Student Creates Documentary by Crowdsourcing WhatsApp Texts, YouTube Videos
When Arianne Alcorta saw the violence and massive protests unfolding in her native country of Venezuela this past February, she instinctively started gathering information and materials about what was happening using social media aggregation. Currently in her last year as a journalism student at the University of Miami, Alcorta spent countless hours monitoring the situation on social media and recording phone calls and saving photos from her friends and family still living in the country. After a month, Alcorta realized that she had compiled a full narrative that deserved to be told.
The final product, a 20 minute documentary titled “Venezuela Fights for Freedom” published on YouTube has garnered more than 200,000 hits at the moment. (Vimeo version used below)
She incorporated YouTube videos, Twitter reports, recorded phone calls, reenactments, and text messaged photos and videos to tell the nail biting story of what happened to three Caracas students when peaceful protests turned violent. The documentary is edited in a way that is mutually intelligible in English and Spanish.
Fusion reached out to Alcorta to ask a few questions about why she made the documentary, and about the innovative way that she produced it:
FUSION: I know you are Venezuelan, and you have living here for some time. The opposition protests have been going on for a long time, on and off. So at what point in seeing the protests this round did you decide that ‘hey, this is something I need to start tracking and pulling together in a cohesive way?’
ALCORTA: Well the opposition groups have been protesting for a long time, like after the election [of Maduro in April, 2013]. But the point in which I said ‘okay, this needs to be reported’ was during the protests of February 12th. That was the point where there was explicit proof of security forces using such force against unarmed students protesting for their rights. And then I looked up the statutes, and they stated that government forces can only use firearms against the citizens when all efforts for negotiation have been tried and exhausted. That was obviously not the case, especially since I was corroborating with several students on the ground about what was really happening.
FUSION: The way that you put this doc together is to my knowledge one of the first times that someone has used this combination of sourcing from social media and traditional reporting to tell such a compelling documentary story. Did you know you were making a doc, or did it just turn into that?