
I hate
having to admit that I'm wrong, so I'm not going to. However, I will concede I was overhasty in generalizing about user-generated content in last week's column, where I said professional video crews
did a better job documenting the earthquake and tsunami in Japan than regular folks.
While I think this judgment was correct at the time, I have subsequently seen some amazing
videos which are easily as compelling as professional video (if not more so). Some of the most impressive examples are a handful of videos documenting the incredible destruction visited on Japan's
northeast coast from a variety of different perspectives. Basically, these videos -- examples here, here, here, here and here show entire towns being swept away by
the unstoppable wall of water. I can't be 100% sure that all of these are user-generated, but the camera work leads me to believe that they are.
As one astute comment on last week's post
pointed out, the reason these videos may have been delayed was -- duh -- the devastation visited by the earthquake and the tsunami, which likely knocked out the Internet (along with the water,
power, and roads) in the most-affected areas. By this reasoning, it also makes sense that people who were able to upload their videos faster probably lived in less-affected areas, and therefore
probably had less compelling videos to upload in the first place.
That said, there are a couple things the videos linked above all have in common. Like the best professional videos, which
were often taken from helicopters, they all have a good physical perspective: in the first four, the person filming the tsunami is on top of a hill or a tall building, which allows them to capture
the kind of sweeping, panoramic shots needed to convey an event of this magnitude (not to mention keep themselves out of harm's way). In the last video, by contrast, the person recording gives a
remarkable street-level view of the tsunami sweeping away a town; while this is incredibly compelling footage, it appears to involve real risk to the person taking the video, which even
professional camera crews might not be willing to incur.