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Video Producer / Digital Marketing Consultant
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Audi A7… by @AudiForLife
CALL FOR FOOTAGE RE: HURRICANE SANDY:
For any on-the-ground filmmakers, shooters, video-makers in NY/NJ/DC, I’ll gladly donate edit time to create a film...
The guys over at WISTIA, posted this satirical gem a few days ago (Link here: http://wistia.com/blog/suit-up/). They...
Typeverything.com - Good fucking advice using fucking Helvetica.
(Via nevver)
Performance advertising offered by performance ad network can make use of display advertising to cater to a customer’s need. There are...
Most people know that I’m not motivated by money. Instead, I have built companies to do innovative work, to change the status quo, to play the game by our own...
goldfinger. fire gilded and leather stitched. Handmade in Italy. for sale inquiries please contact: midikir@yahoo.com
By Joseph Olesh
Its name alone, “Schema.org,” is enough to scare most bloggers and social media pros right back to their WYSIWYG...
Creator of Steve Jobs Tribute lends a hand to Coca-Cola. link found by Joe
I was just interviewed by a young Cal Poly SLO journalism student on all things social media. Upon reflection, I have to admit I found this experience inspiring on a few levels.
The questions that made up the interview were well thought out and plentiful. The eager-to-learn interviewer was quick to amend follow-up questions as they came up. It was obvious the leadership at Cal Poly has not only recognized the potent relevance of social media, but are also educating their future journalists of its value. All of this I find positive, both as an alumnus of Cal Poly and as an active social media professional.
Something else struck me, though much less relevant. Sidney Pollack once said in his film, “Sketches of Frank Gehry,” that he felt for some time like he was pretending to be a director. The catalyst of the conversation had Pollack asking Gehry when he started to feel comfortable as a practicing architect. Pollack’s thoughtful metaphor to his experience as a young filmmaker is one I’ve always found inspiring and endearing.
I have been fortunate to be the recipient of multiple awards this last year as a filmmaker and social media marketer, but it was sitting in this very simple interview today I felt, in a sense, that I wasn’t “pretending” anymore. I’d entrenched myself within the worlds of content creation and social media to the extent that it’d been sometime since I’d taken inventory of how far I, and the technology, have come the last five years.
I love social media because it is dynamic. As a filmmaker, I dream of a time my commercials, videos and films can hold the same interactive qualities social media possess. I also feel fortunate to be a part of a generation when technology and creativity are colliding in such a dramatic fashion.
Watching my students complete their high school careers and preparing for my own cross-country move has I suppose, added to my heightened sense of nostalgia.
Regardless, I think the world is in a good place. Technology has put those with intelligence, creativity, and confidence in a position of power like never before. I’m inspired by my relatively small position in this digital marketing paradigm shift and hope I may be able to inspire those looking to join the movement.
Till later… Cheers, all.