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Fiona and the Governor


Fiona and the Governor
Originally uploaded by Aldon.

Today, Kim and I drove Gov. Dean around Connecticut. As we dropped him off, he posed for a quick shot with Fiona.

Click on the image below to watch a brief interview I did with Gov. Dean at the same stop.


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Folk dancing at Fiona's Birthday Party



We had a folk dance for Fiona's birthday party. Here are a few clips.

Transforming media

I’ve been spending a lot of time recently thinking about how the media affects the way we think. I’ve been writing a bit about The Ad and the Ego. It is a great film about how advertising shapes our thinking in terms of telling us who we should be, or at least who the advertisers want us to be.

Yet there is more to it than explicit messages about what we should buy and the implicit messages about how we should view ourselves. The pace of advertisements has changed over the years. Years ago, advertisements were often 60 seconds long, and sometimes longer. They were more ponderous. Now, the ten second spots through the longer thirty second spots throw as much information at us as quickly as possible, before we click our remote to mute the audio or to change channels. Is this rapid-fire information changing the way we think? Is the medium the message?

I’ve thought more about this based on a blog post by Chris, whom I met last week when I visited Colin McEnroe’s Blogging Class. Chris wrote, Aldon's mind seemed to work very much like the web... He seems to have adapted his thinking patterns to the online world in which he is immersed.”

I’ve often wondered how much does the times makes the man and how much does the man makes the times. Perhaps the same applies to the relationship of media to media consumer. Do I hop from hyperlinked thought to hyperlinked thought because of how much time I spend online, or do I spend as much time online, because I’ve always hopped from thought to thought.

I’ve heard people claim that the television viewership by children is increasing cases of ADHD. Yet on the other hand, I’ve often heard it suggested that the increase in ADHD diagnoses is because of increased testing. When I was young, one of my nicknames was ‘fiddle fingers’. I was always fiddling with something. Later on in life, before I started spending a lot of time online, I was well known for tossing out a ‘collection of thoughts’ in any discussion I was part of and I would take notes at meetings, not to remember what was said, but just to keep track of all of the thoughts that would tumble out of my head so that I could get them in when I got a chance to speak. Have I gravitated to hyperlinked organization simply because that is how my mind worked in the first place?

I suspect that there is a little bit of both in there. This isn’t a new question. The events at West Nickel Mines, PA a couple weeks ago have really got me thinking about this. One of these days, I’ll write my great blog entry about this, but for the time being let me toss out a few thoughts. The Amish have always sought to separate themselves from the world around them. I’ve always thought of it in terms of Romans 12:2 “Don't be conformed to this world…” You look at advertising, you look at blogs, and you have to wonder how much our modern media is conforming us to the world.

Yet that is only the first part of the quote. The scripture goes on to say, “…but be transformed by the renewing of your mind”. Blogs, and all of the new media that is growing up around the Internet provides an opportunity to transformation, and that is an important part of why I am online.

So, whether the way we think is molded by the media around us, or we can mold the media around us by our thinking, blogs and other emerging media provides a great opportunity for transformation, and perhaps we all need to think more about our role in such transformations.

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"I just really want a hug"

(Cross-posted at One America Committee Blog)

I spend a lot of time helping politicians mine for votes, and sometimes I wonder if that is part of the problem with politics in our country today. When I’m not out vote-mining, I’m spending time with my family. Today, we will have Fiona’s birthday party, a contra dance. The vote mining and the contra dancing perhaps shape my reaction to an article in today’s Hartford Courant.

Steven Goode and Colin Poitras have written an article about Sherry Amico, “a self-taught guitarist with a powerful voice”. On August 9th, “she was found dead of a methadone overdose in a friend's apartment.” They quote a posting she had on MySpace, "My dream = to have a family and be happy ... Outcome = feeling like [expletive] because DCF won't leave me ... alone ... I don't mean to be annoying. I just want help. I want to live a drama free life for at least a month ... I just really want a hug."

Maybe it is time for a seismic shift in politics away from this mining for votes, the name calling, or at best policy statements that seem hollow in the wake of a suicide like Sherry’s. Maybe it is time for us to gather around campaigns of candidates that will use their contests not only to find voters, but to change people into the sort of Americans I grew up believing in, American’s that care for their neighbors and work hard to help those around them.

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The Political Palimpsest

(Originally published at Greater Democracy)

The movie, The Ad and the ego has caused me to spend a bit of time thinking about the overall effect of political messages getting etched in our consciousness, only to be scraped away for newer messages to be added, a sort of political palimpsest.

As an aside, I am ever indebted to Judge John M. Woolsey for introducing me to the word "palimpsest" in his decision in the case United States of America v. One Book Called "Ulysses.", which I found in the forward to my copy of the book Ulysses.

Joyce has attempted - it seems to me, with astonishing success - to show how the screen of consciousness with its ever-shifting kaleidoscopic impression carries, as it were on a plastic palimpsest, not only what is in the focus of each man's observation of the actual things about him, but also in a penumbral zone residua of past impressions, some recent and some drawn up by association from the domain of the subconscious.

I started exploring this idea in a post I put up on MyDD entitled, Ad Watch and the Ego Research.

Since I was offline for a few days, I'm digging through all the emails that have piled up in my inbox. There is the standard collection of emails from Howard Dean, John Kerry, Barbara Boxer, and so on, asking me for money, to take time off to get out the vote, to vote in a poll on who my favorite progressive candidate is, etc. I've often wondered if these political request emails have become superfluous. I typically barely glance at them before I move them off to my 'requests' archive, paying them no more attention than I would an advertisement on TV.

That is when it struck me that we need to look at all these requests in a similar light as we look at the advertisements on TV. It isn't about the request or the messaging, it is about residue that gets left on our political palimpsest.

My email box is still overflowing, but I can only take so much at a time, so I took a moment to try and catch up on blogs that I follow through Bloglines, as well as a few others that I go directly too. I scanned a couple hundred posts on official campaign blogs from around the country, again, with about as much attention as I devote to advertisements on TV. This too, then is another part of the political palimpsest.

What then, is the emerging image of our political landscape? I have my own thoughts, which people who read me regularly probably have a sense of, but I wonder what the vista is to you? Perhaps more importantly, are political campaigns thinking about this in their messaging? How could or should they change the whole of their communications to more effectively bring about the change they want?

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