Posts Tagged ‘YouTube’

Google Maps aid areas devastated by Hurricane Sandy


2012
11.05

Usually a map is used to navigate how to get from Point A to Point B.

But as the United States’ east coast copes with the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, those staying put may still find a map to be one of their most helpful tools.

Several days before Sandy ripped through the east coast, inflicting at least $50 billion of damage, Google released a “Superstorm Sandy Crisis Map” highlighting shelter and recovery locations, traffic conditions, power outage information and more.

Google’s Crisis Response Team, an organization formed in 2005, created the interactive map through its free Google Maps service. It was released Oct. 28 on Google’s official blog and it quickly spread on social media because the company provided an easy-to-use “share” feature.

You can view a map of the entire east coast HERE, or you can check out a New York-specific map HERE.

Google’s crisis map is a prime example of how people can collaborate and utilize social media to aid others before, during and after disasters by providing valuable hyper-local information to those with Internet access.

For example, Google has already updated satellite images of areas devastated by Sandy through its Google Earth services.

Through crowdsourcing, Google has also begun to assess damage along the coast and has posted that color-coded information on the map as well.

Many organizations are now also using their own Google Maps to notify the public about locations in need of donations or additional clean-up volunteers. The “Hurricane Sandy Relief Volunteer Opportunities” map located HERE, for example, allows users to drop pins at sites in need of help.

Although the crisis map is already its own form of social media, it also encourages users to take advantage of additional social media services to stay informed and alert. It provides links to areas with local emergency Twitter feeds, webcams and related YouTube videos and is constantly updated as new information is provided.

The crisis map, therefore, has a limitless outreach online. It can help victims seeking refuge, concerned family members across the country, journalists seeking new leads or volunteer and relief organizations.

Although it doubles as a cost-effective method of positive promotion for the company, Google’s philanthropic efforts to aid the hurricane victims is admirable and effective and I praise Google for its creation.

YouTube gives homeless man a ‘golden’ opportunity


2012
10.20

Ted Williams is internationally known as “the man with the golden voice.”

But without modern-day social media and a chance encounter with a Columbus Dispatch videographer, Williams might still only be known as “the homeless man on Hudson Street” in northeast Columbus, Ohio.

Williams was plucked from obscurity and thrust into the limelight in January 2011, when the Dispatch’s Doral Chenoweth recorded an interview with him and posted it to the newspaper’s website. Once determined to become a radio personality, Williams, 53, had fallen victim to drugs, alcohol, criminal activity and apathy. Even though he was now clean of drugs and alcohol, he was left homeless, panhandling for change with a sign that claimed he had “a God given gift of voice.”

An anonymous user copied the video and posted it to YouTube, where it quickly went viral. (You can read the original Dispatch story and watch the video here.) The world was mesmerized by “the man with the golden voice” and his plea for a second chance. Williams soon received several job offers and donations while simultaneously garnering attention from mainstream media, bloggers and Twitter and Facebook users.

Williams ultimately landed a job with the Cleveland Cavaliers and Quicken Loans Arena, who also offered him a home. He has also done other voice-over work on television including commercials for Kraft Macaroni & Cheese. After getting a job and getting clean, he was reunited with his 90-year-old mother, whom he had lost contact with because of his addictions. You can learn more about his work and his story on his website.

Unfortunately, Williams’s story does have its setbacks. After achieving overwhelming popularity and success, he began drinking heavily again and lost his job with the Cavaliers. He is now clean of drugs and alcohol once again, thanks to the help of his girlfriend, a sober living coach and two trips to rehab.

Williams now works out of his home in Dublin, Ohio, a Columbus suburb, as the voice of New England Cable News. He also wrote a book about his struggles on the path to success, “A Golden Voice,” which debuted this May.

Without the assistance and receptivity of the Internet community, Williams would have probably been unable to get his life back on track and reunite with his family. In countless interviews he has said he is very grateful those who helped share his story. Williams’s story is a true tale of “social media success,” and it illustrates how much social media can change peoples’ lives for the better.


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