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MEDIA AND YOUTH

July 17, 2005

Interesting Resources:

Foreign based youth media (merging of radio, tv and internet) that could be emulated in the Philippines:

 Listen Up! Youth Media Network - connects young video producers and their allies to resources, support, and projects with the goals of developing the field and achieving an authentic youth voice in the mass media.
— (source) http://www.pbs.org/merrow/listenup/index.html

 The MAGIC Network - previously known as the Oslo Challenge Network - was set up for professionals and organizations working in the field of children and the media to share information and ideas.
The Oslo Challenge — goes out to everyone engaged in exploring, developing, monitoring and participating in the complex relationship between children and the media. This includes governments, organizations and individuals working for children, media professionals at all levels and in all media, the private sector including media owners, children and young people, parents, teachers and researchers
— (source) http://www.unicef.org/magic

 YO! Youth Outlook - is an award-winning literary journal of youth life in the Bay Area. Featuring in-depth reporting pieces and first-person essays, comic strips and poetry pages, YO! is the communication outlet for youth who feel their voice and visions need to be seen and heard. YO! is a bridge to the world of youth expression. YO! chronicles the world through the eyes and voice of young people - between the ages of 14 and 25. – (source) http://www.youthoutlook.org/

 World Radio Forum…an international group of national, community, and internet radio producers and broadcasters who make radio for, with, and by children and youth. WRF members work in broadcasting, education, entertainment, development, and social change. – (http://www.worldradioforum.org/) (where VOTY’s LKTKR and ECPAT’S Tingog sa Kabataan were featured)
(http://www.worldradioforum.org/programsproducers.shtml)

TV (SHOWS, EPISODES) TACKLING YOUTH

 Kabataan News Network (UNICEF) ABC5 sat 10 am
 Selda: Sulyap sa mga kabataang bilanggo sa Pilipinas - “Batang preso”, The CORRESPONDENTS, Lunes, 11:30 p.m. 04/18/2005
 I-witness; February 21, 2005 - Kara David reports on child drug use

Ion: This is a very interesting article that is pretty much the core of the talk. - emsie

WHEN YOUTH AND MEDIA COLLIDE
by amyline quien ching
(source) http://www.mb.com.ph/SCAU2005042633451.html
Manila bulletin Online

An invisible government… We live and breathe media. From the newspaper articles that we devour alongside our breakfast to the television shows that we argue about over coffee, media has become a staple that we just cannot do without. And in this age of information when being the last to get the latest on dit is akin to scoring way below mean average in a Binet-Simon Intelligence test, one just cannot be blamed if indigestion ensues.
An unharnessed force…
Despite its invisibility, media has succeeded in making their presence felt. The same cannot be said of the majority of Filipino youths, who despite their talents and their capabilities, still remain in the sidelines.
“The youth can do a lot for the country. The problem is, so many youth nowadays do not believe that they can make a difference while some do not care at all. Apathy, I’m afraid is prevalent. We have a voice and we certainly have a say on the current national issues. We should not let it go unheard,” says Angelo Porciuncula.
A collision of power
If media, in fact, wields such enormous power and the youth, when mobilized, can institute change in the country, why can’t both be utilized to build a nation and spark a moral and national revolution? Can these two potent forces work together?
Such is the question posed during the 2005 Universitas Youth Conference in UP Diliman. With the theme “Media and the youth for rebuilding the nation, the conference aimed to encourage these two sectors to come together and collaborate. Among those who lent their expertise are Luis Alejandro, president and COO of ABS-CBN; Eric Canoy, president of the Radio Mindanao Network; Marvin Tort, managing editor of Businessworld; Dr. Eugenia Duran-Apostol, award-winning journalist; and Laurice Guillen, head of the Film Development Council of the Philippines.
According to student convenor Angelo Porciuncula, an incoming Molecular Biology and Biotechnology senior, the influence of today’s media on the youth is a topic that should be discussed. Young people are the “biggest consumers of media” and it is but essential that they understand the effect of what they read, see and hear. Not everything should be taken at face value.
“The youth are very vulnerable for we are at the last stage of the “food chain” so to speak. There is a need to make young people understand that not everything they see should be copied or adapted. Media also has to be monitored. They have to be responsible for the power they wield,” he espouses.
Perhaps, former MTRCB Chair Manuel Morato could not have created a better term when he called today’s media the country’s invisible government. With its breadth of influence and reach, its (un)tarnished reputation for fairness and its reverent-next-to-godliness image, it can make and unmake the actual government with a single swoosh of the pen. From reporters of facts, media practitioners have become shapers of public opinion. The industry has in fact become the cul-de-sac from which Filipinos and the whole of the world base their perception of current issues and their reactions to them.
“Media dictates on us if we let it. It is more privileged than any or all of us put together. No laws can be passed to abridge press freedom. But is media accountable to the people?” Morato unflinchingly put in a speech he delivered in 1989. Media, he believes can be harnessed to attain its potential for national development if only the industry would “wake up from its imposed moral stupor.”
FORMING A DIALOGUE
Though he admits that there are a lot of things that media should correct, Businessworld managing editor Marvin Tort believes that for the wheels of change to turn, the public should also do their part by acting as watchdogs.
“Media also needs to be told that it needs to correct itself, otherwise how would they know? If you do not agree with something that a paper has written, react! Write a letter to the editor. Say your piece. Do not keep it locked up inside,” Tort urges.
Citing the example of Jun Jun, a student participant who reacted on the caption of a photo that featured children with guns, Tort continued, “The fact that you feel so strongly about it, how do you feel knowing that you have done nothing about it. It can be frustrating but it is not hopeless. Lahat tayo, we will be affected by something that we read or see, but the question is what do we do about it? Media can only go as far as correcting itself and exercising responsibility. Unfortunately, may nakalusot. So, who’s guarding the guardians? That should be you! The youth should be there to correct, to question. If the media organization is responsible enough, it will listen. It should listen.”
It all comes down to public discourse. Writing letters to the editor is not a waste of time. In fact, in Australia, what people considered as insignificant letters managed to save an FM station from being closed by the government. If most of the youth would write about something that stir them, their combined voices will make media organizations or any organization for that matter, including the government, stand up and take notice.
“It’s a dialogue, a two-way communication. I guess, this is one of the things that I learned from the conference. Media should exercise accountability. There should be limits. Young people should, in turn, take it upon themselves to voice out their opinions, to let media organizations know what they think. Each of us has a responsibility towards society, towards the country. We should do our share,” Porciuncula remarks.
Doreen de Leon, first year Economics students in UP Diliman, however believes that young people care. This can be seen from the number of participants who attended the conference and the questions that they have raised. “The youth, although seemingly apathetic, is actually participative and concerned about the welfare of the country. Relevant questions were raised and it made me realized a lot of things,” she relates.
PARTNERS IN DEVELOPMENT
Media, according to student-participants from Naga City, can do a lot for youth-spearheaded projects.
“Ang maganda talaga ay magtulungan tayo para sa ikabubuti ng bansa. Media has a responsibility to provide the right information, to uplift the values of the youth through the articles that they write and the shows that they produce. Malaki ang magagawa nito sa ating bansa pero siyempre kailangan din nila ang tulong natin,” second year Political Science student Allen Reandanga.
Faculty convenor Oliver Tuazon agrees saying that there is really no use attacking the media. “We seek to form a partnership with them because we know that media can make a lot of difference in youth development.”
And as mentioned by Jesus Estanislao, chairman and CEO of the Institute for Solidarity in Asia, the antidotes of selfishness and sinfulness lies in solidarity. If people work together, if all sectors of the country, from the government to the youth groups, make a collective effort to rebuild the nation, we can make it happen.

Ion: This is the conclusion of an essay or study about the THE EFFECT OF MASS MEDIA IN SOCIETY AS A WHOLE related to (character and youth development) but the examples cited before the conclusion is particular on the effect of mass media (tv) on the young people.. like violence etc. It’s just interesting.

SOURCE: http://www.geocities.com/bigmike_75/essays/civilLiberties/MassMedia.html

Conclusion
In closing, there are perceived to be constantly changing views on the influence that is exerted by the mass media. At first there was the attitude that the media was forcing itself upon us in such a way as to exert its influence and shape our beliefs, actions and values. Now though as time has moved on, theorists are thinking about this area of research in other ways and through diverse approaches. There was a shift in the perspective of researchers within audience reception in the seventies and is evident none more so than in the statement made by James Halloran (1970):

“We must get away from the habit of thinking in terms of what the media do to people and substitute for it the idea of what people do with the media.”

The technological determinist view, which states an overemphasis on the part of the mass media as the major, if not solitary cause of societal and cultural changes, which have effected actions and beliefs, is not the view that I personally would concur with. In my opinion the mass media is an incredible tool of persuasion and could influence somebody undoubtedly. Mass media audiences are arguably on the whole not passive, and so the amount of influence that is exerted upon the recipient depends entirely on the individual

Posted by voty at 10:38 pm | permalink | Add comment

POCHOLO D. GONZALES and the Voice Of The Youth Network

POCHOLO D. GONZALES and the Voice Of The Youth Network
How do you empower apathetic and ignorant young people to make a difference? How do you maximize the efforts of youth leaders who are actively promoting social change and environmental awareness? Where will you get the information that is necessary for the real youth development and environmental preservation? Such questions have long motivated me on my work as a youth advocate. I see great promise for engaging the active participation of Philippine youth in helping to revolutionize a range of critical environmental and social problems.

“With young people – ages 15 to 30 – making up one-third of the Filipino population, we play an increasing large role in the development of Philippine society,” “Their attitudes, values, mindset, and priorities have a critical role to play in shaping the future of our country.”

In December 2002, through my founded organization TINIG KABATAAN, I started the VOICE OF THE YOUTH NETWORK’s! YOUTHINK AND LINK. I believe that the media – radio, TV, newspaper, mobile phones and the Internet offers an influential means to inspire, inform, empower and involve youth. A critical component of VOTY’s effort is the use of the Internet to facilitate communication and information-sharing of the resources and opportunities to make a difference.
Our website (www.voty.org) contains information on youth participation; a calendar of local, national and international events; newsletter; relevant links and issues. E-mail discussion groups also enable youth to share what they know and network with one another.

The PHILIPPINES has firmly established its reputation as the “texting” capital of the world, with this technology and “pay-it-forward” strategic plan VOTY had informed and reached more than 100,000 youth through email, 5,000 through SMS and continuously collecting more emails and mobile phone numbers.
I also educate countless newspaper readers and VOTY radio program “VOICE OF THE YOUTH” and “LAKAS KABATAAN, TINIG KABATAAN! RECHARGED! ” (YOUTH POWER, VOICE OF THE YOUTH!! RECHARGE!! aired every Saturday at DZME 1530 khz. 12-1 P.M. where part of it is promoting gender equality and empower women and the youth and raising their voices on policies that have an impact on them. We’ve also harnessed the potential of the youth engagement for the environment, raised awareness about environmental issues that affects our lives.

I utilized today’s communications technologies by strengthening youth participation, leadership and empowerment. VOTY’s flagship program the LOCAL YOUTH ACTION FORUMS has already created a big impact to its members and its communities. VOTY dream of creating a national youth centre in the Philippines and has given numerous Filipino youth the opportunity to understand organizational issues, develop their own advocacy skills and actively engaged in identifying their needs, capabilities and talents allowing them to be empowered to change the cycle of their lives and make a difference.

Posted by voty at 10:37 pm | permalink | Add comment