Tag Archives: Arts

The Online Community Is Inexorably Global: Are You?

s GLOBAL COMMUNITY large13 The Online Community Is Inexorably Global: Are You?When it comes to the textuality of the Internet, message rules and the “text” of the message doesn’t need to be limited to ASCII: animated GIFs, infogtraphics, videos, photos, etc — just as valid and way more accessible to people who don’t speak your native tongue.
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 The Online Community Is Inexorably Global: Are You?

Can Eurovision change the world through Dina Garipova’s “What If?”

I don’t know if you’ve ever lived in Europe. I have and while I recommend it as de rigeur as part of experiencing life, one of the downsides is called Eurovision. Why? Well, American liberal intellectuals tend to idealize all of Europe, from Vladivostok all the way to Rotterdam, and the orchestrated lather associated yearly with the Eurovision competition is shameless and humiliating for every member nation, whether they cop to it or not.  Well, the first and only Eurovision song that has ever made it to my attention after 43-years on earth while safely ensconced in the US of A comes from Dina Garipova in the form of What If.

What a beautiful song. Thanks for sharing it with me, Phil. What a message. A message that is almost too earnest and too honest for me to watch all the way through, and yet I did anyway. It’s an inspired song (and will probably be adored and mocked, both) and I like it. I hope you do, too. They’ve always said that we become more sentimental as we age, and that’s true; however, I am half Austro-Hungarian and half Irish so in many ways, sentimental is what I am — and also hopeful.

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Watch Abigail Jones’ Restless Virgins on Lifetime

restlessVirgins Watch Abigail Jones Restless Virgins on LifetimeMy friend Abigail Jones‘ book, “Restless Virgins,” is premiering as a Lifetime Original Movie this weekend on Saturday, March 9, at 8/7c. Here’s Abigail’s report:

The movie is fiction, but it is based on the non-fiction book ‘Restless Virgins.’ While I haven’t seen it yet, I’m incredibly excited that the “Restless Virgins” story is being told in a new way. The movie was even mentioned in the Sunday New York Times and got great write-ups in the Boston Globe and Variety.

So set your recordings or settle into your couch this Saturday night.

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Writing simply isn’t for dumb people

DumbandDumber 300x225 Writing simply isnt for dumb peopleUniversally, the biggest gasp I get when I meet with people new to marketing, PR, or advertising is that most ad copy is restricted to a 6th grade reading level. I am going to use this blog post to reassure everyone that writing simply should mean writing elegantly and not writing simplistically, resulting in young adult fiction.  While the reading ease is kept simple, we’re generally not writing to appeal to 12-year-olds.

One of the biggest challenges that writers have across all disciplines is with interpretation. While ambiguity and nuance is favored by poets and novelists, creating copy that isn’t concise, clear, and succinct is a disservice to my clients.

What is required, at least online and when engaging bloggers, is messaging that endures the obligatory game of telephone that always happens when sharing between people.  If you’ve never heard of telephone, I thought I would share this from Wikipedia:

The first player whispers a phrase or sentence to the next player. Each player successively whispers what that player believes he or she heard to the next. The last player announces the statement to the entire group. Errors typically accumulate in the retellings, so the statement announced by the last player differs significantly, and often amusingly, from the one uttered by the first.

Social media is essentially a game of telephone so it is essential to make sure the last player receives a message as intact as possible, no matter who is in the chain. No matter their background, native tongue, education, gender, cultural heritage, age, or disposition, our most important job is creating messaging that both injects a durable copy into the mind and consciousness of the consumer while also making it past the client’s review.

It isn’t easy, to be sure.  If I choose a word that someone isn’t familiar with, they generally won’t take the time to explore the OED — not because of intellect but because people are busy, people have limited time and attention, and we don’t have them on salary.  The time we have with them is generally limited to 5 minutes from opening an email pitch to when a blogger clicks on [Post] on their blog.

Gustave Flaubert was fastidious in his devotion to finding the right word, le mot juste, and so should we be because when you’re able to spend a little time distilling your message, the client’s message, your company’s mission, then you’ll probably learn quite a lot about yourself as well as how you’re perceived.

I had been using the word premasticate in my talks about blogger outreach and online messaging because I like to think about how the kiss was developed, in a time before Gerber’s when baby food was made by a mother who would pre-chew food for her child.  I also like to think of sea birds going out to sea, fishing for smelt, and then coming back and feeding their chicks through regurgitation. I loved these visuals and it always amused classes when I did my Blue-footed Booby mating dance and subsequent feeding of chicks as marketing metaphor; however, I now know that the visual is vile and is often considered infantilizing to bloggers.

Like I said, I am always listening and always learning. Progress not perfection.

When you think carefully about your core message, think about not just the ideas but also the consumability of each word (6th or 7th grade reading easy, etc), you also realize that thinking this way can also be very useful for organic SEO and search.  How?

Well, when you consider every word, you’ll start to think about how other people read and comprehend your brand.  have you ever listened to an interview of someone who has a highly-technical job?  Their responses tend to include acronyms, nicknames, and references that are only understandable by other scientists, politicians, engineers, doctors, and lawyers. A good interviewer asks what those acronyms means, slows the interviewee down, asks them to unpack what they’re saying. They call this unpacking, layman’s terms.

Google runs on layman’s terms — all search does.  And since search engines don’t use thesauri and are painfully explicit, choosing your keyword phrases, your choice of words, your diversity of language, and the development of content copy to include a great biodiversity of phrases. For example, a television is also popularly called a TV, a flatscreen, a plasma, a big screen, an HDTV — even a boob tube and idiot box.  If you don’t include them all in your online copy — if you don’t know the potential lingua fanca of everyone, you really had better cover your bases.

In summary, the resulting “simple” of any copy you write for general consumption should be as accessible as possible — not simplistic.  More like Hemingway — to the marrow — rather than of a lower fidelity. Writing like this requires and demands that we, instead, work harder, become more concise, and distill the larger prose, copy, corpus, text, into something more essential, more easily and universally comprehensible and intact.

It demands the we bear the brunt of the load, do all the hard work, instead of depending on others to parse what we’re on about.  And, on that note, I am well aware that I didn’t follow any of rules while writing this post.  Let me know is I should.

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My Beard Has More Followers Than You!

Remember when I had a beard?  Man, it was one hell of a bushy beard!

chrisAbrahamSocialMediaBeard My Beard Has More Followers Than You!?

Thanks to the brilliant an eccentric Mr. Phillip J. Rhoades for such an portrayal of devotion.  So, how’s the likeness?

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