Welcome to the Stories from the Field Archive

The Stories from the Field Film Festival Archive is officially launched!

What you are seeing is the original site redesigned as an archive for documents from the 2005, 2006, and 2007 festivals.

If you’re reading about us for the first time, visit our About page and the festival pages to your left to see why a group of intrepid volunteers were so inspired by the Stories vision that we spent four years of our lives to keep it going. Of course, if you’re an old friend, you already know why. In which case, you can reminisce with us about the New York festival that made the Millennium Development Goals come alive.

As one of the festival producers, I was loathe to see our work fade into oblivion. It has taken me nearly three years to find the time to do what I have wanted to do since we closed: pay proper tribute to the vision, dedication, and effort that went into creating Stories from the Field. It was a truly amazing accomplishment that touched many lives. These pages give me a chance to say congratulations to all who were a part of it.

As time permits, I will be uploading photos and other memorabilia to another site, and providing links to them here. So, although this is an archive, it is still a living document.

To old friends and new, I welcome your comments and I hope you enjoy your visit!

Linda Lopez
Editor . . . → Read More: Welcome to the Stories from the Field Archive

About

Stories from the Field, the United Nations Documentary Film Festival, was a wonderful project that burned brightly and educated many for the three-plus years we were able to sustain it. Each festival began with an opening night reception and award ceremony, followed by two days of film screenings, panel discussions, and workshops.

The festival idea was born at a 2004 meeting between the former New York Chapter of the Media Communications Association International (MCAINY) and the United Nations. It was just another one of our monthly member events. No one dreamed where it would lead.

The MCAINY event committee, always looking to create interesting activities for the members, thought they would enjoy learning about the media communication operation at the United Nations, in particular how such a large and politically-charged organization managed its PR messaging. We were excited when the committee was able to arrange a private tour and briefing with the UN’s Department of Public Information (UNDPI).

Revealed: An Inside Look at the UN
A rare look inside the communications infrastructure of the world’s largest non-governmental organization. The United Nations operates and cooperates in a staggering number of programs, conferences, commissions, and funds worldwide. Every day, its program leaders face the challenge of communicating with the governments, institutions, and citizens of over 175 countries. Go with us behind the scenes to see how they do it. (April 2004)

The briefing was a revelation. Some 40 MCAINY members met with then-UNDPI chief Ramu Damodaran and his staff to discuss the challenges of communicating effectively in the world of the endless news cycle. MCAINY had its own challenges creating relevant programming for an increasingly diverse membership. Ideas and suggestions flew in all directions.

We were astonished to learn how much media UNDPI had produced — some of it feature-length films — about the various humanitarian projects run by the United Nations and its various agencies. Yet most of it had never been screened before a public audience. We were all familiar with the negative publicity about the UN, but we knew little about the hundreds of humanitarian projects taking place all over the world, run by unsung heroes making a real difference in real people’s lives. We thought a film festival could help to bring “the other UN” into focus.

As an organization of producers, directors, writers, camera operators — in short, production people — we knew how to make it happen. It took months for the negotiations and paperwork to wend their way through the UN labyrinth, but by November 2004 the project was approved. We pulled out our spreadsheets and got to work.

The timing was perfect. The United Nations was celebrating its 60th anniversary and promoting its newly established Millennium Development Goals. We decided the festival’s theme would be the MDGs and that any competing film would need to reflect one or more of the eight goals to qualify.

(Continued)

2006 Panels & Workshops

PANEL DISCUSSIONS
from the April 2006 film festival
Streamed courtesy of Real Networks. Click on the discussion titles to view the videos.
You must have Real Player installed on your system to view. You may download it for FREE at www.real.com.

Saturday, April 22, 2006 - 6:45 p.m.
THE POWER OF FILM
Film is arguably the most influential medium around, with . . . → Read More: 2006 Panels & Workshops