Posts Tagged ‘swine flu’

A Live Broadcast on Swine Flu from a World Where Germs Can’t Be Transmitted

Live from the AUC Virtual Newsroom: The CDC on Swine Flu: Video from the May 16, 2009 live event with the CDC in the AUC Virtual Newsroom.

Live from the AUC Virtual Newsroom: The CDC on Swine Flu." Broadcast quality video from the May 16, 2009 live event with the CDC in the AUC Virtual Newsroom produced in collaboration with Ill Clan Animation Studios.

On Thursday June 4, 2009 Lawrence Pintak (co-director of the AUC Virtual Newsroom project with Dancing Ink Productions) will appear on CNN to discuss President Barack Obama’s speech from Cairo, Egypt.

A Live Broadcast on Swine Flu from a World Where Germs Can’t Be Transmitted

On Saturday, May 16, 2009, the AUC Virtual Newsroom featured Glenn Nowak and Jay Bernhardt of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), members of Global Voices and journalists from 12 countries in a discussion about Swine Flu and the transformation of media. Walid Al-Saqaf, represented the journalists and bloggers. Al-Saqaf is the former editor-in-chief of the Yemen Times and currently the Founder and Administrator of YemenPortal.net. “There is something about Second Life that is good and that is that you can never get contaminated by any disease even though you meet millions of people,” said Al-Saqaf, to the audience in the virtual newsroom, in Cairo and on the web.

Lawrence Pintak, Director, Kamal Adham Center for Journalism Training and Research at The American University in Cairo (and newly appointed Dean of the Murrow College at Washington State University) who hosted the event said, “This has been an adventure for all of us … One story that the whole world is dealing with these days is swine flu. Here in Cairo, the government has ordered that every single pig be killed. That’s something the WHO and other experts oppose. So we thought it appropriate to use this unique virtual bridge to allow our group here in Cairo – and bloggers participating in this event around the world – to learn a little more about how to get to the truth about the disease in order to better educate their audiences. For that, we have turned to the Centers for Disease Control.”

Overcoming Limitations on the Free Flow of Information

Rita J. King, CEO and Creative Director of Dancing Ink Productions, moderated the panel: “Before the event, we met with many of the participants to discuss the free flow of information they wanted to achieve. The CDC is new to social media but is setting an example among government agencies. The journalists and bloggers are from 12 different countries. Some are dealing with various limitations in the struggle to deliver accurate, meaningful information to their respective audiences.”

King, who is also an investigative reporter, is the author of “Big Easy Money: Disaster Profiteering on the American Gulf Coast,” and co-author of the newly published book, “Race, Place and Environmental Justice After Hurricane Katrina.”

Joshua S. Fouts, Chief Global Strategist at Dancing Ink Productions offered, “This event once again demonstrated the power of digital culture and in this case digital diplomacy to create new opportunities for cultural dialog across time and space.”

A New Approach to Global Dialogue

While this was the first time the CDC has participated in a live broadcast from Second Life, the agency already had a headquarters set up within the virtual world when they were invited to participate in the broadcast from the AUC Virtual Newsroom.

The CDC has recently started to explore the use of social media and provide links and resources for an increasing number of followers. Currently, @cdcemergency has over 240,000 followers.

Many of the bloggers and journalists who had been new to Second Life for the Inuagural Broadcast from the AUC Virtual Newsroom arrived to the event customized, familiar with how to communicate and navigate within the space.

The broadcast was streamed live to the internet by TREET.TV (watch entire archive here), and anyone watching from around the world could watch the broadcast and communicate in live real time chat with event moderators and participants in Second Life.

Glenn Nowak, Director, Division of Media Relations, Office of Enterprise Communication Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Jay M. Bernhardt Director, National Center for Health Marketing at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) both already had avatars.

Jay Bernhardt, who heads the social media operations told the audience, “I recommend people visit the CDC social media website On that site it lists a lot of different things people can get access to. Some are subscriber based like Twitter feeds for example and you can sign up for any or all of our Twitter feeds, which obviously can be mobile enabled.”

Glen Nowak offered these thoughts on the fact that people around the world rely on the CDC’s data, “What we’re trying to do with people living in developing countries when it comes to things like novel flu viruses or other health threats is we’re trying to raise awareness of what the health issues are. We’re trying to give people a perspective. We’re trying to give them the information we have about how much a threat this does pose.”

Full-length video from the CDC/Swine Flu brief in the AUC Virtual Newsroom in Second Life

Screenshot of the CDC Event in the AUC Virtual Newsroom

Screenshot of the CDC Event in the AUC Virtual Newsroom

Special thanks to Texas Timtam and Starr Sonic of Treet.TV for their quick turnaround in delivering the video from Saturday’s CDC conversation on coverage of the H1N1 (Swine Flu) virus. The video is about 60 minutes long. In coming days we will provide a shorter, YouTube-friendly report.

Two versions are available for viewing:

* high quality video for web & mobile devices;
* HD 720p for computer, large screen or home TV set-top box viewing

Press Release–Live Broadcast from the AUC Virtual Newsroom–CDC Brief on Swine Flu

The American University in Cairo's Virtual Newsroom will broadcast live to the internet on Saturday, May 16 at 9 am EST. Anyone in the world with broadband access can participate in a live chatstream while the Center for Disease Control briefs journalists and bloggers on swine flu. Special guests include members of Global Voices.

The American University in Cairo's Virtual Newsroom will broadcast live to the internet on Saturday, May 16 at 9 am EST. Anyone in the world with broadband access can participate in a live chatstream while the Center for Disease Control briefs journalists and bloggers on swine flu. Special guests include members of Global Voices.

On Saturday, May 16, 9 am Eastern Time (4 pm Cairo Time), Dancing Ink Productions will produce a live broadcast from the American University in Cairo’s Virtual Newsroom. This broadcast will take place as part of the “Blogging the Future” summit at the American University in Cairo, Egypt from May 15-17, 2009. (Download a PDF of the release here.)

The broadcast will be hosted by Lawrence Pintak, director of the Kamal Adham Center for Journalism, Training and Research at the American University in Cairo. It will be streamed live from the virtual world of Second Life to a global Internet audience. The event will feature two senior executives from the US Center for Disease Control (CDC), Glenn Nowak, Director of the Division of Media Relations, Office of Enterprise Communication; and Jay M. Bernhardt, Director of the National Center for Health Marketing. Nowak and Bernhardt will brief some of the world’s most active and prominent bloggers and digital journalists with a distinguished selection of their Arab colleagues. The international community blog, Global Voices, the leading participatory media news room for voices from the developing world with over 150 volunteer authors and translators, will also participate in the event. Global Voices has been covering worldwide approach to the Swine Flu crisis. You can view those reports here.

The Second Life event is part of a two-day “lessons learned” conference on the AUC campus in Cairo that brings together 14 bloggers from around the world, 15 online journalists from across the Arab region, and a dozen Egyptian bloggers to discuss the role of information on the internet.

Journalists from around the world are invited to take part in this event by registering for the live stream at the Dancing Ink Productions website (Register here.). Participants will be able to view the entire event taking place in Second Life without needing to be in the virtual world, and those in attendance on the website will be able to communicate in live, real-time chat with event participants in Second Life. Registered users can view the live event here. Questions can be posed in the “chatbridge” and event moderators will pose the most compelling queries to the CDC, Global Voices or the AUC Virtual Newsroom.

The Inaugural Broadcast of the American University in Cairo took place on January 12, 2009 and featured then-US Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy James K. Glassman in conversation with a group of Egyptian bloggers. This was part of a larger USAID-funded project to help Egyptian bloggers better understand the U.S. political process. The effort is coordinated by the Kamal Adham Center for Journalism Training and Research at The American University in Cairo, which sent eight bloggers to the U.S. to cover the elections. The AUC Virtual Newsroom was created as a venue where Arab journalists can meet virtually with experts and officials around the world.

This event will begin punctually, so it is advised that participants register ahead of time (registration is extremely simple–just a username) to avoid missing the beginning. Press inquiries can be directed to (info@dancinginkproductions.com) or +1.914.420.0258.