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November 18, 2007

The D.C Ice Rink is Now Open

The D.C Ice Rink is Now Open

LaToya and I did the museum thing Sat. afternoon, hitting the American Snapshot exhibit at The National Gallery of Art's West building.

We were underwhelmed to say the least. I was expecting a history of American photography, especially given the George Eastman roots of my hometown, but the show was literally American snapshots from the very earliest public-use cameras up until the late 1970s. Some of the photos were good but the rest were snapshots, relatively mundane photos that everybody has in a big trunk in their attic gathering dust.

So we went to the other parts of the museum and saw some Van Goghs, Cezannes, Manets, and Monets among others.

It stared off slow but end well with the other parts of the museum. More importantly, it was great to take a break from my usual D.C. Routine and see some amazing artwork. Everyone needs a chance to decompress and re-energize and there's nothing like sparking your creative part of your mind at a museum. It inspires you to do great things and approach the other parts of your life (friends or work even) a little differently.

I had just read that Ice Rink at the Sculpture Garden had opened this weekend and I've been telling myself ever since coming down to D.C. and running at The National Mall that I needed to stop by.

It's pretty neat to have the rink in downtown D.C.; the Sculpture Garden itself is a little oasis in the concrete jungle. At night with the lights around the rink lit up and Christmas chorales faintly   playing over the speakers creates a nice atmosphere.

There aren't too many quintessential D.C. activities or sights that I haven't done yet but this has been on the list for awhile so I'm glad to check it off the list. I'd recommend anyone in D.C., either locals or tourists, check out the Ice Rink at night, even if you don't skate (which I don't).

October 21, 2007

GE Add Takes My Breath Away

When I posted about the future of advertising I didn't exactly mean ads like this this GE locomotive spot but it's funny nonetheless. I've never thought of Erie, PA in this way before.

Berlin - Take My Breath Away


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Now playing: Nic Harcourt - Zap Mama

August 02, 2007

Sir Elton John Doesn't Get It (Technology, Blogging, or Music in the Digital Age)

If you ever thought that Elton John might understand the Digital Age, you can now throw away that hope. “Hopefully the next movement in music will tear down the internet.

1) “Let’s get out in the streets and march and protest instead of sitting at home and blogging."

2) “I do think it would be an incredible experiment to shut down the whole internet for five years and see what sort of art is produced over that span."

I hope that Leftsetz jumps on this story, would love to read his commentary and insights on this.

February 15, 2007

Snarky Post of the Week: Lefsetz vs. The Dixie Chicks

It's about time that a Bob Leftsetz post makes it to a Snarky Post of the Week. I think I first heard about Leftsetz via Fred, who's pointed me to a lot of great blogs, and I've never been disappointed with Leftsetz's frequent rants, tirades, and screeds.

He knows the music industry and isn't afraid to say what he believes. Are some of his posts over the top? Of course, but that's what makes blogs great is that they're personal and Bob's personality is his blog.

Regarding the Dixie Chick's sweep at the recent Grammy Awards, Bob lets her rip and it's great. Nothing necessarily snarky but he says what many in the music industry were probably thinking when the Dixie Chicks won the award in each category they were nominated for. More importantly, their Grammy wins signify just how lost the music industry is right now:

"What kind of crazy fucked up world do we live in where "Not Ready To Make Nice" wins Record Of The Year?...

"Not Ready To Make Nice" is ubiquitous on the coffee tables of baby boomers who want to impress their liberal friends, fuck, it probably doesn’t even make it into the CD player...

Music, when done right, is universal.  "Not Ready To Make Nice" is like a hit show on the Food Network.  Yup, let’s give the Emmy for best variety show to RACHAEL RAY!
There’s a revolution going on. The major labels are driving headlong in the other direction, with the ass-wipes at NARAS following in their footsteps...

Back in ‘65, we had MANY "Crazy"s.  At least this year we had ONE! But this particular fish could not be shot in the barrel.  God, the guys running NARAS are the same guys running the war in Iraq.  They’re CLUELESS

It’s time to clean house.

The Net is doing this to the inept labels.

But someone has to take charge at NARAS.  Hopefully, not the same people in control of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  And they must turn the ship around.  They must realize the joke of the Grammy Awards doesn’t only hurt the television show, but the ENTIRE INDUSTRY!" (The Dixie Chicks?)

Ah yes, that was great. Don't you feel better know? Listen and decide for yourself: Dixie Chicks' and Not Ready to Make Nice vs. Gnarls Barkley's Crazy.

January 25, 2007

Snarky Post of the Week, #2: American Idol "Sucking" Sound

Just reading the BW's Bloggspotting column about a political polling company before going to bed and after following various links, came across this gem (emphasis added):Americanidollogo

"...And so we begin season six with what I’ve read will be twelve weeks of cattle calls, before we get to the good stuff...A montage of suck from America’s Heartland follows...One more montage of suck, and we’re off to the Seattle audition...A final montage of suck for the week, and we’re out. God, I hate this show."

May the snarkiness of the blogosphere never die!

September 11, 2006

Designing for Public Places

In preparation of my Seattle trip this weekend, watch this fascinating TED video with architect Joshua Prince-Ramus, who helped design the new Seattle Public Library:

September 06, 2006

Flying Pack of Wolves

July 29, 2006

Benkler Responds to Carr

In response to Carr's original post on Benkler's new book, questioning the premise that

the arrival of large-scale systems of "social production" that "are decentralized but do not rely on either the price system or a managerial structure for coordination."

Benkler himself has posted a very thorough comment in response to the critique. He eloquently addresses Calacanis' recent move to start paying the top contributors/social-bookmarkers on Netscape and also analyzes the same point that I disagreed with in Carr's post concerning the  development of the public radio infrastructure (or how radio rapidly became the fiefdom of commercial interests).

Most of us know the current, sorry state of commercial radio and we've responded by finding music via other channels ( internet radio, blogs, mp3 blog aggregators, Last.fm or Pandora, podcasts or the Podshow.com network, Rhapsody, satellite radio, etc.). Most of us are fed up with the traditional radio infrastructure for all the reasons that Benkler outlines, that the public radio spectrum was quickly hijacked from amateurs and consolidated by commercial interests.

From my final paper "Radio’s Spectrum Scarcity and the Implications on Media Freedoms Afforded to Radio Communications" for a Communications Law & Ethics class:

Early radio included a wide range of noncommercial content and commercial radio was just a tiny fraction of the whole pie (Lessig 2002, 74); “By the mid-1930s, NBC and CBS would be responsible for an astounding 97% of night-time broadcasting” (Ibid., 74). This evolution, from local and decentralized press to centralized and national press, has influenced how the law protects the media. This decentralized architecture, as Lessig points out (1998, 2001), implies that the early days of radio are very similar to the model of the internet.

\Did those commercial interests help innovate and push radio to a larger and larger audience (a boon for those previously unconnected to the outside world)? Yes, of course they did but the question is about trade-offs (opportunity costs) of the early legal decision and subsequent FCC framework for radio and other communication medium. What could radio have been or what would it like now if commercial broadcasters didn't have such a stranglehold on the medium? The more pessimistic question is that if radio was once decentralized and free (free speech not free beer), much like the current internet, and yet became the bumbling giant of the present, what does this say about the future of the internet?

That's why it's so nice to see experts in the area of technology, law, and culture (Lessig and Benkler) describe the early history of radio and how unorganically commercial radio now serves content of the lowest common denominator, not what audiences really want. From Benkler's comment to Carr:

" To say that this process represents an instance in which “that nonprofessional network was soon displaced by a smaller set of commercial radio stations that were better able to fulfill the desires of the listening public” is, shall we say, not the only way to characterize that story. "

June 27, 2006

Drinking the MySpace Kool-Aid

Cover14_071The new, July 2006 issue of WIRED magazine arrived today and damn, do I have a subscription to of GQ or what? There's Rupert Murdoch on the cover with a color and a typographic feel of some fancy, glossy men's magazine.

I've commented about MySpace a couple of times before so I don't need to belabor my feelings on the subject. Since the rest of the internet has been abuzz ever since Murdoch bought MySpace a couple months ago, there's not much new analysis out there.

All I have to say (and thanks to my brother for the line) is that it seems like WIRED is drinking the MySpace Kool-Aid again.

June 21, 2006

Cape Cod Musings from Benkler

I went to Cape Cod a couple of weekends ago and while it was fun to hang out with Tyler, Stacie, and Alex, I got shot down a lot over that weekend. There were a myriad of topics, including the Sat. night conversation at the restaurant that was a good wake-up call for me. But, I wasn't wrong in the other discussions we had.

I don't usually voice my opinion unless I think I'm well grounded (personality flaw perhaps, humility is the better way to look at it), meaning I've read or studied the topic.

Below are a couple of takeaways from Benkler's The Wealth of Networks, which I'm currently trying to finish, that prove my points more eloquently than I did over the weekend in Cape Cod. Just because I couldn't fully explain my point or argument all the way to this level of detail doesn't mean that scholarly experts like Professor Benkler haven't done their homework on the subjects of the mass media and the internet:

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1) Whether you agree with its effects, the premise here is true and critically important to understanding the future and as importantly, why the internet does fundamentally change certain economic patterns that we’ve become accustomed to over the last 50 years.

Book pg. 4 / PDF pg. 16

“First, non-proprietary strategies have always been more important in information production than they were in the production of steel or automobiles…Education, arts and sciences, political debate, and theological disputation have always been much more importantly infused with nonmarket motivations and actors than, say, the automobile industry. As the material barrier that ultimately nonetheless drove much of our information environment to be funneled through the proprietary, market-based strategies is removed, these basic nonmarket, nonproprietary, motivations and organizational forms should in principle become even more important to the information production system.”

2) Internet trumps TV because it’s a conversation, not one-way mode of communication and it strengthens the weak bonds that are never sustained in the real world

Book pg. 15/ PDF pg. 27 (emphasis added)

“A substantial body of empirical literature suggests, however, that we are in fact using the Internet largely at the expense of television, and that this exchange is a good one from the perspective of social ties. We use the Internet to keep in touch with family and intimate friends, both geographically proximate and distant. To the extent we do see a shift in social ties, it is because, in addition to strengthening our strong bonds, we are also increasing the range and diversity of weaker connections…we have become more adept at filling some of the same emotional and context-generating functions that have traditionally been associated with the importance of community with a network of overlapping social ties that are limited in duration or intensity.”

3) Mass Media doesn’t reflect or serve what the masses really want; it gives you just enough generic content to maintain the minimal interest level so that you keep on the television

 Book pg. 165-166 / PDF pg. 178-179 (emphasis added)

Mass-mediated outlets serve the tastes of the majority, expressed in some combination of cash payment and attention to advertising. Baker in Media, Markets, and Democracy shows why, however, that mass-media markets do not reflect the preferences of their audiences very well.

“Advertiser-supported media tend to program lowest-common-denominator programs, intended to “capture the eyeballs” of the largest possible number of viewers. These media do not seek to identify what viewers intensely want to watch, but tend to clear programs that are tolerable enough to viewers so that they do not switch off their television.”

“Small increases in the number of outlets continue to serve large clusters of low-intensity preferences—that is, what people find acceptable. A new channel that is added will more often try to take a bite out of a large pie represented by some lowest-common-denominator audience segment than to try to serve a new niche market. Only after a relatively high threshold number of outlets are reached do advertiser-supported media have sufficient reason to try to capture much smaller and higher-intensity preference clusters—what people are really interested in.”

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Taken together, my main point is that Alex was wrong in his assertions about the mainstream media and about the social value of the internet. I value your opinion, I really do (as evidenced by the homework that you assigned me), but you're wrong when it comes to these two topics.

9/3/06 UPDTAE: I forgot to include my Flickr photos from the Cape Cod trip.