Media Memes
A collection of media memes and other ramblings found on the internet. Curated by Patrick McCurdy. Keep up with submissions via Twitter @PMMCC.
Posts tagged Protest
stellar vocals & visuals in @4PlanB’s “ill Manors”
Curated links and videos related to the viral ascent & descent of #STOPKONY

There is obviously a flurry of blog posts on #KONY2012 and the rights and wrongs around this social media campaign. Here are some selected videos and articles about KONY2012, the backlash, context, debate and data visualization to help you make your mind up.
First, the actual video
One of many video responses on KONY, this one recorded for Al Jazeera’s The Stream, also widely shared on social media platforms
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The KONY debate Reddit Style
How the #KONY2012 debate is unfolding on Reddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/qln68/am_i_the_only_one_who_is_suspicious_about/
PBS News Hour looks at KONY
A look by the PBS show Newshour into the backlash over KONY
Watch ‘Kony 2012’: Viral Video’s Message, Backlash Examined on PBS.
Al Jazeera Runs Two Shows Related to KONY
Inside Story
Al Jazeera’s show Inside Story runs an episode on “‘KONY 2012’ and the Future of Activism. Sorry video can’t be embedded, click photo.
The Stream
Al Jazeera’s social media show The Stream runs an episode Is ‘clicktivism’ destroying meaningful social activism? Click link for source or watch video below
The Data Visualization of KONY
Two blog posts, one by the New York Times, the other by Social flows, each examine how KONY went viral
- Data visualization on KONY2012 by Social Flow (click picture)

Documentation on the cessation of KONY screenings in Uganda
ON March 14, 2012 AYINET announced that it was suspending its Kony Screenings in Uganda. Read it here.
Satire. Who better than Charlie Brooker to reflect on Kony?
KONY2012; Arrest of Jason Russell
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Video via TMZ (click picture)
KONY2012 Memes






The use of art in #OWS: Embody the Movement: #Occupy Wall St West. AT @protestcamps; via @Ranjanatweets
An example taken from #PETA of what #Greenpeace’s Bob Hunter and Ben Metcalfe would call a “Mind Bomb”
A Naked PETA member lies wrapped in cellophane and bloodied on large trays for Pro-Vegetarian demonstration in Covent Garden in London, England. Aug. 17, 2006.
(Gareth Cattermole - AFP/Getty Images)
Riot police stand covered with paint thrown by demonstrators trying to reach La Moneda presidential palace on the second day of a national strike in Santiago on August 25, 2011. (Victor R. Caivano/AP) # (via Student protests in Chile - The Big Picture - Boston.com)
‘Occupy Orbit City’
free Occupy workshop @ McGill with Chris Hedges: Media, Politics and Protest Camps in the Occupy Social Movement
I’ll be part of this event in Montreal at the end of the month giving a workshop on: Occupy! the Media. I have put more information about my involvement over on my blog. Info about the event below or just click on the link above!
Media, Politics and Protest Camps in the Occupy Social Movement
In May 2011, Joseph E. Stiglitz wrote an article titled “Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%” in that month’s issue of Vanity Fair. His message of extreme inequality in US society and the historical consequences resulting from the polarization of wealth in the hands of a few, resonated in the Occupy protests that began in Wall Street early last fall. “We are the 99%” fast became the motto of the social movement that transgressed New York boundaries and evolved into a worldwide movement, with more than 80 countries and one thousand cities witnessing their own manifestation of protest camps in the months that followed.
Despite the phenomenal scope of civil society in the Occupy movement, Stiglitz’ warning that the 1% will only belatedly awaken to the importance of maintaining the welfare of the largest slice of the population will, in all likelihood, be realized. Nonetheless, many compelling issues have been borne from the protests: from the mainstream media’s initial disregard of the events to the communication of activists within the camps and the policing methods adopted by each city. Media@McGill will be hosting a free public event on Friday, January 27, 2012 to address many of the media, political and social themes that have transpired during the months-long Occupy protests.
Friday, January 27th, 2012, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm, Grande Bibliothèque Auditorium, BAnQ
Pulitzer award-winning journalist and author Chris Hedges will be giving a keynote address at the auditorium of the Bibliothèque et Archives Nationales du Québec, 475 Maisonneuve Est [map] titled, “The Way I See It”. The keynote will be followed by a panel discussion with the participation of Anna Feigenbaum, Richmond University, Patrick McCurdy, University of Ottawa, and Nathalie Des Rosiers, General Counsel of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Friday, January 27th, 2012, 10:30 am – 5:00 pm, Institute of Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies
Three workshops will precede the keynote and panel during the day – each focusing on a different theme of the Occupy movement. The workshops will be taking place at the Institute of Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies, 3487 Peel Street 2nd floor [map], and are free and open to the public. Online registration for each workshop is required and will be available as of Monday, January 16th until Thursday, January 26th at 12:00 pm.
10:30 am–12.00 pm Feeling the Movement | workshop by Anna Feigenbaum, Department of Social Sciences, Humanities & Communications, Richmond University.
1:00 pm-2:30 pm Occupy! the Media |workshop by Patrick McCurdy, Department of Communication, University of Ottawa.
3:30 pm-5:00 pm Law, Protest and Policing | workshop by Nathalie Des Rosiers, General Counsel of Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Early registration for the workshops is advisable in order to avoid disappointment, as places are limited. Participants can attend all three workshops, but will need to register for each separately and list their workshop preference in order of priority. In this case, a confirmation email will be sent by Media@McGill to confirm attendance to one or all three of the workshops.
Please visit Media@McGill to register online as of Monday, January 16th, 2012.
Zoolander goes Blue Block as part of the 99%
#OWS Activist is Inspiration behind Time’s Protester Image by @obeygiant
Ever wonder where Shepard Fairey got his inspiration for his Time magazine cover from? LA Weekly did some research and below are the results.


Fairey used a picture of 25-year-old Sarah Mason who was active in Occupy L.A. protest on November 17, 2011 at the center of Bank of America Plaza.




