Sonnett Media


Silverdocs 2007 Wrap Up

I had a wonderful time at this year’s Silverdocs documentary film festival and conference, which ran from June 12 through June 17 in Silver Spring, Maryland. It’s always very encouraging to see the local audience’s enthusiasm for documentaries (the weekend screenings I attended were nearly also sold out) and to connect with movers and shakers from the wide world of factual filmmaking.

Silverdocs 2007

The Films

I made a concerted effort to pack in as many films as I could this year. I managed to get in 12 in 5 days. Here are the 10 word or less summaries of the films I was able to see:

“Anderman” (director: Jaap van Heusden)
Caring for his mother with alzheimer’s, man loose his mind.

“Artic Tale” (directors: Adam Ravetch & Sarah Robertson)
The lords of the Artic kingdom are on thin ice.

“The First Sunday in May” (directors: John Hennegan & Brad Hennegan”
Trainers dream of Kentucky Derby while chasing ill-fated Barbaro.

“Lot 63, Grave C” (director: Sam Green)
Murdered Rolling Stone’s fan’s absent tombstone gathers no moss.

“No End in Sight” (director: Charles Ferguson)
Iraq war planners drive off cliff, Bush sleeps at wheel.

“Note by Note: The Making of Steinway L1037” (director: Ben Niles) Handmade instruments created with skillful tenderness for loving, finicky pianists.

“Pete Seegar: The Power of Song” (director: Jim Brown)
This film surrounds hate and forces it to surrender, peacefully.

“Please Vote for Me” (director: Weijun Chen)
Chinese third-graders learn democracy is far from child’s play.

“A Son’s Sacrifice” (director: Yoni Brook)
Half-Pakistani man cuts new path as a Muslim slaughterer.

“Souvenirs” (directors Shahar Cohen & Halil Efrat)
Son directs father back to buried past as a Liberator.

“Voyage in G Major” (director: Georgi Lazarevski)
French violinist explores his 90 years of regrets in Morocco.

The Conference

My week started with the Inside Discover conference session, held in the Discovery HD Theater, deep inside the Discovery Channel’s imposing headquarters. The session, moderated by television production guru Mat Tombers, featured a range of “go to” production companies for the Discovery networks talking about their experiences inside the beast. Mary Donahue, VP of Creative Content and Talent, was in the hot seat for Discovery and charmed the crowd of mostly independent producers while tossing cold water on their dreams of having their independent visions showcased by the media giant. Allusions to Discovery’s recent reorganization were mostly positive as several panelists noted hopefully on the streamlined bureaucracy.

One of the challenges facing the panelists is how to incorporate new media deliverables into their business plans. Margery Baker, VP of CBS News Productions, described a new initiative called Band of Bloggers, which will feature a variety of user-generated content from soldiers in Iraq distributed through The History Channel’s Web site. Following up with Hal Gressner, Executive Producer of Creative Development at CBS Eye Too Productions, during the Q&A, I learned that the venture will feature both text and video content and will be supported by a television special expected to launch later in the year to help drive interest in the launch of the online project. Hopefully, this all will make it pass the military’s sensors.

I attended three “Future of Real” sessions (following up on last year’s rather heady 1.0 version) continued the muddled debate on how best to utilize the on-line environment to extend the audience (and increase revenues) for documentaries. In the first session, “Readiness & Revenue”, Panelist Tamara Gould, Vice President of Distribution for ITVS, quoting from the recently released phamplet “The New Deal: Version 1.5” from American University’s Center for Social Media, said that although few have found a way to make any money off of web-based distribution platforms, these platforms will be a part of the digital future for filmmakers (even if only a minor part). Fellow panelists Jonathan Miller, of the educational market distributor First Run/Icarus Films, Inc., and Linda Lawrence, of web-based educational program distributor Open Media Network, engaged in an animated discussion about the effects and ROI of web distribution, making it clear that the diverse goals of doc distributors and promoters will both feed the desperate excitement for web-based distribution and guide the community as a whole toward some sane practices. With the help of the Center for Social Media report, hopefully we’ll see more of the latter.

Center for Social Media Director Pat Aufderheide lead a wonderfully diverse panel for the “Engaging New Audiences” session that showcased some of the innovative ways public television, non-profits and media companies are reaching out to new audiences through online media. Daniel Cross, Director of HomelessNation.org and my old friend Shane Seggar, the Program Director for Pacific Islanders in Communications, spoke about the cool social networking projects they are working on.

A session entitled “Cutting Edge Technology Issues” included a presentation from Second Life avatar Brian Mnumonic (Dr. Bryan Carter of Central Missouri State University in real life) which delighted the audience with a virtual PowerPoint that encouraged “mindset reformatting” in order to take advantage of Web 2.0. And Kevin Dando of PBS and Dennis Palmieri and ITVS had some great case studies of how public television is beginning to harness the blogsphere, social networking and video-sharing sites like YouTube to reach out to new audiences. Web 2.0 clearly offers a great opportunity for innovative “outreach” (now called “community-based interaction” by some). But for many of panelists, the old school face-to-face interaction was still the most critical in terms of garnering support for their programs.

In a nod to keynote speaker Ted Leonsis, the “Filmanthropy” session featured a Who’s Who of non-profits and advocacy groups involved with documentary film: Gillian Caldwell (from Peter Gabriel’s Witness), Cynthia Lopez (American Documentary/P.O.V.), Susan MacLaury (Shine Global, Inc.), Ellen Schneider (Active Voice) and Meighan Stone (Bono’s ONE Campaign). The panelists emphasized that non-profits are, by and large, under-utilizing the skills of filmmakers in their media plans and could benefit from partnerships with storytellers in order to showcase their programs for the general public and to decision makers in government. Meighan mentioned that non-profits under the ONE umbrella need to work more with filmmakers and offered to matchmake between the filmmakers in attendance and these groups. Needless to say, she was swarmed after the session.



Sonnett Media debutes PBS doc “The State of the Ocean’s Animals” in Second Life
March 28, 2007, 1:59 pm
Filed under: Dan Sonnett, Online Video, PBS, Second Life, SMG News

Sonnett Media president Dan Sonnett (aka Pilotflame Ryder) presented a clip from the new PBS documentary “The State of the Ocean’s Animals” in the virtual world of Second Life to a near-capacity crowd at the popular Laguna Beach sim on Tuesday, March 27, 2007.

Screening in Second Life

A crowd of 81 avatars lounged on the beach and watched an 11-minute clip from the program featuring the sea otters of Monterey Bay and the otter conservation program at the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California. Laguna Beach owner Valiant Strangelove created an impressive stage — complete with swimming sea otters and billowing kelp — to feature the clip and for the question-and-answer session that followed.

The documentary is the tenth installment of public television’s award-winning Journey to Planet Earth series. In this program, viewers join Academy Award® winner Matt Damon as he takes a hard look at why nearly half the world’s marine animals may face extinction over the next twenty-five years. Compelling case studies from across the globe focus on how global warming, sea-level rise, over-fishing, and habitat destruction are beginning to empty the world’s oceans. The one-hour episode, which airs on PBS stations on March 28, 2007, also features inspiring stories of hope and courage that celebrate of the beauty and diversity of the natural world.

The story of Monterey Bay’s sea otters offers a glimmer of hope in the fight to protect the ocean’s animals. On the coastline of Monterey Bay, sea otters are a major tourist attraction. Once nearly hunted into extinction because of their fur, federal protection laws help bring the sea otter population recover from 50 animals to over 2,500. This has had an enormous impact on the health of the local ecosystem. Without the sea otters to eat abalone and sea urchins, these creatures proliferated and threatened to destroy the kelp forest that is home to thousands of fish and marine animals.

But recent discoveries have uncovered an alarming trend. Otters have been mysteriously dying off due to infectious disease — and Monterey Bay has lost 20 percent of its population. Since sea otters are critically important to the health of the kelp forest ecosystem, they offer an accurate read on the health of the oceans.

Produced by Emmy Award winning filmmakers Marilyn and Hal Weiner and in association with South Carolina ETV, Journey To Planet Earth is the only continuing primetime television series that deals exclusively with the most critical environmental and sustainable development issues of the 21st century. Sonnett Media has been proud to support the series since 2002 by creating and updating the companion Web site for the series on PBS.org.

Sonnett Media created content for each episode of the series and supported an educational outreach initiative through the Web site. Beginning this year, Sonnett Media also launched a vital marketing campaign that has reached out to new audiences through YouTube and Second Life. The screening and discussion marks the first time a PBS documentary has been presented before broadcast to an audience in Second Life.




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