CMP collaborated with indigenous filmmakers from Oaxaca in creating a program to teach video and computer skills to the autonomous Zapatista communities focusing on the communities of Morelia, Oventic, Roberto Barrios [ceb; ce; sh; sr; sv] and La Realidad [es; sr], and to provide video cameras, editing equipment, and computers.
[2] Extensive documentation of the Zapatistas indigenous movement includes hundreds of videos, films, books, and websites created by external researchers and journalists.
The introduction of CMP project represented efforts by the autonomous Zapatista communities to tell their own stories, in their own languages and from their own perspectives.
[3] In Guerrero, CMP worked with the Organization of Campesino Environmentalists to document and draw attention to the destruction of virgin forests in the region.
[3] CMP/Promedios built four media centers in the state of Chiapas, including facilities for video production and satellite internet access.