Oct 28

Are Journalists Just Making “The Silent Star Wars”?

Time Inc. is laying people off. Gannett, the owner of 85 newspapers, is laying off 10% of its workforce. Newspapers are seeing 4.6% reduction in
circulation.

What can they do about it, and what the hell does this have to do with Silent Star Wars, a short film by some dude named Geir in Norway?

Contrary to what a lot of new media “evangelists” say, traditional media sources are not dead. If you checked the links I referred to, they are all traditional media sources and I contend that the sensationalist and somewhat incestuous nature of the blogosphere ensures that traditional media sources indeed stay afloat. However, anyone who’s spent anytime in the blogosphere at all appreciates that media is evolving. Readers can add feedback, ask questions, and actually get to know each other. In these very confusing times, such a feedback loop is useful, fun and even comforting to everyone.

People engaged in new media contend that watching TV is “simple”, but I’m sorry, there is a lot of very reputable content on TV and in news publications. People will flock to wherever the most valid content is. Period.

Traditional media sources often get great content and access to people a regular blogger wouldn’t, but it often feels as if they are making silent films when they could be making talkies. They have the means to deliver engaging as well as interactive content–they just don’t. They get access to all sorts of influential people that they show you in their glass cases, even though the technology that allows us to interact with these people is already there.

When talkies first came out, some movie makers and actors embraced them. Others never made the adjustment and paid the price by never getting work again. Interactive media is new, but you’ll have to figure it out.

So my message to traditional media outlets is this: quit making Silent Star Wars. It’s a great film but the talkie version is much cooler, especially when Darth Vader speaks.

**a note: Geir, your video is very clever and very cool, but if I’d never seen Star Wars before, I’d have to pick Lucas’s version. Sorry.**

Oct

Whoa, Check Out My Interview of John Cleese!

When you are twelve and you and your friends spend more time quoting the Monty Python and the Holy Grail than worrying about makeup or the mall, you are going to get made fun of. This was the case with me, which would explain why I didn’t have a boyfriend until I was almost 16.

At this point, I don’t care. I can unabashedly say that the members of Monty Python are truly some of the greatest comedic geniuses I’ve ever had the pleasure to watch. I was so pleased to see that MP member John Cleese not only blogs, he is on Seesmic, Twitter, and even FriendFeed. As Hugh MacLeod would say, “Rock on, sir”.

Here’s my interview, er attempted interview, of John Cleese:

If you are really dense and didn’t catch on, this was just an homage to John Cleese because he totally rocks.

And now for something totally different (from your general routine, of course), those links:
www.cleeseblog.com
http://friendfeed.com/johncleese
and some more
http://twitter.com/johncleese
http://www.seesmic.com/johncleese
http://headcast.co.uk/

Thanks to Loic Le Meur of Seesmic for letting us know about about Mr. Cleese. :)

Oct 26

What the Internet Needs More of (and Less of)

As I have said time and time again in some form or another, the internet provides us with a big publishing tool. We can publish and we can also read others’ works. I have been an avid reader much of my adult life and would like to take this affinity for reading digitally. However, since making this transition, I’ve found my focus to be much too technology/politics-centric for me to feel like a whole person. Here’s what I’d like to see more of on the net. If you’ve seen blogs that fit this description, by all means, leave them in the comments:
1.) A blog dedicated solely to energy. I have read biodiesel blogs, but I’d like to keep up with something that focused on biodiesel, hydrogen fuel, clean coal, nuclear power, etc. I watched a fascinating PBS special on this and would like to see this dialog pushed further into the blogosphere and the current American dialog.
2.) A blog dedicated to analyzing the materials we use and the food we eat. I try to eat organic as much as I can. What is in food? What’s in the crazy plastic we put our food in and then nuke at at extremely high temperature? I don’t like to be a paranoid person, but someone starting a dialog about these sorts of things would be helpful, especially from scientists.
3.) An adventurer’s/philanthopist’s travel guide. I spend so much time researching vacations, I end up not going. I’ve looked at Lonely Planet, but it’s sort of faceless and it would be nice to write a blogger to just say, “What do you think of this place?”
4.) A shopping site with niche drill down menus. How could would it be if you could say, “I want a white ski jacket with pit zips, taped seams, and at least 5 pockets,” and then it pulls up? I guess it would be a lot of work for the online store owner to upload that info into a database, but it could be a great way to close a sale.
5.) A site written by an accountant for self-employed people. What a lifesaver this would be.

I can come up with more but I want to go to sleep soon.

I am guilty of this just as much as everyone, but the web really needs less tech and political blogging, percentage wise. I’m thinking this will change as time goes by, but it gets a bit stale after a while.

Oct 20

Using Your Talent for Good, Linearb Style

Lynn Bender at GeekAustin (aka @linearb to many other circles) is a phenomenal piano player. He heard about my sister Debby’s financial strife while trying to overcome graft-vs-host disease, and decided he’d like to play to help her raise some money to cover her expenses. Right now her health insurance is over $700 a month and she cannot work because she is too sick. She only collects disability right now. It is so difficult for her to overcome this disease which has killed many of her friends, so finances is the last thing she should really have to worry about.

If you appreciate Lynn’s awesome playing of the organ, please consider donating to my sister’s PayPal account. The link is at the bottom:

Take a look at my sister’s blog if you’d like to get to know the person you’d be helping. Please pass this around as well. On behalf of my sister and my family, thank you and God Bless!



debzokiss

Oct 15

Do We or Our Congresspeople Know the Face of Poverty?

This post is part of Blog Action Day.

You see them. They pass by you on the street. They are the ones sitting, waiting for a bus. They clean your tables and serve your breakfast tacos. Do you know them?

Do you know the man that makes minimum wage who cuts your sushi? He narrowly escaped the jungles and oppressive military regime of Burma to a refugee camp in Thailand. He barely speaks English because he had no idea if he was going to be here or in Norway or any other country that accepts refugees. Did you know he has two children he has to support and that he has no idea if his brothers and sisters survived a deadly cyclone? You see this man several times a week. You might even smile at him and ask him how his day was.

Do you know that man who sits on the corner and asks for change? He is a Viet Nam vet who was 19 when he left for war. He did not want to go but was pressured out of going to Canada. He watched the best friends that he depended on to survive get ambushed in plain site. He has nightmares, has severe stomach issues, and struggle as he may, he cannot hold a decent job. Do you realize he has spent the majority of his life as a scared, bitter person? You see this man, but do you know him?

Do you know the woman who was impregnated and dumped at 16, who struggles to make a life for herself and her child? “Daddy” wants no involvement and has enough troubles paying for himself, much less a child. One night of fun, years of being shunned for her irresponsibility.

Do you know the busboy who nearly died of thirst in the desert coming to America? Do you understand why he works so hard? He left because the leaders in his Mexican village didn’t like him, and wouldn’t give him a chance. He left so he didn’t have to pay the police for justice.

You see the 15% of Austin’s population that falls under the poverty level, but do you know anything about their lives and what they’ve faced? Do you actually understand how truly difficult it can be to escape poverty when you make a little less than half of the living wage?

Do you understand that outside this nation, children are dying of malaria and yellow fever because they can’t afford vaccines against simple mosquito bites? Do you know there are places in the world without clean water to drink, and that people are still getting typhoid?

When you complain about how high your taxes are, have you ever stopped to think that if your politicians just spent your money more efficiently, we would be able to help these people out so they could contribute more to our society and to our world?

If you think this post is relevant, blog about it or send it to your Congressperson. If you have an iPhone or Blackberry, check out Congress in your Pocket. Consider contributing some of your earnings on this day.

Oct 11

Let’s Take Our Obama Efforts Off the Computer (I’d Love to Help)

I got an email from the Obama campaign saying they need people to call voters in swing states. I hate cold calling, but considering most people aren’t on their computers as much as I am, it is a necessary evil.

If you are up to the task (which if you have faith in your cause, you will be), here are some tips:
1.) Be genuine–the script is a guideline, but someone will probably hang up on you if you use it. It’s too one-way and not conversational.
2.) Take what you can get. You will get a lot of voicemails, wrong numbers, and even people hanging up on you. Face it, you are a Marine on Normandy on the frontlines, and you are going to take your licks from people who don’t like the idea of you calling them. Expect this upfront.
3.) Stay positive, no matter what. Someone will think you totally suck for interrupting their day. Accept this. If you come in with a defeatist attitude, you will miss the opportunities when they are presented to you. Stay positive and you might just convince someone to volunteer as well.
4.) Come in with a plan. What was my plan? 1.) To ask if they were voting for Obama and 2.) to ask them to volunteer in any way, form or fashion, even for just an hour. If you spend 20 minutes calling people and get three hours of volunteer time from people, this is a 800% ROI. Kick. Ass.

I also had a script for voicemails that I loosely followed. I’ve done lots of phone sales and it helps, especially in the beginning.

Don’t sit idly back and expect this election to fall the way you want it. If you pledge to cold call for Obama, you have my support. Feel free to drop any questions you may have my way.

Oct 06

Should McCain Live Down the Keating Five?

So Obama’s campaign went on the offensive and posted a video on McCain’s ties with Charles Keating of the infamous Savings and Loan scandals. Essentially, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board wanted to investigate Lincoln Savings and Loan Association for “unsound lending practices”. Five senators, all of whom had been given contributions by Lincoln Savings and Loans chairman Keating, intervened and prevented this investigation. One of these senators was John McCain.

What preempted this? Lincoln Savings had invested very conservatively until Keating took charge. He fired existing management, then took company assets from $1.1 billion to $5.5 billion making risky investments that eventually tipped regulators off. It was too late, and Lincoln Savings and Loan Association then collapsed in 1989, costing tax payers $2 billion. It also cost 21,00 investors, mostly elderly, to lose their savings. Three out of the five Senators involved lost their political careers and McCain was chastised for executing “poor judgment”.

We are guaranteed life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, which was basically ripped off of John Locke’s term “life, liberty and the pursuit of property”. So here are some questions for you:
1.) Would this government interference protect our “pursuit of property”, since it was aimed at preventing direct lending as well as the sale of high-risk junk bonds?
2.) How much does the S&L scandal of the 1980s resemble the one going on now (deregulation leading to overzealous and unscrupulous lending)?
3.) Are these just natural cycles? What would it take for us prevent this from happening? How accountable are people like Keating? How accountable was McCain?
4.) Will people trust banks if those involved in today’s housing scandal are not properly implicated?

Would appreciate any feedback.

Oct 01

I’m Presenting On Making Social Media Matter at Refresh Bryan/College Station

I am a writer, so it’s not surprising that I don’t really enjoy presenting. My perfectionist tendencies tend to get the best of me. But when Cody Marx Bailey from Downtown Cartel asked for a speaker for Refresh Bryan/College Station, I decided to step up.

My talk is called “Making Social Media Matter: How Social Media Turns Everyday Citizens into Superheroes”. I’m going to be presenting the Blood Drive Tweetup for the first time in public. While creating my slides, it was amazing to remember how many people stepped up in such a short period of time. I feel truly blessed to have been a part of it and hope that my presentation inspires others to create similar drives and movements in their communities.

This presentation is dedicated to my sister, Debby Greer-Costello, who is still struggling with graft-vs-host disease, and to Johnny Romano, who recently passed away of leukemia at the age of 10. Johnny fought a hard fight against ALL and AML for three years. I ask that you extend your thoughts and prayers to his family at this time.