Audio Description and Captioning: Luxury or Necessity? Recorded live from Australian Accessibility Conference (OZeWAI and PWAC) in Perth
Screenwest Hosts Panel at OZeWAI Australian Accessibility Conference
In February Screenwest hosted a...
Screenwest Hosts Panel at OZeWAI Australian Accessibility Conference
In February Screenwest hosted a panel discussion entitled Audio Description and Captioning: Luxury or Necessity? in addition to an interactive workshop on audio description the Australian Accessibility Conference.
Professor Katie Ellis and emerging writer/director, Tony Sarre and disability and diversity consultant Zel Iscel spoke with Feisty Dame Producer, Tania Chambers about the barriers to full audience access to broadcast and other digital content.
The second half of the session offered participants the opportunity to listen to a professionally audio described short film and to create their own ‘off the cuff’ and at times, hilarious, descriptions of locally produced short film, TANGO UNDERPANTS.
The panel session was recorded and you can watch it now here:
“We’re pleased to have started the discussion around audio description in screen projects and it was fantastic to see the responses from the audience to engage with the practice. We hope this will spark a wider conversation within the WA Screen industry regarding the demand for access to screen projects and the opportunities it presents to reach new audiences,” explained Simone Flavelle, Diversity Manager at Screenwest.
About The Panel
Tania Chambers: Managing Director of Feisty Dame Productions, Tania Chambers produced the comedy feature A Few Less Men and the comedic thriller Kill Me Three Times. Tania produced the short film Tango Underpants and executive produced the factual series End of Empire and Turning Point, as well as short films One Fine Day, High Tide, Dark Whispers and A Shared Affair. Tania is a member of Screenwest’s Diversity Leadership Group, the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA) and of WIFT Australia (Women in Film and Television), an Honorary Life Member of Women in Film and Television (NSW).
Tony Sarre: Tony Sarre is a Western Australian filmmaker who is legally blind. Tony’s aim is to tell screen stories from a disabled point of view, with a focus on living with blindness. He says that screen practitioners who are disability diverse should have agency, power and control over their lives and how they tell their stories. In 2018, Tony made Working Dog which is the first in this series of short films and looks at the relationship between a blind person and their Seeing Eye Dog. Tony is a member of Screenwest’s Diversity Leadership Group.
Katie Ellis: Katie Ellis is Senior Research Fellow and Convenor of the Critical Disability Studies Research Network in the Internet Studies Department at Curtin University, Australia. She has published widely in the area of disability, and digital and networked media, extending across both issues of representation and active possibilities for social inclusion.
Zel Iscel: Zel Iscel is a disability and diversity consultant with lived experience! Zel was born blind and arrived with her family to Australia at the age of six. In 2014 she established her own disability consultancy Inclusive World. She is currently a Project Officer at Women’s Health and Family Services where she develops guidelines and develops services to support women with disabilities through the organisation.
About OZeWAI
OZeWAI is the Australian Web Accessibility Initiative, which is a strong and established group of members. OZeWAI is proud to provide a valuable source of information on accessibility issues and ideas to the broader community.
OZeWAI is an association of volunteers working to make the information world more inclusive. It was the first such organisation in Australia and has been a leading initiative in the field for more than 20 years. Many international and high-profile experts have contributed to OZeWAI activities. OZeWAI has introduced many developers and managers to the need for accessibility, the means by which it can be promoted, and a supportive network of concerned practitioners.
PWAC is the Perth Web Accessibility Camp, which has been running since 2013 to educate and inform the West Australian web community about all aspects of digital accessibility. It is run by members of the Perth Web Accessibility Meetup group.
About Screenwst’s Western Australian Screen Industry Diversity Roadmap
In 2016-17, with Screenwest’s support, the Western Australian screen industry undertook a thorough research and consultation process to develop an industry wide diversity strategy. The resultant document is the Western Australian Screen Industry Diversity Roadmap 2017-2023.
The Screenwest Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Plan builds upon this work, affirming Screenwest’s commitment to diversity. The Plan identifies aims, specifies activities to be carried out by Screenwest and is reviewed and updated annually.
What is Diversity and Inclusion?
The Australian Human Rights Commission refers to diversity as the differences that distinguish groups of people from one another. More specifically, as identified in the industry Roadmap and adopted for the Plan, Screenwest recognises diversity as differences in gender; age; Aboriginal identity; cultural and linguistic diversity (CaLD); disability; sexuality and gender identities, including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex (LGBTQIA+); location (including regional and remote regions) and socio-economic status.
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