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Last Monday, when I conducted a workshop for the Scottsdale Job Network, I used Better Publicker as a test case. The idea was to show that, given the right things in place –passion, goals and a decent internet connection — anyone could start a blog in 15 minutes.

This group was special –largely baby boomers. A lot of them are quite confused and skeptical about what a blog can do. Just like me, five years ago. Bette asked the usual questions, signed up at WordPress.com and while the class was in session, had a blog. Take a look at it today. Just 10 days after the event.

The best part was, Bette was featured in an article about how boomers are taking to blogging -see today’s Arizona Republic. The first paragraph that she typed in, from the podium, was the lead quote in the article by Chad Graham. How often does that happen to a blogger?

She writes well:

Now that I am looking for new job and business opportunities ‘social networking skills’ seem to be as necessary as a resume, business cards and gumption. In every networking event I am asked about websites, Inkedin, and my Facebook. Now perhaps my eyes won’t glaze over and I won’t have to fake cough an answer.

When I spoke to Bette today she was still fixing things. I know how infuriating the first few days of trying out anything can be. But once you get past that, the care and feeding of your blog becomes routine.

Thanks to Chad Graham, who was in the audience, for the great story. Check out his blog, too at AzCentral.com/members/Blog/AzJobTawk

This morning I was sitting in the control room of a KJZZ, the local NPR station here in Phoenix, watching a live radio call-in show in progress. It suddenly hit me like a ton of bricks : a control room in radio is anything but.

(This happened when the guy in the control room was told that one of the mics was dead, even though all the buttons had been punched.)

controlroom_dtI’ve been in and out of control rooms . We do have one at the Decision Theater; many years back I trained as a radio producer at the BBC. But in an environment where we require people to interact, a control room is a misnomer. We control the feeds but not the outcomes. We control the back-timing but it’s left to the audience to fill the dead air. We control the lights but not the light bulb moments…

To this end, radio is a lot more elastic than we give it credit for. The best producers and hosts want you to loosen up and even ‘break’ the format. To me as a listener, that’s what makes it such a great experience, when it is not scripted all the way. When Bill O’Reilly stormed out of an interview with NPR’s Terry Gross, she lost control of the show, bit it made great radio. (She rebroadcast it.)  When the guests take over, something’s working.

So back to the studio. Before the show the producer, Paul Atkinson, told us to make sure we treat this like a conversation, not an interview. Think about that for a second.

A conversation, not an interview. Where have you heard of this before? That’s right, by those (like me) who promote social media tools. The phrase is actually ‘a conversation, not a lecture‘  heavily influenced by the Cluetrain Manifesto. Since 1999, this has been infecting other one-way media as well.

Yes, there are still talk shows like this and this, that are built around the cult of the show host lecturing -hectoring– the audience. Public Radio, on the other hand, has interactivity in its DNA. The callers can change the channel, but they keep calling in to change the direction of the show.

Just two random examples of where this radio virus has spread:

  • KCNN - a station that has embraced citizen journalism
  • BlogTalk Radio — the uber example of citizen-powered, citizen produced radio, in a new skin

Sidebar: Since Sunday the 3rd was World Press Freedom Day, I would like to tip my hat to radio for being the medium that has brought a rich spectrum of voices into the conversation.

 

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