Posted by Øyvind Bye Skille on Mar 18, 2009 in
foto,
reise
Så filmen Slumdog Millionaire i går kveld. En flott film fra et flott land.
Filmen er ikke laget i Bollywood, og er derfor ikke helt som den typiske bollywoodfilmen. Likevel er det hentet mye inspirasjon fra den typiske indiske filmen. En sterk kjærlighetshistorie er på plass, og musikken er viktig selv om den ikke har fått sine egne scener der alt bare bryter ut i sang og dans. Er du Spotify-bruker kan du høre soundtracket der: Slumdog Millionaire – Music from the motion picture
Selv har jeg vært i India, og også i Mumbai. Høsten 2006 fikk jeg muligheten til å reise nesten to måneder i det flotte landet gjennom studiene, og filmen vekker derfor minner. F.eks. kjente jeg godt igjen de fattige barna fra skildringa av hovedpersonens barndom. Bildet over minner meg om Jamal og de andre “gutta i gata”. Jeg har dog ikke tatt det i Mumbai, men i Delhi, og det er heller ikke noe fotografisk mesterverk.
Jeg har veldig mange bilder fra reisen som egentlig fortjener en bedre skjebne enn å bare ligge på en harddisk og støve bort. Jeg har derfor en ambisjon om å få gått gjennom de mange hundre bildene for å lage utskrifter. I den sammenheng kommer det nok flere bilder fra India her på sida, og kanskje også et eget galleri.
//
Just watched the movie Slumdog Millionaire last night. Great movie from a great country.
The film is not made by Bollywood producers. So it’s not just like a typical bollywood movie. Still Slumdog millionaire is inspired by bollywood movies. The love story = check, and the music is important also in this film, just without it’s own music scenes where everything just bursts into song and dance as typical from bollywood movies. If you use the software Spotify for music streaming you can listen to the soundtrack at this link: Slumdog Millionaire – Music from the motion picture
I have had the opportunity to visit India, and I have also been to Mumbai. In 2006 I travelled for two months in the country, and the film gives me memories. By watching the scenes of Jamals childhood I recognized the “boys in the streets”. The photo above is the way we met them in Delhi. The photo is not a masterpiece, but it’s my photographic memory of it.
I have a lot of photos from the trip to India in 2006. It’s a shame they mostly is just stored on a hard drive in a computer. So I plan to go through them all, hundreds and hundreds, to make prints. Then more photos from India will end up here on the web, maybe with their own gallery page.
Tags: Delhi, film, india, memories, new delhi
Posted by Øyvind Bye Skille on Nov 30, 2008 in
jobb
hemant_mumbai reporting directly from Mumbai on news blackout
It’s been written many articles about Twitter and the social web and how it spreads news during disasters and big events, for instance at NRKbeta. What I as a journalist consider very interesting is the possibilities to get first hand reports from people on the ground. One nobody on the ground is maybe not a trustworthy source compared to an official statement. But what about 200 people reporting through the social web?
During the terror attacks in Mumbai news and reports spread extremely fast helped by Twitter and the simple phrase #mumbai. By marking all postings about the developing crisis in the Indian city it was possible through Twitter search to get a news feed updated faster than any ordinary news agency.
But it isn’t the same as a news agency. The #mumbai-feed has a mix of citation/links to ordinary media, eyewitness reports from the area and the thoughts of the users, and there is no one editing the stream of information. So there might be a problem that it is filled with thoughts and postings with little new information. Though there is some self justice, as users posting too much without useful information will be bashed by others:
dfk1986 not happy about spam in #mumbai
But then again back to how it can be used by regular journalists. My opionion is that the postings should be divided into: citation from regular media, eyewitness reports and thoughts.
A pure eyewitness feed would have been very useful. Maybe something like #mumbai-eyewitness with self made rules saying what is posted has to be self experienced. Then the people in Mumbai could tell about cable black out, mobile jammers, silent streets etc. A feed like that would give the regular journalist info that can’t be retrieved anywhere else.
Of course the citation feed also can be very useful as thousands of users watching tv, reading websites and listening to radio is faster updating than any other regular news agency with a certain amount of employees. So we should also have the mixed feeds as #mumbai:
Tags: india, media, mumbai, social web, twitter, web 2.0
Posted by Øyvind Bye Skille on Nov 27, 2008 in
jobb,
oppdatering
UPDATE: Added some links and a map.
The last 20 hours or so, my head has been filled with the attacks in Mumbai. I first noticed it on CNN last night at about 19:30 (Norwegian time), about midnight in Mumbai. While playing a game of Trivial Pursuit I followed CNN’s coverage in the background. I had to get to bed with reasonable timing as I had to get up early to work with the morning radio news.
Frame grab@20:13 IST (15:43 Oslo) – credit: CNN-IBN
So today I started out early going to work at 5:00, text messaging with Deepshikha on the way. At work I was assigned the task following the Norwegian side of it. What do we know of possible Norwegians involved? Could we get Norwegian voices from Mumbai? etc etc.
We ended up with the story of one businessman who had plans for a meeting today at one of the hotels attacked, Taj Mahal palace and tower. It worked as a starting point for a conversation with one of the officials at the Norwegian embassy in India about Norwegians in the Mumbai area.
Later on during my work hours the message of one Norwegian wounded came from Press Trust of India (PTI). We called the embassy, but they knew nothing. So then we had no confirmation from Norwegian officials. Later on we got confirmed that one Norwegian man travelling in India had gunshot injuries to face and hands. He was treated at a local hospital and his medical state was not life treathening.
It’s a bit strange trying to work only with the Norwegian side of such a story which is so small, and of course really not as serious as the big picture. So far the only known consequence of the attacks for Norwegian individuals are one man injured. Total over 100 people are killed and aprox. 300 injured in the attacks.
My day was packed with calls to embassy and foreign ministry officials, Norwegian companies working in India and a few individuals stationed in Mumbai at the moment.
Two years ago I visited Mumbai. I saw many of these places shown today in brutal TV images. In fact I have a photo from the hotel Taj Mahal palace and tower that also have this strange focus on the Norwegian side of it:
Daniel whom I traveled with took a photo of the Taj hotel from a different angle. Here you see the hotel on both sides of the Gateway of India (in front):
Gateway of India and Taj Mahal hotel (photo: Daniel Drageset)
Here you can see where we stayed in 2006, when visiting Mumbai. The blue markers are the attacks yesterday and the red pin is the Regent hotel where we slept:
Vis større kart
Tags: india, media, mumbai