Blogher

July 28, 2008

happykatie on 5 Minutes for Mom


5 Minutes for Mom Interviews Happy Katie from 5 Minutes for Mom on Vimeo.

I got interviewed about my blogs at the Kirtsy/AllTop party at Guy Kawasaki's house during Blogher, one of many interviews actually - there were lots of camera crews roaming around!  Notice Monica and Marla trying to make their hasty escape in the background, tsk tsk.  Also, my face is freakishly expressive.  I look like a cartoon character, but I'm okay with that.

These interviews were done by the twin bloggers from 5 Minutes For Mom, a site dedicated to mommies who love being online but just don't have gobs of time to surf and play.  They also have another site, 5 Minutes For Books, for a quickie look at the best books to indulge in.  Great stuff.

July 22, 2008

Blogher08 - Blogging about our children with special needs

This Blogher 2008 session is part of the 'Mommy Blogging' break-out sessions, entitled 'Blogging About Our Children with Special Needs' with panelists:

Blogging mothers face challenges when discussing their children and their home lives online, but when your child has special needs a whole new set of challenges, fears and triumphs emerge.  Other mothers and people are curious or just plain have questions.  It's tough to be brave and face these everyday, but to many moms and bloggers alike they feel that once they get to the point where they can share these things, they are really doing a service for their children and for the community.

Publisher wanted 3 stories to be removed NICU, poems about autism and essay by a mom who was ppdnos -- all too scary for .  3 months later, she was delivering her twin boys prematurely in the NICU.  Shortly after that, her son was diagnosed with Down Syndrome.  The words she read from those women in her book had stayed with her, even though they didn't get published.

Later on, she explored other books and sources for support and inspiration.  Now she is online and active in the blogosphere.  Our responses to each other's writing and stories have gotten people to stand up and pay attention to mothers with special needs.

Hopefully one day, these stories won't be called 'scary' anymore - they'll just be called parenting.

Kristina has a son with autism   He's a lovely kid :)  'My Son Has Autism' was her first blog, a little bit of a political statement.  After a variety of run-ins with people, she found herself saying over and over 'my son has autism' and made herself leave it just at that, not going into lengthy explanations on why he is behaving a certain way.

Blogging allowed Kristina to have a sustained conversation with people, even though she was at home alone with her son.  The way that people responded and loved back, has made special needs parenting more livable and possible.

Shannon said that special needs parenting is often lumped into 'uncomfortable' topics like infertility.  Experienced many great upswells of community support, like readers banding together to buy a ramp for her son's OT room at school.

Public vs. Private
Kristina would get a lot of comments by adults identifying themselves as autistic adults on treatment options she was using with her son, like ABA.  The family room atmosphere exploded, it's like she felt like she walked into the middle of the street.  Interesting to see the difference between autistic parent blogs and adults with autism blogs - the

Commentary made her think more critically on how she was representing   -- changed platforms to Typepad and now called her blog 'AutismLand' (her state has the highest rate of Autism in the country, so she and her husband use the term to describe how prevalent it really is).  Made her realize that Autism is kind of all over the place, they saw behaviors   made them feel more like a part of the community that wasn't just online.

Then approached by researchers to help with autism blog (called Autism Vox -- vox meaning 'voice'), which would move her away from happy Charlie/son stories and expose her to political elements regarding medical treatments, vaccines.  Autism Diva, Left Brain Right Brain - completely different kind of autism blog that terrified her, much more scientifically focused.   Began looking at things more scientifically, which changed her blog.  Studying the science of autism made her look back at their other treatments for Charlie and re-evaluate what they currently were doing for Charlie.

After writing about the vaccine issue, her traffic (and negative comments) soared - making it even more of an adventure.  But these are things we have to talk about, as this is how we represent our children.  What are you saying about your child and how are you describing what's going on in your life?

Started to re-think the photos that she posted of Charlie, he is getting older and she just can't know what's really going on in his head.  So she moved away form her personal blog and focused on the Autism Vox to focus on scientific issues.  Amanda Bags, autistic blogger, would write rather harsh things to Christine commenting on how she was talking about her son saying she wouldn't like it.  It made her uncomfortable and so she moved on a bit.

The new blogging focus helped her evaluate Charlie's future and helped her connect with parents of older children with autism.  Very encouraging, especially as she connected with Asperger's adults.

Ransom notes -- autism 'ads' put out weren't as positive

Question from the crowd:  How do you deal with your spouse who is not as open?  How do you deal with the difference in communication?
Each spouse has to deal with their grief in their own way.  But it does mean that you have to focus only on your experience and reaction to things and be respectful of other family members' experiences.  It is challenging to get to that understanding.

Must always write from the point of view that you are an advocate for your child.  Could try writing an anonymous blog or under a pseudonym, not always necessary to put a name and family behind a blog.  Perhaps best way to begin in a quiet way without names or photos, give yourself a chance to find a way to communicate what you need to in the way that you need to.  Very important part of the healing process.

Be tender and take care of yourself, if blogging doesn't work then stop.  There is no shame in seeking professional help - there is no stigma.  Incredibly important to take care of yourself. 

Advice to parents without kids with special needs
To other parents who blog that do not have children with special needs, it's very important to reach out and learn what other parents are going through.  Always remember our children's humanity - they are kids.  The human emotions that they feel are the ones that all children feel.  The kids love back with all the intensity that any kind of child loves back, just through a different expression which is incredibly beautiful.

Important to suspend the 'social thing' of not noticing the wheel chair or whatever is 'different'.  Parents with questions should ask.

How to respond to negative comments and reactions
Don't respond immediately, give it time.  Always start with 'thank you' and that you are constantly learning and looking for different perspective.  Keep the door of conversation open, don't just shut people down.  Try looking at negative commenters' web sites and see their perspective and be respectful of that.

IEP - individualized education program

Each family feels like they need to re-invent themselves, but through blogging and social network you can learn a great deal on how to advocate for your child through school districts.  Reach out to people in your community online and find out how they do things and what they can teach you.  Silicon Valley Moms have a great post to use as a resource about IEP prep.

Using humor and language when discussing child's disability
Language frames how we think about things - if you accept a language that puts disabilities first and foremost in the minds of people, that's not positive for anyone.  So many loaded words in our language, but important not to diminish our children when we speak about them.  There are many repercussions when using certain language and types of humor, maybe more than what one person really can deal with.

Legally, blogging can be scary for parents  - some blog posts have been held against parents like when working through IEP process, school read blog and b/c it said only positive things (not focusing on all the bad and negative stuff the family had been put through by the school district) they used it in their case that things 'weren't so bad' and won.

Disability rights are one of the only kinds of visible discrimination left, it's a final frontier we must conquer!  Outing yourself as a parent of child with special needs changes the conversation.  Knowing that everyone is out there online makes this change of tone and daily challenges so much easier.

'We're here, we're quirky, get used to it'  :) 

July 19, 2008

Blogher08 - Pursuing your passion never gets old

This Blogher 2008 session is part of the 'What We Do' break-out sessions, entitled 'Pursuing Your Passion Never Gets Old' with panelists:

Finding your blog on a favorite blog's blogroll is like having a walk-on part on your favorite sitcom, that you didn't know about because you were in the kitchen having a cup of coffee and then there you are on television. 

There's so much you can do on your own that can be so much more fulfilling with community and conversation, you just don't need the print world as much anymore.  Online medium is a good fit for certain people, most active and long-term bloggers would do this anyway.  Filling scrapbooks with notes and clippings from magazines, now with blogs you can do this for other people (or just keep doing it for yourself if no one bothers to read).

On 'quitting' blogging
Some folks are just dramatic and have secret huge issues they don't blog about and say they are going.  Kind of a fad, the very last final mythical blog post.  Addicted bloggers say:   'I'm LEAVING!!!  and then you come back and are like 'oh... I forgot something, I'm back'.  Bloggers drift away and stop writing (for bad and good reasons), like falling in love or other big things that you are scared to write about because it's new and    Kind of like joining a gym, must wear this dress for this wedding and you go crazy until you get there.  Then it drops off again.  All very cyclical, it comes and goes.

What happens when you are not inspired to write? 
Some things inspire 'novellas of perfection', meeting people at Blogher, doing amazing things, going on trips.  But sometimes you just have to power through it.  Whenever you don't feel like writing, sometimes you just shouldn't do it so you don't make yourself not do it more.  If you don't have anything to say, don't post that you don't have anything to say.  Or maybe you do, if that keeps you going -- maybe link to people who don't have anything to say :)  or just pull a snippet of someone else's content that inspires you.

Dry spells and their affect on your readership
It all depends on your goals - if you blog to gain readers, then you really need to post super regularly.  If you are just writing for creative expression, you have a lot more wiggle room.  But obviously, if you don't write regularly there's much less for people to come back for.

Comments on blogs
The majority of the panelists do not use comments or only started very recently.  Typekey helps keep away spam, but also can keep away readers leaving comments.   Comments do wane with less new content, but to some panelists the idea of comments is just plain freaky.

Boundaries with blogging
At first blush, bloggers can forget that what they write is searchable even to people not active in the blogosphere.  Sometimes they also forget that other people read their content period, you can get too personal and people (strangers and friends/family) respond to what you write.  Asking more questions to very personal posts, when you just wanted to throw up a post to touch on something important.  When you blog about personal stuff, you have to be aware that you can and very well might get negative feedback which might be very difficult at that particular time.

Flickr changed  some personal blogging boundaries, you post personal photos of friends and events without any privacy settings -- but somehow the non-blogging platform gives some a feeling of more freedom and openness.

Major life changes (career, family, etc.) can change your blogging dramatically - but do bloggers worry their audience won't come with them?  Do their new topics and posts mean less traffic and do bloggers care?  Apparently not really :)  Rookie Moms spoke about the problem on writing for new moms, even though their own kids are older now.  Is their content evergreen meaning new moms will find value in their content?  What about the moms who had babies at the same time they did?  Who do they write for since they are in a different place? 

It's all about writing on your passion, if you have a kid or a husband you're not going to keep it secret or hush hush.  It's your life and you blog about your life and what's in it.

Focusing on traffic
Audience member says that when she focused on traffic, the passion died.  Focus on writing and don't be stressed on traffic.  Let it go and look at what's important and makes it important.  It just feels dirty otherwise.  At the end of the day, bloggers write because they need to write it.  Most bloggers won't stop just because no one is reading, they need it.

Wardrobe Re-mix - great Flickr group/tag where people post head-to-toe photos of themselves when they are feeling cute.  Rather voyeuristic in that you go piece by piece of your wardrobe, but great form of self-expression.  Major traffic driver for your blog?  Probably not.  But it makes people happy :)  Flickr has also shown us that there is a fetish for absolutely everything world (feet, things covered in bed sheets, etc.).  The great thing about the Internet is just that, there is someone out there that will be into what you write about -- car pooling, kids, food, whatever.

Only 97% of blogs get more than a dozen or so daily hits?  Not all traffic is good.  Stay At Home Mom blog went from 40 readers a day to 5000 a day after being linked from negative blog listing.  It was tough, but when the traffic finally died down to people who actually cared about her it was a great thing.

Blogging about kids, important to be honest in whatever you post about them.  You can't post everything and you can't 'make them characters' on your Blog.  Honesty and respect is very important.

Interesting observations on meeting a blog reader in real life - should there be some sort of protocol on how you meet and what you talk about the first time you meet?  For instance, someone knowing about your menstrual flow before you really even get to learn about each other (facial expressions, jokes, etc.).  How do you handle that?

What happens when you meet a reader in real world and you get the 'ew' factor.  Many bloggers can get that from online interaction already, but some sneak by.  99% are just as cool as they are online, but there are a few crazies that you thought were cool that completely surprise you.

Not all bloggers are out to the The Next _______.  Blogs are about building relationships - not the shallow bullshit ones (they can come from right at home), but about finding common ground and real connections.  The Web helps us find other people who we could never geographically connect to - especially with Twitter.  In a way, we see our online friends more than any other real world friends because of busy schedules, etc.

Best quote of panel:  'Magic box no workie, do you have glue?'

July 18, 2008

Blogher 2008 - Progressive Politics, engaging the world in political disclosure and action

Some very sketchy notes from the Progressive Politics panel held via ooVoo between Blogher panelists and Netroots Nation panelists.  There were some major technical issues, so the majority of the panel was pretty indecipherable.  However, the panelists are all amazingly accomplished political bloggers and I'm sure they'll have a wrap-up with their comments later this week.

Want those URLs?  Yah, you do:

Twitter is a powerful tool, as Social Media enthusiasts like Erin can ask a question or concern and get direct response from the organizations she's needing help with.  Politicians friending her on Twitter and inviting her personally to special events.  Amazing power to

Group using parallels between Harry Potter and real world to get more peeps to register to vote with Wizard Rock the Vote.  Very interesting use of Social Media to increase votership.  Is votership a word?  I think I just made that up.

The Harry Potter Alliance goes beyond just voting, however.  The group is able to move forward some pretty major political themes like the Burmese cultural decimation, Darfur and many other issues.  This connection between pop culture and serious real world movements works greatly in part of the existence of Social Media.

Male-driven community blogs bring you quick hitting news and commentary - not quite as much qualitative discussion and analysis.  Women communicate and analyze differently and can take that power and engage in the conversation.

Andrew had really interesting comments on the subject of motherhood - whether through actual mommies that are being hurt by international violence and genocide, our archetypal mother through environmental issues and the general treatment of women across the world (devastating the brother and sisterhood we all share with each other globally).

So what are women really writing about and doing?  As long as MSM keeps referring to mothers who blog as 'mommybloggers',   The term is rather diminishing in most cases - it's not all about diapers.  As we all become more comfortable with our roles and what we do online, we will become more empowered and hopefully the MSM will refer to us in 'more generous terms'.

The Momocrats - wanting world domination by end of 2008 (originally 2012, 2009).  Aim high, ladies, aim high.

Blogher 2008 - DIY Content Syndication and Promotion

This Blogher 2008 session is part of the 'What We Do' break-out sessions, entitled 'DIY Content Syndication and Promotion' with panelists:

The magical world of the interwebs makes it a snap to create, post and promote content - whether it's video, audio or Blog posts.  This panel touched on a variety of ways to create content, push it out online and promote it to the masses.

Anne-Marie is very interested in social bookmarking sites and likes to explore the SEO aspects of these different  -- wants to be able to find people to help promote your stuff, whether they are Bloggers, people on social networks or just people who consume content.  In a way, 'gaming the system' and helping folks who you like (and vice versa)  Also uses StumbleUpon to 'thumbs up' different sites and content, but still trying to figure out the best way to submit your submitted content and promote it. 

At first, you get an enormous jump in traffic when you start using it -- but can't figure out why it slacks off so quickly afterwards.  Do you stop 'Stumbling Upon' your own content periodically and promote only others'?  There are nuances and changes in social sites like this you must just try out.  One such niche site is HealthRanker - easy-to-use social bookmarking for health and fitness niche.

Posting and sharing the video content love online
Esther has experimented with over 2 dozen video platform sites, trying to gauge what works, what's important and what helps her community.  YouTube is still the 'premiere' video site for traffic -- always post on YouTube even if you intend to post elsewhere. 

Important to not just rely on tags for videos, you must build community by video responding to other people -- not just always pushing your own original content.  Some of Esther's favorite video sites:

1. Bliptv -- great for episodic content that gives you lots of freedom in their terms of service, meaning they won't pull you content if a DCMA (if someone says you have content they own -- even if it's not proven, just filed, it gets pulled) gets filed against you, etc.
2.  Brightcove -- great for customizable video player, but don't get any revenue sharing and paid subscription version is incredibly expensive (so best for large corporations).  Always super great for search engines.
3.  Vimeo -- high quality video, has much better compression rate... actually HD streaming quality which is very important to video artists
4.  TubeMogul -- simultaneously post on a variety of social video sites and keep track of your stats (as well as watch other video blogger stats)

Playing with social networks to grow your community
Gwen Bell is a brand evangelist and active blogger that uses a variety of social networks and sites to post content and engage her audience. 

Where should someone who is new to using a tool start and what are the rules of engagment?
Twitter is a matter of jumping on and becoming part of the real conversation, versus jumping into CEO mode and pumping out info.  Some companies have done this with tremendous success:  Zappos and JetBlue are good examples to look at for best practices. 

To start with a tool like this, you just have to jump in and watch the dialogue and how things are said and just go.  Summize and Tweetstory are two tools to use for Twitter campaigns.  There's been much discussion between Plurk vs Twitter -- Plurk is a little more fun and interactive, but aggregation is an issue.  Not a networking or community building tool the way that Twitter is.  But again, you have to sometimes experiment to find this out yourself.

Kirtsy is great way to share things that you love using the Digg model.  There are many other similar niche social sites, like PhotographyVoter,   that utilize same set-ups and technologies but target different people.  You have to figure out what is best for you to tap into and how.

Ideas on social media submission workflow: 
As a Blogger, you have to visit different sites and experiment with different sites to see what niche works best for you.  Start a Yahoo Group with online friends to help promote your community's stuff.  It is pretty time consuming, and depending on what you are doing can have an adverse effect in Google search rankings (if they are looking at your submission time stamps, etc.) and you must spend time fleshing out your profiles and commenting on other content.  It's all an experiment but there are some short cuts.

Analyze your traffic and see what people are already finding you from and what's already working.  Don't try every new thing that comes out, see what's already working.

For complete blogging beginners, must start with regular great content, post in multiple places (don't always have to post just to your Blog, update your Flickr and other profiles and link them all together), comment on other Blogs and use trackbacks.  Also consider using a commenting system like IntenseDebate and Disqus.

Collaboration is also a great way to get started - do projects together with another blogger or video blogger.  Also, build on what others have done -- find great video and use their relevant tags and format and build on it.  This way, like on YouTube, if you have a relevant video to a very popular video, your's might end up being shown immediately next to a very popular video.

Beth Kanter uses other social sites to help with her blogging - she uses Twitter to ask questions to help flesh out blog posts and other content.  This helps to include different audience members in different aspects of her social media contribution -- networking weaving.

Great idea to get on Twitter now at Blogher to ensure that you connect and grow your network with like-minded individuals immediately.  This grows your sphere of influence and helps you to connect as never before.

Free stuff is good, people respond incredibly well to it.  Companies are increasingly looking to passionate bloggers to be brand influencers.  Does your audience like a particular kind of product or brand?  Consider contacting the company and asking if they'd like to give something away.

Use Friendfeed to search for your company and product name to track what people are saying about you.  It gives you an opportunity to engage another blogger and grow your community that much more across multiple platforms (Krista uses Summize, Friendfeed and Google Blog Search).

Blogher08 - Top-Notch Political Commentary

This Blogher 2008 session is part of the 'What We Believe' break-out sessions, entitled 'Top-Notch Political Opinion Commentary' with panelists:

This was a great session that touched on tips and tricks on how to get female political writers' blogging messages into traditional news.  We chatted on what holds some female bloggers back from getting their words out from blogosphere into Mainstream Media.  Some holdbacks included: not sure how to get in touch with repoters, not sure how to write press releases, concerns with anonymity in a smaller town (especially with differing opinions with local family and friends), etc.

Women political bloggers must have desire to engage in competitive landscape - know your facts, know how to talk about them, know the opposing side's perspective.  The media landscape still doesn't look like we want it too - women are marginalized in OpEd pages, as sources in hard news stories (perspective of editors and producers is often that international affair, global economies and war are understood to be male terrains).

But women straddle many fences, we are invested in many subjects across the board.  The blogosphere allows us to get our perspective out sans editors.  However, even still our perspectives are not hear as widely as they should be -- and even when we are heard, our engagement makes us appear alien to many and puts us under harsh criticism due to sexist mindsets in the media and general public.

Jennifer gets TONS of hate mail after major mainstream media appearances - but always about her looks, make-up or dress.  Maybe the last sentence in a critical letter is about what she actually said in an interview, but everything else is physically-related and has nothing to do with her commentary and ideas.  Her advice:  you just have to expect it and not let it get to you.  This is very different than the criticism her mail counterparts receive, but a reality she must deal with.

Working through the MSM:
The more popular your blog is, the more likely MSM will come to you.  There are media relation training sessions that help you attract notice and attention.

The best way to stay on message is to have practiced it before MSM calls you -- have everything all in a row and ready to go.  Jennifer recommends a book entitled  'Spin Works', which has a concept of  the 'Brother-in-law test'.  The test basically means you must get your message to be understood in a short and concise way by your brother-in-law who isn't engaged in political system willing to listen to you in about a minute. 

Frame your ideas so that all audiences can get your POV, not just the audiences you typically speak to and are surrounded by.  Make your perspectives catchy and personal and related to facts and figures and political realities that disengaged people will be interested in understanding. Then you have a successful message to share.

As a player in the media, you must be willing to do what women are coached not to do - stick to your message, speak up for what you believe in and don't let the boys tell you that your perspective is not as important as yours.

Preparing for a MSM interview:
You must role play before a broadcast or interview, meet up with someone you trust and tell them to ask you the most out-of-bounds questions they can think of that the opposite point of view might misrepresent your position as.  If you can respond in a role play in practice session, you'll be better prepared to do this when/if this happens live.

When writing an OpEd - the goal is to affect public debate and public opinion.  You don't want to alienate people, but want to stay strong in your presentation of your points without appearing like you are ranting or emotional.  This is something to always remember - women with strongly held opinions are often considered 'emotional'.  You have to fight past this with facts.

It is always okay to not answer an inflammatory question, if you can re-direct the question and move it to your point.  Do not dignify inflammatory remarks and questions with a response.

When being booked for a broadcast, always be prepared for the worst case scenario.  Hosts go off script and some shows just lie when briefing interviewees.  You can say no if you don't like what they are talking about.  Some networks and producers are better than others, some will work on the message with you if they really want you.

Powersources project - national database (late 2001) of women experts.  A lot of women who are incredibly well-informed and leaders in their fields don't consider themselves experts.  You don't need to be 'special', you just need to be confident and well-informed.  Systemic bias in the media means that as journalist, those that get to be published are often built around with relationships with editors who call and assign a story.  Become a go-to person to have them come to you. 

Catherine gave the panel a great window on what public debate looks like and why it matters.  She suggests you always start off with 5 questions when thinking about your commentary and OpEd pieces:

1. What is credibility?
Credibility is accountability to what you know - what is the evidence of what you know and can you convey it?  What are you an expert in and what woudl be the point you would make in this area?  Being an 'expert' is really putting yourself out there as a resource.  Most people are uncomfortable with this term, but it's not about you!! It's about what you can provide others with and how you can help others.

2. How do you create an argument that is of contribution?
2 qualities of contribution:  what would be valuable to the other party (the aha! moment) and what is the evidence you bring to bear, opposed to rhetoric or 'I told you so'.  The solid material we could agree upon even amongst those who disagree with our interpretation.  Quotes, credible news sources, sometimes logic.

3. What's the difference between being right and being effective?
Catherine wrote an Sex in the City OpEd piece in NY Times about how they are retrograde (drink, shop, meaningless relationships) and had reactions that were overwhelmingly against her.  Not rational mail, but very passionate.  Catherine felt like she had the better argument, but realized she had alienated 4 out of 5 of the people she really wanted to reach.

So now, before she concludes an argument, she takes a moment to put herself in the other person's shoes.  Empathy and respect - otherwise it is not possible to change minds.  You must assume the other person is intelligent and moral and respect that. 

4. How can you see what you care about as part of a bigger picture?
Catherine connected with a women who spent 10 years writing a thesis on 18th Century French gossip and its implications.  This is a very narrow field of study, but looking larger, she is incredibly well positioned to write on political implications of social networking.  Don't just keep your knowledge in a box.

5. How can you see your knowledge and experience in terms of its potential value of other people?
Definition of social responsibility and starting point of contribution of major political debate. 

These are the 5 questions that come up again and again working with over 1500 women in the OpEd Project.  Answering these will ensure you are far more successful.  In fact, answering these questions give you the barebones of an OpEd piece.

Statistics on public debate: 
85% are mostly privileged (Harvard and Yale graduate) white male debates.  85% of Hollywood producers and radio producers are men.  Only 2 of the 19 major syndicated radio talk show hosts are women.  84% Congress is male. 

1 out of 20 of top political blogs are written by women.  Great to have our voices out there, but even better to have our voices out there in a place where it can be heard.  Half of our nation's best brains are missing in national conversation.

3 different reasons why it matters: 
The lack of women conveys the wrong and very bad idea that women are missing in leadership.  Thought leadership and leader incubation happens in OpEd and public debate.  Example - after Catherine was included in major public debates she very quickly got a book deal, national television, invited to speak with Clinton's Latin American affairs advisors.  This was no coincidence.  These appearances and public engagement really reach out and have an impact.

Whoever writes the story, writes history -- if you are not writing it, someone else is and they might not be telling it right.

Public conversation is happening in an echo chamber.  Today's public debate looks like scene in Being John Malkovich -- all the same people, all John Malkovich's interacting and reaching out to each other.  With this limited view and scope, we're not getting very good information to make decisions about the world.  This is the driving reason why it matters.

2005 Larry Summers made annoying speech on biological aptitude on women in engineering -- sparked off OpEd sexism debate.  Catherine sees that there are astonishingly few submissions by women in this forum, we must add our voice and be heard.  We have the brain power.

A lot of public debate works around Passcode information - this is knowledge that is not secret, but is hidden within groups and books that not everyone knows about it.  Women need to break into this sphere of knowledge so as to grow their minds and have even more input.       

Blogher 2008 - Reach!

Blogher08

HURRAY!!  We are just starting out at Blogher 2008, full of over 1000 sassy Blogging and Social Media ladies (with a smattering of men and kiddos) ready to discuss hot issues in the blogosphere, writing world, business land, parenting sphere.  Plus there's a lot of booze.  And street cars.

To keep up with all of the Blogher 2008, keep an eye on this blog and keep an eye on the official Blogher Live-blogs page to see all of our live blogging volunteers updates.

If you are attending, check out the Blogher 2008 widget to help you keep track of people and happenings:  www.blogher.com/guides/blogher08

And if you want to be REALLY REALLY want to be awesome, keep an eye on my happykatie ma.gnolia page to see all of the cool Bloggers I meet - up to the minute :)  Yes, I multi-task and link to blogs as I meet people.  Sue me. 

August 08, 2007

Scrapblog lengthens Blogher love ROI


Scrapblog Photobooth at BlogHer '07
Originally uploaded by alexdecarvalho

Talk about lengthening your event investment - I think that Scrapblog had a great idea with the wacky photo shoot props Flickr group.

Check out all the silly Blogher ladies and their photos.  I heart Scrapblog - that pink shirt in my arms a Scrapblog onesie for the very beautiful little Baby London :)

July 30, 2007

happykatie Blogher 2007 wrap-up

So I'm back home from Blogher and Chicago adventures - so sad to leave and I know that many other gals are feeling my pain.  A neat bonus before hopping on the plane - I did manage to get up early this morning and pack in some good walk around photo time, a little shopping, museum visits and even another run-in with a favorite blogger :).  So everything ended on a sweet note.

You can view my Blogher 2007 photos here, but be sure to check out other attendees' photos as well.  I saw some pretty nice camera set-ups there, so I know that there are some beautiful blogger photos floating around in the blogging ether. 

This was a wonderful weekend and I'm so excited and pleased to have met and connected with so many remarkable women.  In the words of Garrison Keillor:  'Do good work and keep in touch'.  See you soon, email you sooner :)  Ciao bellas!

July 28, 2007

Food porn and how to shoot it at Blogher2007

Helping foodie bloggers and photographers get more comfortable adding beautiful food imagery to food posts.  Visualization is important :)  This Technical Blogher session focuses on basics for shooting food and edible lovelies at large.  Should your photo shoot not go so well, Jan offers some Photoshop tips.

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