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Where the Wild Things Are: How COVID-19 has impacted the ecology of…
Where the Wild Things Are: How COVID-19 has impacted the ecology of wildlife
Goal?
Talk about how humans have caused harm to the ecology, how COVID-19 has helped us recognise the harm we have caused, but not in an eco-fascist way
Also if through our research we manage to find negative aspects, we can always talk about how it's not as positive as it seems
I'd also like to focus on the script, especially in the sense that it should use scientific language and evidence, but also not be so heavy that it can't be understood by people if they aren't from a scientific or academia background
What is your research in the given topic?
None so far but we're working on it
How is it different from the what is normally perceived?
Popular opinion on how wildlife has been impacted: generally positive; during the first phase of lockdown COVID-19 was touted as "exposing humans as the real virus"
What the popular opinion lacks: Human beings are as much a part of the food chain and ecology as other animals are, we too are important to the balance.
The below listed things are necessarily
on topic
but I'd like to keep them in mind while making the video
Is there any scientific connection?
Ecosystem dynamics, weather patterns, migration patterns, and lots of other stuff
Can't really address ecological changes without a scientific aspect can we
Your originality in how and what you want to communicate
I think this ties in with the cyan strand
Is there any message that you want to send out to the world?
Maybe not? I think it would work better as an open ended thing where people draw their own learnings and conclusion from the information they're given
How and in what form(video/ animation/others...) would you communicate your idea?
I was thinking short-documentary style?
Maybe an expression of the physical world through virtual software like games or something? Hand animations or something like that? Stop motion?
ooh hand animations sounds interesting, we could try that as well
I'm not too familiar with the virtual software games thing but I'm open to that too because it seems like it could work out very well