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    Photo by Alec Schwartzman on Flickr. “What does civic innovation mean to you, and how would you define it?” Michael Hall, co-founder of Digital Grass, posed this question to a panel of civic innovators at The LAB Miami last week at “The Big Business of Civic Innovation.” Digital Grass, a Knight Foundation grantee and technology and innovation firm, sponsored the event to help discover the necessary steps to keep local innovators in South Florida while maintaining diversity in the community’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The event’s panel included locals Matt Haggman, Pandwe Gibson and Armando Ibarra in addition to special guest speaker Carla Mays, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur and ecosystem builder. Mays took the first attempt at answering Hall’s question. “Civic innovation has to do with government, inclusion, equity, and the innovation in public policy and technology,” Mays said. “It also deals with managing the disruption. When we come up with disruptive technology, it tends to put people out of work. My definition of civic innovation is equity and inclusion in the innovation process that moves us toward a more equitable and sustainable community.”
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    Sebastian Spreng is a South Florida visual artist and classical music writer Every time a theater, a library or, as in this case, a radio station devoted to classical music closes, a community and its people are bereaved. It sounds tragic because it is tragic, especially if the station’s finances were on the mend. After losing millions of dollars for years, it was just starting to recover, rallying with optimism. It’s true that Classical South Florida was still losing money, but it had gone from losing nearly $3 million in 2012 to $2.4 million in 2013 and $1.6 million in 2014. Prospects looked good, audiences were responding and programming was beginning to adapt to the needs and tastes of the South Florida audience, thanks to the efforts and innovative contributions of local staff. Unfortunately, that momentum was cut short by the devastating news that the owner, Minnesota-based American Public Media, sold the station for $21.7 million to Education Media Foundation, a California-based religious nonprofit. The news struck the local music community like a thunderbolt, as it had long considered Classical South Florida an unconditional ally and an indispensable voice that informed and educated the public about its activities.
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    Photo by Michael Hicks on Flickr.com Applications for the 2015 Knight Green Line Challenge are now closed. We received more than 350 ideas for projects that tap into the potential of the Green Line to make surrounding neighborhoods in St. Paul, Minn., more vibrant places to live and work. We saw ideas for each of the six neighborhoods along the line that aimed to push the three key drivers of city success: exciting current residents and attracting newcomers; expanding economic opportunity and breaking down community divides; and creating and strengthening a culture of robust civic engagement. Now, a team of local and national readers will join Knight Foundation and St. Paul Foundation staff in an initial review of applications. They will be looking for ideas that are new and innovative, that could have a strong local impact, that provide an opportunity for learning, and that can be executed successfully by the applicant. We’ll announce the finalists in August. Finalists will receive feedback on their ideas and will need to refine their applications and add detail. The finalist application includes an expanded word limit for the initial questions. Finalists will need to provide a final grant amount and full budget. Finalists will also need to provide a timeline for the project, describe risks or barriers to success, discuss how their project will expand knowledge in the field, share how they will tell their story and explain their plan for sustainability (if the project is intended to be sustained). Finalists also have the opportunity to add a maximum of two letters of support as well as a sketch, photo or illustration. Final applications will be due on Aug. 26. A team of readers will share their expertise with Knight and St. Paul Foundation staff in a detailed review process. We will announce winners of the 2015 Green Line Challenge in late September.
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    Photos courtesy of the Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science. What happens when you bring together the work of an aerospace engineer and a sculptor? The Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science will display the result Tuesday with a kickoff event and panel discussion for “Curious Vault Collaborations 002: Insight Flight.” The Curious Vault is an online platform highlighting objects from the museum’s collection. The collaborations bring together an artist and a scientist to create specific exhibits. “The first one we paired a local artist and a marine biologist,” said Kevin Arrow, the museum’s art and collection manager. “This one we are pairing a local artist, Robert Chambers, with [GeCheng Zha, a university of Miami professor and director of the Aerodynamics and Computational Fluid Dynamics Lab].  The project itself becomes a science experiment because we put these ingredients together and hope for the best.” “Insight Flight” will explore the past, present and future of flight. Organizers drew inspiration from an exhibit planned for the museum after it moves next summer from its Old South Miami Avenue location to a new home downtown. “There are many people working on an exhibition that’s going to be highlighted at the new museum called ‘Feathers to the Stars,’” Arrow said. “In a nutshell, it is going to be a history of flight: the very first evolution of feathered dinosaurs, to man looking up and wanting to fly, to SpaceX and the future of space travel. We had this ‘eureka’ moment when we realized no museum has ever linked all three of those into one exhibit.”
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    Photos by Monica Peters. North Philadelphia residents enjoyed one of their city’s public pools resort-style last week. Community members luxuriated in the vacation-like setting at the city of Philadelphia’s Francisville Recreation Center taking full advantage of newly installed palm trees, lounge decks, games and other amenities. The Pop-Up Pool Project, funded as part of the 2015 Knight Cities Challenge, will be at the center through Aug. 21. The challenge, announced last fall, sought ideas on how to make Knight’s 26 communities more vibrant places to live and work. Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter kicked off the July 1 launch festivities, which included poolside performances by jazz band Khadijah’s Trio. “The Pop-Up Pool Project is all about demonstrating the forgotten potential of public pools to act as valuable civic spaces in neighborhoods,” said Ben Bryant whose idea was one of seven Knight Cities Challenge projects selected in Philadelphia; 32 projects won nationwide. Bryant is glad to see community members from diverse backgrounds enjoy the new amenities. He is looking to replicate the concept next year at more recreation centers in Philadelphia. At poolside, local resident and regular pool-goer Josie Gatlin relaxed while her, husband, Michael, treaded in the pool with their 18-month-old son, Franklin. “It’s fabulous!” she said, admiring the pool’s transformation.
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    The Twin Cities-based American Composer’s Forum holds a Knight Arts-funded annual competition to find the best high school composers, offer them mentoring and a scholarship, as well as the chance to perform their work onstage. Here, St. Paul arts blogger Levi Weinhagen writes about the 2015 winners’ performance. Because the term “songwriter” has been so commonly used when talking about popular and current music, and because there seems to be this insatiable human desire to create hierarchies of art and artists, the word composer often implies someone who writes in the style of European classical music. But composer, in its purest definition, means a person who creates music. So I was really pleased to see that the American Composer Forum’s NextNotes High School Composition Awards really was open to music makers from any and all backgrounds. The diversity of what it means to be a composer is well represented by the six young winners of the 2015 NextNotes awards. NextNotes.
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    Growing up in South Memphis, I spent countless hours at a tiny storefront branch library right around the corner from my home. I loved to read and the place was jammed with books. Perfect! But libraries today are as likely to be occupied by people studying for their GED, applying for jobs, figuring out small business startup procedures, and watching movies on computers as they are with people discovering new books to read.  It makes for a complex set of services and a confusing future. Miguel Figueroa is trying to figure out what that future looks like. Miguel heads the American Library Association Center for the Future of Libraries. The center promotes innovative and future-oriented thinking to position libraries for long-term sustainability and success. Here are five things you should know about the future of libraries from my conversation with Miguel:
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    Video: HeartMob completed a successful Kickstarter fundraising round in May. After over 10 years of running Hollaback!, I’ve been harassed and attacked online repeatedly. For those of you who have never been harassed online, here’s a little peek into what the Internet looks like for me: The rest range from being so graphic that Knight Foundation’s editorial director won’t allow them on this site to just being too offensive and disgusting to repeat. We get about 2,500 comments like this a year. That’s more than 200 a month, if you’re counting. On the good days, I can brush it off as the “price I pay” for being a woman online. I act tough, I make funny jokes about it, and I pretend that it doesn’t hurt. But I’d be lying if I didn’t admit that more often than not these comments sit with me like lead weights. With every status update or tweet that I post, I evaluate whether or not what I have to say is important enough to warrant potential backlash. More often than I’d like to admit, I remain silent.   And I’m not the only one. According to a Pew Research Center survey from late last year, 40 percent of people have been harassed online and 73 percent of people witnessed someone else being harassed online. With a problem this big, the old adage “don’t feed the trolls” is akin to telling people on the receiving end of online harassment to adapt to this problem, when what they really need to do is change it. When it comes to addressing violence — in almost any form — one of the best practices is bystander intervention, or what some people term “upstander” intervention. It’s the idea that when you see violence, or even the threat of violence, there are things that you can do to intervene and help out. Typically the list includes actions creating a distraction, contacting authorities, asking the person if they are OK, or of course, intervening directly. In situations like street harassment, someone else is around maybe 50 percent of the time. But when it comes to online harassment, people are around 100 percent of the time. And if the right person isn’t around right when the harassment strikes, they can fly back in time and space through the magic of the Internet to help out.
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    Photo credit: Silicon Valley Gives. For many community foundations, Giving Days have been a great way to cultivate donors for their community’s nonprofits, while raising millions for local causes. Several funders have gained so much expertise in this area, that they have shared their own tools and templates for the broader field in Knight Foundation’s Giving Day Playbook, an online, soup-to-nuts guide to putting on one of these online giving campaigns. Now, though, that many foundations have a few Giving Days under their belts, we’ve heard that organizers need higher-level on training that can help advance their efforts. So today, we’ re introducing our advanced Giving Day webinars, a free and open series addressing the needs of growing and experienced campaigns.  As more community foundations are integrating Giving Days into their work, they face issues of sustainability, and often question how the management of these days helps them leverage their presence in the community and bring in new donor advised funds. This advanced series will focus on topics that speak to those goals, and give advice and tools to participants. Moderated by social media expert and trainer Beth Kanter, the series will address a range of topics, from how to land corporate sponsorships to using a Giving Day to build your foundation’s brand. And because there are always foundations and staff new to Giving Days, we will kick off the series with a Giving Day Basics for Newcomers in August, as a general introduction for those trying them for the first time. Here are the upcoming webinars, with registration links:
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    "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner" Choreographed by: Ray Mercer Dance performances in various outdoor venues during the summer months in Akron go back 42 years to when choreographer Heinz Poll took dancers from his professional dance company, the Ohio Ballet, and put on a free dance show in a plaza in downtown Akron. Jane Startzman, who is festival director of the Heinz Poll Summer Dance Festival, remembers the event well. She danced in that very first performance. During a lunch interview with her, Startzman reminisced a bit about the development of summer dance in the city. For that very first show, Startzman said that the ballet company borrowed wood through one of the crew members whose family owned a lumber yard. The dancers and crew built the stage, gave their performance, then tore the stage apart and returned the lumber. Things changed quickly after that. David Lieberth, former deputy mayor of Akron, commented in a telephone interview that the city jumped in for the second year to help fund the summer performances by Ohio Ballet. Under city sponsorship, Startzman said, the ballet started performing in several parks around town. It even performed in nearby cities. With the demise of the Ohio Ballet nine years ago, Jane Startzman and other dance leaders in the city got together and figured a way to continue the tradition with the help of the City of Akron. Their efforts produced the Heinz Poll Summer Dance Festival, now in its ninth year. The festival is sponsored in part, said David Lieberth, through a Knight Arts grant. When her group first started the summer dance festival, Startzman commented, they decided to support local professional dance companies in order to help generate audiences for the remainder of the year. The first year included four local companies in performances. Subsequently, Startzman said, they decided to have “outside” companies perform. The idea was to expose local audiences to dance groups from other areas of the country that they might not otherwise get a chance to see. One example is from a few years ago when the distinguished New York City-based Martha Graham Dance Company performed as part of the festival. Startzman commented that local companies like to bring new work to the festival. This year, for example, Neos Dance Theatre and GroundWorks DanceTheater will both be bringing new works. Neos will perform two company premieres (Hernando Cortez’s “Chichester Psalms” and Neos Artistic Director Bobby Wesner’s “Searching for the Find”). It will also present a world premiere of a currently untitled work by Joseph Morrissey. Finally, it will perform a recent work that the company has done by Penny Saunders called “Berceuse.” Neos Dance Theatre is a recent Knight Arts grantee and will kick off the festival with performances on July 24-25 in Firestone Park. Neos Dance Theatre. Photo courtesy of Neos Dance Theatre
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    Photo by Alec Schwartzman on Flickr.com More than a hundred people packed O Cinema Wynwood last week for an “Indie-Pendence” Day celebration.  The event was the latest installment of “I’m Not Gonna Move to L.A. (NOLA),” a monthly short film festival from Knight Arts Challenge winner FilmGate Interactive that champions local filmmakers, helping them display their work and connect with the broader community. “NOLA is the longest-running local short film series in Miami,” said Tina Francisco, the filmmaker coordinator. “Since we started [in February 2012,] we’ve shown over 250 films. It’s a great platform for local filmmakers” On the first Wednesday of every month, FilmGate Interactive invites the community to take part in the experience, which includes a “percolator” to pitch ideas to the audience, networking opportunities, vintage movie trivia, live local musicians, and, of course, the screening of shorts produced by local filmmakers. At the end of the screenings, every audience member gets a fuzzy ball to throw at the director of their favorite film. The director with the most fuzzy balls wins the audience award, a free year’s membership in FilmGate Interactive. The membership benefits include discounted production insurance and rentals, and production support. Guest judges choose a winner as well.
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    Painting/collage from the “Going Home” series, Marina Gonella. Sometimes, it’s strangers in a foreign land that can see their surroundings in the most unfiltered manner, who can have a literal point of view that is not formed by a native history. The evocative paintings of Marina Gonella, raised in Argentina, have that essence. An alum of the ArtCenter/South Florida (a Knight Arts grantee), her paintings make up the latest solo show at O Cinema (a Knight Arts Challenge winner) in Wynwood, part of a series run by the ArtCenter. The center sold its flagship space on Lincoln Road in Miami Beach last year, and has been finding ways to show art across the county, and in collaboration with other institutions. This particular coupling began a year and a half ago, and has grown to include a closing brunch that is combined with a movie of the artist’s choice. Gonella’s exhibit title is perfect: “Going Home.” Her small, collaged paintings that hang in the cinema lobby are narrative depictions of her daily travels going home, from Miami Beach to the Broward suburb of Weston. As all South Floridians know, commutes can take up huge amounts of time, and can become mind-numbing, with one highway or freeway interchange melding into another, the views depressingly similar. But in Gonella’s hands, those all-too-familiar road signs, traffic lights, construction cones look distinctive, as if we are almost seeing them for the first time.
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    Wayne Chen is acting division manager for the San José Department of Housing. Photo by Sergio Ruiz for SPUR San Jose on Flickr. Everyone talks about the high cost of Silicon Valley housing, as if it were the next hot IPO. But how “high” is it? This spring, the median cost of a single-family home in San Jose was $851,000 and the median household income here was $81,800, for a cost-to-income ratio of over 10:1. The average monthly rent of a new, one-bedroom apartment in San Jose is approaching $3,000, which would require an annual income of about $120,000. Yikes! Even though these prices make you swoon, costs in other Silicon Valley communities are even crazier. In Palo Alto, just up the road from San Jose, the median single-family home sales price in May was $2.75 million and the median household income was $121,000, for a ratio of over 22:1!   It wasn’t this bad 40 years ago, the last time the Golden State Warriors won the NBA championship. Back in the mid-1970’s, the median cost of a house was about three times the median household income – which was in line with the national standard. Not anymore. Our ratio is now off the charts, in the range of ultra-expensive cities such as London and Tokyo, whereas the current national ratio has remained steady. These high costs do signify one positive thing: the innovation economy of Silicon Valley has created unprecedented wealth and amazing technologies that have changed the world and fueled a local employment boom. The serious downside is that growing income inequality and the mismatch between the growth of jobs and the dearth of affordable housing in our region threaten our long-term economic and social resilience, harm the environment by increasing commute distances, degrade the quality of life and civic engagement and erode the diversity and inclusiveness of our cities. So what can we do to close the gap of housing affordability? With generous support from Knight Foundation, the “Housing 2.0: Reimagining the Housing System”  symposium will bring together doers, thinkers, funders and builders to envision a housing delivery system for a more balanced, sustainable and equitable Silicon Valley that will be good for everyone.
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    We have a terrific lineup of events set for this month in Miami that are supported by Knight Foundation. They include: • July 6, 13, 20, 27: Code for MIA hosts its weekly Civic Hack Night. • July 6, 13, 20, 27: Hacks/Hackers hosts OpenHack Miami at The LAB Miami. • July 8: Digital Grass presents an interactive conversation, The Big Business of Civic Innovation with special guests: Carla Mays, Dr. Pandwe Gibson, Armando Ibarra and me at The Lab Miami. • July 8, 15, 22, 29: Live Ninja holds #WaffleWednesday, its weekly tech and creatives morning meetup in Wynwood. • July 9: Join The Idea Center at Miami Dade College for student-led venture presentations at the CREATE Accelerator Showcase.
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    Bayete Ross Smith's "Question Bridge: Black Males" This article is cross-posted with permission from Sundance.org. What is the future of story?” Kamal Sinclair, co-director of Sundance Institute’s New Frontier Story Lab, asks in her welcoming remarks. I came to the New Frontier Day Lab at the Allied Media Conference (AMC) this year because I have this same question. What does my future as a filmmaker look like and how is the art of storytelling expanding and the technical craft changing? Just like the cinematic leaps we’ve taken from black-and-white to color, to sound to film to digital and beyond, is the “communication architecture” in which we tell our stories about to take another leap that I need to prepare myself for? Artists are projecting moving images onto people’s retinas these days, and I’m still trying to figure out my 90-minute, 3-act structured drama/comedy with sharpies, notecards and double-sided tape on a big empty wall. Yes, this has produced fine results and allowed me to tell my stories, but does transmedia mean that this linear structure is outdated? Is transmedia something I have to participate in if I want my work to remain relevant? Is the transmedia world expanding the method in which we derive our stories, or just the way we are telling them? Is it replacing what we already know about storytelling or giving us more options in which to tell our stories? The merger itself of Sundance and AMC is a powerful one for Detroit. Both of these organizations have been part of my artistic development as a filmmaker and have worked to facilitate discussions around how the convergence of story and technology impact justice and social movements, furthering the aims of using the power of cinema and media to promote broader cultural understanding and inspire curiosity. It’s great when people have your back and I am thrilled that Sundance and AMC are bringing these labs and ways to continue these important discussions to Detroit! The lab itself began as we were introduced and greeted with “Welcome to Detroit! Look around you, you are in a place where many great artists are born and bred.” We then met three transmedia artists and Sundance fellows while hearing about their current creative work and how their practice fits into this new form of transmedia. As an Arab American filmmaker, I am very conscious of the context that I produce film in, having become aware at a young age that the images of Arab people I was seeing in mainstream media did not match the community I knew and loved. And coming from an appreciation of film as a medium that explores the subtle nuances of the human experience and condition, but critical of how the majority of those nuances are depicted through the lens of a white male protagonist while all other characters literally become the “other,” I was interested to hear other filmmakers who were also creating with this critical eye on the history of the medium. Bayete Ross Smith, "Question Bridge: Black Males." Photo © Sundance Institute. Credit: Bree Gant We are introduced to Bayete Ross Smith, the creator of Question Bridge: Black Males, an innovative transmedia project that facilitates a dialogue between a critical mass of black men from diverse and contending backgrounds and creates a platform for them to represent and redefine black male identity in America. Bayete starts by projecting headshots of Black men and women in various clothing and asked us to identify each character. “A yoga instructor,” “a guy walking home from school,” “looks like my cousin,” people answered. “Who controls the images and stories that are used to define us? Who gets to brand a certain truth?” Smith asks. Commenting on process and the importance of figuring out who your target audience is, Smith referred to his work as an examination of identity and a window into one demographic category. Creative technologist and new media artist, Yasmin Elayat (18 days in Egypt) was working with the idea that anyone can participate. Her project started out as a documentary film, which then expanded into a web-based platform where people started uploading photos and videos to build a crowd-sourced depiction of the Egyptian revolution. It was information gathering and sharing on a massive grass roots scale, literally from the ground up from all sides of the revolution. Elayat and her team would shift the story with each new element. She stressed the importance of failing in order to learn: “We didn’t know what it was going to be and that was okay”. But it can be difficult to keep up. “We are at the mercy of current events, and people get tired and move on from movements and sharing media,” Elayat explains. But she stressed that one of the most important things is that this work counters our “collective amnesia” by archiving the stories that the mainstream media refuses to cover. Defining Transmedia Sarah Wolozin, director of the MIT Open Documentary Lab, was defining participatory documentary, which in the history of media production, some suggest is an entirely new art form. Sarah talks about creating empathy through participatory components. She discussed a project that had audience members talk to robots and that these robots were able to elicit genuine, honest emotions from the humans they were engaging in conversation. Maybe people found themselves able to open up to a robot because there simply is no history of pain and confusion with this “person.” Interaction Design: Story, Platform, Audience Attendees at the New Frontier Story Lab in Detroit. Photo © Sundance Institute. Credit: Bree Gant Though in the “robots have never hurt us” scenario that my brain was cooking up in all of this, it was clear from Kamal Sinclair’s opening remarks and throughout the presentations, that transmedia storytelling had not taken a backseat to technology. Questions like “Does your story call for audience interactivity?”; “Why is the story being told this way?”; “What value is interactive media bringing to the story?”; and “How is the structure playing a role in the telling of the story?” reiterated for me the fact that these transmedia artists were more interested in ideas of story than they were in ideas of technology. During the discussion about Elayat’s project, she commented that “history has already been written by the community,” illustrating the idea that in transmedia works, the story’s content may already be there, but the artists job is to find a way to give that content a platform. And if that’s the case, then the design of the platform and the experience of both the users and viewers is important. But where does that leave us, the filmmakers? It was interesting to hear Elayat refer to herself as a “tool maker” – this was something that resonated with me, as I remembered my Dad working at Oldsmobile as a tool grinder when I was young. His job, his craft, was to make things excellent. To sharpen the tools that create the products. I began to think about the fact that no matter what field you are working in, sometimes that sharpening of the tool is all you need to take your experience, your understanding and your perspective, to the next level. Is this what it meant to be thinking in a transmedia way? I wasn’t sure, but it was great to be hearing from other artists who were also trying to figure it out in a variety of different ways. Interactive artist Jeremy Mendes presented examples from his work, which dealt primarily with linear narratives that were being presented in an environment that is non-linear – so that the platform or form of the work is the thing that is under restructuring once the artist has a story locked down. Mendes’ main point was that “quite often (people) get excited about form, but we try to keep form and story separated…the challenge is to tie in your concept with the form you are working with. What does that form mean?” He spoke about the importance of creating multiple iterations, then prototypes, and in the face of “design data visualization interface…maintaining your artistic vision is very challenging.” And here is where I go back to my pen and paper. But I was starting to realize that, for these artists, the processes they were articulating were also about going back to the proverbial drawing board – even if that drawing board was digital, or in a programming language, and not necessarily handwritten on notecards. The common bond that we shared was that we were all working it out. That nothing was certain in our creative processes, and for me this uncertainty made efforts in transmedia more inviting and accessible. It started to feel like we are all trying to figure this out together and the medium is at such an early stage that the only approach we can take is the one all artists take – one where you try, fail and try again. This process of evolution was familiar to me – working through this murky landscape where you just keep pushing until things click into place is what making a film already feels like. And the element that confirms for me when things do click into place is my audience. Multiple artists throughout the day also commented that audience was an important, if sometimes fluid, facet of transmedia work. Elayat commented that “we were seeing our audience as composed of three groups. Essentially, the first group is made up of the people who are there—the storytellers. The second group is the people who might have more context to what is going on—they are the research audience. And the third group is those people who will see the project in the future—the future audience. This group is why we sometimes ask ourselves ‘is this project ever done?’” I began to see that this new medium could be more about decentralizing the storyteller in order to liberate the elements of media production that remain autonomous instead of force through a singular lens. Once those elements are liberated they bypass a filtration, dare I say editing process, and can be realized within their natural context. Jeremy Mendes also commented on audience, but on his awareness of how the audience views media, the viewing context and processes that they bring to the table, and how this affects the work being viewed. His observation that “the average human attention span is now eight seconds” spurred him to focus on “invention, innovation and diffusion” as methods to retain and keep viewers, asking the group for their thoughts. “Should we push back against this trend or go with it?” My immediate thought is that we should push back. A reduction in our attention span (down to eight seconds!) feels like a linear amputation. And we should get that time back. Generated Narrative I was slowly moving from an “I work on paper and I am transmedia intimidated ” mode to seeing the opportunities that transmedia could provide to my practice and to the practices of other filmmakers. Transmedia can be a way to present a multilayered, multidimensional approach to storytelling that provides multiple portals of entry for viewers to both engage with the characters’ experiences as well as generate their own narrative content and keep the discussion going beyond the final frame. Characters in the projects presented by the Sundance artists do not only live in a 90-minute linear timeline projected onto a big screen. They live on Twitter, in art installations and in these physical experiences they ask you to join them in. By providing these multiple portals, transmedia also begins to answer a big question for many artists of how our communities and their authors can translate these experiences of marginalization in ways that others can understand. Adrienne Maree Brown speaks on a panel at the New Frontier Day Lab. Photo © Sundance Institute. Credit: Bree Gant In the afternoon, our time was spent talking through what the creation of transmedia works can provide besides the production of creative work. Detroit-based artists Wes Taylor and Carlos Garcia (Complex Movements), Adrienne Maree Brown, Dream Hampton, Evan Bissell, and moderator Jenny Lee (executive director at Allied Media Projects) asked how can storytelling be self transforming and structure transforming simultaneously? “What we need now in our dying cities is self-transforming and instructor transforming cities.” “We are really good at critiquing but it is hard to imagine something else. What would it look like to decentralize power?” “We are in this imagination battle that is getting more and more vicious. Because white imagination says that we are scary”. The possibilities that transmedia provides for rewriting the narratives above, for shifting the power structure that these narratives have helped remain in place and for ways that storytelling can be a totally transformative act, were exciting. The idea that transmedia works could possibly extend dialogues beyond the screen was being felt by multiple artists and attendees at this lab. This need for empowerment of others, for tools necessary to be able to take this transformative element into one’s own hands and instigate the changes we each see are needed, was also an exciting possibility. As Yasmin Elayat was talking about the idea of transmedia as a tool, she also stated, "We need to step back and start to see ourselves as tool makers instead of filmmakers. Allowing people to build a platform that allows them to tell their stories.” This for me made very clear that by allowing others to contribute to the narrative, by providing portals for viewers to have a more engaging experience with those narratives, we as filmmakers could increase the empathy and resonance that our works create by helping to author these participatory documentaries. As Elayat asks, “What if we can change the narrative from one voice to multiple voices?” This made me think of media critic Jack Shaheen who, in his book Reel Bad Arabs, found that nearly 1,000 films depict Arab characters as terrorists, kidnappers or other negative stereotypes. Shaheen states that in order to combat this effect on how society perceives Arab people there must be 1,000 films made with positive depictions in order to balance the scales. But if transmedia can provide multiple portals of entry into these narratives of underrepresented communities of authors, it could be a way to cut down on this catch up time. Instead of watching 10 movies about an Arab gas station clerk in order to understand how sitting behind the plexiglass has shaped his perspective, if I ask you to step into a bulletproof glass fortress that obstructs your vision, muffles your sound and only provides fresh air through one little circle, your experience of this situation is much more immediate and impactful. But will it be understood? How do we continue to go forward with these ideas as transmedia authors and generators? As Elayat stated in response to whether or not a project is ever done, “I don’t want to believe that the story will end.” I think that was the biggest point for me – while transmedia is not yet a completely defined medium, it is the lack of definition that makes it an exciting form holding possibilities for access by multiple voices, audience and authors. And because the story does not yet have an ending there is still a dialogue that exists.