“#ATTFAIL” presented by the C of A Players

For our first foray into animation, and specifically using the really neat Xtranormal service, we present a brief discussion of Apple’s recent communications regarding the new phone, and their iPhone OS update.

Also, it’s Friday, so we wanted to lighten things up.

YouTube and You: 5 years, Celebrating

Did you hear? YouTube is celebrating five years of dominating the world of online video.

Yes, the company is milking this for all it’s worth, but the extended celebration makes sense: YouTube was founded in February 2005, got their initial big funding in November of that year (from Sequoia Capital, as an FYI to all those start-up folks out there), then “officially” launched in December.

…And ever since has been the premier resource and destination for uploading and sharing video clips online.

  • Quick fact 1: Five years in, visitors log 2 billion views a day. That’s billion with a “b”. Every single day.
  • Quick fact 2: For every minute that passes, YouTube users load 24 hours worth of video. That’s up from 15 hours of video every minute as of last year. So all this uploading is feeding the viewing, and all that viewing is feeding this uploading.

To celebrate these acheivements, YouTube is sharing the fun with the world. They’ve set up the YouTube Five Year Channel and have invited, well, everyone — including you and me — to join in.

That doesn’t mean you can upload just anything and expect it to get posted; but it does mean there are some really interesting, insightful, funny and touching videos already up,  posted by regular people sharing stories about how YouTube has affected their lives.

It’s not just regular users, though. The company has savvily invited celebrities to curate their favorite clips.

This effort is more than just puffery; you can watch his intro below, then check out what Conan O’Brien likes:

And on the higher-art side, here’s some commentary by Spanish director Pedro Almovodar describing his list:

Amateur Hour and Professional Standards

I’ve held off commenting on the Shirley Sherrod episode until now, because I wanted to make sure most of the major elements had surfaced.

When the Breitbart clip and resulting propoganda first broke, I was immediately suspicious because of where things originated — a partisan group with a history of questionable tactics, and a proven record of editing video to support a specific agenda.

To say the initial reactions from the administration, the NAACP, and much of the mainstream media were disappointing, is to let these groups off with minor slaps on the wrists. They deserve a proverbial whack on their snouts, followed by “bad dog!”

“Unprofessional” is one word I’d use. “Amateurish” is another. “Incompetent,” “negligent,” “unsuitable”, “naive,” “sloppy” and “half-assed” are some other words I’d suggest, and that’s only because I’m trying to be safe for work.

There’s a lot I want to say about the political and racial implications of what’s happened, but that’s a detour from the basic facts as they appear to be:

Shirley Sherrod, a woman who’s had a tremendously difficult background that might break many of us, worked hard to get to a position where she could help members of her community. She fought through her own biases and prejudices and was rewarded for it with a federal appointment, one that enabled her to do even greater good and on a larger scale.

Then she was targeted by an agenda-driven group, and a video of a speech she gave was edited, taken out of context, and spun to serve craven political purposes.. The group behind all this pushed claims of racism by Ms. Sherrod, and nearly every group that could and should have done some fact-checking… didn’t.

Their first reactions were FAILS. Working professionals that should know better took the edited clip at face value, failed to do basic vetting and verification, and the woman wound up being hounded from her job, her reputation smeared.

Things are now looking better for Ms. Sherrod — the full video and complete context is now out there, and if anything, she looks far better than even her personal narrative would suggest — and she’s reviewing multiple job offers, including her former post.

But those groups that first reacted have a lot of explaining to do.

As a former journalist, magazine editor, and now video producer, I’d like to offer a few tips and questions these groups should ask themselves — and they’ll work well for  anyone else that has to deal with “shocking, controversial” online content .

1. Carefully review the clip in question. Do you see any edit points? If not, look again. If you do see edits/transitions, WHY? What’s been cut out, and why would anything be cut/edited/trimmed?

2. Where’s the raw/full clip? If you’re going to make any judgements, or if there are any possible negative repercussions, get the original clip.

3. Remember to keep context in mind. Personally, if there’s any question about context, possible edits, or any manipulation at all, you need to do your job and make sure the original, authoritative source has been vetted thoroughly.

4. Once you have the original/full/raw clip… REVIEW IT. (It turns out that a few of the groups in question had this clip in hand shortly after the controversy began, but it was too much effort to sit down and watch it. That’s just shameful and unprofessional).

5. If for some reason this original material isn’t readily available, consider that a red flag. Hold off on any next steps until the source material is available.

Yes, it’s more work, but doesn’t this action involve people’s lives, careers, and reputations? It’s just basic double- and triple-checking

If the tables were turned, how would YOU like this to be handled?

Pavlov’s dog reacted quickly, but so what? You’re not a trained dog. You’re a working professional, right?

Getting a little abstract

I’ve been doing two types of video projects recently: working as 1st  AD on music videos for the Creato-Destructo team, and helming more straightforward interview clips for higher-education clients, including a Boston-based law school and, coincidentally, a Long Island-based law school.

I’ve been glad to do all of it. Although some of my more creative colleagues suggested my sensibilities have been growing more documentary-like, even more literal and realistic (as opposed, I think, to more poetic and figurative).

First, nice work if you can get the poetic/figurative stuff.

Second, I finally broke out with something completely abstract based on last week’s schedule. Because I could, I did — and I especially wanted to emphasize motion, playing off grayscale and light-dark.

Beyond that, it also gave me the chance to delve into licensing through Creative Commons. The music is “At A Distance” by Matmos, and falls under the Sampling Plus license.

Let me know what you think. Although I’m not pushing ideas with this, more like emotional responses.

Nearly all this was done in-camera, meaning I didn’t add any effects or other post-production features, apart from the title and the music. Even the last “white” piece was in-camera.

And to go full nerd again, the video’s title is a reference to quantum entanglement, which Albert Einstein famously described/derided as “spooky action at a distance”.

I am the cosmos

Yes, I am the cosmos. And so are you.

If I had to do college over again, I would have zeroed in on cosmology.

It’s the one subject apart from film and automobiles that leads me to full-geek mode; and so far I haven’t been able to cheapen cosmology through any grubby efforts to make it pay.

This week has been particularly existing in terms of the universe and how it might have come to be, how it might work, and where it may be heading.

First, did you realize gravity doesn’t exist? I didn’t, so next time I do a header off my mountain bike and wonder if I’ll be breaking all my teeth or just shattering my cheekbones, I’ll rest assured it’s simply a holographic illusion, and those aren’t real blood clots and jaw parts I’m spitting out.

Second, the Big Bang may have been a fake-out. This one I was ready for, because there have been a LOT of questions swirling around about galactic clusters and the fact it may have taken 100 to 150 billion years for these things to come together. Based on our understanding of gravity, of course…

Third, the God Particle may have been discovered. Not by that fancy-pants multi-billion-Euros facility underneath the lesser parts of France and the better parts of Switzerland, CERN, but basically in some run-down garage outside of Chicago — also known as the Fermi Lab.

Yes, those same dudes that sent over bad magnets that seriously dinged the Large Hadron Collider last year. That’s how they do things Chicago-style.

There’s also more evidence tying the single-direction flow of time to the possibility our universe may actually be inside a…

Nah. It’ll have to wait for another post.

old dude gets enlightened

To be completely fair…

My last post — which displayed a photo of midget professional baseball player Eddie Gaedel of the historic St. Louis Browns above a photo of U.S. Senator John Boehner — led some people to believe I was inferring that Boehner was perhaps a mental midget.

That’s not the case. As the writer, I wasn’t inferring anything. That’s the job of the reader. My job is to imply, if not overtly suggest.

And to let the chips fall all over the place, had you heard the news about Chuck Schumer’s recent statesmanlike action? In the face of massive unemployment, staggering deficits, and acid-flecked political discourse at all levels of the national dialogue, Schumer bravely whipped off a letter — to Steve Jobs. Complaining about the iPhone 4. And asking for a free fix.

To the senator from New York’s credit, he at least remembered to ask for a free fix for everyone that bought the new phones, not just himself.

Like I said, statesmanlike.

Charles Schumer of the U.S. Senator

"Perhaps it's time to invade Cupertino."

Work examples, Producer, 2

Another great piece by Kenyon College students, Sean Cavanaugh and Martha Gregory, who worked from an excerpt of the 2005 commencement speech given by David Foster Wallace at Kenyon. The Admissions and Public Affairs folks went above and beyond in getting rights to the audio, BTW.

Client: Kenyon College

Work examples: Producer, 1

All the heavy lifting and hard work was done by Kenyon College honors film students, Jean Mougin and Martha Gregory, and their incredibly supporttive professor, Jonathan Tazewell. But sometimes, a producer can help…

Client: Kenyon College

Work examples: Directing and Editing, 3

This is particularly relevant today, July 13, 2010, now that Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has passed away.

A compelling narrative by Yankees President Randy Levin on his path from Hofstra Law School to NYC’s Labor Commissioner, to Major League Baseball, and the lessons he’s learned about working with people in all walks of life.

Client: Hofstra University School of Law