Occupy Wall Street. By Sydney illustrator Matt Huynh. Inspiration from a recent visit to New York City where Huynh found OWS protesters at Libery Plaza Park and drew every placard he found.
Occupy Gotham. Illustration by Berlin artist, Anjin Anhut.
via Wired
@OccupyLA tonight.
http://www.ustream.tv/occupyfreedomla
U.C. Davis Police Chief Annette Spicuzza in an interview with CBS in which she justifies the police’s use of force yesterday on student protestors: “If you look at the video, you’re going to see there was over two hundred people in that quad, and they had already pretty much encircled those officers.”
The implication is that police feared for their safety prior to the decision to pepper spray the sitting protestors. Video via lhfang86.
UC Davis, earlier today. Under Chancellor Katehi’s orders, campus police and police attempt to clear protesters. When protesters are noncompliant, police use pepper spray. Video courtesy of YouTube member iamtoddkaiser.
Clashes and Hundreds of Arrests Mark Protest’s ‘Day of Action’Two months after it began in New York, Occupy Wall Street carried out a “Day of Action” on Thursday featuring an attempt to delay the opening of the New York Stock Exchange, demonstrations on the subways, a sit-in in the roadway at the base of the Brooklyn Bridge and unscheduled clashes with the police in Zuccotti Park that left a protester with a bloodied face and an officer with a lacerated hand. (via Clashes and Hundreds of Arrests Mark Protest’s ‘Day of Action’ - NYTimes.com)
The major news networks’ failure to have a presence in Zuccotti Park last tuesday night during the mayor’s raid and attempt at shutting down Occupy Wall Street was a problem of evolution and dedication, not a problem of police censorship.
I watched most of it as it happened via a mobile streaming feed broadcast to Ustream and Livestream via an Android mobile phone on a 4G network. No Wi-Fi was needed, but that would have added some redundancy to the feed. I saw every significant moment that occurred between the hours of 1 am and 5 am. I also actively observed the silence from Reuters, CNN, and other news outlets. Whilst CNN blamed the NYPD for preventing their reporters from entering the area, protesters and observers still managed to slip past. Nothing prevented CNN nor MSNBC from sending a single staffer into the park with just a smartphone on a fast network. There was a failure on the part of media outlets to adapt and adopt new technologies to make information sharing better and faster. But moreover, there has been a clear lack of dedication on the part of major news organizations in covering this story. Coming off of coverage of the Egyptian revolution, journalists and private citizens willingly risked more than arrest in order to document the story.
If there is one thing that we should take from this week in NYC, it is that social networking and consumer grade mobile communications tech used together is a light in the dark. If Egypt and Iran were a validation of the value of Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook in getting information out, then the Occupy movement is a validation of the value in mobile streaming (Ustream and Livestream particularly) to accomplish the same. Tuesday night in Zuccotti Park, whilst CNN and MSNBC gave light coverage of the NYPD raid, I and potentially millions across the Internet watched the events live as they unfolded. Two things are worth noting:
1) The major news outlets had only hearsay knowledge of what was happening in the park due to Mayor Bloomberg’s media blackout order which prevented members of the press from getting past police or flying over the park.
2) For perhaps the first time in American history, Americans watching over the Internet received unfiltered, unprocessed, and unspun, news from ground zero of a major news event.
There was a perspective. After all, most if not all private videographers and photographers covering the protests were themselves protesters or other sympathetic to the Occupy movement. But it is important to note also that these video streams were live and unedited, and virtually nothing but will prevented those opposing the protests from being present to capture the event from another perspective. Moreover, the perspective given was local perspective, a significant change from the cable news paradigm that dominates televised news.
Simply, the Occupy movement is proof that televised news, especially cable news, is a dinosaur facing extinction. There is a smaller, faster animal now, and it is fierce.
Jennifer, a two-month pregnant woman, receiving care at an ambulance after being hit directly with pepper spray by police at the Occupy Seattle Solidarity March last night. Also in video, police push away an onlooker appearing to have tried to bring milk to a pepper sprayed protester.
Occupy Seattle protesters on a public sidewalk are ordered to clear the intersection before police begin using pepper spray on the group. Videography by Ansel Herz.
Ansel Herz, the videographer, also pepper sprayed, explains the scene at his blog.