links for 2007-08-09
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The Age and other mainstream media are taking the Liberals and John Howard to task for their poor use of social software during the election campaign (possibly because The Age went through something similar a year earlier!)
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The Classic Series. 160 Stories. One Legend. Every Doctor Who episode made last century, cut into one engaging 5 minute clip by Stuart Humphyryes. [Via]
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“Second Life’s financial sector is being rocked by a series of upsets that could spell trouble for the virtual economy.”
links for 2007-08-08
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Slate broke the story that Republican candidate Rudy Giuliani’s daughter appears to support Democrat Barak Obama. The reporting and story itself raises privacy issues about Facebook! Her profile is gone now.
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Interesting analysis of Twitter as a social microblogging form. From their conclusions, it looks like Twitter is more centred on physical geography than (macro?) blogging. [Via]
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“The magazine editor who parodied Apple chief Steve Jobs in a blog says he started the site on a whim only to see the viral nature of the blogosphere turn it into an internet sensation.”
Kevin 07! (Or: Team Rudd gets its Web2.0 on!)
So, Kevin07 is here! Australian Labor leader Kevin Rudd has gotten all web2.0 and has a new portal website which integrates nicely with Labor and Rudd’s re-vamped MySpace page, YouTube and Facebook. As I’ve discussed in the past month, Labor has already shown far more success in using MySpace and Facebook than the Liberal party. Liberal leader and current PM John Howard has tried to use YouTube, but each video clip led to the deleting of comments and each video also seems to have less and less viewers.
Kevin07 was launched today, so for historical archival purposes, here is a full screenshot from day one:
The layout is fairly straight-forward and is clearly based on a the design of both the Hillary08 (screenshot) and Obama08 (screenshot) campaigns for the 2008 US Presidential election. There is a little danger in Australia in pushing the individual (Kevin) over the party (Labor) since Australians are still less comfortable with celebrity politics (hence, among other things, no Australia President) but I’ve got to say I think the Labor media advisors have done a very decent job on this portal. In an article in PerthNow, Rudd’s team certainly seem to be making the right noises about how social software would work during the election campaign:
“Kevin07 will encourage supporters to interact with one another, participate in blogs and stay in touch with what is happening on the campaign trail,” Labor’s campaign director Tim Gartrell said.
On the negative side, ABC News has a story about some very strongly worded responses from Liberal Party faithful:
But Assistant Treasurer Peter Dutton says voters will eventually see the light, and has labelled Mr Rudd’s approach as a “load of crap”.
“People at the moment are looking at Kevin Rudd like they’re looking at a promo for Big Brother,” he said.
“I mean it’s exciting, it’s fresh and when the big night comes, and people actually have a closer look and they look at the detail and they get a better understanding about what the show is about, they actually realise that the show is a load of crap.”
“The thing I say to Australians is please, don’t just look at the media tart, look at the policy detail.”
However, what Peter Dutton fails to understand, is that a generation who started watching Big Brother when they were 13 are old enough to vote this year. More to the point, dismissing the web, which is a central social space for those in the late teens and twenties, is clearly alienating the majority of a key demographic group. On more stable ground, The Age has tried to take Team Rudd to task for not registering all the possible Kevin07 variant domains (.net, .org etc) but if that’s the only issues the mainstream media can find, then I’d have to say Kevin07 is a winner in terms of design and its connectivity with voters.
links for 2007-08-07
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John Tulloch, a media professor who was also one of the survivors of the 7/7 London Bombings, talks about (mis-)representation, the media, terrorism, and personal experience in an engaging and fascinating lecture!
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A generator to create your own custom “finger pressing novelty keyboard key” image. Anyone for an Any key? 🙂
LonelyGirl15 is over … for the season!

So … Bree’s dead, then. Or, that should be “Bree’s dead” since her character supposedly had all of her blood transfused to someone else, but you’re not dead on television, or in videoblogs (which, in this case at least, looks like they want to be television) until your head comes clean off! If you’ve no idea what I’m on about, LonelyGirl15, the poster-child for videoblog commercial success in the YouTube era, has come to an end for this ‘season’. To be honest, I never thought the creators of LonelyGirl15 would be referring to their work in ‘seasons’, in the same terms as a TV production; for some reason it seem like a backward step to use this terminology when half the point of the project was to expand the bounds of where meaningful drama could be found, made and enjoyed! That said, since the creative property of LG15 seems to have been the heart of many a sales pitch recently, perhaps a first season (of 260 episodes, no less) is a useful way of packaging a product.
For those joining the game late, LonelyGirl15 shot to fame after the seemingly innocuous clips of 16-year old, home-schooled Bree raised the eyebrows of a few viewers who noted the slightly-too-professional look of a few episodes. There were a few tears when fans who thought Bree was real discovered she was just a character, but after the controversy died down, the series has continued to engage viewers and command a loyal following in its format of 3 to 5 minute episodes. The LG15 ‘gang’ expanded recently to include another 4 people (originally only Daniel was a regular character, and the ‘explanation’ for the show’s neat editing), and it seems that “season two” will continue the drama in the aftermath of Bree’s death (and, I wouldn’t be surprised, her shock, not-so-dead return somewhere toward the end of season two). Jessica Lee Rose who played Bree has gone on to bigger and better things (proving that videoblogs could be a jumping on point to ‘make the name’ of an actor), so her departure was inevitable.
On the commercial front, LG15 seems to have become a very successful commercial project. The rights to distribute (but not control production) of LG15 were finally won by MySpace for the 12-part season finale (and subsequent season), and as Liz Gannes this shows the robustness of the videoblog as a commercial model.
I can’t say I’ve watched the last 100 or so episodes of LonelyGirl15 that closely, or at all in many cases, and I certainly thought Bree’s demise was a little over-the-top (which you can now view on YouTube, too, here) but the overall endeavor points to a very viable alternative production model which could well see many creative teams get their feet wet before taking on the mainstream media world!
links for 2007-08-06
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A very useful beginners guide to what BitTorrent is, how peer to peer filesharing works, and the like …
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A 19 y.o. in Arlington, Virginia took a 20 second clip of teh Transformers film in the ‘Regal Cinemas Ballston Common 12’ and was promptly arrested, possibly facing up a year in jail!
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Advertisers on Facebook are removing ads since they can’t control where they appear. First Direct, Vodafone, Virgin Media, the AA, Halifax and the Prudential have withdrawn advertising after it appeared on the British National Party page.
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How to create a blogroll of the blogs you’re subscribed to in Google Reader. Not exactly a one-click solution, but a very useful function I used to wish for!
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“latest figures from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) show that mental illness, including anxiety and depression, is currently the greatest burden of disease for people aged 15 to 24.”
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Profile of artist Amber Hawk Swanson who had a realistic lifelike doll created, modeled on her physique, and calls the doll Amber. Their performance art challenges perceptions, to say the least. I wonder when this tech will lead to the ‘printing’ of Second Life avatars?
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Australian “Defence Department has confirmed that a video posted on the Internet shows soldiers binge drinking at Darwin’s Robertson Barracks.” The YouTube vid showed soliders in Klu Klux Klan outfits…
