Please don't forget about these two options to share your audio projects with a wider audience:
The Digital Media Sandbox Consortium (based at Tennessee State University in Nashville) is offering a national podcasting contest. We have entered this before, and if you want, I can help your group post to the iTunes-based contest and complete the submission.
A group of colleges, predominately on the East Coast and in the South (WSU Vancouver had the honor of being the first Northwest college to join the mix) will participate in an annual podcasting competition, which offers prize packages of up to $500 in cash as well as "gear."
Our audio stories could fit perfectly in the category of "creative feature," but those aiming for that distinction will need to keep in mind the theme this year, "distraction" as well as the submission guidelines (such as maximum length of 10 minutes). This might take a bit of editing, or additional credits and such tweaks.
A full set of contest rules and criteria can be found here.
Here are the winners from last year, to compare techniques and quality level.
Besides the Digital Sandbox contest, Jon Tanner also identified a site, Radio Drama Revival, that accepts submissions. This not only would be a great line on your resume, but if you can get your work posted on the site before the end of the term, I will negotiate a few extra credit points as well (for the person, or people, who work through the submission process, depending on what that entails).
Any other sites you have found that might be worth a look? These are good projects, and it's important to share your work with others,
- Prof Brett
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Friday, November 13, 2009
Did You Know 4.0, updating "Shift Happens"
"Facts and stats focusing on the changing media landscape, including convergence..."
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Meet in our regular classroom on Nov. 18
MOVE lab demo has been postponed until December. ... We'll start class on the 18th with the quiz.
- Prof Brett
- Prof Brett
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Podcatchers and examples of podcasts
Here are a few podcatchers of note (which handle your "subscriptions":
Miro
ZenCast
Juice
WinAmp
and, of course, iTunes
And some general repositories of podcasts:
Podcast Pickle
GarageBand Radio Network
Blubrry
Odeo
Podcast.com
Podcast Alley
As well as some examples of kinds of podcasts:
Adam Carolla,
mainstream radio personality and comedian who moved into the realm of podcasts, referenced by Rick Emerson during his guest appearance last week"
"60-Second Idea (to Improve the World),"
rant, then roundtable, produced by the BBC.
Android Guys,
by a couple of Android phone enthusiasts, who also run a web site on the same topic."
"RadioLab,"
experiments in audio.
"Cruising to Otherworldly Antarctica,"
an NPR story of the day.
Block of R.S.S. coding for iTunes:
Written by WSUV student Kerry Mraz
Miro
ZenCast
Juice
WinAmp
and, of course, iTunes
And some general repositories of podcasts:
Podcast Pickle
GarageBand Radio Network
Blubrry
Odeo
Podcast.com
Podcast Alley
As well as some examples of kinds of podcasts:
Adam Carolla,
mainstream radio personality and comedian who moved into the realm of podcasts, referenced by Rick Emerson during his guest appearance last week"
"60-Second Idea (to Improve the World),"
rant, then roundtable, produced by the BBC.
Android Guys,
by a couple of Android phone enthusiasts, who also run a web site on the same topic."
"RadioLab,"
experiments in audio.
"Cruising to Otherworldly Antarctica,"
an NPR story of the day.
Block of R.S.S. coding for iTunes:
Written by WSUV student Kerry Mraz
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Participatory culture
A couple of examples of participatory culture (concept from Henry Jenkins' "Convergence Culture") from Rick Emerson's visit to WSU Vancouver on Thursday, Oct. 29:
Rick said he never would have imagined five years ago that listeners to his radio program could and would be creating this kind of content and recirculating it among themselves (creating remixes of remixes). Within days of the original bagel piece airing, he said the first remix appeared followed by other listeners submitting riffs on that, and creating t-shirts, and the like, in what originally was just an off-the-cuff observation about what a waitress said to him at Gustav's in the airport.
And here is a second one, about a news story turned into a tune, created by the same Rick Emerson fan, "Calvin," I think:
Here is a link to the KOUG podcast of the interview:
KOUG radio
Or the direct one
Rick said he never would have imagined five years ago that listeners to his radio program could and would be creating this kind of content and recirculating it among themselves (creating remixes of remixes). Within days of the original bagel piece airing, he said the first remix appeared followed by other listeners submitting riffs on that, and creating t-shirts, and the like, in what originally was just an off-the-cuff observation about what a waitress said to him at Gustav's in the airport.
And here is a second one, about a news story turned into a tune, created by the same Rick Emerson fan, "Calvin," I think:
Here is a link to the KOUG podcast of the interview:
KOUG radio
Or the direct one
Could (or should) your resume be remediated, maybe into audio or video?
The Aleksey Vayner video (Yale student, 2006, Wikipedia on this), an example of what you don't want to do:
One of the many parodies on this:
A WSU grad, Benajamin Hampton, who created a video resume mentioned in Time magazine on this subject.
Here is a NPR piece on multimedia resumes
MSNBC piece on multimedia resumes
Vault.com and its tutorial on video resumes:
Other links of interest:
JobCircle's VoiceIntro
GigTide
RecruiTV
VisualCV
Zolio
One of the many parodies on this:
A WSU grad, Benajamin Hampton, who created a video resume mentioned in Time magazine on this subject.
Here is a NPR piece on multimedia resumes
MSNBC piece on multimedia resumes
Vault.com and its tutorial on video resumes:
Other links of interest:
JobCircle's VoiceIntro
GigTide
RecruiTV
VisualCV
Zolio
Thursday, October 29, 2009
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