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cathy brooks

One of the first events taking place during the first night of the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas was hosted by Intel at the Palazzo Hotel that allowed the public to sit down and meet a group of evangelists they called “Intel Insiders”.

Complete with a photo booth and props, flowing libations and frequent hors d’œuvres streaming through the Sushi Samba restaurant, we were greeted with some old familiar faces and even got to meet some new ones. What was pretty surprising and an honor was the chance for people to meet one of the state of California’s candidates for Attorney General, Chris Kelly – the Chief Privacy Officer at the social networking giant, Facebook. But other famous names also made an appearance, including Social Media Club’s Chris Heuer & Kristie Wells, Internet famous lifestreamer Sarah Austin, host of Social Media Hour Cathy Brooks, vlogger Justine Ezarik (aka iJustine), TechCrunch’s Daniel Brusilovsky and several others.

In its second year, the Intel Insider program was created to bring certain individuals to the table to help act as an advisory board for the company on matters of social media and extending the brand. The current Intel Insiders are:

  • Cathy Brooks
  • Daniel Brusilovsky
  • JD Lasica
  • Erin Kane
  • Corvida Raven
  • Mia Kim
  • Steve Paine
  • Brian Solis
  • Tom Foremski
  • Frank Gruber
  • Justine Ezarik

Here are some photos from the Intel Insider Happy Hour:

CES 2010 - Intel Insider Core Kick-Off

CES 2010 - Intel Insider Core Kick-Off - JD Lasica
JD Lasica

CES 2010 - Intel Insider Core Kick-Off - Chris Kelly & Ponzi Pirillo
Facebook’s Chief Privacy Officer, Chris Kelly (candidate for California’s Attorney General) being interviewed by Ponzi Pirillo

CES 2010 - Intel Insider Core Kick-Off - Chris Kelly & Marsha Collier
Chris Kelly & Marsha Collier

CES 2010 - Intel Insider Core Kick-Off - Justine Ezarik & Cathy Brooks
Justine Ezarik (iJustine) and Cathy Brooks

CES 2010 - Intel Insider Core Kick-Off - Chris Heuer, Justine Ezarik, Jen Consalvo, Frank Gruber & Cathy Brooks
Chris Heuer, Justine Ezarik, Jen Consalvo, Frank Gruber & Cathy Brooks

More photos from the event can be found by clicking here.

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By Miiko Mentz (@miikomentz)

Panasonic’s ‘Living In HD’ (LiHD) Insider contest is in its final hours. Five of the ten finalists are friends of Bubblicious and we’d like to enlist you to help one of them win by voting today. The contest ends tonight at 11:59pm EDT.

Check out each of their videos and then cast your vote for your favorite at http://lihdinsider.livinginhd.com/. And if you tweet it, use hashtag #lihdinsider.

The LiHD Insider winner will receive a full content creator suite of Panasonic HD products to fuel their creativity and share their life in HD across the social Web and within the LiHD community. In addition, the newly crowned LiHD Insider will receive a Panasonic LUMIX G1 digital camera to give away to one person within their own community of friends, fans and followers.

So vote now for your favorite and if he or she wins then you might have a chance to win the Panasonic LUMIX G1 digital camera. To read more about the LiHD Insider program and see the suite of products that the winner will receive, check out the social media release at http://pitch.pe/23965

Sarah Austin (@pop17)


Cathy Brooks
(@cathybrooks) and Truman Brooks (@trumanbrooks)



Erin Darling
(@ErinADarling)



Frank Gruber
(@FrankGruber)



Michael Sheehan
(@HighTechDad)

Once again, voting closes tonight at 11:59pm, so VOTE NOW!

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by Cathy Brooks (source PR 2.0)


Source: Shutterstock

I admit it. I’m old fashioned. That may seem a silly statement coming from someone as deeply steeped in the digital realm as I, but when it comes to certain things this Silicon Valley geek likes to roll old school. I believe in charcoal barbecues. I believe in hand-writing thank you notes. I believe that white shoes have no business being worn after Labor Day. Most of all though, and to the great amusement of many I know, I believe in daily newspapers.

So when someone started to steal my New York Times off the front step of my building, I did what any self-respecting social media person would do. I launched an aggressive effort to catch the SOB, and began to chronicle my efforts in streaming video.

After a couple of weeks of on and off success in at least getting my paper but failing to snare the culprit I escalated my efforts, as I explain in this video:

Day after day I arose far earlier than my non-morning person self cared to, and I waited. Through the process I got to know many neighbors – those in my building as well as various and sundry folks whose morning schedules took them past my stakeout perch. I realized that every morning more than a half dozen newspapers landed on the step of my building alone. I saw similar stacks of newsprint on other stoops. I saw myriad people walking dogs and striding purposefully towards bus stops – many of them also with broadsheets in hand.

When it came to that daily paper fix, clearly I wasn’t alone.

Then there were my online comrades. Besides the amusement several people seemed to get from my daily commentary, I found a growing chorus of support from folks on Twitter and Facebook. People shared my self-righteous indignation at the theft. That surprised me less than the passionate support that many shared for getting that daily slab of printed paper to complement their morning coffee. Most people felt I should just set up a streaming web cam and save myself the burden of getting up so darn early. Others suggested setting a booby trap for the culprit. Still others offered to come and sit in shifts to help me snare the thief. Then came a note from Chris O’Brien, a friend and long-time Journalist who writes for the San Jose Mercury News. His suggestion? My videos would make a great ad campaign for the newspaper industry.

Some might say that an ad campaign for the newspaper industry would be a waste of time. After all, why waste effort for an industry that, according to statistics, is on the decline? Seeing Chris’ name in my comment stream, however, reminded me that in addition to his being a dyed-in-the-wool member of the Fourth Estate, he had an up-close-and-personal perspective that maybe, just maybe things weren’t so bleak after all.

After a bit of calendar choreography, Chris and I managed to settle in for a phone chat one afternoon last week. Over the course of about a half hour, we wended our way through a discussion from which I gleaned several key points:

1) Newsprint may be black and white but the media business isn’t – While people tend to lean towards a twofold viewpoint (the world was this way, now it’s that way; people used to do things this way, now people do things another way), the truth is that the advent of new forms of media have yet to wholly kill previous forms. Television didn’t kill radio. The VCR didn’t kill the movies. Okay so maybe the Internet struck a near fatal blow to the music industry, but even in that case, things continue to evolve. In Chris’ words, “People want to get into a binary debate that we used to just all want (the newspaper) because we had no choice and now people want the raw feed to mix up their own news. From where I sit what’s really happening is that people have splintered in a lot of different directions. You still have people who value the gatekeeper/passive experience at one end and then you have (people on the other end) who just want the raw feed of all data washing over them, but mostly people exist on the span in between.”

2) Never underestimate the power of human nature - The people who get newspapers in print tend to be committed to getting the product in that form and whether it’s habit or not, they tend to stick with getting that paper delivered to their doorstep. O’Brien related that when the Seattle Post-Intelligencer ceased publishing its print edition and went web only, thanks to a joint operating agreement all P-I subscribers were switched automatically to the only remaining Seattle daily – The Seattle Times. People had the option to cancel, but something interesting happened. They didn’t. Not only did they retain their existing subscriptions, but when those began to run out, almost everyone renewed. O’Brien is not surprised by this and spoke of the digitally saturated people with whom he speaks every day – the venture capitalists and tech company executives whose lives are shackled to Blackberries and RSS feeds. “These are people who use technology for everything in their lives and they still get the paper in print. They still have it delivered to their doorstep.”

3) In today’s rapidly moving world, tactile yet passive experiences have merit - One of my favorite things about that morning paper is, quite simply, turning the pages. Humans are, after all, kinesthetic creatures, so the hands-on experience of a paper has some value. O’Brien agrees with that, and thinks that there’s something even more simple. Sometimes people just want a “psychologically different experience … a purely passive experience.” He went on to explain that oftentimes people don’t want “something with buttons or to click around. Even with a Kindle, there are buttons to push and that’s not appealing to them. They just want something that’s there. Something they don’t have to think about.” There are some who disagree with that perspective, but I’m not one of them.

What does all of this mean? From where I sit, it’s pretty clear newspapers aren’t going away. While some may enjoy the macabre view of a deathwatch, the truth is that this is all about evolution; and as these things go, it’s not about today – it’s about what and who is coming across the horizon.

For starters, there are myriad efforts to revitalize and retool newsrooms and O’Brien has done more than dabble on this front. Awarded a grant from the Knight Foundation, O’Brien tackled the task of building a next generation newsroom for Duke University. His “Next Newsroom” project, included the development of a site on which to archive his research and create a conversation around the task of designing this newsroom of the future. Though the official part of the grant ended in 2008, the Ning network he created lives on – and is thriving. In addition, in spite of the bleak industry outlook, the numbers for Journalism programs across the US proffer a glimmer of hope – they’re on the rise.

Are these monumental steps that will swoop in and save the anemic newspaper industry? No. They do, however, represent positive movement in a necessary evolution – an evolution that will no doubt lead to a new kind of newspaper for a new kind of audience.

As for me and my newspaper thief – the problem has been resolved. No, I haven’t found the culprit (though I did narrow down the potential suspects to one of eight residents in my building). Instead, my newspaper delivery man has adapted. Rather than whizzing by my house and winging the paper out of the open window of his car, this fine fellow stops his car, and physically hides the paper for me every morning.

Besides the guarantee that this great service will keep me as a subscriber, you can be sure I’ll be giving him a nice present for the holidays.

Please also read, “Can the statusphere save journalists?”

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