- Always question the assertion that your privacy is protected
- The Clash Over Copyright
- It's Become a Story About Speed
- Mergers and Morning Radio
- The Permanent Campaign Event: Alpha Test Report
- These are the Daves I know...
- The traditional conference configuration is obsolete
- Texas continues to attack Ontario and the North East
- Online Socializing and the Space of Flows
- Child Pornography and Computer Hacking
Television
Online Socializing and the Space of Flows
Submitted by jesse on Wed, 03/05/2008 - 13:53.I really enjoy appearing on the TV Ontario show The Agenda, in part because the conversation led by host Steve Paikin is always top notch, taking the guests and audience into new territory. Steve has this way of simultaneously understanding where the conversation is going while also keeping it grounded in language and concepts that are as accessible as possible. This type of intellectual populism is precisely what I think enables engaging television.
Last night's panel was on the subject of "Socializing Online", it was produced by celebrity TVO producer Mike Miner, and my fellow guests were Nancy Baym from the AoIR, Maggie Fox of the Social Media Group, and Will Pate, community evangelist and host of commandN. While there wasn't as much debate or disagreement compared to past shows, we were able to really build off of each other's comments and insights to reach a high level of discourse.
Review of CBC Fortune Hunters
Submitted by jesse on Fri, 01/18/2008 - 00:41.Today I received a review copy of the upcoming episode of Dianne Buckner's Fortune Hunters that airs this weekend on CBC Newsworld. I'm always happy and willing to receive movies, TV shows, books, and other media, and I promise to be both honest and relatively prompt with my review.
While I was not able to watch the first and debut episode of Fortune Hunters that aired last Saturday, I enjoyed watching the second quite a bit. Of course I do have some criticism to share, which I will detail below, however the overall production and content of the show was great, creating an entertaining and informative half hour.
The stated mission of the show is to focus on the hottest trends, with a focus on how to capitalize and make money off of them, hence the title, Fortune Hunters. Each episode has a theme, and this second installment is about the "web".
Huckabee and Obama Win in Iowa Thanks to the Internet
Submitted by jesse on Fri, 01/04/2008 - 13:55.Yesterday's results in Iowa demonstrate that the Internet is playing a central and strategic role in the 2008 US Presidential Election.
Mike Huckabee, with the help of Chuck Norris, has been able to defeat Mitt Romney who out spent him by a factor of 20! Some estimates put Romney's Iowa expenditures at $10,000 per vote.
Barack Obama, with the help of Obama Girl, has been able to defeat Billary who admittedly had low expectations for Iowa to begin with. It's also worth noting that John Edwards has been able to stay in the race, in no small part due to his sophisticated Internet operation.
Of course I'm not suggesting that literally the videos I cite above are responsible for the victories. Rather the candidates who won did so against the odds and the Internet played an important role in that victory.
Which brings me to the story many journalists are missing this morning, which is Ron Paul. His results in Iowa may seem small compared to the victors, yet 10 and 11 percent is actually quite impressive for the congressman from Texas.
Ron Paul is running the most successful Internet campaign of any candidate because he and his campaign team make no effort to control their online activity. What shocks most journalists and political consultants is the way in which the Ron Paul campaign is autonomous and spontaneous.
The $20 million dollars raised in the last quarter of 2007 will go along way to keeping Congressman Paul in the race. He may not win, but he will affect the process as a whole.
Today, after Iowa, it's clear that there is great sentiment for Change. Huckabee, Obama, Paul, all are candidates that campaign from the outside, call for change, and embody the Internet's President.
Mind you, don't count out Billary and John McCain. The former has money and a machine that can keep them competitive right till the end. McCain has also been using the Internet quite effectively to offest his fundraising problems. He may easily win New Hampshire now that Romney is on the ropes.
For the record, I like aspects of all these candidates. I'm loving this election, and am looking forward to it getting strange, weird, and totally out of control!
3D Dialogue: The Politics of Buddhism in Burma
Submitted by jesse on Sat, 11/24/2007 - 05:00.The following segment from 3D Dialogue is a great example of how the show combines politics, religion, sociology, and economics to cover a story in a unique way, especially when it comes to complex issues such as the recent protests in Burma. This interview with Bush Gulati, from the Committee for Restoration of Democracy in Burma, provides an overview of the role Buddhist Monks play in the struggle against the military dictatorship in Myanmar.
The Clash of the Titans 2.0
Submitted by jesse on Fri, 11/09/2007 - 05:00.The Perpetual Information War
Submitted by jesse on Sat, 09/15/2007 - 04:00.I've done a number of CBC segments recently around computer security and information warfare. While trying not to be sensational, these are subject areas that I feel require more attention, certainly from the news media, but also from the public at large.
On the one hand they are fascinating unto themselves, and don't require any added emphasis to denote severity, yet at the same time, the phenomena generally flourishes due to the ignorance and fear of average computer users.
A Review of The Tudors TV Series
Submitted by jesse on Thu, 09/06/2007 - 04:00.I'm just about finished watching the first season of The Tudors TV show. Set in 16th century Europe, the show is an excellent blend of sex, politics, religion, history, and of course violence that makes for entertaining television.
Social Media and the 2008 US Presidential Election
Submitted by jesse on Tue, 06/26/2007 - 04:00.I've always loved politics. Since an early age I've been fascinated by all levels, and for that matter all jurisdictions. I suppose this is what fuels my news consumption, and relatedly what attracts me to innovative uses of technology. The upcoming US Presidential election, which is arguably already underway, promises to be quite a battlefield when it comes to the use of technology, explicitly social media, such as facebook, youtube, etc. It was with this in mind that Nancy Wilson and I had a chat about the election, and just how nasty it may turn out to be, thanks to the fog of war the Internet fosters when it comes to campaigns and electioneering.
3D Dialogue: Little Mosque on the Prairie
Submitted by jesse on Tue, 06/19/2007 - 04:00.I quite enjoy the CBC sitcom Little Mosque on the Prairie. I find it an excellent example of what Canadian television can achieve when given the proper funding and development environment. The show's creator and producer Zarqa Nawaz came on my show 3D Dialogue for an interview regarding where the show came from and the rationale behind its characters and context. Season 2 of the show will air on CBC this coming fall and I'm looking forward to see how it progresses.
3D Dialogue: Faith and Politics in the United States
Submitted by jesse on Tue, 06/19/2007 - 04:00.Retired CBC foreign correspondent David Halton has been giving lectures and is writing a book about his experiences, and explicitly his time as the Washington correspondent for CBC News. David was in Washington during the rise of the religious right, and the ascendancy of the born-again Bush White House. It was with this in mind that I interviewed him for my show 3D Dialogue:






