Thursday, September 24, 2009
Week 8 tute task
No problems. I googled “sign a petition” and I chose the first site that came up, www.whalesrevenge.com. It was a campaign to gather one million signatures to stop whaling. It’s a campaign that I believe in and I think I’m not only sticking to my political belief but reinstating them as well. I heard about a restaurant in Japan that served whale burger. Really, how good must endangered meat taste?
Respond to a professional blogger at a major news site.
Honestly, I don’t know any bloggers who work at news sites but I do know of feature columnists in the newspapers. One writer in particular is Frances Whiting, she irritates the hell out of me. I wrote:
Dear Frances,
I think your column stinks and constantly wonder why you are still being published.
If you have any reasons please tell me. I am baffled!
From,
Anna Heraghty.
I’m still waiting for the response to see if it has been published or not. It doesn’t go against my political beliefs- I am all for free speech and writing to Mrs Whiting has been on my to do list for some time now.
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26095526-5012445,00.html
What is Barak Obama up to today?
Did someone say invasion of privacy? I wasn’t very comfortable looking up Barack Obama’s schedule but couldn’t find it anyway. I suppose the FBI was on top of it and saw it as the breech of security it is. I did however find what Obama did yesterday, on http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/ .
Find out who your local, state and federal representatives are.
Local: I live in West End which makes me apart of the ‘Gabba Ward’. I found out that Councillor Helen Abrahams was my local representative. http://www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/BCC:BASE:1709411286:pc=PC_3024 State: I’m assuming, Anna Bligh? She is the premier of Queensland and when I googled “Queensland representative” there were no definite results. I went to her web site which was no use- it didn’t say she was a “representative” or not. http://www.thepremier.qld.gov.au/index.aspx Federal: I’ll put my money on Kevin Rudd. He is the Prime Minister of Australia and in the House of Representatives. http://www.aph.gov.au/House/members/member.asp?id=83T Finding the local, state and federal representatives was an act of sticking to my political beliefs. They are there to represent the community and myself in parliament. It’s important to know who they are.
Let your local member know what you think about their last speech.
So I was on the Parliament of Australia, House of Representatives website because honestly, I have no idea who my local member is. While there I came across Arch Bevis who is the member for Brisbane. I went on that tangent because I had already spent a solid twenty minuets trying to find who my local member was. His last speech was on the 20th August 2009 about Health Legislation Amendment (Midwives and Nurse Practitioners) Bill. I sent him a note on his website http://www.archbevis.com/ in the ‘contact Arch’ page. I told him I agreed and to keep up the good work.
Week 9 summary.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Week 8 summary
It was hard to summarise this week's lecture content because there was so much of it and it wasn’t really explained because there was no lecture. In the tute however, Dan turned it around and gave us an overview of it which was very handy. The lecture was about Cyber politics and eDemocracy. Cyber is a Greek word that means to steer or navigate. It has ties to the word Cyberspace which is a mathematical realm or virtual world that is pure structure with no colour or tone. It involves computers and the internet and everything inside of them. Cyber politics is the politics and laws of Cyber space. eDemocracy is the use of political debate and campaigning on the internet. It’s no secret that politicians are using technology to promote themselves and persuade the public these days. An example is the America president appearing on David Lettermen:
Democracy is a political system that places the public first. It’s about free speech and equality. But what happens when the government wants to censor the means of the publics’ speech- the internet? I can understand why someone would want to shut down a site that promotes rape or has child pornography on it, but when does it stop? A free country, like Australia or the USA, could become a communist country like North Korea by censoring Digital technology that has opened a new world inside the world. People don’t need to march in a protest anymore; it’s as easy as going to a website. By censoring this land of free speech, politics is clashing with the internet and not in a good way.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Week 7 summary.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Week 6 summary
Consume, eat, gobble, nibble, scoff, munch, chew, chomp, gnaw, devour. In these times we are guzzling down the media. We are becoming obese with information, entertainment and communication, all of which are in fingers reach. There are 2 ways we consume media: “big” and “small” screens. Big screens are shared and public ways of consuming media whereas small screens are private and physically smaller. Whether it’s the cinema, TV, computer, iPod, mobile phone or “on the fly” gadgets, they all cater to professionally made, produced and edited content from traditional and new media producers; content that we gorge ourselves on. Nowadays, audiences are taking back control and producing/ editing work for themselves and the already made market. Our culture is becoming more creative by the minute: mash ups, mobile productions, even changing the story of well know film. Stirring the pot? The way we interact with media is changing thanks to technology. Personal computers and mobile phones have put the utensils in our hands to be able to make something different and to have an input into the media. An example of this is footage which has been caught on mobile phone in news stories. Terrible quality or not, audiences now have active roles and consumers are becoming the creators.
Week 6 tute task. Tomato Anna
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