Posts Tagged ‘social media’

BloggersUnite Day: Human Rights

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Carolyn at And One brought it to my attention that BlogCatalog is asking bloggers to unite today for human rights. Go check out her post with a bunch of links to human rights organizations on the web, including the NBA’s organization NBA Cares.

Bloggers Unite

Thinking about the place that sports has in the ongoing conversation about human rights, the focus of late as I see it has been on the upcoming Olympic games in China.

Sean Gregory wrote a great piece earlier this month for Time Magazine on the viability of Olympic athletes as ambassadors speaking out against China’s human rights violations. He asks the question: Why shouldn’t the American team leave the whole “we’re just athletes” excuse at home?

Indeed, some U.S. Olympic team members feel it is not their place to voice their opinion for lack of being well-informed on the issues. Women’s U.S. Soccer Abby Wambach player told Gregory:

That a lot of responsibility, to ask an athlete to not only represent your country and perform and try to win a gold medal, and to have a political view.

Conversely, 1968 Olympic track & field bronze-medalist John Carlos, whose black power salute from the medal podium is one of if not the most famous political image in Olympic game history, told Gregory:

All young individuals should be aware of the situation, the circumstances in which they a becoming involved in…It’s something they have to study, and become well-versed in. It’s an obligation.

(John Carlos, right)

As interesting as the athletes’ reactions to the social controversy is that of the big name brands associated with this year’s games, many of whom have been planning their 2008 Olympic marketing and sponsorship initiatives as long as the competitors have been training for the events.

In an article in yesterday’s Boston Globe, Reebok announced they are dropping plans for a hospitality facility to host athletes, guests and media in Beijing, citing the human rights controversy as one of the reasons.

Among the activities Reebok planned to conduct at these facilities were media interviews with the 250 athletes the brand is outfitting for the games. Josie Stevens, Reebok’s Director of Global Public Relations, said:

As a brand, we didn’t want to put our athletes in the position when being interviewed of having to explain their personal views on the human rights issue, and we didn’t want to act as a censor either.

Reebok plans to distribute canned interviews with their athletes through a video news service instead.

Check out some other articles on the Olympics human rights debate here:

Toss the Burner: April 9, 2008

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

The twelfth season of South Park has been oh so sweet, and yet another fresh episode airs tonight.

If you’re kind of a big deal like myself and can’t always be around at 10 p.m. on Wednesday, check out ALLSP where you can watch every single episode (beautiful) ever created.

Here’s a musical moment from the show’s past, I can’t remember laughing harder during South Park then the first time I saw this…

Concerning YouTube…The Today Show has been covering this story about the 16-year old girl who was beaten up on camera by a bunch of her supposed girlfriends.

The she-thugs then put the video on YouTube…shocking.

This morning, The Today Show put together a panel to discuss how awful this whole thing is, and the disturbing trend in kids posting violent video in search of their “15 MBs (clever?) of fame.”

Interestingly enough, on YouTube’s most viewed today page a news video of the beating loaded by user AssociatedPress has 226,065 views…today.

So, we’ve got trusted, reputable media source The Today Show condemning kids for doing this with violent videos, and trusted, reputable media source The Associated Press…What? Fueling the fire?

In their defense, AssociatedPress has removed the video.

…and some of my favorite (at least by name) YT users who have picked up the slack in posting these girls’ story include CuddlyNutBear, SockPuppetry101, and JUMPTHECOOCH.

An emerging voice of reason in this whole sordid affair…a YouTube comment posted 12 seconds ago:

WHAT THE F#$% IS THIS SH*T!!!!!!!!!!!!
Those girls should be punished!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You don’t do that to some one just because you have a disagreement or she said something to offend you. COME ON PEOPLE THIS IS F#$%ED.

says lesbianloveaffair

Comparing Sports Social Content Sites

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

I’ve been all over a lot of these sports syndication sites recently. They’re a great aggregator for what is going on online in the sports universe. I ran a quick compete.com comparison with my top-3 (BallHype.com, Yardbarker.com, ArmChairGM.com):

Personally, I thought BallHype would come out on top. It is definitely the site where I see pages by the most influential sports bloggers. Interestingly enough, FanIQ.com also came in at just under 100,000 monthly uniques (placing it above BallHype as well).

I hope to have widgets for all my profile pages from these sites up on this site sooner rather than later.