Fake or Original?

Our reporters hit the streets of Gugulethu to find out why some people buy knock-off football jerseys. Does a fake jersey diminish your support for the team, or not?

Xhosa Funeral

Our reporters find themselves in the middle of a Xhosa funeral in Gugulethu. Here they capture the sights and sounds of the traditional Catholic ceremony over-layed with African songs, and the lively wake with plenty of food and friends.

Meet Tinashe!

Tinashe is one of our highly skilled and dedicated tutors responsible for training our student reporters in the townships around Cape Town.  Here he shares some insight into the workshop process and his experience sharing his knowledge and skills to empower a new generation.

Headlines from the Townships

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

News Reports from the Townships

Yesterday was the last day of editing for the Khayelitsha group. They had one final hour to complete the news reports they had shot last weekend.

Mbo, Manez and Zintle’s group did a story on the tensions between coloureds and blacks in Delft, a divided township with coloureds (mixed race) and blacks at odds with each other. The group  used the Delft Library to find their interviewees and people spoke candidly about why these divisions exist.

Pelisa and her sister Spokazi chose to follow a lady as she cooked meals in her shack for a hungry queue of customers waiting outside. We watch as she dishes up mounds of rice and chicken stew, while talking about how she and other women will watch the World Cup together without the men. Pelisa then interviews the people sitting outside eating, wonderful on camera, she has been nominated by the group to present their reports.

Another group, Bokiswa, Ntombi and Thembile, focus on environmental issues and ask whether the government is doing enough to collect rubbish, and on the flip side, whether local residents are using these refuse bins.

We watch as one lady shows us the plastic toilet her family has been using for years – a small contraption with a tray that is cleared twice a week. The woman shows us her toilet and explains the realities of living with such basic facilities. It’s an eye-opener.

A group of boys, Andile, Juga, Terra and Shaun, cut together footage from a match they filmed at their local soccer field in Khayelitsha. The commentary is brilliant, and this was a good lead-in to the match reports they were assigned to film last night.

Everyday more young people turn up, wanting to be part of the workshop. Some are friends of existing students, others have heard about the workshop on the radio, thanks to Simcelile’s appearances. He’s been on both Khayelitsha community radio and UCT radio already. The word is getting out there and WFC is becoming known within these communities. It’s a great feeling.

James Farmer has joined us from the UK and is now filming the workshop. Welcome James! He’s already part of the team and we’re so happy he’s here.

The group from Gugulethu shot vox-pops in the local mall. Although in their mid-teens, they’re grasping the concept of filmmaking and have now completed their films about the funeral of an aunt last weekend, as well as a report on why people are buying fake Bafana Bafana t-shirts rather then their original counterparts. This is a hot topic, and people are debating whether real patriots buy fakes. We’ve talked about it in class and like all young people their age, status is attached to expensive clothes and some students are convinced that it’s imperative people buy originals at four times the price. The other camp argue that wearing Bafana Bafana t-shirts shows a person’s support for South Africa, so fake or original, it doesn’t matter. We’ll return to this topic as the World Cup approaches to see if opinions have changed.

Computers are slow due to small memory, so we’re asking our supporters to donate old laptops for this project. Especially with the younger students, the delay in playback leads to boredom and distraction. We’ve got only two working computers for the Gugs group and this is continually frustrating.

Panavision have donated a camera for James to use, so we’re incredibly grateful to them.  We’re also working out of an office in a very cool, bohemian part of Cape Town called Observatory. Thank you to Phillip and his wife for their support. Yet another generous gesture of support from the Cape Town community, amazing people, we couldn’t do this without you.

Spreading the word

May 25th, 2010

Yesterday saw final touches added to the report from the Gugulethu group on the funeral of their aunty. We drove to the graveyard where students Linda, Alutha, Mangaliso and Thanda recorded intros to their report. Tutor Lukhanyo Calata gave guidance notes on the footage they shot on Saturday at the burial and the wake. We’re going in for a re-cut and adding a voice-over too. The report should be ready for viewing by the end of the week, so watch this space!

The Khayelitsha group goes from strength to strength. Students booked out phones over the weekend and will be cutting their news reports together today. We watched their intros to camera yesterday and they’re absolutely brilliant. Pelisa and Sisa in particular were straight out of SABC (The South African equivalent to the BBC). Students clapped at the end of these reports, astonished at how quickly they could look and seem like reporters, the reality of what they were preparing to do finally sinking in,  their confidence rising.

Our Producer here, the canny Simcelile Kalimashe, appeared on Khayelitsha community radio yesterday to spread the word about WFC, and to warm up our potentially huge township audience. He called me straight after he left the studio to tell me he was being inundated with calls from interested participants. So it looks like we have our next workshop set-up thanks to Simi’s sales techniques!

The weather is holding and we’re making real progress. I remain overwhelmingly impressed by the talent of these young people. During a conversation with workshop participant, Manez, I learned the students in the Khayelitsha group are pleased to be participating. They’re hungry, Manez tells me, and they see the value in this workshop. Now I just hope we live up to expectations!

Unexpected Experience

May 23rd, 2010

Having travelled to Gugs on Saturday for an extra lesson with the Amy Biehl group, we found ourselves in the middle of a Xhosa funeral. The young people needed a lift to the graveyard  and would be able to leave after that so I found myself watching a traditional Catholic ceremony over-layed with African songs. The women of the church, in their black and white uniform with a streak of red ribbon around their necks sang the loudest. After a while we gave phones to the kids and they shot the burial, capturing each guest throwing sand into the earth and the faces of the ladies sitting under the awning away from the midday sun.

At the wake, while the students shot interviews,  I spoke to the parents about how much they appreciated Amy Biehl and what a difference it made to their children’s lives. Plates of food, fizzy drinks and smiles came from all sides.  I had washed my hands in the big tub and was from then on part of the gathering.

We drove over to the school where we had been given permission to use the computers to edit. Having been delayed by the funeral, we were rather late, but the Principal forgave us when we showed him some of the footage from the funeral, along with interviews with the family of the deceased and a report to camera from some of the students.

We converted the footage and began to edit. As ever, the limited Ram in the computers made playback hard so we whipped out two of the laptops donated by Jenny Estill and Rex Salisbury from Davidson University, which saved the day.

Back at the wake, we gave a DVD of the short report to the sister. It was a great lesson in how quickly their work can turnaround. We found half the group playing on iTunes which they figured out instantly and loved listening to the music in the collection.

It was a great day. More to come soon

If anyone has an old laptop they would be willing to donate to this project, please contact [email protected]

Cheers!

The workshop is underway!

April 24th, 2010

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 XX 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, Kimshee 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.