April 2008 Archives

"Don't ask me about racism. As a white racist it didn't affect me. But if you ask me about fear, I can tell you about that."

Pieter-Dirk Uys, in "Elections and Erections"

Pieter-Dirk_Uys.jpgThat line ends a serious interlude in the show, one of several that provide counterpoint to the satire and humor he so deftly uses to highlight the flaws of South African society, both before and after apartheid. He has just told us how he came to be a democrat, and he has told us of sharing the garden-shed home of a yard-boy at a rich South African home. Of the fear of being discovered. The fear of being black with white, white with black. A fear so powerful that it overwhelms the fear of being man with man. Even now, when I relate the story to my friends, that final line sends a shiver down my spine.


Pieter-Dirk Uys' alter-ego is Evita Bezuidenhout, a household name in South Africa, famous for over thirty years of satire against the apartheid government. But she hasn't stopped there. "Elections and Erections" makes it clear that Uys' true enemy is that which makes people afraid. Whether it's corruption in the apartheid government or in the ANC; politicians denying the existence of AIDS; friendships with dictators based on a common race; ignorance; false pretenses; or just the everyday fears of trying to survive in a country stuck in a downward spiral. Uys wants to expose the things that make us afraid, shine the bright light of humor on them, and bring hope and laughter to the people he loves: the people of South Africa.

I'm hearing only bad news
From Radio Africa,
I'm hearing only sad news
From Radio Africa

"Radio Africa" by Latin Quarter.

MotherTheresa.jpgIf Evita Bezuidenhout has a counter-part in the the U.S., it might be Stephen Colbert, with his pseudo-conservative satire. But Evita is much more biting and relevant, and Uys has many more roles to don beyond Evita. He plays the ANC politicians contemplating whether the next president will get the position before, or after, he is thrown in jail for corruption. He lampoons (gently, but none-the-less) Archbishop Desmond Tutu. He describes the trials of a Jewish African Princess, her relatives self-exiled to Canada, trying desperately to be the liberal she knows she ought to be. He takes on Winnie Mandela, including relating the time he played her character (complete with rubber tire jewelry) with the real Winnie in the audience. He talks to the asian storekeeper whose husband used to be too black for jobs, but now is turned down because he is too white. He does a chilling rendition of Grace Mugabe as an evil child-like woman, losing her mind to AIDS. And he doesn't save all his barbs for Africa; his characterization of Mother Theresa, filling in for Marilyn Monroe as God's secretary, is priceless. The angels are on strike, suicide bombers keep showing up in pieces looking for their virgins, and the son of the managing director is refusing to return to Earth. He even does a great Hillary (and Bill!) impersonation.

What makes Uys' work really stand out, particularly as compared to American satirists like Colbert, is its compassion; even his enemies are human. The apartheid-era security chief he lampoons still had a sense of humor. Winnie Mandala may have "necklaced" informants, but she now tours AIDS facilities and pushes AIDS education. This, in a country where the government Health Minister promotes a cure of beet juice, and claims that HIV drugs are poisonous. His barbs are as pointed as they are funny, but he sees the humanity in everyone. In his heart, his true goal is to make his people happy and unafraid. You can see it in his eyes as he relates the story of a little black boy who wanders into his theatre as he is building the stage. From a simple "do you like to sing" and a few shaky songs, you see Uys' pride as he relates how that same child made it all the way to top awards at Trinity College. Uys' South Africa has nothing to do with race, and everything to do with the pride of being a good human being.

Told today that they release you
That you had paid your debt
Nomzamo in her own damn country
How much more boorish can these people get?
But you refuse to get the message
Of waving whips, in bloody semaphore
Where only gunfire's indiscriminate - as always
One People! One Cause!
One People! One Cause!
Nomzamo! Nomzamo...
"Nomzamo" by Latin Quarter.

South Africa has not been on the forefront of American minds for some time. As Uys says, if Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela hadn't had an easy-to-pronounce first name, Americans may not have been aware of the country's plight at all. In "Elections and Erections," Uys entertains, and more importantly, educates. Throughout the show, he relays tidbits of history and culture which later become the punch lines of his comedy, ensuring the audience understands the satirical context of his work. Yet the pace never suffers. The flow of comedy and pathos, serious and profane, never falters. This is not a show you want to miss. I only wish we could import Pieter-Dirk Uys to provide a similar look at ourselves.

"Elections and Erections: A Chronicle of Fear and Fun" is written and performed by Pieter-Dirk Uys. It is playing at the American Repertory Theatre's "Zero Arrow Theatre" playhouse (a wonderful dinner-theatre style space just off Harvard Square, with tables, a bar, and wonderful ambience). It will be showing through May 4th, 2008. For more information on this show and other performances, see the A.R.T. site.

The A.R.T. graciously provided free tickets to myself and other Boston-area bloggers in exchange for an honest review (good or bad). I'd like to thank them for initiating this experiment in new media.

Many thanks to @devyl for the editing assistance.
Any errors are due to my not following her advice.


I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.jackcards.com/

Jack Cards apparently has been getting a lot of coverage in the mainstream press, and I can see why. It has that kind of magic mix of online and offline that makes it stand out. That said, I just don't see a future for it. I wouldn't have mentioned it at all except that people seemed excited about it; so I figured it was worth saying why I'm not.

Jack Cards has the goal of keeping you from forgetting about birthdays, anniversaries and all those other events when you need to send cards. They've done an impressive job. You can put in the events, enter the names/addresses of people, enter their interests, and get a wide selection of cards that match those. And you can choose them years in advance!

The magic piece is that we aren't talking digital cards. These are real cards. And secondly, they don't mail them to the destination. Instead they mail them to *you*, enough in advance that you can fill out the card, personalize it, and then stuff it in the SASE and forward it on. That's pretty cool.

But I just don't see it. First of all, I hardly send physical cards anymore. Secondly, when I do, they are made using pictures of my family (last time we just used CVS to do it; uploaded the picture, picked up the cards that evening). The mail-it-to-me-in-advance model doesn't work real well there, although presumably they could email me a reminder to upload a recent picture.

It just seems to me that the overhead of doing those SASE's, and packing and shipping all these onesie/twosie sets of cards, has got to be pretty high. I don't know what their pricing is, but obviously there's some premium there. I just don't think they are going to drive enough traffic (and remember, they don't get a lot of cost savings from larger traffic) to make it fly.

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April WebInno Meeting: Yamli

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I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.yamli.com/

Yamli provides a simple, straightforward service. Arabic (and Persian) speakers are often not comfortable (or have available) keyboards or software that support their languages. So an adhoc communication mechanism has sprung up. They send their posts using the English character set, but phonetically in their language. Yamli translates the phonetic into the actual script. That means that someone without an Arabic keyboard can do Arabic searches on sites like Google. Or they can type email messages in their web mail client and send them to their friends. That's a big bonus, because this phonetic Arabic is a lot easier for a human to type than it is for a human to read.

The concept is simple. The implementation is straightforward, and Yamli provides a set of Javascript routines that let you embed the functionality on your own web site.

I don't know what their business model is, but I suspect that the concept will gain widespread acceptance.

I asked them about a Farsi version, since the problem is very similar, and the language scripts are essentially the same (same character set, slightly different display styles). All they really need is a different set of phonetic lookup tables. They claim it would be straightforward to do (and Urdo as well), they just need a native speaker to work with them. Given that Farsi has a major presence on the web, particularly in blogs (certainly more than Arabic) I hope they make a move in that direction, I think it would gain them a lot of support.

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I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.good2gether.com/

I don't like the domain name. I *especially* don't like that they don't own the version with "to" instead of "2". Otherwise, this looks like a good company. Their goal is to take non-profits and give them a single place where they can provide schedules of events, basic information and, most importantly, place them in front of the right people. Good2Gether will tie their information into advertisements placed in major online news sources, and they'll do so using contextual information. If you're reading an article about Rwanda and everything going wrong there, the call to action section will contain a list of charities who are doing work in Rwanda. This is an excellent idea, and likely to have a very big impact.

I don't know what their financing model is.

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I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.traackr.com/

Traackr is aimed at content producers who want to be able to monitor and adjust their web presence to maximize their impact. They sign up, indicate what services they are using, an Traackr (I'm having serious problems spelling that) tells them how they are doing on those services as compared to other people in the same content space. From that information you can fine tune your presence, and see where else you need to be making an impression.

I didn't have a chance to see a full demo, so I don't know how they track, or what kind of metrics they provide. I also have no idea what the business model is.

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I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.stylepath.com/

While they are currently a shopping comparison site, I think if they have something real (they invoked the magic phrase "Artificial Intelligence", which generally means, "It's kind of fuzzy, and we aren't going to tell you the details") they will eventually end up licensing it to other companies rather than competing directly themselves.

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I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.moborazzi.com/

Sorry about the fade off at the end of the recording. I have several concerns about Moborazzi's business model.

1. Sending your content to all of your followers is a bit heavy weight. As a follower I could get tired of that real fast.
2. Mobile Web removes the need. I want a content notice perhaps, but I'll go to the web site. I can do that right now with dozens of sites, why have a specialized one?
3. How hard is it for Flickr to add this functionality? Seems pretty trivial.

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I went to the Web Innovators meeting in Boston last night (April 2nd, 2008). I made these recordings after looking at a number of the demonstrations. I'd originally planned on writing them up, but given time constraints, I'm going to leave it with the original audio. Sorry About the quality, it was a *very* crowded ballroom.
http://www.webinnovatorsgroup.com/
http://www.entrecard.com/

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Ode to Single Moms

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This is my response to Gary Vaynerchuk's call for Good People Day postings (http://garyvaynerchuk.com/…ass-it-on/)

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A correction on my posting. It wasn't @QueenOfSpain, it was @GeekMommy (Lucretia M. Pruitt). Sorry about that.

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