Archive for the ‘Life’ Category

Um meme é universal/A meme is universal

Monday, February 28th, 2011

meme – (n.) in Internet culture, an idea that is shared digitally across a culture. Also, typically funny.

When things on the Internet spread like wildfire as they often do, we might be tempted to assume that since we – the English-speaking Americans of the world – began using the web in earnest, that Internet culture is ours and ours alone.

But that, of course, is not the case.

From the cryptic blogs in the Cyrillic alphabet hosted on LiveJournal blogs to the old oekaki online drawing boards in Japan, foreigners have contributed just as much as Americans to the humorous or interesting posts we find on eBaumsWorld.com, that are emailed to us by friends, or are shared on Facebook. Digital emoticons, for example, are now used by the masses but first started popping up in international Usenet groups, one of the first forms of large-scale message boards from the 1980s. A smile or frown emoticon says the same thing no matter your nationality.

The Tenso meme, using a screengrab from Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

The principle of how an Internet meme catches on also applies to viral videos, save one crucial detail: creating memes requires considerably less skill and equipment to create, capture and share with the Internet. And unlike videos, a photo meme can transcend the language barrier. A video that begins in America may only reach an English-speaking audience; but a funny picture that requires no caption or language knowledge to understand could end up flying around the world.

Tenso, which originated in Portuguese, is a beautiful example of such a meme.

Tenso memes are typically four-panel comics that showcase something that might not have been obvious in the original image. In most cases, this is drawing attention to someone who has a less than desirable facial expression in a photograph. An example, shown right, is taken from a concert scene in the film Scott Pilgrim vs. The World where an extra has a rather absurd face that doesn’t fit in with the crowd so much.

There are several instances of Tenso photos popping up on a forum called “Fórum Uol Jogos,” a popular Portuguese-language destination primarily for Brazilian Internet denizens to discuss pretty much anything from the latest video games to silly pictures like these.

Many memes are images adapted from their original media (a music video or a movie, for example) and applied to other pictures. Take the meme simply known as Dorgas, in which a Brazilian forensics dog has its picture taken in front of a large supply of narcotics. In the meme, people place a quote bubble above the dog’s head, and meme participants change what the dog is saying. The head of the dog has even been Photoshopped into the wildly popular “Advice Dog” meme, as well.

The Drago meme incorporated into the colorful Advice Dog meme.

Memes like this cross-pollinate on a near constant basis, turning pictures of a dog with a bit of text and point-blank humor into images that are instantly sharable and almost universally understood. It’s subtle humor that makes for big laughs and, if done correctly by a marketer, gives customers a reason to pay more attention to their brand.

So, to recap, memes must be:

- Simple.

- Funny.

- Universal.

“Language” is not necessarily included. Get all three of those right and you might have just created the next big Internet sensation.

- Brad (@bcarr)

Share

A foundation is laid for “Selective Connection”

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Like any other member of the early-adopter subset of users out there (yes, I count myself as one), I try to get my name onto as many social networks I can just to get to know the latest up-and-coming technologies. I sign up, test ‘em, then continue on or throw them out after a few weeks. Each network – and there are dozens – gets a fair shot at earning my approval.

I’m presently putting a new social network, Quora, through its paces. So far, so good. It’s all part of my interest in seeing what works for people and businesses/clients -and what doesn’t.

I recently reviewed a social network called Path that bills itself as an “anti-social network” of sorts wherein it limits a user to 50 friends. I like it and continue to use it, and recommend you do, too. And after a few weeks of use, I’ve come to realize that digital services that require a user to selectively limit their friend list to a small number of connections must be getting the idea from other networks, where such friend-limiting activity happens naturally.

At Feedback, we call this phenomenon “Selective Connection.” Take LinkedIn, for example.

Where Facebook has now become the primary network that enables friends to find each other after losing touch with one another over time, LinkedIn has become a quiet network for business professionals.

Most users typically keep their personal profiles on other social networks separated from their LinkedIn profiles for good reason: it’s a professional network for the purpose of being professional. Nowhere on LinkedIn do you ever anticipate that photo of you doing a kegstand to appear. Instead, it’s the place where you can share your talent and skills, learn more about others, and make recommendations and engage in meaningful professional discussion.

The limitations that a user has come to expect on LinkedIn were welcomed in business world much faster than Facebook’s more casual usage and customs. Sure, LinkedIn has integration with Twitter accounts to allow for cross-posting of content that might have something to do with your job. But overall, LinkedIn is kept pretty civil.

So you might start to wonder, why hasn’t Facebook come in and taken command of the online business networking scene? Can’t Facebook flip a switch and do that?

Of course not. Well, not presently, anyway.

A recent conversation that I had on Twitter concluded with the revelation that the social graph online has been replicated from what has long existed outside of the Internet: Some people keep work at work, while some might want to keep home at home.

How Facebook operates right now on a fundamental level is drawn straight from the actions of promoting someone that you just met to a level of friendship. As Facebook continues to grow, the assumed action and reaction of sending and accepting a friend request is slowly solidified as the proper etiquette.

A separate network, LinkedIn, exists for those who feel that they don’t want to share what might appear on their Facebook profile with those at their workplace or potential employer. For those who don’t want to share every particular photo with all of their Facebook or Twitter followers, there is a network like Path.

And there will be more to come, as closed-circle networks and selective connection becomes one of the latest darlings of the new media industry. While it seems like a niche market, closed-circle social networks continue to grow and become successful. LinkedIn might be a closed or specialized network with the most amount of visibility, but smaller online venues could influence the direction that networks are taking in 2011 and beyond.

-Brad (@bcarr)

Share

A Cool Idea, Born out of Social Media

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Here in Richmond, the social community is all a-Twitter (see what we did there?) with buzz about the new Richmond Type Map. Local graphic designer Carrie Fleck spent more than 100 hours creating a map of our great city using nothing but letters.

A map of Richmond, made entirely from type.

She may have never done it, though, were it not for the online community: A Richmond Twitter user found a link to a typographic map of Chicago made by a company called Axis Maps, then shared it with the Richmond Twittersphere. Then the gauntlet was laid down: “Can someone make this for Richmond?”

Fleck saw the tweets and desire for Richmonders to have their own version. “I thought I’d give it a shot,” she said. The project has since received immense support from the local online community and regional advertising industry insiders.

The maps (which contain 533 layers of type for you design nerds) went on sale this week at www.RichmondTypeMap.com. They’re $40, with $5 going to local nonprofit group Art 180 for each print sold before Christmas. They are going fast.

“It was a huge undertaking and the attention to detail was enough to drive me insane,” Fleck said. “But I am super proud of how this turned out, and hope Richmonders feel the same way.”

At Feedback, we definitely do. We’ve already ordered a half dozen.

-Jeff (@jephkelley)

Share