Thursday, April 12, 2007

Speaking of iJustine...

Favorite Twitter of the day, from Jason Calcanis:

"Is ijustine a real person or a lonelygirl type thing?"

(Thanks to Jeff Persch for that heads-up...)

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Monday, March 19, 2007

Packing for VON

I'm packing my luggage and checking my must-bring list for Video on the Net, which starts today in San Jose. I'm flying in tonight and will be speaking on Wednesday morning, at a panel entitled "Meet the Producers," along with Steve Garfield and Brian Conley of Alive in Baghdad. It should be an interesting, well-rounded selection of points of view.

Since STBD resumes new episodes starting next Monday, and I'll be in San Jose for four days this week, I'm currently trying to figure out how to squeeze 12 G of video onto my 3 G-free laptop so I can edit on the go. It seems some backing off is in order...

How time flies: at the last VON in September, I was editing the 2nd episode of this STBD season. This week, I'm editing the 21st...

More updates from VON both here and at my personal blog throughout the week -- or add me (or STBD) on Twitter.

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Monday, February 19, 2007

Why Old Media Is Becoming Extinct -- And Why You Might be Next

My best friend hasn't had a raise in 3 years. That's because he works for a TV news station in a small market. He's been laboring under ever-changing workplace conditions, and frequently taking on the responsibilities of others (who have quit or been fired). That's more work for the same amount of money.

Why?

Because the station is trying to cut costs. It already has to overhaul its entire process to become HD compliant by 2009, so additional investments -- like employee morale or new market exploration -- must be postponed.

We talked last night about all the cool things his station COULD be doing, but isn't -- ways in which new media could be utilized to bring in a whole new audience AND make the station more relevant. But, as he explains, the powers that be in his company see the web as the enemy, something that steals the TV news viewers, and they see no reason to invest more money in that losing proposition.

This discussion reminds me of a video I just saw today at New Assignment -- a "MAC vs. PC"-esque debate between two Chicago newspapers that sums up exactly why old media is lumbering toward extinction.

Before you or I get too smug about being ahead of the curve, we should instead stop and ask ourselves the same question: namely, what IS that hot new thing everyone is buzzing about, and how AREN'T we using it?

For example, I don't use Twitter or Groovr. I see no reason to, based upon the way I currently live my life. But then I freeze in my tracks because that's the same kind of statement I would have expected my grandparents to make about email 10 years ago.

With the speed the world changes today, we're all one trend away from becoming our grandparents -- or worse, extinct.

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