Headlines

Here are just a few of the stories our World Cup reporters are working on! Stay tuned to see how they develop!

Headlines from the Townships

Find out the top stories that our reporters will be developing next week!

World Cup Reporters 2010

The first glimpse of our World Cup Reporters in action in the townships around Cape Town! They will be covering the events as they unfold using mobile phones, giving you a unique perspective on the world’s most important sporting event – stay tuned!

First News From South Africa

Our Creative Director, Alice, has checked in with an update from the workshops in the Townships.

Preparation for the workshops continues. Father Audecius agreed to an affordable venue charge for teaching space, which was generous of the church of St Raphael in Khayelitsha. Laptops are arriving from America where Jenny Estill and Rex Sailsbury have managed to raise funds to send over two PCs. This is a huge relief as renting editing space in Cape Town is costly.

Community leaders are onside in the township of Delft, where we are intending to run a workshop with a group of young theatre practitioners. My fixer in the townships, Simcelile Kalimashe, arranged a meeting with the group in the shack of one member last week.  We spoke for a while about the workshops and I asked why they would like to take part. They all agreed they had lots of stories to tell; of young men making music in the neighbourhood, a local TV star busy drinking himself to death and a Swiss man moving to Delft many years ago and marrying a local woman.

They were also enthused by the possibility of changing people’s views about the township, generally agreeing that the news reports which came out of Delft did not accurately portray the life and the community that stay there.

In Gugulethu, the workshops with Amy Biehl Foundation has started and already the young students are producing startlingly good films. The tutors, Kimeshree and aforementioned Simcelile are leading the group towards making insightful films, beautifully framed and full of confidence. The teenagers told the story of the hardest day in their lives. Some were the universal; going to the dentist or failing an exam. Others were more troubling, the day they were stabbed or shot at.

The Cape Town community has been incredibly supportive. Professionals in sports and news journalism have agreed to mentor students, venue space has been offered to teach, CTV are running a weekly World Film Collective slot featuring the best material from World Cup reporters. Ideas are bouncing around and our commitment to providing support for students between workshops is becoming a reality.

The shoe-string budget on which WFC is carrying out these workshops seems less daunting when social entrepreneurs such as Silulo Luto in Khayelitsha offer discounted rates to use computer facilities. There is a genuine will from inside these commuities to help youth, although meetings with local government have been less fruitful.

We’re incredibly grateful to 1000 Heads for sending across phones and to MTN for supplying handsets too. Zoopy.com are very much onside and you can check out our World Film Collective page in the coming weeks.

With the World Cup upon us, Cape Town is talking of little else. It will be an event of mammoth proportions, offering the chance to see not only the skill of their football stars, but also the talent of South Africa’s youth.

Workshops, Workshops, WORKSHOPS!

WFC has just kicked off our first workshop with students in Ramellah, Palestine. This will be our largest workshop yet, with 22 very keen students. The group will be creating documentaries using their mobile phones. Look for their films in Early June!

Our Level 3 Sports Journalism programme is set to begin in Cape Town, South Africa in two weeks. The students will be covering a certain prestigious sporting event… *wink, wink*… from the townships around Cape Town. They’ll be bringing you provocative stories from beyond the stadium walls, featuring unique voices from the townships.
We’re gearing up for more action in Brazil and the UK as well – more info to come!

Mobile World Conference

WFC has always been dedicated to utilizing the latest mobile technology to feature youth voices from around the world and facilitate global connectivity and collaboration in filmmaking.

You can imagine how thrilled we were to have attended the recent Mobile World Congress in Barcelona! The four day event is the world’s largest exhibition for the mobile industry with a congress featuring prominent Chief Executives representing mobile operators, vendors and content owners from across the world.

Needless to say this was an invaluable opportunity to connect with the greater global mobile network and explore new technologies that will enable WFC to expand its reach in the world!

Wrapping up!

WFC has just wrapped workshops in Brazil and Palestine! From October through December 2009, we delivered a Level 1 Fictional Shorts Workshop in the Cidade de Deus favela in Rio de Janeiro, and a Level 2 Documentary workshop in the Balata Refugee Camp in Palestine.

The students were enthusiastic and eager to learn about making films with mobile phones. Each workshop produced two wonderful short films based on the issues that the students found most relevant and important in their lives.

We are currently busy delivering our second workshop here in London, and are preparing for our upcoming workshop in South Africa this March! Stay tuned for more updates and student films from the workshops!