New Media and Opportunities for Ordinary Citizens
Content Bringing People Together
This paper examines how YouTube is able to provide a strong lifeline for marginalized people. YouTube is the fundamental public forum and is one which is able to offer individuals a means of showcasing their story for the world. YouTube offers people who are minorities, repressed or otherwise pushed to the fringes of society a means of sharing their story and of showcasing their unique experience. For some, YouTube allows them to show the violations of government and civil rights -- this creates a level of accountability along the world stage. For others, YouTube helps them foster an online community of marginalized individuals otherwise sharing their story. This paper will look at two specific groups of marginalized people: transgendered teen and ordinary civilians in Venezuela and discuss how YouTube is able to offer them a means of sharing their story while bringing people together in a sort of online community.
For transgendered youth, creating videos on YouTube which share their story is a means of building a sense of community and strength, helping these often discriminated against youths share their collective experience and grow stronger as a community. "Thousands of teens and twentysomethings who are transgender -- identifying with a gender that is different than their sex at birth -- have turned to YouTube as a kind of public diary. As they start taking hormones or using new names, many are documenting their journeys on video, baring their souls and revealing their changing faces to strangers online" (Reyes, 2014). One of the aspects of this very experience is that the fact that these youths are creating a public diary at all is revolutionary. Many of them have long been told that it's in their best interest to abandon their former selves post-surgery and post-transition. Essentially, this advice made life easier for all the non-transgendered people as they didn't have to confront this person's alternative choices. Abandoning one's former self was simply advice given so that narrow-minded people within a narrow-minded world wouldn't be challenged or wouldn't be taken out of their comfort zone in any way. YouTube videos in a sense are a way of combating this mentality. YouTube is creating a permanent and public diary which is helping these individuals share their story -- regardless of whether their journey of transformation makes people uncomfortable. When the old norm used to be stuffing down and suffocating one's personal story, the new norm is one of sharing and disclosure. As one transgendered youth recounts, hiding one's personal story used to be a necessity, or else one would lose everything, including dating opportunities while making oneself vulnerable to violence. "Three years ago, a national survey of more than 6,400 transgender and gender-nonconforming people found that 71% had tried to avoid discrimination by hiding their gender or gender transition. Sharing their stories remains risky: More than a third of people who were gender nonconforming or had a transgender identity before graduating from high school said they had been physically assaulted, the National Transgender Discrimination Survey found" (Reyes, 2014). If only violence and bias were the worst case scenarios for this marginalized group: in reality, society tends to have difficulty accepting these young people for who they really are by virtue of the type of surgery they've had. Consider the experience of members of the gay community: gays and lesbians "come out" and essentially showcase who they really are: transgendered youths are worth that this sharing and disclosure actually does the reverse, making people think that they are actually less than the real men and women they claim to be.
When it comes to conflict overseas, it's generally agreed upon that Americans are often overly concerned about their own country and their own problems -- so much so that this can create a sense of both indifference and ignorance about the injustices and horrors that are occurring overseas. In the case of the Venezuelan student protests, YouTube has been able to provide a platform and meaning to these students, showcasing their struggle and plight in ways that professional journalists are not allowed to. This is no small feat. The Venezuelan government has a strong track record of sequestering and concealing the realities of their own actions and life within their country. All acts of violence and intimidation are swept under the rug via the state-run media circuits.
Consider the events of just a few months ago: "The Venezuelan government has expelled CNN reporters from within its borders,...
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