences on the whole will be smaller. And again I comfort myself by saying, well, I wish it could be glossaries, but these are the people who will effect more, who will eventually be in teaching, in government, in universities. These are the guys, these are the women who are going to have the jobs that are influential in terms of the next generation.
JM: How do you judge the effectiveness of your magazine?
JVH: I don’t know. I think that is the most difficult thing. You can do your reader surveys- which we have done- but your reader surveys will only in the end tell you what the people who respond think. What effect this has on law and policy and the way individuals think, I truly don’t know. And I want to be honest with you, I don’t know any way we can measure that. I haven’t noticed a huge liberalization in the attitudes in our own country. I think it’s very hard to measure, and it’s a long game. I mean, you plug away and plug away and plug away.
JM: What of your work are you most proud of?
JVH: I’m not proud of myself. I love what I do. I actually think I’m quite lucky at 65 to have this to do. I love it, and I’ve been a journalist for a long time. I suppose I am most proud when I have an issue and my hand and it is good.
JM: And by good you mean?
JVH: When I have the issue in my hand and it turned out what we wanted it to be. Then I am proud, knowing that others are reading this work. And with the subscription program, it’s the people in these countries who normally Index wouldn’t reach. Does it have an effect for them? I suppose if they are reading something that they wouldn’t normally have access to, then we were effective.
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Trigger: Index on Censorship
Spring cleaning
March 17th, 2009
Yahoo! Briefcase is Closing- Action Required, said the email. And so I have about 300 documents and presentations to go through. Most are years old. While the Briefcase has become redundant, I am finding some really cool stuff in my files.
For example, the Meet the World ad campaign designed for defunct Portuguese political magazine Grande Reportagem:
European Union

Angola

Brazil

Burkina Faso

China

Columbia

Somalia

USA

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Trigger: Meet the World
HITSPAPER
December 16th, 2008

Back in the summer of 2005, Yasutaka Kageyama and Kenji Moriuchi designed and published 1,000 copies of Letter zine. The single issue is dear to me as editor and contributor– and because the entire project came together in our small apartment on Maujer Street.
Letter introduced the work of 16 artists and writers. One was Reona Ueda, a fine artist who recently returned to Japan after seven years studying and working in New York.
Reona is currently profiled on HITSPAPER, a Tokyo-based think tank about creative fields. The write-up includes an interview and an abbreviated flip through his multidimensional portfolio.
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Trigger: HITSPAPER and Reona’s website
NYM
November 13th, 2008
Thanks to the urgent action I took to save some frequent flier miles, I’m back on my weekly dose of New York Magazine- this time delivered to me in the comfort of my own home. Hallelujah.
It took about six weeks, but the first issue’s arrival was marked by a happy dance that would fall in the lowbrow + despicable quadrant of an Approval Matrix.
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Trigger: New York Mag
jk
May 5th, 2008

Back in my days of free magazines, a bad selection was forgivable. Now it costs $5-$9. I wanted something I hadn’t read before from the indie side of the rack. I hastily chose Swindle, Shepard Fairey’s pet dedicated to street art, art art, and posturing coolness.
When I flipped through it at home, I had a Jean Kilbourne moment.




The oral fixation is only slightly more original then having a themed “London Issue”. My mistake.
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Trigger: Swindle magazine
We are old
April 17th, 2008
I recently came across an old copy of Bidoun magazine: arts and culture from the Middle East. The issue features the Arab Image Foundation, an organization that collects personal photographs to be used in historical archives. The amazing images inspired me to track down some of my family. I love what I found.





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Trigger: Arab Image Foundation
Beppe on top
April 12th, 2008
Time.com recently announced their First Annual Blog Index “Top 25 Blogs“, and asked the public to rate the sites they selected. Outranking the rest by a huge margin is the blog of Italian political satirist Beppe Grillo.
Grillo likens Italy to a sinking ship captained by criminal politicians. Instead of just making a case against them, he mobilizes his readers to protest, resist, and work to change the situation in any way they can.
To those voting in the upcoming elections he writes:
“The least worst is the son of the worst. It is his creature. Without the worst the least worst could not exist. The worst is the reference point for the Italian. It’s useful for orientation.
The Italian always tries to do better than the worst. The least worst is a leap in quality. The Italian chooses the least worst dentist, he reads the least worst newspaper, listens to the least worst TV programme, works for the least worst company, votes for the least worst party, gets his operation in the least worst hospital, eats in the least worst restaurant, drives on the least worst road, breathes the least worst air, lives in the least worst apartment, uses the least worst notary, gets to be buried by the least worst funeral directors in the least worst tomb.
The worst is the best alibi of the least worst. Rather than the worst, the least worst is always better. Anyone can do better than Alitalia, than Asphalt Head, than Telecom Italia, than the RAI. Without the worst, who would have voted for D’Alema, traveled with Air One, listened to Rete 4 or made telephone calls with Wind? However… there’s a but, why do you have to choose between the worst and the least worst? Why this blackmail? I don’t want a least worst life. I demand a normal life, in fact I want it to be beautiful, optimum, excellent. Perhaps I won’t succeed, but I must try, I’m obliged to try.”
Although Grillo blogs for Italians, his ideas resonate in every part of the world affected by political corruption.
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Trigger: Blog di Beppe Grillo and English version
tomorrow night in NYC
March 18th, 2008

DROME magazine is pleased to announce the launch of
sideways
a smart art project
New York, March 19th 2008
9.00 p.m. - midnight
7 World Trade Center, 52nd floor, 250 Greenwich Street
smart chose DROME magazine as the only Italian magazine together with 10 other excellent cross-culture magazines from all over the world, to select the gifted artists of different ages, backgrounds and levels of fame of the sideways project, the sought-after art anthology book produced by Die Gestalten Verlag in conjunction with smart.
The recent ecology-inspired works recommended by DROME are by: Karin Andersen, Zaelia Bishop, Silvia Camporesi, casaluce-gegier, Rubens Lp, Native & ZenTwo, Christian Rainer, Sten and Fernanda Veron.
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Trigger: smart green marketing and Drome magazine
Happy Media Democracy Day!
October 18th, 2007
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Ways to celebrate: Purchase independent publications // Support organizations or journalists whose work challenges that of the corporate media // Keep discussing online and in your communities issues that the mainstream media won’t cover // Use your consumer power. Don’t give money or viewership to media that lies, misleads, or omits for the sake of a story or agenda.
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Trigger: Media Democracy Day
