Archive for November, 2009

Twit’up the volume

25
Nov
09

Wyclef Jean (aka @wyclef, aka Toussaint St Jean) is using his Twitter showing 1 million+ followers and TwitVid (Twitter+Video) to launch his new Mixtape EP “Walk Away”.

Some funny stuff man, happened to me,
I signed an autograph for a kid, Clef from The Fugees,
Kid looked at me, said what the hell is a Fugee,
Aint you Will.i.am from the peas,
I’m a fan, but no I aint Will.i.am,
Let me introduce myself to the new generation,
I’m wyclef jean singer, song writer, composer,
In high school I used to be a battle rapper,
Then I got with The Fugees, hi haters,
Fifteen years later, still sold more records than all of ya’ll put together,
That’s just a piece of the biography of Wyclef Jean,
And when I spit call me Tousaint St. Jean.

HipHopAtLunch.com met up with him to speak about the inspiration behind his Toussaint St. Jean mixtape, his Yéle Haiti Timberland boot, taking classes at Berklee College of Music, and of course his views on Twitter and Facebook…

Muppets and Queen

24
Nov
09

You see just a almost certain viral video …

… I see a pretty intelligent way to sell music.

“Transmedia” Translated: Defining a term you’ll hear more of in the coming months

24
Nov
09

What will storytelling look like in future decades?

Ken Eklund’s “World Without Oil,” may give us a window. The project built a massive, original narrative by posing a provocative question to an online community: What would happen if we ran out of oil today?

Citizens at boiling point over Government Inaction_1259020815322

Hundreds of intrigued participants responded with text, images and video, creating an immersive, cross-platform story that grew more textured as new prompts (”what will $4/gal gas do to your finances?”) garnered further additions each week.

The end result is a kind of citizen journalism of the near-future, an activism that forces users to engage in concrete terms with an abstract (yet realistic) eventuality.

This was one example in the emerging field of “Transmedia Storytelling” — the organizing concept behind the fourth Futures of Entertainment conference at MIT last weekend.

For Henry Jenkins, the conference’s organizer and author of Convergence Culture (NYU Press, 2006), Transmedia describes a new approach to telling stories given:

  1. The growth of “participatory” media, like blogs
  2. An explosion of new devices that allow you to both consume and produce media socially
  3. The persistence of “Old Media”

“Transmedia Storytelling,” then, spreads a unified fiction across these old and new media, where each medium plays a part in unfolding the tale. It expands a story between the digital and the physical, the premium and the free, the creative and the passive.

Other, and perhaps more developed cases are the recent “Alternate Reality Games” agencies have created for a whole range of media. WhySoSerious.com, an extension of The Dark Knight, allowed people to get privileged information about the film, flesh out its back story, and win prizes by collectively contributing to online puzzles, playing online games, or documenting real-world activities.

why so serious

Similar kinds of Transmedia extravaganzas have accompanied campaigns for video games like Halo 2 (I Love Bees), and albums like Nine Inch Nails’ Year Zero.

Granted, as these Alternate Reality Game instances reveal, Transmedia has often targeted the ultra-geeky. Indeed, the relentless expansion of the Star Wars universe may be a canonical Transmedia storytelling example, where video games, fan fictions, films, novels and blogs all work to produce a rich and sustained narrative.

Yet the booming production of these types of deep, participatory fictions suggest that they’ll soon break free from the cloisters of nerd-dom.

World Without Oil, for instance suggests a new terrain of Transmedia storytelling that appeals to a creative community of non dorks, using politics as a locus.

Of course, with such new approaches come new problematics:

Because it requires elements of user participation, Transmedia confuses the distinction between author and reader. On the continuum ranging from total authorial control to complete audience control over the course of a story, where is the best place to set the dial for a given project?

Moreover, as these techniques become more sophisticated, what does it mean when the marketing campaign for a movie becomes more compelling than the movie itself?

We can easily imagine an entertainment industry of the future oriented around story nodes, in which a film shown to a small audience at a makeshift video theater in someone’s basement might play only a small role in an overall narrative arc. Is this suggestive of a cultural world in which there is no seam between the advertising and entertainment? Is this as nefarious as it sounds?

Perhaps most germane for TrendWatch: Can these techniques be employed by goods and services brands?

Fullsix’s own participatory show for Sprite (shameless plug), Green Eyed World may hint at this, as does 42 Entertainment’s Alternate Reality Game Vanishing Point for Microsoft.

Are there more compelling examples of this? Is what’s termed Transmedia indeed central to the ‘future of entertainment’?

Last weekend a motley assortment of tweedy academics, game designers, jargon-slinging marketeers, artists, and communications gurus, collected in Cambridge, MA for the fourth “Futures of Entertainment” conference at MIT. Over the next few days, I’ll aim to unpack a few of the more interesting ideas that came up during two days of panel discussions.

ROI of Social Media

23
Nov
09

The connections we make socially, however we make them, can be invaluable. But in case you need some hard-hitting #s, here’s the latest vid from Socialnomics

What strikes you most about the video?  Love the quote from Erik Qualman himself…

“Why are we trying to measure social media like a traditional channel anyway?  Social media touches every facet of business and is more of an extension of good business ethics”.

Ommmmmmmmmm

23
Nov
09

I am writing this from a beautiful, serene space with nothing to distract or disturb me. No Twitter feeds, no Facebook updates, no emails. There is calming music and my keyboard is giving me harmonious sounds of approval as I type.

It’s lovely here.

I’ve been put in a mood where I don’t even want to type ‘hate’ but if, like me, you hate Word and its ugly formatting, you will love this new software called OmmWriter. It has just three font styles and sizes, three soothing backgrounds and a choice of sounds. You don’t even see the menus while you’re writing.

It was developed by Herraiz Soto & Co who wanted to help writers to concentrate, it works brilliantly and it’s free. This is the best type of innovation – no fancy gimmicks or unnecessary functionality, just the things that genuinely help you focus and write in peace.

ommwriter_grab

Unfortunately, it’s Mac only at the moment – if you’re using a PC beg them to make a version for you.

This is a men’s world…

19
Nov
09

For males that didn’t had a chance to play with the interactive playmate of the last Esquire “Augmented Reality” Issue… Enjoy this official tour!

Abducted by the marketing hype cycle

18
Nov
09

Because it’s important to know the difference between trends and hype, here’s a keynote presented last Saturday…

UFOs: Abduction by the marketing hype cycle

View more presentations from Armando Alves.

iPhone + Book

16
Nov
09

= the charming little ‘PhoneBook’.
It’s a really simple idea (essentially a cardboard box with an iPhone sized hole!) that combines print and technology beautifully. I wish I’d thought of it.

Moonwalk.

07
Nov
09

Stuck on earth?
Step on the moon with experts Sally Ride, Buzz Aldrin and Jim Lovell.

A wonderful set, a beautiful talk, a nice journey again, by Louis Vuitton.

Social Network Evolution – Twitter Lists

03
Nov
09

evolution_of_man

In previous articles we studied the evolution of the Internet Society.  Our theory is that an internet tool, when it first appears, is like the cast of a TV show; its personality isn’t very well defined at first.  But as time goes by and viewers start watching the show, the characters’ personalities take on new proportions (have you ever compared the first episodes of Friends to the final ones? Joey undergoes a constant ‘dumbing down’ process as the series progresses.)

As more users watch what’s happening on Twitter, it’s character is taking on new proportions.  For example, Twitter has recently released a feature in which you can follow lists. Sure, this is something avid users have been wanting for a while and is indeed a valuable add-on, but what’s most revealing is how this small functionality basically defines a little better what Twitter is exactly for – Twitter as an aggregator of links related to common interests for a user (a.k.a. the Internet Yellow Pages).

Lists basically allow a user to gather their followed users into, well lists. These lists can be followed individually or you can add all the users to the regular timeline as you always had on Twitter. But the most interesting thing is that you can share your lists and a user can choose to follow the exact same list. It means you are no longer following a person – you are following a theme or a topic. Which leads us to the point – what if users stop following other users because they have relevant content and start following a list where what matters is what the list as a whole broadcasts and not the individual valor of the broadcaster himself? Twitter becoming less a “What are you doing?” and more a “What is your group doing?”. You can probably still measure the interest rating of a user by his following/followers ratio, but now you have a new metric – how many list are you part of? What are those lists about? Why are you part of the list? And are you an active member of the list or are you there for aggregation purposes?

Sure, Twitter lists are useful. But what strikes us as an interesting study is the shift from the human islands of Twitterland to Content Continents built by the content the users generate. After all, we live in a Content Society.  And in this realm, Twitter just took one more step from plain generalist micro-blogging into a fully defined Social Network that can be set completely apart from all the others by focusing not on apps, photos or moods, but by content sharing in its purest form.




The TrendWatch:


The TrendWatch is the collective postings of some of the FullSIX Group’s designers, strategists, and consultants on new media and marketing trends. It is meant to be an impromptu think-tank, and is a way for us to share theories and beliefs about how we think communication and connectivity is evolving.

We work for The FullSIX Group; a leading full service marketing agency with digital DNA. From our 15 international offices with over 600 employees, we constantly embrace and encourage innovation to make integrated marketing and communication campaigns that are more accountable and efficient for our clients.