Archive - 2013
February 5th
Thinking About Conversations.
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 02/05/2013 - 20:45This afternoon, I read a blog post by David Weinberg, Are all good conversations echo chambers?. He was discussing a blog post by Bora Zivkovic, Commenting threads: good, bad, or not at all. They are both very good blog posts, well worth the read.
David spends a bit of time at the end of his post talking about theories of communication. In particular, David says
I presume that such a theory would include the notion... that conversations have aims, and that when a conversation is open to the entire world … those aims should be explicitly stated
When I talk to people about social media, I often talk about the aim. When doing social media for an organization, it is important to stay on task and make sure that the communications are inline with the organizations mission. Another key aspect to talk about is audience. Who are you communicating with? This includes understanding the motivations and abilities of your interlocutors.
On the other hand, I often talk about social media as a conversation at a party, or perhaps even at the office. It is one of the reasons I like tweets about what people had for breakfast. When I run into a friend, whether it be at work, at a conference, or wherever, I don't start off immediately with the topic I want to discuss. If I see David tomorrow, I'll probably start off by talking about how it's been a long time since I've seen him. Ask how things are going, maybe tell him a little bit about what has been going on in my life, before getting around to discussing his latest blog post.
Now you could say that part of the aim of such repartee is to strengthen rapport be the the participants. That is an aim of the beginning of a conversation. Yet it illustrates that the aim of a conversation may be very broad based and fluid.
Likewise, what is the aim of discussions around the dinner table? At the Hynes household discussions can be very wide-ranging. The aim of the discussions are perhaps primarily about having fun and enjoying one another's company. But there can be subservient aims, like learning something new or stimulating creativity.
I think this may fit into the research that Bora is writing about. The tone of the discussion in comments communicates the emerging aim of the comments. It may be for the sheer joy of flaming or troll baiting. It may be for the joy of learning something new or sparking creativity. Depending on how the comments are approached, the emerging aim may end up being closely in line with the aim of the person who wrote the blog post or vastly divergent.
With this, I want to come back to David's concern about echo chambers. It is why I've been talking about the roles of learning and creativity. Echo chambers seem to reinforce already established views as opposed to being an opportunity for learning or creativity. I'm not sure I know exactly what produces creativity, but it has always seemed to come from when very different ideas collide. We have some wonderful collisions like this around the dinner table, but I've rarely seen such collisions in echo chambers.
Will these ideas collide with those of David or Bora in any interesting way? That would be wonderful. If not, the simple joy of reconnecting virtually with some old friends might be a sufficient aim.
February 4th
The Party
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 02/04/2013 - 21:46"It's been a rough couple of months for a lot of us," I said as I compared my mother's recent death with the recent death of another attendee's mother. We were at the Middletown Remix Launch Party in a glassed in room on the roof of the Community Health Center in Middletown. The sky was overcast so the lights of the Arrigoni Bridge sparkled unassisted by starlight.
The Middletown Remix project encourages people to perceive their community differently, just as the death of a parent causes us to look at life differently. Listen. Record the sounds that strike you. Think about how these sounds can be combined with others. These sounds, these perceptions, these experiences can become material that we remix to create something new, something wonderful, especially when we collaborate with others.
The launch party wound down and people went their different ways, each carrying their experiences of the evening with them. The emptying room felt a little bit like the emptying room at a funeral reception. We were all left along with our memories, and the sounds of city.
February 3rd
The Second Screen
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 02/03/2013 - 17:33I don't watch a lot of television. If I do watch television, it is likely to be something on the Roku, most likely something from Netflix. I haven't yet watched 'House of Cards' on Netflix, but I'm hearing good stuff about it. It is interesting to see changes in who is producing video content.
When I do watch television, I like to do it as a social event and I've tweeted about various shows for years. Now, there are a growing number of 'second screen' apps and websites. I installed Zeebox on my phone quite a while ago, but have never ended up using it. Today, I tried to use it during the Animal Planet Puppy Bowl, but without any success.
The other day, I got an invitation to Tweet.TV Initially, I didn't find Animal Planet, but that was because it had me defaulting to some television system in Pennsylvania. When I configured it to my local cable company, Animal planet came up and I started tweeting about Puppy Bowl.
Tweet.TV has gamification. You score points for connecting, tweeting, etc. You can use these points to pick up deals or freebies, similar to Klout Perks. So far, none of the perks have really caught my attention.
So, as we approach the big game, we'll see what social media tools I'll use for my second screen. What are you using as a second screen during the big game?
February 2nd
A Super Bowl Etymological Palimpsest
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 02/02/2013 - 19:58The Super Bowl's tomorrow. I look out the window at the brown leaves and small patches of ferns, still green, on the hillside beside our house, where the snow ought to be. Yeah, I'll watch the game tomorrow. Like many of my friends who love words more than sports, I'll watch the plays and the score, but I'm more interested in the ads.
Young men and women in ad agencies across the country have struggled to put as much meaning and creativity into these ads as possible. I've spent time trying to pick out the details of the ads I've seen so far, sympathy for the devil, being happy as Priscilla and her friends seek Coke.
It makes me think about the stories that have led to this moment, when Cæcilius Calvert, Lord Baltimore, was granted 12 million acres in the New world.. Lord Baltimore came from Baile an Tí Mhóir, the town with the big house, in good old Catholic Ireland. They named the new colony after Henrietta Maria, the Queen Consort, another good Catholic.
One of my best friends from college grew up a good Catholic in Cleveland. I suspect he'll be rooting for the 49ers after his beloved Browns slipped out of town to become the Baltimore Ravens.
The Ravens, how'd they come up with that name? Was it from that great poet who lived his final days in Baltimore? "Once upon a midnight dreary…"
The Raven, one of several larger-bodied members of the genus Corvus. This genus includes the crow, which, in Irish mythology is associated with Morrigan, the goddess of war and death. "Nevermore…"
Then, there is the city named after St. Francis of Assisi and the team named after prospectors who came to that city a hundred and sixty years ago and the more interestingly named state, California.
The name California is most commonly believed to have derived from The Adventures of Esplandián written back in 1510, describing a place inhabited by black Amazons and ruled by Queen Calafia. Queen Calafia was a pagan who led an army of women warriors and a large flock of trained griffins in a Muslim battle against the Christians who were defending Constantinople; not Istanbul, but Constantinople. The Christians had a good defense, blocking several Muslim field goals. As the clock ran out, Queen Calafia's team is defeated. She became a free agent, converted to Christianity and got married. Yet the name is still relates back to the Arabic khalifa, or religious state leader.
Well, I dreamed I saw the knights
In armor coming,
Saying something about a queen.
We've come a long way from the black Amazons, through the gold diggers, to the football players of today. Perhaps, some centuries hence, people will try to understand what this American gladiatorial event was all about, the way people today read Edgar Allen Poe or Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo. This blog post will probably be long lost, which is perhaps just as well since it only captures a small part of the etymological palimpsest that the game will be played against.
Super Bowl Ad Semiotics
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 02/02/2013 - 09:56Last night, I watched Coke's Super Bowl ad with my eleven year old daughter. Before I brought up the ad, however, I showed her clips from Lawrence of Arabia, Blazing Saddles, Mad Max and Priscilla Queen of the Desert. She would have appreciated the ad anyway, but knowing those four movies helped.
We also watched the VW ad, and listened to some Bob Marley and a little bit of the Partridge family. It provided a context to understand the ad within. We also listened to the Rolling Stones, "Sympathy for the Devil".
This morning, I saw the Smilow Cancer Center ad. Fiona is well acquainted with flash mobs, knows the inside of the train station in New Haven, so she picked up most of what was going on and simply needed to know the song Closer to Free by the Bodeans. We also talked a little bit about Party of Five.
We also watched the Samsung ad which apparently Breaking Bad fans should appreciate. However, I've never seen Breaking Bad and it really didn't mean much to me.
It made me wonder, what other symbols are embedded in the Super Bowl adds that I'm missing? For that matter, what other ads have been pre-released that are worth watching and have an interesting story?