Another Great Episode From This American Life

August 1st, 2008, 3 Comments »

I’ve become a This American Life convert. I anticipate listening to it every Monday, and am rarely disappointed. I always worry a little when the show’s host Ira Glass does not say “a show in three acts, three acts”. And instead, he says “we’re dedicating the entire hour today to…”. See, if the topic doesn’t interest me, that’s the whole show shot.

Last week’s episode was such a show. It was entitled Switched at Birth, and it was fantastic. Here’s the blurb:

On a summer day in 1951, two baby girls were born in a hospital in small-town Wisconsin. The infants were accidentally switched, and went home with the wrong families. One of the mothers realized the mistake but chose to keep quiet. Until the day, more than 40 years later, when she decided to tell both daughters what happened. How the truth changed two families’ lives—and how it didn’t.

It’s an absolutely riveting show. It’s about nature vs. nurture, the big secrets in every family and the influence of the church on small town life. The producers just get everything right. They skillfully manage the large cast of characters in the two families. More importantly, the show is a classic example of radio at its best–it’s a story tailor made for the medium. Plus, it feels like a very American story. Which, of course, is what the name of the show promises.

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Search Engine and Spark: A Tale of Two CBC Technology Shows

May 10th, 2008, 6 Comments »

Last September, CBC Radio launched two new technology shows: Search Engine and Spark. I forget how I first heard about them, but I subscribed to both podcasts from their first episode.

Search Engine is a show about the cultural and politics of the web (they need a copyable blurb on their home page and in iTunes). The most recent episode featured stories on the hacker convention Defcon, gaming the CIA’s website and a rapping Hungarian YouTube star.

Here’s the spiel on Spark:

Spark is a weekly audio blog of smart and unexpected trendwatching. It’s not just technology for gearheads, it’s about the way technology affects our lives, and the world around us.

What’s a Spark story? Wikis in the workplace, Guitar Hero in your living room, or why the new trend in design is the trailer park.

So they cover similar territory, but Spark is less concerned with the Web than Search Engine. Spark has a stickier tag line, because I can remember it: “Tech trends and fresh ideas”.

It’s been educational to watch both shows’ evolution over the past year or so. My impressions:

  • They’ve taken somewhat different approaches in story development and presentation. Spark seems much more crowd-sourced, while Search Engine has a more traditional structure. I don’t know how successful it’s been (I’d be curious to hear about their objectives and measures of success) Spark has a wiki for developing show ideas. Additionally, host Nora Young regularly cites comments from the show’s blog. They’re usually insightful enough to merit inclusion (I tend to loathe traditional man-on-the-street commentary).
  • Both hosts seem very well-informed, and (while I’m layman in this) are excellent presenters. Search Engine host Jesse Brown has a more informal style–he seems to be palling around with a lot of his guests. This mostly works, and reflects the DIY culture he documents. I do get a bit tired of the geeky indignation Brown seems to have for a lot of his tech stories. I get that every day in the blogosphere (including this site) and at tech conferences, so I don’t want to hear it from the CBC. Because of this, Search Engine sometimes feels more like commentary than reportage.
  • I like both shows, but given the choice, I listen to Spark first. Why? Because the topics are fresher (see the tagline) to me. 80% of Spark stories are new to me. I’ve already heard about 80% of Search Engine’s stories. That’s not a criticism of Search Engine–it’s a reflection of the kind of information I consume.

Clearly the CBC made emerging technology and the web a priority last year, and I applaud the results. Keep up the good work.

This is barely related, but I note that these CBC sites have a wacky URL structure. For example, the about page for Spark is http://www.cbc.ca/spark/index.html?copy-about. Maybe it’s a symptom of an older CMS?

6 Comments »

$280 Million for Last.fm?

May 30th, 2007, 2 Comments »

Via Johnny, I just read about CBS acquiring Last.fm for 280 million simoleons:

CBS radio is the largest radio group in the United States, with 179 stations in the top 50 markets covering news, rock, country and urban music.

The firm’s president and CEO Leslie Moonves said: “Last.fm is one of the fastest growing online communities out there.”

He said Last.fm’s strength in building communities around music and syndicating content was “central to CBS”.

That’s over 18 bucks a user. Is that a lot or a little? I’d pay more attention to the details of these acquisition deals, but they don’t interest me on more than a wow-that’s-a-lot-of-cash level.

I joined Last.fm through the plug-in software with the more exotic name AudioScrobbler. Aside from exposing my shameful taste in music to the world, I didn’t really see much point. The same goes for Last.fm–it hasn’t proved particular sticky for me. I have, on rare occasions, tried to discover new music through Last.fm, but I’ve found Pandora to be more reliable.

I just visited Pandora, and see that I can’t use it because “we believe that you are in Malta”, and they’re only licensed for Americans.

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