NEW YORK (AP) — More than 60,000 people are expected to descend upon Central
Park on Saturday evening for a free concert featuring the Black Keys and Neil
Young aimed at calling attention to poverty worldwide.
Dubbed the Global Citizen Festival, it also is slated to feature K'naan, Band
of Horses and Foo Fighters. Video of the event is to be streamed worldwide.
The concert was scheduled around the meeting of the United Nations General
Assembly in New York this week and organizers used an innovative approach to
ticket distribution so that many concert-goers had no choice but to learn about
an array of global problems such as polio, malaria, child mortality and clean
drinking water.
Anyone wanting free tickets had to register at globalcitizen.org, which then
required users to watch videos or read information about poverty-related issues.
Each time material was consumed, users could earn points toward a drawing for
tickets. Points were also accumulated by sharing information via Twitter or
Facebook.
"Our social media campaign has been off the charts," said Hugh Evans, CEO and
co-founder of the Global Poverty Project. The approach demonstrates a new model
harnessing digital tools that may be repeated for other big events with
political or social messages.
Organizers said more than 71,000 people had signed up online, resulting in
more than 3.5 million page views. On average, they spent just over six minutes
consuming content or sharing information. Nearly 200,000 pieces of information
were shared on Facebook, and just a bit more than that on Twitter. About 170,000
people signed petitions via the site, and there were 98,000 videos viewed to
completion.
Evans said the project achieved its goals, set out last year, of getting more
than 100,000 people to take action related to extreme poverty while telling a
new story about the challenges. To that end, the site conveys information in
detailed, documentary-like accounts and uses an array of video, graphics and
stories that are friendly for mobile and digital consumption.
Financially, he said, the project also achieved its yearlong goal — working
with an array of organizations like the U.S. Fund for UNICEF, the Earth
Institute and Rotary International — of garnering $500 million in commitments to
help fight poverty.
So now what?
Evans said that he's hoping the audience, built online and at the concert,
will continue efforts by tweeting President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt
Romney to halve extreme poverty by 2015. And Evans is working on an announcement
in October or November about "a major rock band" getting involved with the
anti-poverty efforts.
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