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LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Kony
2012, the movement that streaked across global media like a righteous
comet in early March, was meant to shake the world with a night of
action on April 20, last Friday.
"Paltry turnouts on Friday at locations across north America, Europe and Australia left cities largely unplastered and the movement's credibility damaged," wrote the Guardian, one of the few news outlets to actually cover the lack of action.
Sure, there were some activists who put up posters. A few.
The Kony 2012 website posted a slick video about it. But by Sunday night, the video had only 108,531 views, a pittance compared to the 88 million-plus who viewed the original documentary and were inspired to join up.
On my street in Santa Monica, one lone Kony poster was left hugging a tree on Sunday.
"No one showed up
:( ," she wrote. "It was quite sad. Even Fox called (an organizer) that
day to ask if they could interview students on campus and they never
showed up, either... don't know what that says about the movement."
Julie Halpin, a spokeswoman for Invisible Children,
the group behind the anti-Kony effort, disagreed that Cover the Night
failed. "For Invisible Children, Cover the Night was a huge success,"
she told me on Monday. "People all over the country and all over the
world participated. But the mainstream media didn't cover it the way they covered the first video. So it's a perception."
In fact, the mainstream media didn't cover it at all.
To me, Kony 2012
was another extraordinary step in testing the boundaries of social
media. The movement took an issue from zero public awareness to headline
news in every major news outlet to the embrace of the White House,
fueled by the enthusiasm of hundreds of thousands of kids across the
nation.
But it didn't last.
Quickly came the wolves of the internet, who howled about how the
nonprofit spent its money, criticized the naivete of the activists and
questioned the utility of the protest. The web-savvy activists of Kony
2012 reacted quickly, but the pressure took its toll.
The founder of the movement, Jason Russell,
collapsed. He was arrested in San Diego, detained by police and
hospitalized after witnesses saw him running through streets in his
underwear, screaming and banging his fists on the pavement.
Said a spokesman at
the time: "The past two weeks have taken a severe emotional toll on all
of us, Jason especially, and that toll manifested itself in an
unfortunate incident yesterday."
That, combined with the criticism, turned the newfound zeal of some into tempered curiosity.
Or did the kids
just get bored? I asked my 18-year-old, who had pronounced the original
29-minute video one of the most important films he'd ever seen.
"Once I started
hearing negative things, I thought, ‘I don't feel as strongly as I
did,'" Jeremy told me. "But what he (Jason Russell) did, and the idea
definitely overpowers anything else."
But not enough to make him participate.
"I guess not," he said.
My daughter wrote
that the problem was timing. "Personally, I think the event should have
taken place a week after they leaked the video because most people just
forgot about it."
Indeed. The fizzling of Kony says a lot about our era of short attention spans.
Also telling: The comments on the new Kony video
on Youtube had been disabled. And Cover the Night was framed not as
crowning effort but as merely the next step in the effort to bring the
Ugandan warlord to justice.
We'll see whether that's the case.
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