The cost of the World Cup

South Africa has invested a lot of money in order to host the 2010 World Cup, but not everyone thinks it was money well-spent. Our reporters hear from local township residents who feel the World Cup might carry detrimental consequences.

South Africa v. Mexico

What a match it was! South Africa played hard and the fans remain optimistic for Bafana Bafana! Our reporters from Khayelitsha were in the streets to catch all the action.

South Africa v. Mexico

Fans are gearing up for South Africa’s first match against Mexico tomorrow, June11th. Everyone believes it Bafana Bafana will be victorious. The locals will be watching the action from their favorite hotspot, Mzoli’s. Come out and join the fun!

Of Vevuzelas, films and BBQ’s

We rounded off the workshop in Khayelitsha with a Braai (a South African bbq). Half a cow appeared on a plate which was distributed and eaten with only the sauce that it came in. Being a vegetarian, I became a residual source of amusement as I made conversation around the bbq with an ice cream tub of rice and beans. On the final day students performed the process of filming, editing and up-loading from start to finish, with each group showing (thankfully) how much they’d learned. The good feeling at the end left us all with a smile. I then got lost dropping students home. Not a great move in the middle of a township, but thankfully James was with me and navigated us back to the main road.

Already ideas are flowing, with each production team agreeing on a programme schedule for the month. Roles have emerged quite naturally. The good directors, producers, presenters and editors are aware by now of who they are. Competition doesn’t show itself often, and the students are happy to share and co-operate so that everyone feels included. On the penultimate day we screened match reports shot during the South Africa / Guatemala match and subsequently edited. As a group we have been trying to work out how to do match reports when we have no access to the games and finally we struck gold, with three excellent reports shot in the shabeens  of Khayelitsha and Delft and showing the end to the match and celebrating, while a voice-over narrates the highlights and turning points in the game.

Yesterday was spent in the AFDA film school studio space, where CTV record their shows. Balt and I had selected two presenters from the group – Zintle and Pelisa – and they were given scripts with intros and links. The 28 minutes programme will be aired today (Wednesday) at six o’clock. James has been the star behind the show, taking on the responsibility of cutting it together after the decision was made to go ahead last Friday. Three cheers for James Farmer! The programme shows off match reports, pre-match reports from the Khayelitsha group, as well as video diaries from the young students at Gugulethu.

In Gugulethu we spent yesterday (Tuesday) shooting the first video diaries for broadcast on the BBC’s youth programme, created by 21CC. Also for broadcast, they shot vox-pops in the local market asking which team members of the public supported and who they thought would win. Naturally there was resounding endorsement for Bafana Bafana, with little defection. The sense of nation-building is acute here, flag fly from car bonnets, car wing mirrors are abalze with the South African colours. Imaginations have run wild and every car accessory possible adorns vehicles throughout the city. Vevuzela’s are a feature of every household and the national uniform seems to be a yellow and green Bafana Bafana t-shirt.

The World has finally reached South Africa to be welcomed by much noise and excitement!

South Africa 2010 Trailer

World Film Collective brings you the World Cup Reporters, Cape Town, 2010. Stay Tuned!

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?

Welcome to South Africa!

WFC is proud to present the first Behind the Scenes look at our World Cup Reporters in action. For the past three weeks they have been training every day, learning about sports and news journalism and exploring their local communities, to bring you their unique perspective on the World Cup. Stay tuned for their daily coverage of the world’s most important sporting event, starting June 10th!

Headlines

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

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.