Basically, if you were one of the poor, benighted folks of the world and busy choosing between starvation and being shot, 1984 was a very good year. You all remember the massive Live Aid promotion with "Do they know it's Christmas" coming out in 1984 raising a whole raft of cash for Ethiopian famine relief.
Unfortunately, in the intervening 22 years, the marketing viability for dying brown people has plummeted. Donor fatigue and disaster oversaturation has set in, in a very big way, numbing the public. And after Somalia, Haiti, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq, governments are either overcommitted, or governments have realized that there is absolutely zero percentage for them in stepping in to try to stop the bloodshed. They catch hell domestically ("No Blood For Oil!", “Wag the Dog!”) or get pictures of the corpses of 19-year-old kids getting dragged through the street. Or even if, against all odds, they manage to put a stop to the bloodshed they don't get a damn bit of credit for doing so.
What this means is that the marginal value of each life has effectively dropped to zero. Kill 5 people, kill 500, kill 500,000 - it makes no difference - each added fatality has absolutely no policy impact and won't change the situation one iota. It's not that there roughly 500,000 (essentially an entire Seattle) have died in Darfur. The horrific thing is that they could kill another 500,000 and nobody will bat an eyelash.
So, how can the dead of Darfur compete with dead soldiers, Afghanis, and Iraqis for media coverage. Well, one thing that has changed a lot since 1984 is the advent of the internet, viral marketing, and meme propagation – the entire dynamic of word-of-mouth propagation.
Two of my friends and I are going to Darfur this Christmas (http://www.christmasindarfur.org/) in order to shoot a film. Since people aren't going to respond to Yet Another Tear-Jerking Movie about how terrible things are, we're going to try to connect to the audience by interviewing the people from the US and Europe - folks like you and me and your cousin and your uncle and your sister - who have volunteered for little or no cash to go spend their Christmas away from their families in the middle of some hellhole trying to stem the tide of genocide.
Now, to think that a single film is going to have some sort of world-changing impact is, frankly, absolutely delusional. However, we hope to make use of the new dynamics of media to make something that will help return the spotlight to Darfur, and give those concerned something to nucleate around. But, if you recall the flooding of the Mississippi some 10 years ago, or more recently 9/11, and Katrina, and all the people who dropped everything they were doing, to go help, it's those countless, nameless individuals who all chipped in to make a difference. And it's those kinds of people we want to reach.
So, in any case, we've begged, borrowed, and scraped together enough cash to go, and we're committed to the trip. However, fighting has started to intensify a bit and is spreading into Chad. War zones are ruinously expensive. Furthermore, they don't take plastic. So, what that means is that while we can actually get there, the proposition of getting enough security to arrive in a war zone with a lot of camera equipment and cash on hand is going to be an expensive and risky proposition. We are trying to raise enough to move this whole project from the realm of suicidially stupid over to regular, plain old risky. (Think of it like raising money for body armor for troops in Iraq)
We're going, and being the selfish bastard I am, not only do I want to make the experience gunshot-wound free, I would also like to make it back with all of our kit and equipment. We've gotten a lot of support from people have volunteered to do all of the time-consuming and costly editing, production, post-production, sound, and all of that good stuff to take footage and turn it into a movie. Now we just need to go get the footage.
So, if you can help out with a couple of bucks, click on over to Christmas in Darfur (http://www.christmasindarfur.org/) and hit the PayPal button. For those of you in the DC area and who have the inclination, we’re holding a benefit tonight at Bourbon (2321 18th Street, 6pm – 1 am, which will involve DJ’s, drinking, and things of that sort). In any case, we certainly appreciate any way you can help contribute.
Thanks for taking the time to read this. Go to the site. Post it. Link it. Pass it on.
And if you can, please help.
Launched by Bravo Romeo Delta at November 15, 2006 08:41 PM | Missile Tracks