Showing posts with label hep to the jive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hep to the jive. Show all posts

Friday, February 20, 2009

Things that rhyme with turtle: curdle, fertile, girdle...


Wordle!


What a neat toy. This site generates word clouds from any massive block of text you feed it. Below is a word cloud built from the content of my blog:



Way cool.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Making YouTube work for you

This is exactly the kind of video media people need to post to YouTube:



In a little under three minutes, these two WGN anchors showed their unique personalities. They've thoroughly choreographed this handshake during years of commercial breaks. The video is quirky enough to make you laugh - but shows subtle dedication and professionalism.

At the end of the day, what can one local news station offer that other stations can't? All local news stations offers news, but many watch one station in particular for the people they recognize. Make your anchors likable and you'll keep all eyes on you.

YouTube is a way to make yourself stand out. Don't be surprised if this video goes viral.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

The only Good thing at Starbucks

I normally can't be bothered to stop at a Starbucks, but halfway between Gainesville and Pensacola with the sun sinking low in the sky, the promise of caffeine was the only thing keeping my eyes open. So I stopped at a Starbucks in Tallahassee because, well, I do kind of like the Doubleshot on Ice. Starbucks has good espresso; everything else there sucks.

While waiting for the barista to dissolve unhealthy amounts of espresso and sugar into far too little milk, I picked up a copy of the Good Sheet, a fold-out newsprint magazine about the size of a CD case. A Starbucks exclusive, I might add. Here it is pictured.

I'd never heard of the Good Sheet before. I'm holding issue No. 11 in my hand. According to a short description on its inside cover, "Good is a collaboration of individuals, businesses, and nonprofits pushing the world forward. We make a magazine, produce videos, curate a website, and host events around the country." Good's magazine and website operate under a Radiohead-esque pay-what-you-want subscription policy, 100% of which goes to the non-profit of your choice.

According to the VP of Marketing at Starbucks, the Good Sheet started as a way to get people to talk about election-related topics like health care, education and gas prices. Now that the election is over, this issue attempts to spark discussion about our consumer culture (it's titled "Holiday Economy").

But this trendy, cute magazine got me thinking about something else. It caught my attention because it's small, strange and simple. Its design calls out to the Internet generation--my generation. We like colors and short blurbs and pictures. We don't want to analyze; we want the gist, the meat. And this magazine--littered with ASCII art, diagrams and ten-word captions--tries to satify our information-addicted society's hunger for instant understanding.

Also, I can put the little guy in my back pocket and take it with me. Like an iPod.