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Borders vox youtube
Borders vox youtube




borders vox youtube

“Going through and reading 400 responses to people’s feelings on the encroachment of China in Hong Kong, suddenly after you read hundreds of responses on how people are thinking about this - you haven’t set foot in Hong Kong but you’ve interacted with this paradigm,” Harris said. He set up a meeting place with 15-minute time slots for people to come chat with him, and ended up walking around with some people who described the history of the locations to him as they lived through it.Īll the engagement work started beforehand. When he was on the ground, Harris emailed the network to see if anyone wanted to meet up and had to make a waitlist with 400 interested people. These were designed to both find interviewees on the ground and local fixers to help navigate the politics of drone-filming borders, but also surface other components of the larger story of the border, like a neon light craftsman and people stuck in cage homes in Hong Kong’s housing market. “In the weeks leading up to his trips, each week we would send via email a set of structured call-outs for what to explore.” “We expected 40 responses and got more than 700,” Hickman said.

borders vox youtube

While Harris was out exploring, the engagement team flexed the muscles of Harris’s Facebook page as a “community hub,” as Hickman described it, to share his trip with the 69,000 followers.įor the second season on Hong Kong, Harris and Hickman created a network of local followers who wanted to participate in or help the videos’ creation in some way, using this form and other callouts. Hickman designed a form to gather ideas and the team received 7,000 responses in one month. For the first, knowing it would have a broader focus, Harris made a video asking followers to suggest places for him to highlight. “I was sensitive to saying, ‘Here I am, an outsider,’ a non-expert going to these places and saying ‘I’m here to explain this,'” Harris said.īlair Hickman, Vox’s director of audience, explained the way they ramped up engagement with each season. The Borders idea was different because the approach was baked in from the beginning. Vox also made a video on what high schoolers really think about school shootings, drawing from a survey after the Parkland shooting with 1,635 responses. For Explained, its weekly Netflix show, producers used follower input for its e-sports and K-pop episodes, Posner said. This isn’t the first time Vox (with a four-person engagement team) has sought its audience’s ideas for video. We’re just as curious as they are,” Posner said. “It’s a delicate mission to help explain the world, but we’re just riding along with our audience. Its leader, Joe Posner, pointed out that Harris was the fourth person to join the team. Vox’s video team is only four years old, like the site itself. The third season - focusing on the borders of Colombia - is yet to come, as the callout started Thursday with the Harris’s announcement of the new destination. The second was a deep dive into Hong Kong, which incorporated more engagement reporting to avoid the white-man-parachuting-into-the-natives’-land trope and more fully tell the stories of Hong Kong’s borders. The first season focused on six different borders from Haiti/Dominican Republic to Nepal/China. Harris, an international-relations aficionado, pitched the idea a few years ago, which has since bubbled into three seasons of five or six episodes each. “I wanted to look at a map and zoom into it and look at the people there and the stories surrounding this thing that we usually just look at from 30,000 feet.”

#Borders vox youtube series

That was the premise of Borders, Vox’s video series by Johnny Harris and producer Christina Thornell.Īfter living near the U.S.–Mexico border in Tijuana, “I wanted to humanize the lines on the map,” Harris said. If you’re going to attempt to humanize the border between two contentious countries, you should probably start by asking the humans living there what they think.Īnd while it’s easy (well, relatively) to go in and ask the first migrants or border guards or vendors that you see - doing your engagement homework beforehand doesn’t hurt either.






Borders vox youtube