Archive for February 2010


Book 6: The Giver

February 23rd, 2010 — 7:56pm

Yup, that’s right; The Giver by Lois Lowry.  In what was apparently the surprise of the century to some of my friends, I had never read this book until now.  I know, right?  Judging by the responses I got, mine must’ve been the only middle school where this wasn’t required reading.

Now that I’m a part of the herd I will join them in saying that it’s a really good book, both for kids and adults.  Since I’m sure you weren’t like me in missing this book for the first 25 years of your life I’ll skip the plot summary and commentary.  I really liked the overriding theme of a kid coming of age, learning the dangers of choice, and then accepting that it’s the only thing that makes life worth living.  Sage advice no matter your age, and I think the end of chapter 22 sums it all up.

Then, when he had a choice, he had made the wrong one: the choice to leave.  And now he was starving.

But if he had stayed . . .

His thoughts continued.  If he had stayed, he would have starved in other ways.  He would have lived a life hungry for feelings, for color, for love.

And Gabriel?  For Gabriel there would have been no life at all.  So there had really not been a choice.

I just hope Jonas enjoyed the sled ride as much as the memory.

The Giver

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TED: Philip K. Howard

February 23rd, 2010 — 1:50pm

“Self-consciousness is the enemy of accomplishment.”

That’s just one of the great quotes in this 18 minute talk by Philip Howard entitled “Four ways to fix a broken legal system.”

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Book 5: Adventures in the Screen Trade

February 21st, 2010 — 5:05pm

I know that I’ve been lazy on updating my book list, but I have been reading.  This book actually came from a recommendation by Bill Simmons.  A couple years ago he started a page on ESPN Page 2 where he would review the best sports books.  I loved this and it’s actually what got me back into reading again this summer.  I read a couple and still have The Last Shot and Loose Balls sitting around to read.  Anyway, I sent him an email and a message on twitter about liking the list and asking him to start it up again.  For a short period of time he did, making some suggestions on his twitter account.

You’ll see a few more of his suggestions show up, but Adventures in the Screen Trade was my first choice.  Now, it looks like a long book, and it is.  But a lot of that is due to the two screenplays he has in there: one that he drafted from a short story of his also published here, and then the full screenplay he wrote for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.  Seeing as how I have no desire to learn how to write screenplays, I skipped over those and the instructional parts at the very end.  I just read about his stories and experiences.  And they were fantastic.

He has a lot of very entertaining stories about actors he’s worked with, scripts he’s seen altered, interactions between people on the set, etc. but I don’t want to ruin them all here for you.  Nothing I write in describing them will do them justice.  What I will do, however, is talk about a few other things from the book that I liked a lot.

It gets started early too.  Page 5 talks about the early days of Hollywood and how everyone had to license from Thomas Edison because of his patents.  Not many people had the money to do that, or the distribution network to really be noticed, so they all just pirated it and didn’t pay royalties instead.  That’s part of why they located out West.  As Goldman puts it

Sure, Hollywood had all that great shooting weather.  But more than that, being three thousand miles west made it easier to steal.

And look at them now, fighting tooth and nail to stop people all over the world from being able to watch their products rather than finding new distribution methods.  Hardly shocking, but you wonder what goes through their minds with things like this.

There also times when you can see how obvious it is that this book was written in 1983, the year before I was born.  Here are his thoughts on Bambi in the context of cartoon movies of the time

Bambi took all of our heads off.  Because, primarily, they don’t make movies like that anymore – animation stinks these days because of costs.  It’s all jerky and when the mouths move they don’t coincide with the words and the color is bland.  My guess is that Bambi works better now than it did when it came out in 1942, and I think it’s only going to improve as the quality of animation continues to deteriorate.

Looking back on this, it is pretty true.  I can’t remember a cartoon movie from my very early childhood that was actually that good.  However, then Disney brought the game back, hit it’s stride in 1989 and pumped out this murderer’s row of 6 straight animated movies: Little Mermaid (1989), DuckTales The Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp (1990), The Rescuers Down Under (1990), Beauty and the Beast (1991), Aladdin (1992), The Lion King (1994).  Damn.  Not a bad run.  Computer animation wasn’t far behind with Toy Story coming out in 1996 and then animated movies were saved.  Millions of kids are thankful that he was wrong about this.

This is getting long, but yeah, between the interesting facts he points out (I had no idea who does what on a Hollywood set) and the amazing stories from working on movies like All The President’s Men and The Right Stuff I would put this book at the top of the list for your next book purchase.  It’s available used for $3 on Amazon.  Just do yourself a favor and hit the link.

Adventures in the Screen Trade

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The French are Good at Marketing

February 14th, 2010 — 10:09am

Once Charlie Davies went over to FC Sochaux I figured I’d utilize my little French reading ability to check up on his progress at www.fcsochaux.fr

That worked pretty well for me, but I know there were plenty of English speaking fans who couldn’t decipher the website, and were therefore at the mercy of the American press, who doesn’t care, and online translators, which don’t work well, to try and get their Chuck D news. I had actually emailed the people at the website asking if they were going to come out with an English version (yeah elementary French knowledge!) and they confirmed that they were working on one.

However, after Davies got injured I had little reason to go back to the page very often and, when I did, I must have missed the new UK/American flags at the top that allow me to switch it to English.  Very well done Sochaux!

But, even more impressive, check out the subtle difference of the right sidebar between the French and English pages.

French

English

The English version not only has a video tribute to Charlie, because we care about him obviously, but they use a picture of him in the ad to get you to go over to the team store, rather than a generic jersey in the French page.  Very well done.  If it didn’t cost like $50 to get something shipped over here, I’d probably buy something like this or this just for their effort.

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B.o.B. – Nothin on You

February 8th, 2010 — 8:22pm

I can’t stop listening to this song.

A+ work again Atlanta music scene.

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Rob Burnett gets it

February 8th, 2010 — 1:23pm

Rob Burnett is the executive producer for “The Late Show With David Letterman” and did a short interview with CNN about the Super Bowl advertisement featuring Letterman, Oprah and Jay Leno.

Given all the back-and-forth amongst late night hosts recently it was certainly a surprise to see these two get together and do a good-natured commercial.  Burnett pretty much sums up the situation in one sentence though.

The bottom line is, if you’re a comedian and you have the chance to do something funny in front of 100 million people, you should do it.

Incredibly simple, and yet more than a little insightful.

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Book 4: Have a Little Faith

February 6th, 2010 — 6:47pm

Book four actually tricked me.  I had planned for this latest Mitch Albom book to be a fiction story, like his last few (I had read For One More Day a while ago).  Turns out, that little “A True Story” tag on the front was actually correct.  So much for maintaining my balance with fiction/non-fiction.

The book is similar to his most famous effort, Tuesdays with Morrie, in that it’s basically a story of two people (one in Morrie’s case), told through Albom’s interactions with them over a period of time.  There’s also enough back story thrown in when necessary that you get a good picture of who the characters are.  The two people the book focuses on are Albert Lewis, or “The Reb” as he is known in the book, who was Albom’s lone rabbi for the first 50 years of his life and Henry Convington, founder of the I Am My Brother’s Keeper ministries in Detroit.

Most of the book talks about struggles with faith, who has it, who doesn’t, who loses it, and how some regain it.  The conversations with The Reb were enlightening if you’ve never talked with someone who was secure enough in their faith to discuss it without being defensive.  Meanwhile, Henry’s story was more about falling prey to the temptations that come with growing up poor in a bad neighborhood, trying to turn your life around (a couple times) after hitting rock bottom, and, in my favorite couple pages, doubting that it’s possible to ever redeem yourself after having done so much wrong but still doing as much good as you can to try.

If you liked Tuesdays With Morrie, odds are you’ll also like this and it will probably make you cry once or twice.  If you didn’t like that book or find Albom’s style of writing to be off-putting, then you’re not going to get anything here.

Have a Little Faith: A True Story

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On an Education Kick

February 5th, 2010 — 2:52pm

I’ve always had an interest in education.  I grew up with a mother who was a high school math teacher and is now an elementary school counselor.  Her father was a professor at University of Kentucky, Tulane University, and University of Georgia.  My aunt has been a teacher for as long as I’ve been alive.  And obviously there was my summer internship at Flat World Knowledge where I got to work with a company that is designing open-source college textbooks.  There’s a lot of history to explain why I’m so close to it.

Lately, however, I seem to be spending even more time thinking about the education system and ways to change it.  I’ve also been reading a lot more articles that have been linked to me about schools and students and the challenges they face.  Here’s a collection of some in case you’re interested:

A Peek at Apple’s Plans to Re-invent Textbooks (Gizmodo)
Apple iPad vs. Kindle DX: Which is Better for Education (PC World)
5 Reasons Why the iPad Won’t Change Higher Education (PC World)
Annual Poll of Freshmen Shows Effect of Recession (NY Times)
Open Educational Resources (Opensource.com)
CC Salon NYC: Opening Education (Creative Commons)
An Educational Extinction Event (Dr. Dick Lipton, GT Professor)
Free Education Can Be Profitable (The corridor of uncertainty)
Universities Find Free Classes Don’t Hurt Enrollment (Ars Technica)

Whew, that’s a lot.

I’m not really sure if I’ve been actively searching these out more, or if it just so happens that more are showing up in front of me.  I’m also not sure if it really matters since I end up reading them all anyway.  Whatever the cause, I find myself pushing a lot more in that direction so maybe I’ve finally picked an industry to work with.

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Book 3: Rules for Revolutionaries

February 2nd, 2010 — 7:13am

The third book in my quest also doubles as the first book I had to read for school. There will be a few more of these (and a couple I read that I don’t count) but they probably won’t be as interesting as this one.

Guy Kawasaki is pretty well-regarded for what he does, which is basically tout the value of companies he likes. He started doing it at Apple and now he does it to help promising young companies raise venture money. I read a piece by him recently where he jokes about how often he gets mentioned as an entrepreneurial thought leader even though he’s never started a company. I’m willing to be that in private he’ll admit that he deserves a little more credit than that, because the things he shares can be eye-opening for people new to the game.

This book does a great job going over what needs to be in your DNA to start a new venture. It’s obviously written for the standard startup company, but we were supposed to read it as an instruction manual for non-profits/social enterprises. So, from that perspective, here are a couple passages I found enlightening:

Q. What is the starting point of evangelism?
A. The starting point is a great product or service (DICEE) that empowers people and improves their lives. Customers must be able to say, “This is good. This makes the world a better place.”

This comes from the first FAQ in chapter 5, “Make Evangelists, Not Sales.” Honestly, I could have copied this entire chapter because it’s that good and relevant to both for-profit and non-profit enterprises. When you can create evangelists you create salesmen. Only they’re salesmen who don’t want to get paid and feel as though it’s their duty to change the mind of anyone who disagrees. Sure, that could be annoying for the non-believers, but it’s great for you as the owner of the company.

This is a prime example of the principle, “Don’t ask, just watch.” When you ask people what they want, they think about how they should answer; they want to look smart; and they are influenced by what other people say.

I wanted to write a whole other blog post about this topic. I was gonna title it the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle of Marketing to prove by nerdiness and pontificate on my choice to study marketing when there is so much research out there that shows people are too messed up in the head to get anything worthwhile out of it. Oh well.

I’d say this is the best book I’ve read so far, but that’s mostly because of how directly it relates to the things that interest me. Also, I’m pretty sure I was the last person on this bandwagon so I doubt you haven’t read it if you’re interested in this space. However, if I’m wrong, let me try to be the final person to push you over the edge.

Rules For Revolutionaries: The Capitalist Manifesto for Creating and Marketing New Products and Services

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A Goal for Today

February 1st, 2010 — 12:41pm

I  have nearly 800 “favorited” items in my Google Reader.  That’s absurd.  There are not 796 blog posts I’ve read in the past 3 years that a) I need to have cataloged for quick reference and b) I can’t remember enough about off the top of my head to find through a basic web search.

I want this to be more of a collection of posts that are the best written, most informative, etc.  Not just the collection of funny posts, cool products for sale, and soccer highlights that it has become.

The goal is to get it down to 100 favorites or fewer.  It may take a few passes.

Also, I’ve set up a separate page to track my book reviews for the 50 books I’m reading this year.  If, for some unknown reason, you want to go back and see some of the books I read you can always check it out here.

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