Video>Summery
Wednesday, September 5th, 2007
A subverted travelogue of our adventures in France, Spain and America which turns out to be a pretty wonderful place.
The panel picker just launched. If you'd like to see these panels happen, then lay 5 stars on 'em. And have your pals do the same. It would make me very happy.
• Gossip isn't just for breakfast anymore. It's the new news, and at the heart of the much of the new content, viral marketing, the new investment analysis and the new business model. Do we have time for facts? Owen Thomas from Valleywag will be on the panel as will some very different folks.
• What Will Replace the Studio Model Online? Somewhere between Goo Tube and Hollywood, there are new studio models trying to be born. With most models working to serve advertisers or tech needs of users, who is serving the creator's point of view?
Of course, The Heather Gold Show will be there too…
Other than Scoble and Goodnight Burbank, I was the only person I know i=of in the room actualy making stuff, and the only one making it long-form net-first. This point of view changes my interests and what I see:
I'm bl/vlogging a geek / biz conference with a strong media twist this week. I'll let you know when I'm doing some live streaming commentary. I'm not sure how quickly Ill post video. For now, I'm blogging and twittering (twitter name - heathr)
My thoughts on the coming more humanly/communicative company:
Sales> service
Marketing> community management / relationships
operations>integration
I'm looking forward to judging tonight's NewTeeVee's Pier Screening . They offered me the Simon Cowell Role, but I don't think I have the hand hair to qualify.
You an always clink on the videocategory link to see a lot of my videos, but here are some of my favourites (I know that's not the way Americans spell it, but it's the way Canadian-Americans do):
I've become a regular reader of Andrew Sullivan's excellent blog.
Andrew is a proud conservative and I am not, but I'm finding his blog a better way to track politics than even the New York Times. He's struggling with principle against the creeping fascism and pro-torture position of his party, the Republicans.
I wish I had the same level of interest in the details of politics to be as effective a voice about the Democrats. I consider myself an independent and registered that way. How deep are the Democrats problems? They couldn't get a Jewish lesbian Canadian immigrant to register Democrat.
The truth is that I really am not so attached to what I call myself. I never have been. My sense of myself is deeper an probably more complex than the "tags" lesbian, straight, bisexual and politically I don't find Republican or Democrat appealing.
I am concerned about honesty, integrity, caring, intelligence and effective problem solving wherever it rears its head. I don't believe any one group has a lock on truthfulness or a right way. To be attached to that is similar to the kind of religious fundamentalism that has created such pain in the world in the name of the safety of those who will blindly agree there is only one right way.
Perhaps that's why I find myself drawn to the Ron Paul clips Andrew Sullivan has been posting. He's running for the Republican Presidential nomination. I disagree with a lot of Ron Paul's political views but at least he seems genuine, human and principled, rather than a brand created by marketing team. I would love to see someone within the Democratic nomination race speak as plainly to that party.
And I would love to see, more than anything, government stop being a broker for round-trip (decidedly unfree market) financial deals, whether it's through debt financing a developing country or creating a massive wealth transfer via war.
Watch the show (5 Min)How does one become self-made? Guests: Caterina Fake, co-founder of Flickr, Dave Chappelle opener W. Kamau Bell and celebrated psychologist, activist and painter Dr Lillian Rubin (The Transcendent Child).
My friend Judith Zissman went on a family vacation. She lost her camera. She made a blog. And then really unexpected things began to happen, including: rude Canadians, polite Americans and angry bloggers.