Happy Blog Action Day

In case you missed it, today is Blog Action Day – a day when blogs all around the internet talk about a certain issue and link to sites that talk about that certain issue. Today’s issue that we are taking action on is poverty. How, you may ask, are bloggers taking action? Let’s go right to the horse’s mouth:

“Blog Action Day is an annual nonprofit event that aims to unite the world’s bloggers, podcasters and videocasters, to post about the same issue on the same day. Our aim is to raise awareness and trigger a global discussion. “

At this point, I feel compelled to say that “awareness” and “discussion” are not “action.” They are awareness and discussion. “Action” involves volunteering or donating. It’s easy to link to a non-profit whose job it is to call on more government funding to help these people out. That’s a lazy solution for people who want to feel like they have made a difference without getting their hands dirty.

But even though the temperature has been in the 80s this week in Your Nation’s Capital, it’s going to get cold soon, and there are going to be folks who can’t pay the home heating bill – or worse, don’t have a place to call home at all. There are always too many people who, for whatever reason, can’t get enough to eat.

As a good friend of mine once said, poverty is not a social problem – it’s a personal problem. Each person who suffers from poverty, homelessness, or hunger has their own path to that destination. That’s why small, local charities are the best equipped to deal with it through personal attention and help.

Your local homeless shelter, your church, or any number of community charities can use your time – and the people they help will appreciate it. So take action.

Coming soon: SNL joins the 21st Century

This weekend, my brother and I were remembering of our favorite SNL sketches. I wanted to watch it, so I dialed up Hulu, the free video site that includes content from NBC. Nothing. I had to go to Google Video to find “Sabra Price is Right.”

Funny enough, Mashable today reports that a new SNL website is in the works. The site would feature (legally uploaded) clips to watch.

Lorne Michaels and company are apparently still working out a revenue model for the site – which means they view this as a separate business venture from their TV show. But beyond their recent election-related ratings boost, SNL has spent the past few seasons struggling to find the relevance it once had as a source of cutting-edge comedy.

What better way to create a buzz and excitement about the show than to release their sketches online for the viral email-forwarding crowd? And what better way to track which three minute sketches (buried in a 90-minute show) generate audience reaction? To be on the cutting edge of comedy, SNL must join the cutting edge of technology (beyond Andy Samberg’s Digital Shorts).

Entertainment 2.0

I just found this article about an online variety show to promote the band Tally Hall. Warner Brothers’ offbeat promotion is an attempt to match modern media and the spirit of the Monkees. And good for them, because it seems like in today’s media environment, the bigger the company or cause is, the less likely they are to try new marketing and – more importantly – revenue models.

During my college days around the turn of the century, music downloads took off, and record companies attacked Napster. They should have realized that the black market sprang up because of some important consumer trends: sometimes people wanted to buy singles, rather than 13-song albums, and they wanted their media digitally. This was a new revenue model and a new market that iTunes eventually capitalized on; and now legal music downloading and internet radio sites exist. How badly do you think Sony, Universal, and other major labels wish they had thought of a download-based business model ten years ago?

The trend is starting to continue to video. Studios and television networks are quick to scour YouTube and pull unauthorized copies; anyone who has tried to share a Saturday Night Live sketch on Monday afternoon can attest to this. But now NBC and other networks and studios have been delivering web content though their own sites and through other sites like Hulu.

The beauty of capitalism is that factors such as the delivery of goods and services are ultimately dictated by the customer. Smart companies analyze those trends and find ways to take advantage of them.

Daily Kos: Earmarks are OK!

The rhetorical gymnasts at DailyKos are hard at work “taking the steam out of John McCain’s anti-earmark crusade.” Their two-pronged approach has two key points:

1. Earmarks don’t cost that much.
2. Earmarks pay for good things!

It’s not pointing out earmarks that McCain has supported, or rooting out hypocrisy in McCain’s position. They actually like earmarks (for the purposes of the 2008 Presidential campaign).

For the first point, DailyKos draws the analogy of a worker who makes $30,000 per year and carries $90,000 debt, approximately the ratio the country is in. Under this scale, the worker would spend $150 in earmarks – not enough to dent the debt. Thus, according to Kos, earmarks don’t cost that much.

On the other hand, I’d advise the worker that throwing around money and spending wastefully is probably the type of behavior that led to the $90,000 in debt.

And of course DailyKos advises it’s readers to highlight earmarks that do good things and were sponsored by Obama. Setting aside that it’s probably a bad idea to highlight their candidate’s record of supporting earmarks, is the point of reforming earmarks really about the outcome? If our government was spending money on the Monroe County Office of Puppy Punching, I doubt earmarks would be an issue.

Earmarks are bad because it’s taxpayer money – yours and mine – going to a project so a Congressman or Senator can buy their constituents’ votes. And regardless of DailyKos’s moral relativism, that’s wrong.

Don’t call us, we’ll call you

It looks like the Senate will vote to approve the Wall Street bailout that failed the House earlier this week – despite intense constituent disapproval.

Public disapproval of the proposed bailout was so high, in fact, that the House website crashed under the weight of the public response: those who tried to email their Congressman got an error message about high volume. Their solution was to limit the number of emails constituents could send in.

That’s not a typo – Congress really told America, “Hey! Pipe down!”

It’s easy to blame Capitol Hill’s 1970s-era staffing structure for making Congressional offices amazingly ill-equipped to handle high volumes of electronic constituent communication. But as the internet becomes the easiest and most convenient way for most people to get in touch with their elected representatives, this may just be a scam to drum up business for the post office.

Debate Day

We still aren’t sure whether or not there will be a Presidential debate tonight. We are sure that there was one 48 years ago today. The infamous Kennedy-Nixon debate ushered in the era of TV politics.

To say TV won the election for Kennedy would be an overstatement – after all, Richard Daley played a big part, too. Similarly, Barack Obama’s vaunted internet strategies will not in and of themselves win him the White House. But like Kennedy’s television presence, Obama’s online savvy involves the mastery of a new medium – and an instant connection with the voters who are catching onto it. By conquering these new conduits of information, both Obama and Kennedy have been heralded as forward-thinking and intellectual.

And, assuming McCain takes the stage at some time in the coming weeks, his age and aversion to technology will be every bit as effective a counterpoint as Nixon’s five-o’-clock shadow.

No "YouTube Debate" this fall

The Commission on Presidential Debates announced they will not hold a “YouTube debate” – with questions submitted through voter-generated videos – for this year’s election.

That’s a little disappointing – since 1992’s “townhall” format, the Commission has seemed willing to experiment with new ways of pitting candidates against each other. Still, the idea was tried in the primaries and proved to be little more than a gimmick. Debate co-sponsor CNN essentially picked the questions anyway, so the only difference was that a talking snowman asked candidates about global warming rather than Wolf Blitzer.

A better “voter-generated debate” format might work along the lines of 10questions.com, a project originating from TechPresident.com. The site invites video questions, allows people to vote them up or down, and submits the top ten to all candidates for their response. That would promote videos which are both informative and entertaining. Best of all, those submitting videos would have to “campaign” for votes as well by rounding up friends and social network contacts to vote – which means the project could have an opportunity for viral expansion.

For critics, the long-term solution is to simply break the current debate monopoly by offering new and exciting debate formats every four years – independent of the Commission. As with any idea, it may take time to catch on, but a smart candidate will view it as a way to connect with voters – and, since this is still politics, an opportunity issue a withering criticism of his or her opponent for not jumping on board sooner.

Moore for less

Good news! You won’t have to pay a dime to see Michael Moore’s next movie. Slacker Uprising, a documentary about Michael Moore travelling around the country during the 2004 election, will be available for free download on September 23. (But only for U.S. and Canadian citizens, which is of course wrong because we are a nation of immigrants.)

Moore claims the digital freebie is a thank-you note to his legions of adoring fans. More probably, he realized that fewer people than usual would go see it. His previous films, which dealth with issues like health care, gun control, or the war on terror, had an element of hot-of-the-presses controversy; Slacker Uprising deals with a speaking tour that tried (and failed) to affect an election four years ago.

Second (and, truth be told, more important), Moore must realize that, although big theatrical releases are great, this is 2008, and that ideas on film spread faster through viral video. Moore’s crackpot ideas have a better chance at exposure if his potential followers aren’t asked to plunk down $9.75 for the experience.