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Using coffee and oatmeal to build an audience on Twitter

idea

It started with a suggestion from Sandy Walsh in September in a tweet where he said, “ 2011 topic idea: “Effectively building a Twitter following with oatmeal” by @” and then it grew. Roger Ebert wrote about all the amazing things you can cook in a rice cooker and I was inspired and bought one. Then I found out that you could make oatmeal in it and that became part of the morning routine. Coffee has been there for a long time and with Twitter it is the logical thing to mention when you start the day. Strangely people would mention the morning tweets which always mentioned coffee and oatmeal and then the weather or something similar. Why did people like these?

Plan for the day

Doing a session at Podcamp was a chance to figure that out and to also share some thoughts about Twitter and why I love it and what works. In a broader sense it really can speak to a lot of things that I enjoy and why. One of the great things about doing a talk is that it is a great chance to meet people and share ideas. If you are shy as I tend to be with a crowd it provides a way to meet a lot of people without a lot of effort. But there is the challenge of the speaking, which can be a bit stressful.

I love creating slides for presentations and using technology in interesting ways, but the problem with that is that it locks you in to a certain linear structure and then the technology becomes the focus. The key for me is to have a good and simple structure that gets people involved and with a screen it is easy for the focus to be there, but if you can turn things back to the people attending and not be a person who speaks and asks for questions at the end, it’s the best. I’d rather be a facilitator than a professor. But that can be difficult to do. So in the way that I usually do this, I thought and thought and thought and then finally wrote down the structure on a Post-It note which consisted of the three things that I wanted people to talk about – one thing that they liked to share, one thing they liked to eat, and one thing that they liked to watch or listen to.

Since it was about oatmeal and coffee the other thing to do would be to provide coffee or oatmeal. I love making coffee, but it can be a bit complicated. The beans need to be ground and most of the time my preferred method is using the vacuum extraction method with a Bodum Santos coffeemaker. So that’s a bit too much equipment to bring. The oatmeal is much simpler with only the rice cooker, water and oatmeal required. So the plan was all in place. No technology other than the rice cooker along with some Post-It notes, pens, and cups to hold oatmeal (with a bit of sugar too).

Results of Coffee and Oatmeal Podcamp Session

Sunday, January 23rd arrived and on a nice day the event began. The organizers, Ryan Deschamps, Craig Moore, and Bessy Nikolaou did an amazing job. This was the third Podcamp Halifax and the second that I went to. At the inaugural event I did a presentation called, “Small, Specific and Real” which was fun. This year it seemed bigger with a lot more people that I knew.

One of the central rules of Podcamp is the open space concept of “the law of two feet” where you are free to go from one session to another if you want to. While I love the idea, I usually don’t do it that often. The sessions that I attended were good and interesting and, as always, it seemed that there was a lot of good stuff happening everywhere.

When it came to my session the attendance was very good and it was surprising to see so many people there. So I set up the rice cooker and the water and oatmeal as things got underway. The real point (and thanks for reading this far to get to it) is that you should use Twitter to be who you are and to share things that you like to share and enjoy. It’s about being yourself and finding others who enjoy things that you do or at the very least derive some pleasure from your enjoyment.

The fun part of the session was when people wrote things down on Post-It notes for me. They shared an amazing range of things to share, things to eat, and things to watch or listen to. As people came up to put the notes on the board it was like a physical version of Twitter with everyone sharing little bits of themselves. The board filled up quickly and I scanned through and read out what people had shared. Then I asked a few people about what they had shared and then it grew and more people spoke. It was fun and it’s always great to see a group of people who have the courage to share and speak. So thanks to everyone who came out and shared. Podcamp Halifax 2011 was a lot of fun and I’m excited about more events with the wonderful people who are part of the social media community in Nova Scotia.

January 30, 2011 , , , ,

1

Favourite Films of 2010 and More

2010 Films

The past year was a pretty good one in film and it wasn’t really that difficult to come up with a list of the ten films I enjoyed the most. It was an interesting and uneven year with solid films from great filmmakers and some neat new discoveries. I’ve written about the films in separate reviews on the blog, so this is a chance to make some observations about the films.

Most of the films feature strong and compelling characters with riveting performances. Some new discoveries for me with actors young and old with Katie Jarvis in Fish Tank, Jennifer Lawrence in Winter’s Bone, Tahar Rahim in A Prophet, and Kim Hye-ja in Mother. Some great central performances by some of my favourite actors with George Clooney in The American and Tilda Swinton in I Am Love. At the other end of the spectrum are great established ensemble casts with Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush and Helena Bonham-Carter in The King’s Speech, Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield, and Keira Knightly in Never Let Me Go. Finally two films with sprawling, complex stories and great ensemble acting with In a Better World and Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.

Two films play with shooting conventions with bold, open framing by Martin Ruhe in The American and off-centre, wide-angle compositions by Danny Cohen in The King’s Speech. The more intimate stories have naturalistic and intimate shooting styles by Stéphane Fontaine in A Prophet, and Robbie Ryan with Fish Tank. Moving into a sensuous and impressionistic style is Yorick Le Saux with I Am Love.

The films are diverse with half of them in languages other than English and most of them have a level of ambiguity to them, which I really like. The stories are constructed and we have to fill in many of the blanks. The most ambiguous and diverse of the films is easily Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives which crammed so many different styles and tones into one film and ultimate had an amazing ending that gave me chills. I Am Love, Winter’s Bone, In A Better World, Mother, The American, and Fish Tank all work slowly at first, but build to resolutions that raise the stakes are are surprising.

One of the nice things with the availability of films more quickly after their theatrical release is that you can see these films as well as other ones by the directors and actors. Some of the directors from my list this year have me looking forward to everything they do such as Andrea Arnold of Fish Tank who previously did Red Road which works in the same working-class British environment, or Anton Corbijn who followed up Control with The American. I love Jacques Audiard‘s compelling character studies with Read My Lips and The Beat That My Heart Skipped leading logically into A Prophet. Susanne Bier works more melodramatically with her large casts with Brothers and After the Wedding exploring similar ground as her In A Better World.

While the list has ten films here are some other films that I really enjoyed that can be honourable mentions for 2010. Ingrid Veninger wrote and directed the coming-of-age drama Modra in a documentary-style with a great cast enhancing the story. Xavier Dolan‘s Heartbeats was one of the most gorgeous films with lovely cinematography by Stéphanie Anne Weber Biron. Banksy’s documentary (mockumentary?) Exit Through the Gift Shop was fun and provocative and made me think a lot about art and how it can be defined. One of the geekiest and funnest film from the past year was Edgar Wright‘s underrated Scott Pilgrim vs. the World which fused film, video game and comic book aesthetics into something that was fun and light.

The films from established directors such as Scorese‘s Shutter Island, Polanski‘s The Ghost Writer, Christopher Nolan‘s Inception, and the Coen’s True Grit were solid genre exercises that were good to watch, but not really extraordinary compared to their other films. David Fincher and Darren Aronofsky both told stylistically interesting, but oddly misogynistic stories with The Social Network and Black Swan. While making splashes with their releases, the Fincher and Aronofsky films were a bit more interesting later to discuss than they were to watch thanks to some heavy-handed writing with both films. An action-filled pleasant surprise was seeing Angelina Jolie in Philip Noyce‘s Salt which was a enjoyable well-constructed thriller with a strong central female character.

So it was a good year for films with lots of solid work, but nothing really standing out too much for me with the exception of Uncle Boonmee which was a pleasure to see in the theatre.

January 3, 2011 , ,