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Nonprofits turn to YouTube to raise awareness, funds
19 Oct 2007 16:01:00 GMT
Source: Reuters
Inmates at the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Centre perform Michael Jackson's "Thriller" dance, Philippines, August  2007. Clips of the prisoners grooving created a stir after they were posted on Youtube.
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Inmates at the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Centre perform Michael Jackson's "Thriller" dance, Philippines, August 2007. Clips of the prisoners grooving created a stir after they were posted on Youtube.
REUTERS/Victor Kintanar
By Yinka Adegoke

NEW YORK, Oct 19 (Reuters Life!) - After Holly Schnaars, 37, was diagnosed with late stage colorectal cancer she picked up her video camera and decided to tell her story on the online video site Metacafe to raise awareness of the disease.

The mother of two from San Jose, California, is just one of thousands of Americans, as well as charities and nonprofit organizations, who use online video to publicize their cause and raise funds as it becomes easier and cheaper to post videos than hope for television coverage or other forms of marketing.

The ground shift has prompted the biggest online video sites led by YouTube to reorganize their pages to make it easier for such users to find videos related to their favorite causes.

YouTube, which is owned by search giant Google Inc , is creating a special section for nonprofits to air their videos and link them to its Google Checkout online payment system to receive funds directly.

"Nonprofits understand that online video isn't just a way to broadcast public service announcements on a shrunken TV set," said Steve Grove, head of news and politics at YouTube.

"It's a way to get people to do more than just absorb your message but to engage with their user generated content as well," he said.

POWER OF VIDEO

It's not just the online video companies giving support to individual causes and charities. Pure Digital, maker of the Flip video camera, has said it plans to give away a million video cameras to nonprofit organizations around the world to capture images and moments in places traditional media outlets might not be able to reach.

"Video has power and media has power but the challenge is that the media is limited to telling stories that are controlled by a very small number of people," said Jonathan Kaplan, chief executive of Pure Digital.

"This program along with YouTube and other sites will expand the media universe for learning what's really going on in the world," he said.

One recent example of the power of video was the impact of clips of the Myanmar army's confrontations with local protesters which were posted on YouTube and other Web sites. Some of the clips made their way to mainstream news outlets.

Witness, an activist organization founded by veteran rock star Peter Gabriel in 1992, has focused on raising awareness of such previously unseen events through video. Sam Gregory, program director at Witness said online distribution has made it easier to put videos in front of the right people such as decision makers and others with a personal connection to the cause.

"It's not necessarily about the size of the audience it's about placing targeted video and turning 'watching' into action," said Gregory.

Scott Schnaars, Holly's husband, said the eight-minute long video of his wife talking about her disease and then shaving her head to donate her hair to a charity that makes wigs has attracted more than 20,000 views on Metacafe and YouTube.

But for the Schnaars the most important thing is that the video has helped educate people about the importance of recognizing any cancer symptoms as early as possible.

"We've had amazing responses," they said. "The thing that's made us most happy is people sending us messages saying 'I've had these symptoms too, I am going to get checked out.'"
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