Amateur Hour and Professional Standards

I’ve held off commenting on the Shirley Sherrod episode until now, because I wanted to make sure most of the major elements had surfaced.

When the Breitbart clip and resulting propoganda first broke, I was immediately suspicious because of where things originated — a partisan group with a history of questionable tactics, and a proven record of editing video to support a specific agenda.

To say the initial reactions from the administration, the NAACP, and much of the mainstream media were disappointing, is to let these groups off with minor slaps on the wrists. They deserve a proverbial whack on their snouts, followed by “bad dog!”

“Unprofessional” is one word I’d use. “Amateurish” is another. “Incompetent,” “negligent,” “unsuitable”, “naive,” “sloppy” and “half-assed” are some other words I’d suggest, and that’s only because I’m trying to be safe for work.

There’s a lot I want to say about the political and racial implications of what’s happened, but that’s a detour from the basic facts as they appear to be:

Shirley Sherrod, a woman who’s had a tremendously difficult background that might break many of us, worked hard to get to a position where she could help members of her community. She fought through her own biases and prejudices and was rewarded for it with a federal appointment, one that enabled her to do even greater good and on a larger scale.

Then she was targeted by an agenda-driven group, and a video of a speech she gave was edited, taken out of context, and spun to serve craven political purposes.. The group behind all this pushed claims of racism by Ms. Sherrod, and nearly every group that could and should have done some fact-checking… didn’t.

Their first reactions were FAILS. Working professionals that should know better took the edited clip at face value, failed to do basic vetting and verification, and the woman wound up being hounded from her job, her reputation smeared.

Things are now looking better for Ms. Sherrod — the full video and complete context is now out there, and if anything, she looks far better than even her personal narrative would suggest — and she’s reviewing multiple job offers, including her former post.

But those groups that first reacted have a lot of explaining to do.

As a former journalist, magazine editor, and now video producer, I’d like to offer a few tips and questions these groups should ask themselves — and they’ll work well for  anyone else that has to deal with “shocking, controversial” online content .

1. Carefully review the clip in question. Do you see any edit points? If not, look again. If you do see edits/transitions, WHY? What’s been cut out, and why would anything be cut/edited/trimmed?

2. Where’s the raw/full clip? If you’re going to make any judgements, or if there are any possible negative repercussions, get the original clip.

3. Remember to keep context in mind. Personally, if there’s any question about context, possible edits, or any manipulation at all, you need to do your job and make sure the original, authoritative source has been vetted thoroughly.

4. Once you have the original/full/raw clip… REVIEW IT. (It turns out that a few of the groups in question had this clip in hand shortly after the controversy began, but it was too much effort to sit down and watch it. That’s just shameful and unprofessional).

5. If for some reason this original material isn’t readily available, consider that a red flag. Hold off on any next steps until the source material is available.

Yes, it’s more work, but doesn’t this action involve people’s lives, careers, and reputations? It’s just basic double- and triple-checking

If the tables were turned, how would YOU like this to be handled?

Pavlov’s dog reacted quickly, but so what? You’re not a trained dog. You’re a working professional, right?

To be completely fair…

My last post — which displayed a photo of midget professional baseball player Eddie Gaedel of the historic St. Louis Browns above a photo of U.S. Senator John Boehner — led some people to believe I was inferring that Boehner was perhaps a mental midget.

That’s not the case. As the writer, I wasn’t inferring anything. That’s the job of the reader. My job is to imply, if not overtly suggest.

And to let the chips fall all over the place, had you heard the news about Chuck Schumer’s recent statesmanlike action? In the face of massive unemployment, staggering deficits, and acid-flecked political discourse at all levels of the national dialogue, Schumer bravely whipped off a letter — to Steve Jobs. Complaining about the iPhone 4. And asking for a free fix.

To the senator from New York’s credit, he at least remembered to ask for a free fix for everyone that bought the new phones, not just himself.

Like I said, statesmanlike.

Charles Schumer of the U.S. Senator

"Perhaps it's time to invade Cupertino."

Words to live by…

I’m pondering exactly how political to get in this blog, because there’s a lot to be said about both parties, Congress in general, and the team in the White House.

But I believe Bill Veeck summed it up completely, even though he was talking baseball: “All I ever said is that you can draw more people with a losing team, plus bread and circuses, than with a losing team and a long, still silence.”

\Eddie Gaedel of the St. Louis Browns

Eddie Gaedel of the St. Louis Browns

John Boehner of the U.S. Senators

John Boehner of the U.S. Senators

Radio Interview: Music videos, N.C. independent film, and zombies!

Yes, it somehow all comes together. This is a July 13, 2010 radio interview I did with Molly Matlock, Executive Director of ChathamArts and host of “Inside the Artist’s Studio” on WCOM-FM in Carrboro, NC.

Molly put it best in her program description: “Now to the Zombies. Today on “Inside the Artist’s Studio,” ChathamArts interviews James Bryson Hyatt about the NC film industry, making music videos, and how zombie movies hold the key to a better world.”

Sadly, I know way more about zombie movies and what they say about us as individuals and as a society than any normal person should. Wait, “normal”… 😉

Here’s the audio, just under an hour:

\”Inside the Artist\’s Studio,\” July 13, 2010, Molly Matlock and James Hyatt

Molly Matlock

Molly Matlock, right, ChathamArts executive director and radio host

Work examples: Directing and Editing, 3

This is particularly relevant today, July 13, 2010, now that Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has passed away.

A compelling narrative by Yankees President Randy Levin on his path from Hofstra Law School to NYC’s Labor Commissioner, to Major League Baseball, and the lessons he’s learned about working with people in all walks of life.

Client: Hofstra University School of Law

Work examples: Directing and Editing, 2

It’s easy to get great interview material when you have great interview subjects. This is Diplomat Sarah Peck, who went to law school after a few years working in different fields — and is now showing the world how the American justice system can make a difference far outside the US.

Client: Northeastern University School of Law

Work examples: Editing, 2

What I think is a great video clip on studying abroad and how that can change the student and their life — optimized for social media.

Client: Northfield Mount Hermon School

New music video: “Lazy Demons” by The Strugglers

Hats off to Randy Bickford and Wyley Pamplin of The Strugglers, may your musical careers be anything but a struggle from here on.

And nice work, Team Creato-Destructo! Jerry Stifelman, director, Trace Oliveto, producer. Ian Ostrowski as the actor, lots of folks in and around Carrboro in other roles (including Wyley again). Production support, Becky Davis and Shay Stifelman (also nice editing!).

Oh, and I was 1st A.D., but enough of my yakkin’. Here’s the video: