links for 2006-11-07

  • Shift is a multi-media company that focuses on the exploding environmental movement through a pop culture lens. Aimed at an emerging mainstream that is environmentally conscious, Shift entertains, inspires, and informs readers about practical advances in

Adopt-a-cast

Here’s an unsolicited podcasting idea, mainly for weekly or occasional public radio podcasts with a good number of subscribers.

  • Think of each podcast as a dedicated channel with a captive audience of subscribers.
  • This channel is mostly empty other than the one episode per week that you send along.
  • What about using that space to introduce new content - a new podcast, a new segment, some new talent?

Imagine if, for example, Weekend America turned to one of the many independent producers it works with for the main weekly show, and had them produce a special podcast-only segment that would be dropped in as an extra episode in the feed.

Or now that This American Life is finally podcasting, what if Ira picked a story that didn’t make the cut (and there are always worthy ones that don’t make it)?

Of course it would need to be a) really good; and b) introduced and endorsed by the main show. You don’t want to annoy your existing subscribers with content they didn’t sign up for, and they do not necessarily experience the subscription as a “channel” at this point. And the adopted podcast wouldn’t be establishing their own direct subscription base — though that might be an ok trade-off to reach a bigger audience.

So far the majority of public radio podcasting is simply repurposing radio shows for digital distribution, often with some podcast-only intros and outros but little else original.

Most of the providers and producers of these podcasts would tell you there simply isn’t time or an efficient model for creating custom podcast-only content in addition to repurposing the show itself.

So that’s where the collaborative opportunity presents itself: adopt a podcast from someone else. For new podcasters it’s a struggle to build up an audience, but over here you have “channels” with tens of thousands of subscribers to these weekly public radio podcasts that are sitting empty.

Seems like an interesting way to nurture new talent and provide original content to new audiences.

Hot Chip again

Saw Hot Chip at the Paradise in Boston last night - fantastic. Totally not the kind of music I’m usually drawn to, especially with all those Depeche Mode and Kraftwerk influences, but perhaps that’s all balanced with bits of Prince and funk and a tinge of Postal Service electronika melodika that I dig.

The thing that hooked me from the first listen about a year ago was the immediately noticeable fact that these aren’t just machine loops and layers — it’s all the imperfections and not-quite-aligned human grooves that make it stick. And live that’s even more apparent with the bunch of nerdy guys in front of keyboards across the stage. Last night they also added a live drummer, which they didn’t have at the Great Scott show I saw earlier. It’s a good addition and amped up the dynamics for every song - and he was amazingly good at locking into the other beat loops the band was playing. Evidently he’s from LCD Soundsytem.

Lots of good Hot Chip clips on YouTube, and here’s the video for “Over and Over”, the final song in the encore from last night.

links for 2006-11-03

  • Bezos wants Amazon to run your business, at least the messy technical and logistical parts of it, using those same technologies and operations that power his $10 billion online store. In the process, Bezos aims to transform Amazon into a kind of 21st cent

New Creative Commons video

links for 2006-11-02

  • webcasts from the recent Digimart conference; with topics like “the democratization of media”, “new producer business models”, “what’s the point of copyright”

links for 2006-11-01