PMC in the News

Strange But True: How Soap Operas Might Save Us From Overpopulation

June 9th, 2010

Earth reached its human capacity in the 1980s. Our planet is in crisis, and Bill Ryerson is using media to change behaviors that contribute to global overpopulation.

Global warming, food and water crises, even international conflict — you can trace all these societal and environmental problems to overpopulation. Experts believe that Earth reached its population capacity in the 1980s, meaning we now consume natural resources at a rate much higher than they can be replenished. And of course, as we take away natural resources, we’re adding a slew of unnatural, toxic matter into the mix that brings about a host of other problems.

Currently there are just over 6.8 billion people in the world. By mid-century, we’re expected to number 9 billion, roughly the equivalent of one-tenth of all humans who have ever walked the planet. Curbing population growth is a logical goal if the human race wishes to ensure its own sustainability — and that of the other species with whom we share Earth. (Not to mention Earth itself, too.)

Bill Ryerson has dedicated his life to the stabilization of human population numbers at a level that can be sustained by our ecosystem’s resources. He is the founder and president of the Population Media Center, a non-profit that seeks to improve the well-being of people by using — believe it! — melodramatic soap operas on radio and television throughout the developing world (and soon, the U.S.) to teach listeners and viewers important lessons relating to family planning, reproductive health, HIV/AIDS and environmental preservation, as well as a thing or two about women’s and children’s rights.

Ryerson and I met recently in San Francisco to discuss the peril our fragile ecosystem faces as a result of our unsustainable growth — and how we might save us from ourselves.

Daniela Perdomo: Before we get started on the specifics of your work, I was wondering if you could give me some understanding of just how many people listen to the radio, how many people watch TV, how many people own their own TVs — in other words, what is the reach of media among developing-world populations you are trying to reach?

Bill Ryerson: Of course it varies from country to country and region to region. The place that has the least media coverage is Africa, particularly with regards to television. An example of that is Ethiopia where 4 percent of the population can afford a TV, but even there well over half have radios and listen to them on a regular basis. So it’s a majority of the world’s population that has access to broadcasting. Outside of Africa, which is still dominated by radio, certainly in Latin America and in Asia, television is the dominant medium and it reaches almost everybody. If you look at Vietnam, for example, an excess of 90 percent of the population is watching TV. I was in Pakistan last week and that is a TV society with maybe two-thirds of the population watching TV on a regular basis.

DP: Your organization, Population Media Center, uses the Sabido method to reach your target audience. Could you describe for the layman what the Sabido method is and why you chose this as your driving platform?

BR: When I first heard about the idea of using what Americans call soap operas for trying to achieve global sustainability, I thought it sounded ridiculous because I have never been a big fan of soap operas. The Sabido methodology actually refers to the Latin American version of soap operas, which are telenovelas, which are television novels, and they are quite different from American soap operas because they don’t try to go on for 40 years. They are truly novels with a beginning, middle and an end, and they tend to last two to three years. They are the dominant prime-time format in Latin America and they are very, very popular, as you know.

DP: Yes, they are far better than American soap operas. They are engrossing.

BR: Yes, and they are highly melodramatic — that is, melodrama as really as the battle of good versus evil. So there are good and bad characters and they are battling it out over some set of issues. Miguel Sabido was a vice president of Mexico’s largest commercial network, Televisa. He oversaw the audience research division and he also was a key producer of some of their prime-time telenovelas. He realized through his research that he was having a huge impact on his audience on things like fashion and so on. He began looking at ways in which he could modify the typical design of the telenovela to systematically provide audiences with information that would improve their lives, while at the same time retaining high ratings. He created a research-based and theory-based approach to the creation of serialized melodramas that has proven over and over again to be highly influential in changing social norms on all kinds of issues.

One of the theoreticians that he read the writings of is Stanford psychologist Alfred Bandura. He is the world’s authority on role modeling and how role models influence behavior and what makes a parent or a peer of a celebrity more or less influential on the people who are observing them. One of the things Bandura is known for is his work on self-efficacy. Self-efficacy is really the concept that I have the right and the ability to accomplish some task. So if I see an 80-year-old man climbing up a mountain, I may change my own view of whether or not I’m capable of doing that. The role model, if that person is influential and I can look at them and say, yes, I can achieve what that person achieved, can lead me to change my behavior without ever telling me what to do. That is really the concept.

If you have societies in which, for example, girls are denied education but are instead married off at puberty to older men in polygamous relationships and are not given the right to determine how many children to have and so on, changing the attitudes and behavior of the men as well as the women can be done through this strategy, by creating characters who in addition to the positive and the negative characters who are battling it out, these transitional characters start out in the middle of the road and are representative of segments of the audience. They sort through the conflicting advice they get from the positive and the negative characters and figure out who is right, and they evolve into positive role models for the audience, both demonstrating how to overcome the obstacles to change in that society and showing the benefits of their new behavior.

In the Sabido methodology, the negative characters always suffer the consequences of their behavior. So in a period of a couple of years the audience learns what they might not otherwise learn in a lifetime through the school of hard knocks. We have gotten thousands and thousands of letters from people thanking us for having addressed various issues in our programs, now in 24 countries around the world, because it helped them to avoid the mistakes that they saw the negative characters falling into — characters who are so much like people in their society.

DP: Do your shows play in prime-time slots?

BR: Yes.

DP: So you really do reach a lot of people. Can you give a tangible example of the effect PMC’s programming has had?

BR: In Brazil, we have a project in Rio that works with the writers at TV Globo [the country's largest television station] that monitors the impact and the content of their programs. So, for example, there was a program we developed called “Páginas da Vida,” “Pages of Life,” that contained a teenage pregnancy and parenthood storyline. We set up research at the Planned Parenthood affiliate, Benfam, to ask women at the clinics during the time of that telenovela why they were there. Thirty-six percent of the women at the family planning clinics were there because of that program.

DP: Because they heard about this kind of clinic in the show?

BR: Yes, exactly, and they did not want to fall into the trap and the poverty and all the health problems that this teenage mother had fallen into. So they learned from that and they went to family planning.

DP: That’s amazing. But here’s a question. Is there any danger of romanticizing the kinds of problems presented in a soap opera because it’s so melodramatic and the actors are so good-looking and people want to be like them? Would people almost want to have the same problems?

BR: When people identify with a negative character, we call this the Archie Bunker effect. We actually measure this. It is a very, very small percentage because we are very careful to create the negative characters as extremely horrible. So it’s highly unlikely people would be attracted to emulate them, and they are not attractive as characters. They are pretty evil people.

DP: Even if you depict, for example, teenagers having unprotected sex, they’re bad characters? They’re not the heroes of the story?

BR: Exactly. Another important thing to recognize, particularly in Africa where we are working, and are doing radio serials — kind of like the 1930s radio serials in the U.S. You’re not seeing the character, you’re just hearing their voice and learning about their behaviors through the dialogue.

Let me give you an example — a Tanzanian radio serial which was on public broadcasting, it was on Radio Tanzania. One of the negative characters was an alcoholic truck driver with a girlfriend at every truck stop and a subservient wife waiting at home. His name is Mkwaju. Tunu, his wife, figured him out during the serial and told him she had heard about the AIDS epidemic — this was 1993 — and said that when he was home he was going to have to use condoms. She made that happen. She went on to become an entrepreneur and found her own business and she became a role model for female empowerment.

In the meantime, you’ve already figured out that Mkwaju became sick. A huge audience, maybe 50 to 80 percent of the adult population, with more men in the audience than women, found out Mkwaju had made a fatal mistake. Now, the men had been very attracted to Mkwaju because he was having a lot of the good time, but when he started dying from AIDS, which he did during the serial, there was a massive self-reported change in behavior. Of the audience members, 82 percent of them in a survey at the end of the two years said they had changed their behavior to avoid HIV infection. The most common change they said they had made was reduction in the number of sexual partners. The second most common change was condom use.

We weren’t able to verify the claims of the numbers of sexual partners, but we got the condom-distribution data broken down by district. In the districts that did not hear the program but got all the other programs about HIV/AIDS, there was a 16 percent increase in condom distribution. While in the broadcast areas of the Sabido-style serial drama, there was a 153 percent increase in condom distribution. There is a similar differential between family-planning use, a zero percent change in the control area where they didn’t hear the program, a 32 percent increase in the broadcast areas. I got the minister of health to have health-care workers ask new family-planning adopters why they had come in, and 41 percent of them named the program by name. Just to be sure it wasn’t something else going on with the control area, we then ran the program in its entirety in that region and we in fact then experienced an even bigger increase in family planning adoption there in a place where there had been zero change the previous two years when they didn’t hear the program. At the ministry of health clinics, 41 percent again named the program as the reason they had come in.

DP: A lot of people are out there trying to affect change in behavior throughout the world. Some things work, some things don’t. Could you tell me a little bit about why you honed in on the Sabido method over other approaches?

BR: Oh, yes. But the quick answer to your question is that per capita behavior change this is the most cost-effective approach that I have found anywhere in the world. For example, in the Tanzania project we were just talking about, the cost per person who adopted family planning was 32 cents. The cost per person to change behavior to avoid HIV infection was 8 cents. When you can save lives at 8 cents a person, it is worth doing something.

When I have looked at other strategies, at even cheaper programs like public service announcements, health messages, two-episode dramas, 10-episode dramas, they’re not nearly as effective because they haven’t allowed the time to attract an audience, to make them fall in love with the characters, and then to move them with baby steps in a way that doesn’t create backlash. They can’t measure the kinds of dramatic changes that we can over a two-year period, even with repeated efforts at telling people what is in their interest, in part because they are not as entertaining.

High entertainment value obviously attracts an audience, and if you’re just doing intellectual blah, blah, blah, people don’t remember it as well. But when there is a highly emotional element, when you are emotionally involved in something, you remember it far longer. The reason for this is emotional involvement enhances memory. It’s kind of crazy that our school systems just do intellectual blah, blah and hope the students will remember it. An emotional program with changes in the life fortune of characters that you are in love with is something that causes audience members to remember the rest of their lives the lessons they have learned from those characters. That is part of the reason why this approach is so effective.

DP: Thirty-two cents, 8 cents. That sounds very cost-effective but are you taking into consideration everything that it takes to produce, say, a two-year soap opera in Tanzania?

BR: Yes. Including the research.

DP: Does everyone who works on these projects get paid?

BR: Some of our trainers work pro bono but for the most part when we’re taking people’s time in a developing country setting, we are paying them for their time. In our case we don’t send ex-pats into any country. All of our projects are run by country nationals. We hire the best writers in the country. We get people from the drama department of the university in the capital city or from the national theater. We hire actors who know how to do radio or, in the case of TV, TV acting. We train them with trainers from other developing countries who have used this methodology successfully, including Miguel Sabido who we have had do training in a number of countries.

DP: So there is really a lot to be said about the in-culture, in-language approach, as opposed to an American guy coming in telling people in other countries how to plan for their families.

BR: Yes. Now, who would I be to go and tell the women of an African country they should try to emulate Gloria Steinem? If I did that, I would be thrown out on my tail.

So we and the local writing teams and the ministry of communication, agree on what are the policies of the government and of the UN agreements to which the country is a signatory. If a country is a signatory to some of those, it gives us a policy basis on which to move forward. We choose a focus and the writers then create something to move the audience, not from A to Z, but from A to maybe E, because you’re not going to solve all the problems in, say, the Sudan with one soap opera. You can’t move people a huge distance in a short period of time, but you can measure the change and do so scientifically.

For example, in Sudan, we developed a program where the major emphasis had to do with female genital mutilation and ending the practice of FGM. At the baseline, 28 percent of the adult population thought FGM was a bad idea. The majority thought it was just fine. But in the post-broadcast survey, 65 percent of the population thought the practice should be abandoned. So it was clearly a huge shift.

DP: Let’s step back and take a look at the bigger picture. Let’s talk about population growth. Why is it the cause you’ve committed your life to?

BR: I’ve been involved in the population field for over 40 years. It is, from the standpoint of most ecologists, one of the key driving issues related to sustainability. Sustainability is the bottom-line issue, whether you are talking about health or, say, the welfare of other species. Whether the planet is operating in a sustainable way is of critical concern. The warming of the climate and the things we are experiencing now with regard to climate crisis are clear indications that what we have going on is not sustainable.

Here in the Bay Area there is an organization called Global Footprint. They have created a way of describing human activity on the planet in terms of sustainability. What they have determined is our ecological footprint is 40 percent over what is sustainable. Sometime in the 1980s we were at 100 percent of the capacity of the planet to renew resources as we were using then. Now we are using resources at 140 percent of what is possible. It means we are taking resources out of the bank, so to speak, and not replacing them. One of the key resources we are doing this with is water. The top three grain-producing countries of the world are India, China and the United States. All three are using underground fresh water aquifers for irrigation, as well as using river water for irrigation.

In India, the water table is sinking by 10 feet a year because they are pumping out the water at twice the rate of replacement by rain water. That is clearly not sustainable. As water becomes economically more and more difficult to reach or just disappears, large areas of farmland in India are turning into desert. Farmers are giving up farming. So the overuse of water to support the green revolution crops that indeed had brought us 30 years of leeway to try to get population stabilized are now starting to disappear. With the melting of the glaciers in the Himalayas, the regular flow of the rivers in India and China are also threatened. Even now the Yellow River doesn’t reach the ocean two-thirds of the year because China is using it all for irrigation.

So it is clear that expanding human numbers and expanding demand for food is something that has its limits. Clearly eating lower down on the food chain, eating more grain and fruit as opposed to eating meat, will make the food go further. But just on the issue of food and water, we have a very serious problem facing us in the immediate future.

On top of this, Al Bartlett of the University of Colorado at Boulder described modern agriculture as the process of turning oil into food. When you think about it, cheap oil is a key element in fertilizers and pesticides and in planting, harvesting, transportation to market, refrigeration, packaging, distribution to supermarkets and taking it home and serving it — there are elements of oil or petroleum products in all of those activities. You can calculate the oil component of the price of food. We witnessed the impact of this when oil reached an all-time peak two years ago. The price of grain and of both rice and wheat tripled and quadrupled on the world market and there were food riots all over the developing world.

Now, because of the recession that may have been partly triggered by that spike in oil prices, the demand for oil and the cost of food rather has come back down. But we face a very serious threat to global food security if, and I think when, oil starts to go into long-term decline as it has in most other countries in Saudi Arabia. When production goes into decline in the face of expanding demand, economists can tell us the price of oil is going to go way up. If it goes up maybe twice what it was two years ago, the cost of food will be so high that, even if it’s available on the world market, the billion people living on a dollar or less a day may not be able to buy enough food to survive. If we have a billion people starving at once, and if you can’t buy food, starvation occurs within weeks. This is something the World Food Program has never dealt with. They have dealt with a drought here or a famine there, but this kind of event could change the planet in terms of the way we see life unfolding.

DP: Perhaps we’ll go the way of the dinosaurs?

BR: There are non-linearities that exist in the way in which the environment may treat us as people that it is hosting. Ecologists have been worrying about this for a long time. Perhaps the biggest threat is our continued elimination of biodiversity. If you would have visited this planet three billion years ago you would not have survived probably two minutes because there was no oxygen to breath. There was poisonous water. There was no clean water to drink. There was nothing to eat. It was just a chemical cauldron.

Over billions of years life has evolved and we now have a complex web of life. One of the things ecologists can’t tell you is exactly how much we can deplete it before the whole system collapses. But clearly if you are swimming in the Gulf of Mexico right now you would think we have already gone back to a chemical cauldron. That is a reflection of how desperate we are. We have gotten all the easy oil there is to get. Now we are drilling 5,000 feet below the surface of the ocean, high-risk operations trying to get the last bits of oil. That is an indication that we don’t have anything nearly as inexpensive to replace oil in terms of solar and wind. Yes, they are there, and yes if we count the cost of polluting the environment and making the whole Gulf of Mexico uninhabitable, solar is a whole lot cheaper. But in terms of right now what we are paying for oil our whole system is dependent on a lot of cheap oil.

The increase from one billion to almost seven billion people on the planet has occurred since the discovery of oil. When oil disappears — and most experts think it will disappear, maybe not disappear but start go into decline, within the next decade — the international energy association says they think it will start in 2020 and other experts think it will start now or has already started, then our way of life is clearly threatened. But the expanding human numbers and the demand for food has meant that we have continued to cut down wilderness forests, threatened the existence of many, many species. The extinction rate is way, way up from what has been a normal level. At some point this will lead to very serious ramifications. All of these things are driven in part by the number of consumers and driven by the per-capita rates of consumption, which of course vary all over the planet.

DP: Could you speak to overpopulation’s effect on conflict issues?

BR: I was in Pakistan [in May] when the bombings occurred at two mosques in Lahore. Thankfully I was in Karachi at the time. The people I was meeting with said part of the issue of terrorism is a population-related issue. Why? Because in high-population growth countries people are spending all of their money on food, housing and clothing. They have nothing left over to save. That means there is no capital formation. That means businesses can’t expand. Therefore, there is no growth in employment. So you have a rapid growth in the number of people trying to enter the labor force and no jobs.

That means you have in urban centers like Karachi and Islamabad and hundreds and thousands of unemployed men walking around angry and very concerned as to how they are going to survive. Guess what? In a society like that they are great prospects for recruiting into terrorism because they have nothing to lose. In fact studies done by Population Action International have shown that in very youthful, fast-growing population countries, which almost all have very stagnant economies as a result of the high growth, that there are much higher rates of civil and international conflict than in countries that have stopped growing, where the population is aging and where people are able to save money and have strong economies.

DP: You’re flying to L.A. today, where you’re working on a PMC show for a U.S. audience. Could you tell me more about it?

BR: We’re developing a project to serve the Hispanic population. Great Hispanic talent are devoting some of their time to helping us do this program. Certainly one strong possibility is it will air on the Internet because there are so many barriers to entry when it comes to getting something on cable or on a network [here in the U.S.], though it is too early in the process to know. In the meantime we are going to address, among other things, the issues of teenage pregnancy prevention and obesity prevention among Latino populations, and it’s based on research we commissioned a couple of years ago in the Los Angeles area. It will be a program that will be available to anybody worldwide if we do it online.

DP: Will it be in English or Spanish?

BR: It will be in Spanglish. It will reflect the way in which Latino teens speak to each other. So it will be mostly English with a little Spanish salted in.

DP: Speaking to the audience, as usual.

Soccer e-game to debut at World Cup

June 8th, 2010

The following article from The Burlington Free Press, features PMC’s electronic game project.
————————

A student-designed electronic soccer game that will make its debut in two weeks, during the World Cup, is a “Breakaway” in more ways than one.

For starters, that’s the title of the game, more than two years in development at Champlain College’s Emergent Media Center and heavily promoted by the United Nations for its persuasive subtext: preventing violence against women. The target audience: soccer-minded boys age 8-15 throughout the world.

But the game exemplifies its name in other ways: It’s an episodic, tactical Web-based diversion that features not only soccer moves, but also more than a dozen characters and a running narrative that’s based on the Sabido method — a technique for influencing behavior that’s been perfected by the Population Media Center of Shelburne, a key adviser in the project. The method has infused TV serial dramas used to promote public-awareness campaigns in Third World countries around such issues as AIDS and birth control.

“Breakaway” even has a new celebrity spokesman — Samuel Eto’o of Cameroon, a world-famous striker who plays in Italy’s top league. A Champlain College delegation interviewed Eto’o in Milan last month to lay the groundwork for a promotional campaign that will begin after the game’s Chapter One goes live on the Web, June 20, and is distributed in CD form to hundreds of youth soccer organizations, two days later.

Chapter One includes three episodes. Five more chapters will follow, with nine more episodes in a developing, intensifying story that has the player experiencing peer pressure, bullying, competition and teamwork.

“Breakaway” gives the player choices that allow them to make decisions, face consequences, reflect, and practice behaviors in a game and story format,” said Ann DeMarle, director of the college’s Emergent Media Center. “The goal is to show young males that they should show respect on and off the field, not only to teammates, but to other people in their life and community.”

Two of the game’s major characters are female, and one of them is identified as the sister of the player who logs on. All of the major characters, including both the positive and negative role models, are of the same ethnicity, so there’s no racial stereotyping — and the player gets to choose that ethnicity at the game’s outset.

Releasing the game during the World Cup in South Africa “is an important part of the marketing strategy,” DeMarle said. The month-long soccer tournament will draw massive media attention and huge TV audiences from around the world.

Initially, the new e-game will have versions in English, French, Spanish and Portuguese. The term “Breakaway” — a maneuver akin to a fast break in basketball, where an attacker gets behind defenders and approaches the goal — is familiar to non-English-speaking soccer fans worldwide, DeMarle said.

The U.N. Population Fund underwrote the game’s development, as part of its worldwide campaign to discourage violence against women, to the tune of $750,000 — much of which was used to pay students working on the project. More than 70 students have collaborated in all phases — from research, writing and graphics to game design, programming and marketing. Private donations have kept the project moving between the larger grants.

Another big grant will be needed to carry through the next major phase, which could take another couple of years — making the game playable on cell phones, the most common medium of communication around the world.

Thursday morning, two students, both Champlain College juniors — Connor Norman, a game designer, and Austin Brkish, a user-interface artist — were polishing a match in Chapter Two before it’s recorded for CD distribution.

“You pretty much have to program every possible outcome,” Norman said. On his screen, he pulled up a scene showing team members in a locker room — a key setting for teammate interaction off the field.

“Based on your relationship with team members,” he said, “they’ll be able to tell you different things.”

So far, people from 47 countries have logged on to the website for “Breakaway” to check out a pilot episode, DeMarle said. One of the major remaining tasks is to evaluate the game after it’s released worldwide, based in part on feedback from questions built into the program.

The designers have already made modifications based on comments from youths in St. Lucia, where an early version of the game was tested last winter, and from students in the Winooski Middle School.

As in any compelling serial drama, the third episode ends with a provocative question that’s likely to lure the player back for more: One of the team’s key members is moving away, so who will replace him — could it be a girl?

“It’s really exciting to see it all come together,” said Lauren Nishikawa, who graduated from Champlain in game design last year and is now the project’s creative director.

United Nations connections gave “Breakaway” staffers an entree to Eto’o, a first-rate player and a household name, according to DeMarle, almost anywhere except the United States.

“I’ve never met such a polite, generous young man,” DeMarle said, “considering he’s so famous.”

Eto’o is expected to play in the World Cup for the Cameroon team, but he’ll also make another debut this month — as a character in Breakaway’s Chapter Three.

http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/article/20100606/NEWS02/100605015/Soccer-e-game-to-debut-at-World-Cup#ixzz0qGZTh0nX

Student-Designed ‘Breakaway’ E-Game Ready for Play

June 3rd, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Stephen Mease
Public Information & News Director
802-865-6432
smease@champlain.edu
www.champlain.edu

Student-Designed ‘Breakaway’ E-Game Ready for Play

With support of the United Nations and behavior change expertise of Population Media Center, a two-year project by Champlain College will make its worldwide debut later this month during the 2010 Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup in South Africa. Over 70 Champlain College students from a wide array of majors are developing an innovative, episodic web-based soccer game for boys ages 8-15.

The online game, entitled Breakaway, is a tactical and narrative soccer (football) game that has been under development and testing since 2008 at the Champlain College Emergent Media Center (EMC). Students have traveled to Cape Town, South Africa and St. Lucia to research how best to tailor a game toward youth on a global level.

Breakaway is a game that offers youth the chance to discover how to become a champion both on and off the field. The game offers an engaging and fun way to develop successful intrapersonal skills,” explained Ann DeMarle, director of Champlain College’s Emergent Media Center It will debut online on June 22.

World-famous football star Samuel Eto’o of Cameroon – striker for the Football Club Internazionale Milano – joined the project as a celebrity spokesman and is expected to help gain international attention for the game with its intended audience of young boys, according to DeMarle.

Eto’o spent a day working with Champlain College students and faculty from the EMC and representatives from the United Nations in Milan, Italy, in mid-May to record interviews for game trailers, develop public service announcements for the game, and to model for his animated in-game character that will be included in the Breakaway narrative.

The ground-breaking game project is funded by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in collaboration with the Shelburne, Vt.–based Population Media Center, the leading authority in using the Sabido methodology for social and behavioral change using radio and television dramas around the globe. The game is an integral part of the UN’s ongoing worldwide fight against poverty, violence against women, hunger, disease and environmental destruction. The game is also part of the UN Secretary Generals’ Campaign UNiTE to end violence against women.

Through an intensifying story arc and unique game mechanics, the player encounters real life situations that resonate with a teen’s experience such as peer pressure, competition, collaboration, teamwork, bullying and negative gender stereotypes. “Breakaway gives the player choices that allow them to make decisions, face consequences, reflect, and practice behaviors in a game and story format,” DeMarle explained. “The goal is to show young males that they should show respect on and off the field, not only to teammates, but to others in their life and community.”

“Millions of boys and young men look up to you,” said Leyla Sharafi, a technical specialist with the Gender, Human Rights and Culture branch of the UNFPA at the Milan meeting with Eto’o. “It is such a critical age where boys’ ideas about manhood, parenthood and being a partner are shaped. You have a chance to impress them with the positive values and behaviors, so that they grow up respecting their mothers, sisters, wives and daughters.”

Breakaway challenges players to understand the nature of a true champion while having fun practicing football and personal skills. (To see Episode I of 14, now in beta testing, visit: www.breakawaygame.com and follow instructions under “Play the Game.”

Beginning June 22, the first episodes of the free game will be unveiled during the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa and distributed locally in Africa during the month-long competition to young soccer players attending camps.

“The World Cup, viewed by one billion people, is an important part of the marketing strategy,” DeMarle said. The game will be available globally via the Web in English, French, Spanish and Portuguese language versions and the remaining 11 episodes will continue to be released through December 2010.

Champlain students working on the project include electronic game designers, programmers, artists, professional writers, digital filmmakers, and marketing, business and graphic art majors. Students have been directly involved in the initial research, development and testing done in the Caribbean, South Africa and Vermont. Champlain faculty and international technology, game and media businesses have lent their expertise and insight along the way, as well, she added.

The project has received attention from major news outlets, online bloggers and will be featured on dozens of online video game sites as the World Cup nears, organizers said. Breakaway’s initial beta testing site has drawn interest and players from dozens of countries around the world, DeMarle said. Students at the EMC are continuing to refine and improve the game right up until the June deadline using suggestions and comments from early online players. “The game’s final background art, animations, interface design, and character profiles will pleasantly surprise those who’ve been testing the rough cut version,” she added “but what will really intrigue them is moving through the episodes and the plot twists and turns”.

MORE ABOUT CHAMPLAIN COLLEGE:

• Champlain College, a private, residential college founded in 1878, has a long tradition of educating professionals for leadership roles by providing a high-quality, career-oriented education. Champlain’s distinctive educational approach embodies the notion that true learning only occurs when information and experience come together to create knowledge. Champlain was named a “Top-Up-and-Coming School” by U.S. News & World Report’s America’s Best Colleges 2010. To learn more about Champlain College, www.champlain.edu.

MORE ABOUT THE EMERGENT MEDIA CENTER:

• Champlain’s Emergent Media Center, located in the Champlain Mill in Winooski, Vt., works directly with industry, public institutions and non-profit organizations to provide a laboratory/studio environment for discovering concepts, processes and application in electronic and video games. It allows students to experience learning and become leaders in the areas of technology, media in real-life work situations. www.champlain.edu/emc

Bill Ryerson Interviewed on KQED Radio

June 2nd, 2010

On June 1, 2010, Bill Ryerson participated in an hour-long discussion of population on KQED, a public radio station in San Francisco, along with Julia Whitty, author of the Mother Jones story on population, and Kavita Ramdas, head of the Global Fund for Women. The show can be heard at http://www.kqed.org/epArchive/R201006010900

World excitement grows … in Winooski

June 2nd, 2010

Below is a blog post about our electronic game project, written by Tim Johnson at The Burlington Free Press.
————————

Global excitement is growing about the World Cup, but you wouldn’t know it, living in this country, unless maybe you wander into the Champlain Mill in Winooski, home to the Emergent Media Center of Champlain College. For going on two years, scores of students at the center have been working on an electronic soccer game designed to discourage violence against women. The game now has a name, “Breakaway,” and even a big-name spokesman (big, that is, any place outside of the U.S.), Cameroonian soccer star Samuel Eto’o. For more info on the game, click here.

This is a huge, U.N.-sponsored project that’s soon to culminate with the release of the game’s first chapter (including three episodes), which will go live on the Web on June 22. And on June 20, 2,000 CDs will be distributed in Africa.

Five more chapters are still to be developed, and ultimately, over the next year, the game is to be made cell phone-friendly, because worldwide, cell phones are the primary medium of the target audience, boys 8-13. (If all of this comes as news to you, you haven’t been paying attention. Our last post was in January.)

“The ultimate dream,” says Ann DeMarle, center director, who has been presiding over this mammoth effort, “”would to be in a cycle of production that includes the cell phone version and new chapters of the web game — much like cartoon series, but with a profound message and teaching.”

As for the World Cup excitement, DeMarle experienced it in Milan, where an interview with Eto’o was recorded recently.

“This is something hard to see from within the U.S. … the excitement feels like the air just before a thunderstorm!” DeMarle said. “It is everywhere! In South Africa, it is even more so. Schools will be closed during the World Cup even though it is their fall term. Many programs are hosting youth camps – with both South African youth and youth from around the world. We are distributing to these camps.”

U.N. connections apparently helped snag Eto’o, which apparently was something of a PR coup. (You can read the center’s blog on this, and the Milan trip, by clicking here.) Here’s hoping, for Breakaway’s sake, that Eto’o shows up for with the Cameroonian team for the World Cup. (He seems to be having a dispute with another Cameroonian eminence and has threatened to walk, or so we learn via Google.) As if we didn’t have enough dramas to follow in this story!

By the way, U.N. funding will soon run out again, and private donations — which tided the project over before — are still welcome. Click here for details.

http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com

Time to Breakaway!

May 30th, 2010

Moboid – Heather Kelley blog

http://www.rapport.moboid.com/?p=236

As World Cup 2010 approaches, let me direct your attention to Breakaway, a game sponsored by the United Nations with the goal to end violence against women by reaching out to young men around the world. Through exciting football (soccer) gameplay and intriguing character and story, the game reveals issues of gender discrimination and violence, and offer alternatives. The hope is to end violent and discriminatory acts against women and girls before they even start.

I had the great privilege of working on this project with the incredible team of students at the Emergent Media Center at Champlain College. They have launched the first episode of this ground-breaking online game right in time to ride the wave of World Cup fever. Breakaway is free to play – so pass it along to all the young people you know!

The student and faculty team at the EMC have done an amazing job at balancing the needs of institutional sponsors and partners, the interests of the young players, and the complexity of the issue itself. I can’t wait to see what happens next!

Ignore the Bluster of Demographic Winter Alarmists

May 7th, 2010

Congratulations to Joe Bish for having this column distributed by Cagle Syndication Service to 800 U.S. newspapers and magazines.
——————-

Can you visualize 850 jumbo jets landing at your local airport today and each deplaning 250 people? If so, you will have a good grasp of daily, real-time global population growth.

Indeed, human numbers increase by over 200,000 every 24 hours. Every minute, 150 additional people need energy, water, food, and space to inhabit. By year’s end, that results in a 78 million person increase. It also creates demand for a significant amount of new resources the Earth must yield.

Arguably, on a planet already showing troublesome effects of a degraded, carelessly exploited environment, this extra passenger load is not good news. It was just in 1999 that we surpassed 6 billion humans, and in less than 2 years, we will pass 7 billion. In light of these trends, many respectable, hard-working environmental advocacy organizations argue that voluntary human population stabilization should be central to our efforts at sustainable development.

For full article, visit:
http://www.caglecartoons.com/column

BeMobile Sponsors UN MDG’s Radio Drama Campaign in Papua New Guinea

April 30th, 2010

PMC’s new program in Papua New Guinea was featured in the April 30 edition of WanWok.

WanWok Apri 30, 2010 (PDF 898KB)

Breakaway – A Game Changing Way of Thinking That could Change The World

April 29th, 2010

PMC’s electronic game project, Breakaway, was recently featured in Champlain College’s Champlain View Spring 2010 edition.

Champlain View Spring 2010 – Breakaway (PDF, 363 KB)

For more information on this project, visit http://www.populationmedia.org/where/worldwide/.

William Ryerson, President of Population Media Center, Awarded the Nafis Sadik Prize for Courage

April 28th, 2010

Global Health Council
August 10, 2006

On June 13, 2006, William Ryerson, President of the Population Media Center (PMC), received the Nafis Sadik Prize for Courage at the Annual General Meeting of the Rotarian Action Group on Population and Development in Copenhagen, Denmark. The award recognized Ryerson’s 35 year dedication to the field of reproductive health. The prize is named after the previous Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Dr. Nafis Sadik, a national of Pakistan. In addition the Rotarian Action Group on Population and Development named Ryerson a Paul Harris Fellow.

Ryerson gave the keynote address at the meeting, which was held as a part of the International Rotary Conference. His talk covered the issue of population, the need for motivational communications to slow population growth, the work of PMC worldwide, and the joint project PMC and Rotary are conducting in northern Nigeria to combat the problem of obstetric fistula (a condition commonly resulting from adolescent childbirth that makes its victims incontinent). In Nigeria, PMC is producing a radio program to promote delaying marriage and childbearing until adulthood and to promote maternal health through having professional birth attendants on hand for childbirth. Rotary is doing surgical repairs for fistula victims.

The Population Media Center (PMC) is an international nonprofit organization headquartered in Shelburne, Vermont. PMC works worldwide to bring about stabilization of human population numbers at a level that can be sustained by the world’s natural resources and to lessen the harmful impact of humanity on the earth’s environment. PMC uses entertainment broadcasting to change cultural attitudes and individual behavior with regard to health and social issues in various developing countries. To achieve this, PMC adopted the Sabido methodology, which uses long-running serialized melodramas, written and produced in participating countries in local languages, in order to create characters who gradually evolve into positive role models for the audience to bring about use of family planning, adoption of small family norms, avoidance of AIDS, elevation of women’s status, protection of children, and related social and health goals, depending upon the relevance of each to the policies of the country in which PMC is working.

PMC has completed projects in Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, Mali and the Philippines with very impressive results and currently has programs either broadcasting or developing in Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Brazil, Jamaica, Mexico, China, Vietnam and the US.

RELATED RESOURCES

PMC Annual Report 2008

In 2008, PMC had projects in Brazil, Eastern Caribbean, Ethiopia, Jamaica, Mali, Mexico, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, the United States, Vietnam and a worldwide electronic game.

2008 Annual Report (PDF, 2.7 MB)

Soap Operas for Social Change to Prevent HIV/AIDS

This training guide is designed to be used by journalists and media personnel to plan and execute the production and broadcast of Sabido-style entertainment-education serial dramas for HIV/AIDS prevention, especially among women and girls.

Read more and download »

GIVE TO PMC

Amount (U.S. Dollars):

$
 

Fatal error: Call to undefined function akst_share_form() in /nfs/c02/h11/mnt/20886/domains/populationmedia.org/html/wp-content/themes/PMC/footer.php on line 19