Or, get your candy ass handed to you. Loren of 1938 media is, from what I remember, a pretty tall guy.
Anyway, Loren’s looking for a Web 2.0 fight club. If you’re looking to hand him some two-fisted justice, give him a ping. :)
Or, get your candy ass handed to you. Loren of 1938 media is, from what I remember, a pretty tall guy.
Anyway, Loren’s looking for a Web 2.0 fight club. If you’re looking to hand him some two-fisted justice, give him a ping. :)
I don’t watch video podcasts as a whole. I don’t really have the patience for it. I do watch 1938 media from time to time because the videos are short and I actually had the chance to meet Loren Feldman in Toronto at the Mesh Conference earlier this year. As I said before: even though he comes off as being loud and abrasive, he’s also a genuinely funny and nice guy.
Which was all the more shocking when I saw this video, where he essentially does blackface / minstrel - type comedy for about 5 minutes. I mean, wow. He put a lot of effort into that video. Transitions, video clips, the whole 9 yards.
And it was all the more sobering (no pun intended) to find out that Loren went into rehab shortly thereafter.
Which, in turn, was followed by this video that was shortly posted some time ago as he’s returned from rehab. I’m not so cynical to believe that what Loren’s posted was an act. He sure as hell doesn’t look like he’s acting, and as I’m the kind of person who is inclined to believe folks (at least for the first time), my wishes do go out to him and his family.
Addiction — no matter what its form — can be devastating.
Best of luck, man.
I usually love meeting bloggers in person. For me, certainly, its a chance to talk about things that I rarely get a chance to talk about with friends in my own social circle — and I think my wife has heard my crackpot theories about Digg about once too many times. But as I bask in the warm togetherness of happy memories, there is one funny downside to meeting bloggers in person.
And that’s when you actually do … its hard to write about them critically thereafter.
Take Dell’s most recent gaffe, for example.
I was going to write about it one way — but, well, some recent experiences made me almost change my mind. For example, I’ve found that when you meet bloggers in person they’re all reasonably normal in their sense of humour, outlook on life, and how they like to keep their sense of personal space. Happily, everyone I’ve met seems normal in that regard.
And that’s the problem.
Sort of.
Before, you were happily analyzing what they might say or do with a coldly critical eye, without a care in the world about throw out a jovial remark or three in a blog post, sometimes personal, sometimes not.
Now — you kind of second guess yourself. Wait — they aren’t really thinking that, were they? Hold on, perhaps *this* is what they meant. I was going to write “hackneyed, tired and pedestrian”, but perhaps I should rather substitute “… this was not, actually, their best effort?”
At Mesh, for example, I met Lionel Menchaca, the guy who blogs for Dell at Direct2Dell. A brilliantly humble fellow. To be honest, you can’t help but like the guy. Now, recently there was a dust up around how a former manager at Dell released some thoughts about the purchasing experience at one of those Dell kiosks you might see at a Mall. It was published at the Consumerist, Dell got upset, asked it to be taken down — and voila. Streisand Effect.
[where trying to remove a piece of information causes more backlash and publicity than the initial offending piece of information]
Good ol’ Lionel has a post apologizing for their goof up, titled “23 Confessions”.
Now, I think that there is a lot to learn from Dell, in the way that they’ve engaged their consumer base to try and turn things around. Furthermore, Lionel’s Mea Culpa on behalf of Dell is the right way to do things. Do it quickly, do it honestly, and keep the conversation open on all frequencies.
That’s good.
The post, “23 Confessions”?
The pre-Mesh Tony [who, let’s say was in a deliciously foul mood] might have said “this piece is nothing more than a thinly veiled attempt at damage control, and in the context of their prior efforts, is seriously lacking; moreover, several of these confessions are not “confessions” at all, but unabashedly contrived attempts at selling more of Dell’s stuff.”
The post-Mesh Tony, on the other hand, might say something like “Dell’s making a good attempt at customer relations, and while some of these confessions aren’t quite confessions — its clear that they’re meant to be taken tongue in cheek. Good for Lionel.”
And I suppose what this all *really* means is that its been an epiphany for me as a blogger. Journalists, for example, have had to deal with interpersonal conflicts between what needs to be put down on paper and the relationships they have made with people in industry to get the story — relationships that need to continue to allow a certain degree of access that is critical for their continued success.
Bloggers, on the other hand, particularly ones that blog about topic events, may never get close to the participants or newsmakers in their field of interest. They write “at a distance”, and I think, in some respects, that its a good thing. It keeps the ideas and opinions impartial — or certainly more impartial than if you’re in the thick of things.
Now that I’ve had the pleasure of meeting a few interesting individuals in the area that I write about, will that change what I’m going to write? Will it water down my opinions, or cause me to pause as I prepare a particularly acerbic post?
Well, I really, really hope not.
Rather, I’m hoping that as I mature as a blogger, that I’ll be able to divorce my opinions of the people that I meet from their actions, their words and their deeds. You know how it is — hate the sin, love the sinner and all of that. After all, at the end of the day, they are all real people who are trying to make a go of things in their own way. Yes, even Ted Murphy, CEO of PayPerPost, who is vilified in the blogosphere is actually quite affable, honest and transparent about exactly what he intends to do. And Loren Feldman, who can appear brash and abrasive, is actually a really nice guy. Heck, even though he was prepared to hate Mike Arrington, it seems like even he was taken aback by how easy going (and real) Mike Arrington was.
So, will it be a little harder to write some posts about some people? Probably.
But will it stop me from telling it like I see it?
Not a chance. ;)
Some of whom I met, and some who I observed. All were interesting in their own ways.
1. Mike Arrington doesn’t want to be thought of as a guru — he wants to be first to report things. Being outrageous helps him, but why are you paying attention to him or what he’s saying? He’s not a guru or anything.
2. Tom Williams and Austin Hill *are* inspiring.
3. Loren Feldman is a funny guy and has a uniquely sharp talent of cutting through the BS in a funny way. That’s valuable. And funny. But I mentioned that already, didn’t I?
4. Paul Sullivan is a smart guy who knows a lot about journalism — and who is as enthusiastic as hell about it for being in the business as long as he has.
5. Steve Herrman has never been to Toronto or Canada until Mesh. I hope he had a good time. ;)
6. Ethan Kaplan is wicked smart. The way that he talks so smartly and so abstractly about — let’s face it, pirated music — makes it sound like thesis material. And it probably is for someone somewhere.
7. Richard Edelman, in spite of the Wal-mart fiasco, seemed really genuine about a desire for transparency and authenticity in public relations — in a this-guy-isn’t-faking-it kind of way. I mean it.
8. Jim Buckmaster only had one thing to say: “we do what the users want”. In spite of the wonder that is Craigslist, there wasn’t a lot of sophistication to his message. On the other hand, is that any surprise from someone described as a social anarchist or a communist?
9. Jeff Howe seems like a cool dude, and whose message about crowdsourcing was interesting and important: crowdsourcing is good for filtering. Not so much for certain kinds of content creation — like journalism.
10. Will Pate, in spite of his youthful looks, knows a hella lot about creating and maintaining community. How old is this guy anyway? :)
11. Lionel Menchaca was so down-to-earth and self-effacing about Dell’s community initiatives its a wonder that he’s a face of Dell. But he is. Which is amazing.
12. Ted Murphy isn’t the most evil man in the world, and PayPerPost isn’t. Well, probably isn’t. But he’s actually a pretty personable dude who really believes in what he does.
13. Mike Masnick is also wicked smart. I’m not sure who would win in a face off between him and Ethan Kaplan, but one thing’s for sure: *my* brain would explode.
More:
Panelist discussion with Loren Feldman, Rachel Skylar, Cynthia Brumfield: