A Poor Excuse for a Proposal

The final piece of writing I owe for my “Podcasting In Business” class is a proposal for my personal podcast project, The Armchair Architect. I am at a bit of a loss for how to write this, however, since I would never seriously propose such a project.

The lowest scores on my evaluation sheets from the class were for the future viability of this podcast. And they were absolutely right. This podcast has no future viability. I think I said just about everything I have to say about architecture in this one episode.

It was just a joke: a one –off. I just did it to vent a little spleen about contemporary architecture and compensate for the fact that my group project was a propaganda piece for a huge Seattle real estate developer. I also wanted to fool around with audio comedy, talk in some silly accents and force a group of people to sit and listen to me playing bad Heavy Metal music on my electric guitar.

So, if I were to propose an actual podcast, I guess it would have to be some sort of comedy series that would feature me interviewing myself in various accents about various topics. Each episode would be a mock talk show, and perhaps that could be the title of my podcast: Mock Talk. I just Googled those words and didn’t find a show with that name – at least not in the first few pages I examined.

I would categorize my program as Comedy. The pilot episode I produced could also be categorized under “Arts” and “Architecture.” What other episodes would be about, however, I have no idea, because I would never seriously attempt to do an ongoing comedy podcast, or a podcast of any sort for that matter. It hurts my brain just trying to imagine what other programs might be about.

It was fun working on podcasts in this class. I wouldn’t mind producing podcasts for other people (as long as they paid me), especially if they want video or visual content. As far as producing my own podcast, however, I’d never do it.

Finally, I’m supposed to cut and paste a Creative Commons bug to my blog. I’m so worn out, however, from pulling all-nighters for my two podcasts and several other projects, that I’m just going to post the following:

©2008 VAUN S. RAYMOND. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Now I’m going to attack the huge pile of dishes in my sink and finally get some sleep. Good night.

Last Chance to Blog

This is my last chance to blog for credit this quarter. I got so busy working on podcasts and videos in the last few weeks that blogging had to take second place, and that translated into not blogging at all. Last night I finished the first and second versions of our group podcast and now I’m waiting for feedback from my group before adding images for an enhanced podcast. I’ve got a few minutes this morning before heading up to Kirkland to teach an all-day video class, so I’m going to blog about whatever pops into my head.

It seems to me that there really is no ideal software for creating podcasts. My brief experiment with Audacity made me crazy because I found I could not accurately navigate around the timeline, due to the fact that the playhead disappears when you hit pause. I do a huge amount of razor sharp trimming and volume adjustment, so I need the playhead to stop on a dime while I’m listening and remain visible so I can see where I am.

GarageBand is pretty good for doing precise edits and it’s certainly wonderful to have all those loops available, right there in the same program, for adding music and sound effects. I actually have all of the Jam Packs, so I’ve got thousands and thousands of loops to choose from.

I discovered the biggest drawback to GarageBand when I got feedback from my group on my first version of the South Lake Union Walking Tour. A couple of people wanted me to add new material or re-do sections of the narration that would have expanded the timeline. Because my podcast is made up of hundreds of individual voice, music and sound effects clips, this would have meant moving all of these to make room for the new material. There’s no problem doing this, except for the fact that I also have scores and scores of volume and pan keyframes that are associated with all these clips.

In Garageband, you place keyframes on the track, not on the clips. This means that when you move a clip, the keyframes that control its volume and panning do not move with it. You must move these or else delete them and re-do them at the new clip location. This is different from other editing software, such as Final Cut Pro, in which keyframes are placed in clips themselves and so move with them. Adobe Premier actually gives you the choice to adjust volume (and perhaps panning as well) either in clips or on tracks, or in both.

Of course Final Cut Pro and Premier are video, not audio editing platforms. Nevertheless, I almost wish I’d edited our group project in FCP. Not only would I have the freedom to expand the timeline and add new material freely, without worrying about moving keyframes, but I’d also have access to FCP’s fairly sophisticated audio filters, including a Notch Filter that lets you EQ out a precise spectrum of sound frequencies. This can be handy for getting rid of, say, the whine of an air conditioner without losing too much of similar frequencies in people’s voices that you want to hear.

And of course any professional sound engineer would tell me that I need to be using ProTools. But ProTools is quite expensive and I’ve heard that it’s somewhat difficult to learn. For most podcasters, I’d think ProTools is probably overkill. Then there’s Apple’s Logic, which is probably comparable to ProTools in sophistication as well as difficulty.

So, it seems like there is a great opportunity for someone to develop the perfect podcasting platform – somewhere between GarageBand and ProTools. Or perhaps the folks at Apple could improve GarageBand with podcasters in mind. The most important thing they could do, as I indicated above, is provide the option to place volume and panning keyrames within clips rather than (or in addition to) placing them on the tracks.

When I get home from teaching tonight, I plan to start work on the enhanced podcast version of our group project, with graphics and still photos to illustrate the audio. I am definitely not planning to do this in GarageBand, even though Garageband provides a track for images. Confident in Final Cut Pro’s capabilities for manipulating images, this where I will be finishing our podcast.

Digital Folklife

I don’t have much to say about digital technology this weekend, having spent most of the last three days at the Folklife Festival. Except for a conspicously out-of-place (but very popular) Wii-Fit booth, there wasn’t a whole lot at the festival that reminded me that we live in a digital age. For hours and hours in a crowd of thousands, I hardly saw anyone talking on a cellphone and absolutely no one tapping away at a laptop.

Very much in evidence, by contrast, was the multi-culturalism and internationalism of our era. I floated happily from culture to culture as I drifted around the Seattle Center. I also saw what seemed like every type of human being mingling, dancing and playing music together. There were strange combinations and juxtapositions, such as a dreadlocked guitarist and mohawked punk playing together in a traditional Irish band, a huge white woman in her late sixties leading an African highlife and reggae band, and a little East Indian man dancing ecstatically by himself, first to a bluegrass combo, then to a Greek band, then to a Flamenco ensemble.

It was nice to be able to take home CDs from virtually any band I saw — even from many of the buskers. I was entranced by a playful jug band from Eugene, OR, called the Blair Street Mugwumps, who dressed in dirty clothing and played dirty blues and fun old-time music on washtub bass, ukeleles, kazoo and musical saw. I bought their $5 CD, not expecting much, but found it to be a very well-recorded live performance that almost perfectly reproduced what I heard at the festival.

I was also fascinated by a group of buskers called “Abandon Ship” from Santa Cruz, CA, who looked like homeless punk teenagers and played original polka songs on accordion, banjo and washtub bass. Their home-made, hand-labeled CD was also excellent. Talking to the bass player, I learned that they are in the middle of a Northwest Tour, which consists of playing for tips at various street fairs, farmers markets and house parties around the region, and staying at the homes of other small bands they have met through Myspace.

Except for an ugly vibe on Saturday that culminated in three people getting wounded by a nut with a gun, the festival was wonderful. It’s been a while since I heard so much laughter and saw so many people enjoying such simple pleasures. It’s also quite surprising, in this day and age, to find out how many people actually still know how to square dance.

Review of Maine Podcast & Website

The podcast I have been sampling is titled “Randum Radio Oddcast” and is part of a website called the “Backwards of Maine.” Both are the products of the fertile mind of C.W. Lakeman, a graphic artist, musician and storyteller from the middle of New England’s largest and most rural state. The Millinocket paper mill where Lakeman worked for forty years went bankrupt recently, leaving him unemployed and with a lot of time on his hands. He filled this time by writing songs, drawing cartoons, creating a website, and recording a series of podcasts between March of 2006 and March of 2007. Between April and June of 2007, this podcast became a vodcast, and then ceased entirely, presumably due to Mr. Lakeman finding a new job.

The home page of the website features a colorful drawing of Lakeman in his fictional characterization as “Cuzin’ Waine Fromain,” seated on a wooden chair near an outhouse, with the snowy peak of Mount Katahdin in the background. All text on the page is hand written, with links to various pages of illustrated humor. These include a series of cartoons illustrating Rube Goldberg-type inventions such as a “Manual Snow Blower” (the user blows through a tube leading to a funnel mounted on short skis) and a disposable “Dixie” axe, made from “cast iron coated cardboard,” and dispensed from a handy “10 paxe” dispenser.

Most pages lead to stories and cartoons about outhouses, close encounters with moose and other folksy subjects. Somewhat more serious is a section entitled “How to kill a paper mill,” featuring wistful memories of a local industry that was bought out and dismantled by an outside corporation.

I especially enjoy Lakeman’s down-home take on website navigation, such as a link labled “Nutha’ One” to take you to the next page in a series,” and “Nuff” to return you to the home page.

The home page features a “His’try of Randum Radio,” in which Cuzin’ Wayne explains that he realized the power of his voice when he succeeded in making a moose dance with his moosecalls. A cartoon shows Wayne sitting in his privy, with the door open, calling to moose through a megaphone. Another cartoon below shows the privy renovated into a podcasting station, with an “On Air” sign hanging from the door and Wayne visible through a window, podcasting away.

In the “pile-it” (pilot) episode of his podcast, Wayne announces that his show “is broadcast originally from the new two-holed privy studio, in stereo of course, high atop a holding tank on Golden Ridge, in the legendary Katahdin potato country.” He states that his show “is a very serious show about, of all things, being silly. Silly is something not practiced as often in our neighborhood as it used to be when our paper mills were a family business.”

The shows are silly indeed, but Cuzin’ Wayne’s dry, sardonic New England humor keeps them crisp. In the pilot he advises listeners to “tune in occasionally,” and for those who want a more formal schedule, he invites us grab a pencil and a calendar and “jot this down as to when we’re on…here it goes…’EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE.”

It strikes me that podcasting’s “once in a while” nature is very much in tune with the casual attitude toward time found in rural Maine. Many years ago my family and I stayed in a motel in Millinocket. On the TV in our room, we found a station that was broadcasting text messages of local news and a clock showing the current time — only the time was wrong. Because of this we missed an appointment to tour the paper mill – the very same one, I assume, where Lakeman worked. A bit annoyed, my father called the TV station to point out the error. A person there replied, “Yeee –ah. Lotta people been callin’ up about that. One a these days we ought ta do somethin’ ‘bout that dan clock.”

For all its folksiness, Lakeman’s website is fairly sophisticated (or at least it seems so to an old folk like me), with animated lightning bolts around the masthead and a choice of Real Player, MP3 or Windows Media files for downloading the podcasts.

The podcasts themselves are full-fledged variety shows, some running nearly an hour. They begin with a homey title song, followed by a chatty welcome from Cuz’n Wayne, often describing the weather and the scene outside of his outhouse studio, or “privio.” The first of many regular features on the show is Wayne’s “Stinky Little Rhyme,” a short poem, always on the subject of outhouses. Other segments feature guest appearances by neighborhood characters, played (with a few exceptions) by Lakeman himself. At one point, during a “call in” segment, Lakeman leans away from the mic and asks an imaginary assistant, “Is there something going on here? These people all sound the same to me.”

One regular feature pays homage to a venerable tradition of Maine storytelling: the shaggy dog story. Wayne introduces a guest named Warden Lovesay who sets out, in episode 46, to tell “The Shortest Joke Ever Told That Takes the Longest Time to Tell.” Lovesay gives the audience only one word of this joke per episode, prefacing this word with a lengthy, rambling discussion of his “slow joke” in true Maine style.

My favorite feature is a recurring segment in which Wayne gets together with some of his elderly neighbors to sing in an imaginary garage, achieved through the liberal use of reverb. Playing all the parts in an elaborate multi-track recording, Lakeman talks over himself as he simulates the chaotic babble of a group of senior citizens trying to organize themselves into a choir. In one episode, the group actually writes the lyrics of their song as they go along, arguing about each line and its meaning as they improvise. By the end, they are belting out their new song and scatting like an African-American gospel choir in a truly hilarious climax.

In April of 2007, Lakeman began a short series of vodcasts, featuring interviews with his actual neighbors. Unfortunately, the laconic side of the New England character comes out in these video interviews. Looking a bit like deer (or moose?) caught in the headlights, Lakeman’s subjects stare blankly into his camera and often answer long questions with very short answers. Cuzin’ Wayne continues to be quite entertaining in his off-camera remarks, but interactions with his real-life guests often fail to live up to those he has with the imaginary ones.

Lakeman’s podcasts and vodcasts ended abruptly in June of 2007. I wonder what happened. Perhaps, as I guessed earlier, he got a new job and found new ways to use his energies. Perhaps I should email him and ask what he’s up to these days.

In any case, I’ve enjoyed listening to Lakeman’s podcasts. It is certainly wonderful that podcasting gave this talented man a way to keep busy and creative after the loss of his career. It is also wonderful how Lakeman used the technology of podcasting to keep memories and traditions alive in a small community, way out in the back woods. I hope to hear more from Cuz’n Wayne in the future.

Teacher’s Blog Analysis

The two teachers’ blogs I explored earlier have a lot of good content, but are rather plain in terms of design and use of media. So I followed a link on one of them that led me to another educator’s blog that offers much more varied content for analysis. This is 2 cents Worth, a blog from David Warlick, who is not only a teacher but also the author of several books on education. Warlick is an evangelist for a new, digital paradigm for education in the 21st century, so it is no surprise that his blog is sophisticated in its use of blogging, podcasting and hypertext technology.

Warlick uses WordPress, but has his own, non “WordPress” URL. A striking image of a china cup, filled with black coffee relecting a blue light, tops the blog. A Creative Commons bug inside the banner prominently alerts us that this blogger is eager to share his words and ideas (with attribution, in non-commercial, non-derivative works). Large orange RSS bugs just below the banner make it easy for users to subscribe to this blog.

The blog is composed in black and grey text on a white page with grey borders. Numerous images and thumbnails make the page colorful, but never cluttered.

The blog uses a two-column format, with stories on the left and a narrow strip of items (what should I call these?) on the right, including a photo of the author, a list of books by him (with thumbnails of the book’s covers), a list of books he has recently read, a series of thumbnails of Flickr photos from his recent travels, a Clustrmap showing where in the world visitors to this blog come from, a series of Seesmic podcasts, a blogroll, an archive, and finally a link to the International Edubloggers Directory. Whew!

The blogposts themselves are richly illustrated with photos, charts and screenshots. The posts are about events and developments in the digital world that relate to education. Recent posts include a story about a teacher who assigned his students to write Wikipedia articles, and comments on Clay Shirky’s book “Here Comes Every One.”

My eye was attracted to the Seesmic podcasts (are they podcasts?) in the right hand column. Warlick uses these to post random thoughts, but also to respond to inquiries from people who have commented on his blog. I liked getting to know the author a little better by seeing and hearing him.

One thing I missed on this blog was some kind of “About Me” section. Perhaps it’s in there somewhere, but I missed it. I certainly learned a lot about the author just by exploring his blog, but I had to go to to Google to find another Worpress page that gave me biographical information about him. But this reminds me that I don’t have any kind of “About Me” information on my blog either. I think I’d better get to work on fixing that right now.

Notes on Shirky

Clay Shirky’s speech “Gin, Televsion, and Social Surplus” was both thought provoking and entertaining. I chuckled at many of his colorful analogies, such as his theory that a TV show like “Desperate Housewives” functions as a “cognitive heat sink, dissipating thinking that might otherwise have built up and caused society to overheat.”

I also laughed when he referred to “that episode of Gilligan’s Island where they almost get off the island and then Gilligan messes up and then they don’t.” Isn’t this the plot of most episodes of Gilligan’s Island? I think all those episodes have merged into one in Shirky’s memory.

Better Podcasts

My first attempt at subscribing to podcasts led me down one very short and one dead end path. The Nordic bagpipe music podcast has only one installment to date and the Orson Welles radio podcast is definitely limited by the fact that Orson Welles has been dead for some time.

So tonight I set out in search of new, more promising podcasts. I was quickly gratified to find two podasts that satisfy my fantasy that all this new technology can bring us back, in some ways, to the good old days. They are:

“The Backwards of Maine”

and

“The Paranormalists”

The first is an old-timey talk show, podcast “from the edge of a potato field on the east side of Mt. Katahdin.” Somewhat similar to Garrison Keilor’s “News From Lake Wobegon,’ this show is a lighthearted monologue about life in a small, rural community, filled with homspun wisdom and curious country characters. The podcast’s website encourages listeners to ‘tune in every once in a while” and lists episodes as “Numbah One,” “Numbah Two,” etc.

A recurring motif of the show are references to outhouses. The show’s website offers a live view of Mt. Katahdin from an “outhouse cam.” Because I visited the site at night, the image was completely black, so I had to take it on faith that I was really looking at midnight in the backwoods of Maine.

When I was growing up, my family had a collection of record albums of Maine humor called “Bert and I.” I memorized a lot of stories from these and learned to imitate the Maine accent. In later years I started a small career as a sort of standup comedian, dressing in a flannel shirt and suspenders and performing some of these old time stories in retirement homes around Seattle. I ended this short career in front of an enthusisatic audience at the Folklife Festival in 2002 and decided to retire on a high note. Now, as a retired Maine storyteller, I’m glad to see that the tradition lives on in podcasting.

The second podcast, “The Paranormalists,” is a terrific comedy/drama from the U.K. that is very much in the tradition of old radio drama. Making full use of sound effects, music and a troupe of talented actors, this podcast tells the tales of a group of English “Ghostbusters” who chase around investigating paranormal phenomena, including the Abominable Snowman and the Ghost of Elvis. What makes the show especially funny is that it is set in the rural West Country of England, amongst a lot of cows and hay ricks. The characters are often discovered chatting about rural matters in dialects not too far from Chaucer, until their cellphones begin to chirp and they must rush off to join their team for a new paranormal investigation. Jolly good fun!

Back to the Cracker Barrel

After a long period of skepticism about the South Lake Union streetcar line, I had a major change of heart the first time I actually saw the three streetcars parked in their barn, awaiting their inauguaral run. What won me over — and actually shocked me — was the fact that they had NO ADS on them! Although they were a far cry from the picturesque old Seattle Waterfront Streetcar, they pleased me with their sleek modern lines, fun colors and, most of all, a feeling of PURITY and singleness of purpose that I could only attibute to their not being rolling billboards.

I am an enthusiastic proponent of public transportation, and yet I grimace almost every time a Seattle city bus rolls into sight, because it forces me to contemplate some giant, univited advertising message.

Mitch Joel points out that the Advertising Era is but a tiny “blip in the history of the world,” but from my perspective it feels like it has been around for a very long time. Looking at photos of cities in 1900, with billboards and placards crowding every wall and public conveyance, I feel like little has changed, except that advertising has found ways to seep ever deeper into the crevices of our lives.

In her book “No Logo,” Naomi Kline quotes an anonymous advertising executive who said that consumers “are like roaches – you spray them and spray them and they get immune after a while.” Thus the advertising industy’s need to concoct stronger roach sprays all the time. I hope that Joel is right in suggesting that social media and Web 2.0 may break the established cycles of marketing and usher in a new era of commerce. My eyes are stinging from all that roach spray.

If new media can bring us back to an era when commerce was conducted by people interacting with each other, I will be very happy. I am leery, however, of the possibility that new media will only bring us more pervasive and insidious forms of marketing in the guise of person-to-person interaction.

I love the ability to shop on the Internet, read customer reviews of products and research products by visiting chat rooms and technology blogs. And yet, not long ago, I completely abandoned the Internet when it comes to buying one type of product that is important to me: audio gear. After several bad experiences buying microphones and adaptors that looked great but turned out to be completely wrong for me, I discovered that there is an actual store for professional audio gear, called Pacific Pro Audio, tucked away in the fifth floor of an obscure office building in Queen Anne.

Going in there for the first time, I was shocked to discover a little gang of audio experts, surrounded by all sorts of gear, who were ready to sit down with me and discuss my needs, ask me questions and then pull something out of a drawer or a catalog that was exactly what I wanted. Even if the item only cost $5, they treated me with as much courtesy and interest as if I were buying the most expensive thing they offered.

Going in there now, I feel as if I’m visiting an old time general store, leaning against the counter and chatting with the store keeper, then watching him as he pulls something out of a cracker barrel for me to sample. He never gives me a sales pitch, never pressures me to get on their mailing list or join their club and never offers to “supersize” my order. He just shares his expertise and gets me what I need.

I LOVE DOING BUSINESS THIS WAY! I love it so much that I grab every opportunity to buy something at Pacific Pro, and I reccomend the store enthusiatically to my friends and clients. I consider it a personal mission to bring this company as much business as I can, in hopes that it will never dry up and blow away.

I’m hoping someone will find this blog post in a Google Search and share it with others, starting a little viral marketing campaign. Maybe someone in another business will read this and realize that they ought to be doing business like Pacific Pro. Maybe what I’m doing right now is exactly what Mitch Joel is talking about. If social media and Web 2.0 can bring back some of the best aspects of commerce in the pre-marketing era — the days of the cracker barrel — well, then I think we’ll really be getting somewhere.

Misery Loves Company

As a new teacher (five years now teaching video production, or ten years, if I count teaching art to senior citizens), I decided to seek out wisdom from other teachers by Googling “teacher’s blog.” Right away I found two fascinating blogs and subscribed to them:

Anonymous Teacher Blog

Hipteacher

The two teachers here spill their guts about frustrating situations they’ve encountered in recent days and how they’ve dealt with behavior problems, as well as interesting ways they’ve found to help students understand difficult subjects such as reading Shakespeare.

Sometimes I think I’m a terrible teacher because half my students stare blankly at me most of the time. I thought I was unique in being torn between wanting to be “cool” in my students’ eyes and wanting to show them how much they can miss by being “cool.” Sometimes I doubt my professionalism because I let students get under my skin.

It’s great to read these blogs and see that I am not alone in thoughts and doubts like these. From grade school to academia, it seems, being a teacher is always somewhat akin to being a zookeeper and competing with the monkeys.

Reading about the adventures of these two teachers is giving me comfort, insight and ideas. Also valuable are the comments from other teachers, who provide advice when the blogger is facing a dilemna or wondering how to feel about something that happened in class. What a wonderful new way to find a “support group.”

Corrected Links to Podcasts

I didn’t realize that linking to a podcast’s location in iTunes was a problem. Here are links to my two podcasts’ websites:

Nordic Drones

Orson Welles On the Air