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	<title>The RANT &#187; The Voodoo Of Video</title>
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		<title>The Voodoo Of Video</title>
		<link>http://www.john-carlton.com/2008/03/the-voodoo-of-video/</link>
		<comments>http://www.john-carlton.com/2008/03/the-voodoo-of-video/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Mar 2008 04:23:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Carlton</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General Archives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[video]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[video sharing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.john-carlton.com/2008/03/13/the-voodoo-of-video/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Thursday, 8:03pm Reno, NV Bring out the champagne&#8230; Howdy, You either hate&#8230; or love video. Doesn&#8217;t seem to much of the old &#8220;in between&#8221; on this. And I think I can clear up some misconceptions about it here in this post. First, however&#8230; Happy Anniversary To Us! Last night, as my partner Stan and I]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thursday, 8:03pm<br />
Reno, NV<br />
<em>Bring out the champagne&#8230;</em></p>
<p>Howdy,</p>
<p>You either hate&#8230; or love video.</p>
<p>Doesn&#8217;t seem to much of the old &#8220;in between&#8221; on this.</p>
<p>And I think I can clear up some misconceptions about it here in this post.</p>
<p><em>First</em>, however&#8230;<span id="more-227"></span></p>
<p><strong>Happy Anniversary To Us!</strong></p>
<p>Last night, as my partner Stan and I were discussing the subject matter for our next Radio Rant Coaching Club call, I realized that today is (<em>sob, choke</em>) our one-year anniversary.  On March 13, 2007, we launched the club with little fanfare, but a lot of intense interest from insiders.</p>
<p>Frankly, I&#8217;m stunned.  Not that we lasted out the first year with bells and whistles&#8230; but that another year has snuck by.</p>
<p>I mean&#8230; who do I write to about this time-zipping-by thing?  Is Einstein still taking calls?</p>
<p>Seriously.  For most of my life, I followed a barely-functional form of (I guess we can call it this) hippie-tinged Zen awareness&#8230; which focused on the &#8220;here and now&#8221;.  Americans have a bad habit of living in the past or the future (obsessing on past injustice, for example, or believing their life won&#8217;t actually start until they do X).</p>
<p>This is a horrible way to live, avoiding the present.  Memories are great, and plans are good.</p>
<p>But you can only <em>live </em>in the present.  The past is gone, and the future is a crapshoot.  (I have friends who were killed by buses and unexpected crap falling on them.  It&#8217;s no joke to realize that &#8212; <em>literally </em>at any moment &#8212; your ticket can get punched.  Ride over.  Plans cancelled.)</p>
<p>(Brrrr.)</p>
<p>There&#8217;s even an old semi-wise saying:  &#8220;You wanna make God laugh?  Make plans.&#8221;</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I didn&#8217;t get my professional life moving until I learned how to entertain the concept that thinking ahead a little bit is how you <em>get shit done</em>.  I bought my first-ever year-long appointment calendar, and starting scheduling stuff out, like, <em>weeks </em>in advance.</p>
<p>Weeks!</p>
<p>Even today (long after the moment I really should know better), I feel creeped-out writing in some commitment for speaking at a seminar, or meeting some deadline, more than a few months hence.</p>
<p>I mean&#8230; how the hell do I know the Earth will even BE here in August?  Let alone that I&#8217;ll still be a guy who speaks at seminars, or meets deadlines, or hasn&#8217;t been locked away in a mental ward?</p>
<p>Silly, I know.</p>
<p>But I swear to you that, up until a few years ago, I would agree to something a few months out&#8230; and relax, because there was plenty of time to prepare&#8230; and there really WAS plenty of time.</p>
<p>Now?  I write the commitment down in the planner&#8230; seven months and two complete seasons away&#8230; and then, like, TWO DAYS LATER it&#8217;s time to get on the plane.</p>
<p>Somebody&#8217;s been screwing with my sense of time.</p>
<p>My father is now 88 years old.  Healthy as can be.  Takes his lovely wife Marge out dancing three times a week (real hard-core ballroom dancing, too), keeps up a social calendar that would exhaust me, and travels frequently to joints like China, South America, Alaska, that kind of thing.</p>
<p>I sure hope I have his genes.</p>
<p>But here&#8217;s why I bring it up:  In our last phone conversation, Pop sighs and laments the way time is flying by so quickly.</p>
<p>Wait a minute, I say.  I&#8217;m feeling like it&#8217;s rushing by like a speeding bullet.  Just HOW fast is time flying for you at 88?</p>
<p>Faster than it did when I was <em>your </em>age, he says.</p>
<p>So now I&#8217;m completely freaked out.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve even studied the phenomenon.  There are tricks to &#8220;slow time down&#8221;, like learning new stuff every day, challenging your brain by avoiding habitual behavior, meditating, that kind of thing.</p>
<p>Works a little bit.</p>
<p>But I&#8217;ve kinda had a revelation here:  While time is a human invention, it&#8217;s NOT gonna slow down much for me.</p>
<p>In my twenties, a week seemed to last forever.  More stuff would happen to me in a day than happens to me in a month now.  So many possibilities crowded my awareness then.  Adventures cascaded upon my head like rain.</p>
<p>But something changes when you age.  It may well be that once all those adventurous possibilities fall off the radar (no way am I joining the Peace Corps now, nor am I gonna move to Greenwich Village and form a punk band), life becomes more about <em>finishing up </em>goals I&#8217;ve already decided are my main focus&#8230; and that makes time more real.  Deadlines, when I&#8217;m able to self-impose them, arrive like bricks thrown at the door in startling succession.  (I&#8217;ve got three unfinished novels in my file cabinet &#8212; the youngest is ten years old, the geezer is over twenty.)  (No lectures, please &#8212; I consciously put them aside all those years ago when I realized being a novelist would bankrupt me&#8230; and I decided, instead, to concentrate on what I&#8217;m doing now.  Writing for the real world, and teaching.)  (Still, I want to finish the little bastards at some point.)</p>
<p>This may be the ultimate generation gap.</p>
<p>You know, I tell everyone who&#8217;ll listen (and I&#8217;m really lucky to have so many colleagues who still find my stories entertaining) that for MOST of my career&#8230; I was the young hotshot rebel in the room.  My <em>job </em>was to make life uncomfortable for the old farts, and inject some youthful energy and enthusiasm into projects.</p>
<p>Then, one day (and not too long ago in &#8220;John Time&#8221;), I realized I was the oldest guy at a big brainstorm of Internet colleagues.  By twenty years, too.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a testament to how hip these younger Web honchos are that they not only put up with me (cuz I WILL tell you stories)&#8230; but actually go out of their way to hang with us.  My friends and mentors were always all over the map, age-wise.  Frequently, Halbert (thirteen years older) and my now-partner Stan (fifteen years younger) would sit around bullshitting and having a good time.  Age tends to be irrelevant when you&#8217;re hip, smart, and open to evil fun.</p>
<p>Still&#8230; it seems to me that dogs have it right.</p>
<p>A dog truly lives in the moment.  When you&#8217;re gone, or dinner&#8217;s late, she&#8217;s understandably ferklempshed and upset.  When I&#8217;m gone for a week on biz, my little rat terrier mopes and checks my office for signs I&#8217;m there, constantly.  Yet, the MOMENT I arrive home, she is happy to see me&#8230; and promptly forgets that I was ever gone.</p>
<p>Dogs &#8212; as any vet will tell you &#8212; have zero sense of time.</p>
<p>And the good ones &#8212; the lucky dogs among us &#8212; live each day with passion and gusto and lots of groovy naps.</p>
<p>Bark heartily, is their motto.  Then go eat the cat.</p>
<p>I know this time thing is just a worthless obsession.  There&#8217;s no way to tell how other people experience time, because it&#8217;s such an objective perception.  (Though, I once made Yanik Silver shiver in horror in a San Diego bar when I told him to blink&#8230; and then said &#8220;The <em>next </em>time you notice you&#8217;ve blinked, twenty years will have zipped by.&#8221;  Startled him.  Almost spilled his vodka.)</p>
<p>It&#8217;s all freaking relative, I know.  I&#8217;m as happy, and more healthy, than I was twenty years ago.  If my genes play out, I have another mini-lifetime left to enjoy.  (Consider that, in 1900, at the dawn of the last century, the <em>average </em>lifespan of an American was around 30 years.  My generation didn&#8217;t begin to feel like adults until we hit our 30s, for cryin&#8217; out loud.  The current generation is still <em>living at home </em>at 30.)  (So, if 30 is a lifespan, I&#8217;m heading toward the end of my second shot at it.  It&#8217;s not exactly &#8220;borrowed time&#8221;, but I&#8217;m very aware that my health and happiness is a product of living in the times I live in, and not because I&#8217;m special.  My friend Dave Kekich is obsessed with increasing our lifespan, and I&#8217;m listening closely.  But, mostly, I really want to concentrate on squeezing the most from the time I know I&#8217;ve got &#8212; today.)</p>
<p>Is this relevant for a business blog?</p>
<p>Hell, yes, it&#8217;s relevant.  I get &#8220;woe is me&#8221; email from young men who are convinced their life is over because they&#8217;re not wealthy yet.  And I get &#8220;can&#8217;t wait to test more shit on my new Website&#8221; email from ancient geezers who only recently got over their fear of turning a computer on.</p>
<p>And, when you consider all factors, that young guy&#8217;s life might really BE over soon.  I&#8217;ve lost a big damn bunch of the people I grew up with at this point&#8230; and way too many dropped dead before their first wrinkle.  Life ain&#8217;t fair, never pretended to be, and the inherent risks of being a carbon-based oxygen-breathing mammal in a semi-hostile environment isn&#8217;t gonna change anytime soon.</p>
<p>And, just as possible, the old guy may live another mini-lifetime yet.  May write the Great American Novel (it&#8217;s a stupid, mostly-American myth, that the best writers are young &#8212; they aren&#8217;t).  May invent that flying car I was promised back in the fifties in my brother&#8217;s beat-up copies of &#8220;Mechanics Illustrated&#8221;.  Might even father (go for it, dude) the child who will grow up to save the planet.</p>
<p>Movies don&#8217;t help much.  I have to force myself not to break out of the suspended disbelief required to get absorbed in film and realize &#8220;Hey &#8212; he&#8217;s <em>dead</em>&#8221; when I&#8217;m watching a great actor do his thing.  (And because a &#8220;classic&#8221; movie buff like me gravitates toward REALLY old movies, I often remember that ALL the actors are dead.  Been dead, too, for a while.)</p>
<p>Time is fleeting.</p>
<p>Anybody up for the Time Warp, again?</p>
<p>And&#8230; I guess that&#8217;s a good enough segue into video, as promised.</p>
<p>So.</p>
<p>In honor of the one-year anniversary of the Radio Rant Coaching Club&#8230; I have pulled another post of mine off the Forum.  It&#8217;s pretty good, and a good example of the cool stuff you can enjoy as a member.</p>
<p>So, with no more fanfare (I&#8217;m running out of time, you know), here&#8217;s my reply to someone&#8217;s post asking &#8220;Does anybody read copy online any more?&#8221;&#8230;</p>
<p>(Note:  The &#8220;Jason&#8221; I refer to is my young colleague, Jason Moffatt.  He answered the post just before I logged on, saying &#8212; as a self-admitted &#8220;video guy&#8221; &#8212; that getting a sales message across online was really a &#8220;mixed bag&#8221; that includes copy and video and everything else.)</p>
<p>Ahem.</p>
<p>&#8221; Dear [name omitted for privacy].  I&#8217;m really glad that Jason popped back into the Forum &#8212; he truly &#8220;gets&#8221; the entire marketing mindset online, despite being mainly a video guy.</p>
<p>The &#8220;mixed bag&#8221; theory of communicating a sales message goes back to the very beginning of direct response marketing. Companies used print ads, door-to-door salesmen, direct mail, television (you didn&#8217;t think the infomercial suddenly sprang into exisitence full-blown in the 80s, did you? The very first commercials in the fifties were <em>looooooong </em>damn ads&#8230; in fact, single companies sponsored entire shows), radio, spectacular PR events, supermarket tastings, etc.</p>
<p>You want to engage as many senses as possible, and video expands the visual. (Reading is visual, as are photos, but it&#8217;s static. Video moves.)</p>
<p>The only thing we&#8217;re missing, today, is smell. We experiment with it, occasionally, with mail samples, perfume samples in magazines, and Smell-O-Vision at the movies. But the virtual experience kind of makes it impossible, for now, online. (Can you imagine a Wii console squirting out odors for, say, an adventure game in the jungle?) (Even bowling alleys have a peculiar smell, you know &#8212; I grew up in one, Lebowski-like, and remember it well.)</p>
<p>The split between people who prefer to read, or watch, or experience things in multiple ways, is NOT age related &#8212; it&#8217;s part of your DNA, how you perceive the world. We&#8217;re complex creatures, but you can still draw a flow chart of finite ways we engage with the world (kinestetic athletes and risk takers, introverted readers, gourmets, sculpters vs painters, and so on).</p>
<p>Smart marketers use it all. I love video, and plan to do more and more&#8230; but as Jason points out, it still needs to be scripted (even if only with notes). And of course, I&#8217;m primarily a writer &#8212; you cannot edit or rewrite with video, and the best writing is the result of many go-throughs.</p>
<p>The top marketers avoid using one medium over any other on ideological grounds &#8212; we do what <em>works</em>.  Right now, you can enjoy the &#8220;mixed bag&#8221; of possibilities in getting your message across.</p>
<p>These are special times, full of possibility and generously tolerant of new ways of doing things.</p>
<p>Enjoy them.</p>
<p>Before you blink, and it&#8217;s 2028 (and your flying car is in the shop).</p>
<p>Stay frosty,</p>
<p><strong>John Carlton</strong><br />
<a href="http://www.carltoncoaching.com/carltonradiorant.html">www.carltoncoaching.com</a></p>
<p><strong>P.S. </strong> Love to hear your thoughts about time, and about video.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m all over YouTube these days, you know.  Though I look so much <em>younger </em>in the film taken last year&#8230;</p>
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