This is the sixth
post in my attempt to hierarchize media uses according to a utilitarian
rubric. My first five posts dealt with James Cameron’s Avatar,
Marcel Duchamp’s The Fountain,
Homer’s The Odyssey, Ludovico
Einaudi’s Primavera, and the Idle No More movement. In this post, I
examine the effectiveness of doing promotional videography for a good cause.
I’ll use the Against Malaria Foundation (AMF) as my example of a good cause, as it’s
the top ranked charity in the world by GiveWell, The Life You Can Save, and
Giving What We Can.
AMF is a charity
that distributes insecticide-treated bed nets across sub-Saharan Africa. It’s
just over $5 a net and roughly $2300 to save a life. Working
for a charity seems like a great thing to do, but does it actually accomplish
much? After all, not that many people will see your work, and the ones that see
it, might not donate, and the ones that donate, might just as well have donated
to another charity that isn’t drastically less cost-effective. It’s easy enough to see that producing promotional media for a top charity is better than
producing promotional media for a weaker charity, but that doesn’t show that
one couldn’t do more good by making art or culture jamming or producing
promotional media for a political party.
Strength of Impact:
- How many people does the project reach?
- How significantly does it impact the people it reaches?
- How likely are the people it impacts to spread this impact?
- How long lasting is its impact?
- How grave was the issue pre-impact?
My answers:
- Low
- Medium
- Medium
- Low
- High
Explanation:
It’s important to remember that these answers apply to the resident AMF
filmmaker and photographer, not to AMF itself.
The AMF YouTube channel is surprisingly underviewed. Despite hosting
192 videos over a 5-year span, their channel has a grand total of 63,670 views,
for an average of 331 per video. Further, most of those views came from the
first couple of years. Over the past two years, AMF has managed to crack the
200-view mark about once every 20 videos uploaded. Their 7 Jumbo Jets
commercial has just over 1,000 views despite being well-made and featuring
voiceover from Alan Rickman. The Become One In A Million ad has 2,700 views
despite featuring the US Olympic swim team. Photos and video are also displayed
on the AMF website but people watching these have evidently already heard of
AMF and are interested enough to research them. Most AMF donors have likely
never encountered any of their media. SoI-1 receives a resounding “Low.”
There is no way of knowing what percentage of 7 Jumbo Jets viewers
decided to donate. I’d imagine that it’s very low. The percentage of people it
impacts likely isn’t very different from the percentage of people a short film
impacts, but unlike short films, charity ads urge at least a small minority of their viewers to behave in a specific way. People might watch fiction and have their
attitudes changed, but we can’t quite predict their next move. In the case of
the charity advertisement, we can expect those that were impacted to go onto
the AMF website and donate.
People that are impacted enough to donate are moderately likely to get
others in their social circles to donate as well. Recommending charities is a
thing people do. Also, if someone really cares about minimizing suffering, they
are likely to try persuading people they know. This is again different from how
people usually react to fiction. If I loved Avatar, I’m likely to, as a
result of having loved the movie, try persuading my friends to watch the movie,
but not to, as a result of having loved the movie, try persuading them to value
the preservation of the environment.
SoI-4 is difficult to answer because it really depends on the quality
of the video. In general, and I think this applies to the 7 Jumbo Jets
commercial, I would expect the impact of a charity commercial to be short
lasting. Most people persuaded to donate were likely prior donors to other
causes. And those that donate to AMF might next time donate to less
cost-effective charities in the future. After all, the advertisement in
question makes no mention of AMF being the #1 ranked charity in the world. It’s
possible to imagine a particularly effective video campaign that manages to permanently convert people to AMF or to effective altruism at large, however.
Quality of Impact:
- How much does it increase the accuracy of people's models of reality?
- How much does it improve people's quality of life?
- How much more likely does it make people to act altruistically toward others?
My answers:
- +1
- 0
- +2
Explanation:
Most people already have a vague
knowledge of there being masses of “people starving in Africa.” The AMF video
work I’ve seen is unlikely to significantly boost anyone’s state of knowledge
but it is at least educational and somewhat informative. Their videos also show
glimpses of life in various African countries that likely challenge Western
stereotypes about what those places are like.
Despite only impacting a small
percentage of a small pool of people, those that are persuaded are driven to do
a lot of good. Donating $100 is already a 23rd of a life. The
advertisement does not necessarily improve the donor’s life (although it
might), but it does significantly improve the lives of those who would have
gone on to die from malaria, hence the decision to answer QoI-2 with a 0 and
QoI-3 with a +2. It’s important not to confuse the receiver of donations from
the receiver of media messages.
Though producing media for AMF and other good causes has a pretty standard SoI, it has an above average QoI, and thus might be a good way for media producers to do good in the world, if sub-optimal. It may turn out that the pay cut a media producer takes for a good cause accomplishes more than their actual work does.
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