
Some stuff from last week I thought you mind find interesting. Would love to hear your thoughts in the comments..
iPlayer: Laughing Len/Psychoville
BBC4 had a Leonard Cohen night on last Friday, if you can access iPlayer (UK peeps only I believe) then you can still catch the ace 1973 documentary Songs From a Life in which he looks very much like the young Dustin Hoffman and smokes like a trooper, and which also features stunning live footage of the likes of Suzanne and Hallelujah. There’s also a recording of one of the London shows from his 2008 “comeback” tour, where he is still in fine voice if a little less unpredictable than he was in the earlier footage. I think there was another programme too about his fans but I couldn’t find that on the iPlayer.
Also, the folks behind the legendary League of Gentlemen have a new show called Psychoville – which is pretty much the same,albeit not based in Royston Vasey – with lots of nasty characters and grimness, but with some nice original twists as you’d expect (cheers to Iain and Stu for the tip).
Journalism/Twitter/Iran
Though a seeming endless round of lay-offs would suggest otherwise, the gravitas-oozing patriarchal figure of Channel 4 News Jon Snow reckons now is the most exciting time to be a journalist. Turns out he never trained to be one originally, but is now all over that social media like it was Jeremy Paxman’s wage slip – you can even follow the silver-haired old newshound on Twitter (if you’re into that sort of thing).
Of course the newspapers have stopped deriding Twitter for a while due to the fact that it was used by Iranians to spread information about the protests there, and the website delayed scheduled maintenance work to allow for this at a crucial time. According to Tech Crunch a former Bush advisor has even called for the website’s founders to be given the nobel peace prize.
But Tech Crunch say such blatant political bias has forced the founders to deny that they are in fact a “covert government agency”. Scary to think that every time you are answering the seemingly innocent question “what you are doing?” into Twitter it could be a very clever, voluntary govt surveillance system.
Also, as a warning to corporate arsemonkeys everywhere, in an example of inexplicably dumb #marketingfail, Habitat got it badly wrong with their hashtags.
And that brief mention of marketing allows me to lead smoothly on to the above video that the undisputed blogging guru of that field Seth Godin posted, which is hilarious whether or not you agree with the point he’s making (and it reminds me of the Found video I posted a wee while ago).
Coming next: Yes it’s the bloody iPhone again, but could it be my last word on the subject?



