seeing is believing episode 1: autumn 2002 episode .
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. video . campaign . technology .
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. the storyboard .
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Press Contact
Elana Wright, Publicist
contact via e-mail: elanaw@globetrotter.net
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The Leaders of Nakamata, a coaliton of 10 Tribal groups in the Philippines, accept a state-of-the art digital video camera in a traditional Manobo ceremony.
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The Nakamata coalition, made up of 10 Tribal groups in the Philippines, is learning to harness digital technology to defend their rights in one of the poorest and most remote palces on earth.
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Joey Lozano, a human rights activist, uses his personal camcorder to investigate and expose injustice in the Philippines.
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A Manobo Tribe member learns how to operate a video camera, so he can document human rights abuses against his community.
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Audrey Challice, a Welsh pensioner joins the Handicam Revolution by documenting a polluting factory with her camcorder.
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In Seeing is Believing, co-directors Katerina Cizek and Peter Wintonick examine the impact of new technologies on human rights, international justice, and journalism.
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Co-directors Peter Wintonick and Katerina Cizek spent two years travelling the world, discovering the front-lines of the handicam revolution.
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