Friday 29 October 2010

John Coster Blog: Every Event Provides an Opportunity


It’s been one of those weeks when you stop and look back and find it hard to believe what has happened. Several big decisions have been made that will shape the next three years of activity.
Firstly, I had a very good meeting with the guys from the superb Leicester Comedy Festival. The plan is to run a ‘skyride’ style media centre for the whole comedy festival, based in the Phoenix Square Film & Digital Media Centre foyer. The media centre will be set up a week before the start and run throughout the whole 17 days of the festival. Congratulations to Geoff Rowe and his team on being nominated for the People’s Millions project on ITV. Make sure you vote for them so the money can be used to set up Laughter Clubs and community bases across Leicester.

Thursday 21 October 2010

Buy Yourself a 2011 Diary Today!

Now the Commonwealth Games have finished (well done India!), the media seem to have finally started to view the London 2012 Games as being close. It would appear from a quick glance that the Games budget is okay and secure from funding cuts but I guess only time will tell. The role I’ve made for myself means I don’t have to worry about any of that stuff, I can just focus on making sure that young people and communities have the opportunity to have an Olympic/Paralympic experience close to home.


Soar Community Weekly Community Reporters 2012 Blog

My Games My Legacy

My Games My Legacy
To get everyone involved in creating a legacy from the Games, Inspire LeicesterShire are asking people to make a personal pledge for 2012. The pledges will be used to sign post people to partner activity.

Sunday 10 October 2010

Why Olympic radio didn't get off the starting blocks


JC - perhaps we should have a radio FM licence during 2012 games in partnership with Panj Pani Radio?
It sounded like a champion idea – a dedicated radio station, or even a whole bunch of radio stations, broadcasting exclusively about the Olympics when the games come to London in 2012. But the ambitious Olympic radio idea fell at the first hurdle last week when Ofcom quietly pulled the plug on the plans it had announced just six months ago.
Back then there was no shortage of optimism about the new service, with Ofcom anticipating that demand would be "particularly high".
A possible sticking point was that the stations would be digital-only, as it ruled there was insufficient capacity to put them on analogue AM or FM, thereby depriving them of potentially a much wider audience. But what better shop window for digital audio broadcasting (DAB) radio – which has grown in popularity but is still far short of the critical mass required for digital switchover – than a digital-only service showcasing the biggest sporting event the capital has ever seen?

Wednesday 6 October 2010

Leicester……we have a solution!!


It was a great day in Manchester on Monday. I travelled to the AND Festival (Abandon Normal Devices) taking place in the superb Cornerhouse. If you’ve ever visited the place you’ll know how interesting it is and would be great to be able to replicate some of their basic services in our own Phoenix Square.

It was a packed day with lots of interesting people from across the world talking about their personal Olympic experiences and the work they undertake. This link takes you to all the day’s background information and also the speakers.

It is clear to see that the Olympic movement has become an industry in its own right creating opportunities for people from many sectors including research. This was the first time that I fully appreciated the extent of the work that goes into staging each Games every 2 years.

The statistics around the number of journalists who take part in each the Games is simply mind boggling – 13,000 broadcast & 7,000 print journalists. It is quite simply the largest media event in the world. Does citizen’s journalism offer the opportunity to make London 2012 a media festival?

The role of citizens journalists was discussed at length and the general feeling was that this is the first games to be dominated by citizen journalism and a great deal could be learnt from the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics experience. These games have been called the Twitter Olympics due to the prolific use of social media tools and saw the emergence of a new kind of reporting that was powered by ordinary citizens. In turn community pioneers developed new support facilities for citizen journalists and this led to remarkable initiatives like the True North Media House and the W2 Media and Culture House.

I’ll try to bring many of these lessons to bear for the Phoenix based Community Media Hub during both games of London 2012 and intend to discuss them in more detail over the coming week’s in my Soar Community blog.

It was a real humbling experience to be asked to present on Citizens Eye and its quite unique relationship with the Leicester Mercury. Also the broad proposal for recruiting 2,012 people to become Community Reporters across Leicester & Leicestershire was outlined and the fact that ward reporting was a positive by product made many interested in the project.  The feedback was very positive from all involved. I hope to see many of these new ‘Olympic’ friends visit Leicester over the next 12 months as they seek to find ways of attracting and organising their community reporters from Manchester to Bristol and Liverpool to Glasgow.

I think I’ve stumbled on something here. Whereas many will be looking to create a network of citizen journalists to report during the Games we already have a group of people in place, that’s expanding daily and reporting on Citizens Eye and on the pages of the Leicester Mercury.

It’s going to be an interesting 2 years that’s for sure.


Powerpoint Presentation - "2,012 Community Reporters By 2012"

Tuesday 5 October 2010

It All Started Monday!

Citizens’ Eye editor John Coster is making a presentation at  the ‘Will citizen media take over the 2012 Games?’ event in Manchester on Monday October 4.
John will be conducting a session called ‘Organising 2012 Community Media Reporters’ to outline the involvement of Citizens’ Eye and Leicester Wave young people’s newspaper in the Olympic Games 2012.