1) Use YouTube.com as a recruitment area... put up a couple of good films,
see what people think and lure them to the IAC website.
2) Create some Awards at BIAFF for specific Genre's like 'Best Comedy Film'
or 'Best Horror Film'. Thats the sort of thing youngsters are making...
3) The website could do with a little revamp... more pictures, and maybe
a slightly different layout.
4) Lets start going to all the Film Making Websites like MySpace amongst
others and start spreading the good word!
If i think of any more... i'll let you know
HEY IS ANYBODY LISTENING TO THIS MAN CAUSE HE'S RIGHT!
Promotion has to appear in the right places. Having a website isn't enough.
When we launched thursopicturehouse we covered our town with daybills and
some are still up. Dropping updates notes into forums like this is another
way we get attention for our site along with any excuse to get it in the
local paper. If you want to get the youth membership you need someone who
is on their wavelength. Such a person can connect by having a knowledge of
where the most popular places young people are at, knowing what they are
interested in, etc. To some extent it is more a comercial than artist approach
but that's where it starts. A kid buys a cd of a popular band, the more music
they hear the more they want to explore the artform. Movies are the same.
I spent some amount of time trying to get through (banging my head off a
brick wall) to older members of an arts organisation that the main focus
of youth interest in the arts is mainstream movies and music. If the older
members show an interest the youngsters open up and discussion begins. New
ideas are shared with experience to create a vibrant mix of creative posability.
www.aimfortheface.piczo.com Have a look at the silly stuff our juniors (16
to 20) get up to. They are currently working on a comedy called "American
Dog" on which I've assisted the writing and direction. Their pyrotechnics
tests were hilarious and the project is looking good so far. Even though
we have very few members we have an even spread of young and older (coz no-one
is over 55 yet). "American Dog" is a project created by our young members
and they are delighted by the encouragement they get to make their movie
as they see fit whilst benefitting from assitance and advice that does not
intrude on their vision of the project. Hell the cameraman has even taken
up super 8mm as a filming tool after being shown material from our archives
and "The Bilbster Adventure", and he loves it.
We have only to listen to their ideas and help them find ways of making
their movies happen.