Chris Brogan’s Birthday Video!

Posted by Bill Cammack On April - 8 - 2007

Pulver / Network2 @ Proof

Posted by Bill Cammack On March - 28 - 2007

Yesterday, Jeff Pulver & Chris Brogan hosted a Network2 get-together @ Proof in NYC.

I saw David Kowarsky for the first time since the last Network2 event at Proof I attended. He was telling me about VON:San Jose and his future videoblogging plans. I also saw Bre, Kendall, Mike & Dina, Grace, Eric, Eric, and met Matt & Dave from G14productions.

Here are some flickr pix from the evening:

The NY Video 2.0 Group

Posted by Bill Cammack On January - 26 - 2007

Last night, I attended the NY Video 2.0 Group “meetup”. The focus of the event wasn’t the _making_ of digital video, but the business surrounding putting video on the internet. I found the presentations to be interesting as well as informative.

The host was Yaron Samid, Founder, Pando.com.

The presenters were (in order of appearance):

1. dotSUB – Michael Smolens, Founder
http://www.dotsub.com

2. Network2 – Jeff Pulver, Founder (www.pulver.com)

http://www.network2.tv

3. NBBC.com – Marc Siry, VP, NBC Universal
http://www.nbbc.com

4. YouAre.TV – David Dundas, Founder
http://www.youare.tv

5. Bolt.com – Aaron Cohen, Founder

http://www.bolt.com

Also, Chris Brogan, Community Developer for network2.tv had special information for the NY Video 2.0 Group about the upcoming Video on the Net conference in San Jose, California.

It was interesting to hear about “the shell” surrounding creativity, or perhaps the vehicles by which content is presented to the world via the internet and hopefully monetized all the way back down to the content creator. I think I can say that I felt “behind the scenes”. That’s an odd way for me to feel, since as an editor, I’m _always_ “behind the scenes”, but they’re behind MY scenes, and I know exactly what’s going on and what I’m doing.

To the average person, sites, applications and widgets just magically appear one day and get reported on in a blog or a show. Now I know where these things come from. People “moonlight”, creating businesses during their time off from their day jobs. People solicit venture capital (VC). People count on what they learned in their last business to make decisions for their new startups.

If any of those topics are interest to you, the videos I made from the meeting are available on Network2.tv, tagged “nyvideo20group” [link]

Bill Cammack • New York City • Freelance Video Editor • alum.mit.edu/www/billcammack

re: Chris Brogan’s “Your Voice”

Posted by Bill Cammack On January - 15 - 2007

re: Chris Brogan’s “Your Voice”

I think there’s something more important / useful than learning voice. That would be learning to listen to yourself and discover your own voice.

Learn your own patterns, your own perceptions, your own priorities and values. The more aware you become of your own personal “voice”, the more efficient you’ll be in expressing yourself and the more you’ll enjoy what you’re doing, which makes it easier to write A LOT in a short amount of time.

Then again, it depends on what one is writing about… I can’t write about surfing, because I don’t surf. I’ve seen “Point Break” and other beach movies, and I’ve even watched a competition or two on television, but I have no personal experience with surfing, so A) it would take me a long time to write something about surfing, and B) whomever actually surfs would know that what I’m saying is completely inauthentic. If the goal is to write horror films or stories about people flying around on brooms, then, yeah… I think that needs to be learned! :D

Your (Chris’) particular voice may very well be ‘merely’ a series of writing tricks….. except it’s YOUR collection of tricks and you deploy them in your own particular fashion. The individuality is in the selection and use of the tools, not the tools themselves. The ‘value’ of your voice is found in the same place. Your perception is what separates you from the next writer. It’s all about how you perceive things and then how you express yourself to the reader. I see a table, you see a chair, someone else sees a collection of wood. Making others aware of a different way of seeing things is value right there.

Person vs Material is an interesting question. I think the first time, people in general read for material… After that, they read for the person… assuming it’s the same material. I think that if they disagree with or just plain wouldn’t like to believe what you have to say about things, they won’t return to read more, even if it’s on a topic they’re really interested in. OTOH, if you have an interesting take on people flying around on brooms, they might click on your new article about auto repair…..

I think that what makes someone’s ‘voice’ useful to someone else is relevance and competence. If you’re talking about issues that are interesting or important to that person and they respect what you have to say about it or how you see it, you’ve gained someone that sees you as an authority on that topic. If that person decides to check what you have to say on other topics, they may gain respect for your views in general and not just on that one topic that they clicked on from a search engine that one time.

Interestingly enough, IMO, it all comes down to individuality, and perhaps the luck of the draw… How much life experience is someone bringing to the table to be able to talk about certain issues? How much training did someone pursue to learn “writing tricks”? How often can you say about that person “he/she has a point there!”? How narrow does that person’s range appear to be in different topics that they can talk about intelligently? Where has this person gone and what have they put themselves through in order to formulate the concepts they’re expressing right now?

I’ve actually learned some of this over the last few months. The ‘value’ isn’t in the production values or the writing tricks & gimmicks. The value is in what YOU take for granted that other people have no idea about and have no way of finding out about unless YOU tell them about it, take them there and show it to them…..

Pulver / Network2 party

Posted by Bill Cammack On November - 15 - 2006

This evening, I attended the pulver.com and network2.tv networking event at the Proof Bar & Lounge in Manhattan, NYC. There was a really good turnout and the place was packed. Amongst others, I met:

Jeff Pulver: pulver.com
Chris Brogan: network2.tv
Rudy Jahchan & Casey McKinnon: galacticast.com
Kendall James: skilltip.tv
David Kowarsky: focus.blip.tv
Michael Schreiber: realmeals.tv
Dina Kaplan: blip.tv
Drew Olanoff: bestdamntech.com, scriggity.com
Jeff Lofgren: g14productions.com
& Public Relations specialist, Sherry, who has yet to begin her videoblogging career, but definitely NEEDS TO HAVE her own vlog!!! :D

Thanks Jeff & Chris for making it all happen!

Official Coverage ==> http://pulverblog.pulver.com/archives/005981.html





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