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27 August 2008

Farewell Dave Freeman

I was sad to learn today about the death at age 47 of Dave Freeman, co-author, with Neil Teplica, of "100 Things To Do Before You Die," the quirky and popular travel guide.

Dave Freeman One of the things I got to do before I die was to work with Dave and Neil way back in the internet 1.0 era, around 1997, when I was director of City.net, owned by Excite.com. City.net at the time was the most popular travel site on the web according to PC Meter (later Media Metrix). We had tons of traffic and were looking to bulk up our content offerings.

I can't remember how Dave and Neil came to us but their website, WhatsGoingOn.com, provided the perfect, original antidote to the standard travel guides that anyone and everyone could license for the web. With their original take on offbeat events and their unique set of icons indicating "danger," "risk of vomiting" and the like, we loved what they added to our service.

And Dave and Neil were such nice guys, we were really glad to send our traffic their way. It wasn't hard back in those days for Excite to drive a hard bargain with a small content producer -- and we often did -- but there were times when you helped somebody out too, and that's how we felt with Dave and Neil. At least that's how I remember it today and I hope they'd remember it the same way.

Of course many web 1.0 dreams did not work out, and WhatsGoingOn.com eventually fizzled out (so did Excite, for that matter). I kept in touch with Dave and Neil only occasionally, usually through some address book update.

Reading his obituary was not a happy way to be reminded again of Dave. But I was glad to realize how he and Neil had ultimately turned their website into a best-selling book that captured the public imagination as much as their website had captured ours more than a decade ago. And reading the tributes to Dave made me realize how many people he had reached, and inspired.

If there's one thing any of us would like to do before we die, it's to inspire others and be remembered for it. Dave pulled that one off. I'm happy for him.





07 August 2008

Remembering Jerry Garcia

Jerry Garcia was born 66 years ago this month, and died 13 years ago, in August 1995, just days after his birthday.

Jerry-2 Garcia’s death hit me hard. I was 31 years old, a junior business development executive at News Corporation in New York, about to head out with my boss for a lunch with someone long since forgotten – when a colleague told me the news and sent me reeling. Sitting moments later in a trendy downtown restaurant picking at my plate of fancy greens, I was torn between the suit-and-tie-wearing businessperson I was trying to become and the carefree tie-dyed Deadhead I had been.

Garcia’s death sealed the deal and made it clear there was no going back. As the blah-blah-blah of business and the clinking of cutlery on fine china carried on about me, I tried hard not to cry.

I never met Garcia – although when I was 19 I could have sworn that he had winked and pointed his guitar right at me while I danced in the front row during a particularly solid jam that was tearing the roof off of Madison Square Garden. So what was it about this disheveled San Francisco guitarist and his band of rag-tag associates known as the Grateful Dead that caused such devotion in me and in others? What could we – eventually millions of us, from all walks of life – hear in Jerry and the band that some people never got and most musicians never came close to attaining?

Certainly part of it was his musicianship. Garcia’s insatiable curiosity and open-mindedness led him to explore and excel at a multitude of musical genres – from bluegrass guitar and banjo with Old & In The Way; to sweet pedal-steel country rock with the New Riders of the Purple Sage; to funk and blues and soul with Merl Saunders and others; to his own earnest interpretations of Motown and Dylan with his Jerry Garcia Band.

And of course there were the Grateful Dead, with their enduring original compositions, their admiring cover versions of songs by artists such as Howlin’ Wolf and Johnny Cash and Dylan again, and their acid-laced, lengthy improvisational jams that percolated along determinedly and sometimes careened haphazardly toward some unknown destination, rivalling their jazz predecessors such as John Coltrane, Miles Davis and Charlie Parker – jams that spiralled along until one of the members of the band pulled a rabbit out of the hat and somehow managed to bring things full-circle, or maybe at times failing to do so and crashing and burning instead into a smouldering heap of ash – but nevertheless all the better for the trying.

Maybe it was their ethos – the Grateful Dead understood community, and user participation, long before these things became buzzwords of the internet era. Their openness to taping and trading concert recordings anticipated the era of file sharing by decades. Sharing and collaboration were how they operated in their music and in their life. From their first hippy days living together in the Haight to their later years running one of the biggest rock-and-roll businesses around, the Dead remained true to their core principles. And the Grateful Dead community was like a carnival rolling down the interstate into towns all over America, year after year, bringing along with it the same friendly, familiar faces – and anyone could join simply for the price of a ticket.

Jerry Garcia was the reluctant figurehead of it all. Accorded near-diety status by so many, he was in truth a humble intellectual – freely experimenting with music and art and, yes, with drugs but remaining ever self-effacing and non-political. Garcia never used his stature to try to lead or to influence, unless it was showing the way to more great music and good times. He let his guitar, and his sweet and soulful singing, speak for him.

In Garcia I felt I had found integrity – a hero to admire, a person who did things in his own natural manner and somehow achieved excellence, satisfaction and success without compromise. Who could be a better model than that?

There was much truth in this, but sadly there was a dark side too. Garcia succumbed at age 53 to the toll of years of self-abuse – chain smoking, obesity leading to diabetes and ultimately to two diabetic comas that almost took him even sooner. And despite his hippy advocacy of the mind-expanding potential of hallucinogens and other drugs, his great talent and tremendous intellect was eventually addled by a sad addiction to smoking heroin which in later years caused him to sometimes even need to be reminded what song he was playing. He was found dead of a heart attack on the floor of a drug rehabilitation center on that day I headed off to my fancy business lunch.

We all have our demons and sometimes they kill us. Those of us who loved Jerry Garcia are lucky, though, that he lived in an era when everything could be recorded – and the Dead were the ultimate open-source archivists. Today we have a collection of many thousands of hours of Garcia’s exquisite live performances. And for those of us who loved him, his soul lives in those recorded notes.

As Bob Dylan said at the time of Garcia’s death: "There's no way to measure his greatness or magnitude as a person or as a player. I don't think eulogizing will do him justice. He was that great - much more than a superb musician with an uncanny ear and dexterity. He is the very spirit personified of whatever is muddy river country at its core and screams up into the spheres. He really had no equal. To me he wasn't only a musician and friend, he was more like a big brother who taught and showed me more than he'll ever know. There are a lot of spaces and advances between the Carter Family, Buddy Holly and, say, Ornette Coleman, a lot of universes, but he filled them all without being a member of any school. His playing was moody, awesome, sophisticated, hypnotic and subtle. There's no way to convey the loss. It just digs down really deep."

A quarter of a century after Garcia winked at me at Madison Square Garden, I’m still listening. I don’t wear tie-dye much anymore, but I am running my own business, doing my own thing – and I hardly ever wear a suit. Maybe a little something of Garcia rubbed off on me after all.

05 August 2008

Congratulations -- It's a Tweet!

Recently I received a message via FriendFeed, broadcast by a friendly associate, someone who is highly successful, liked and respected -- and deservedly so. To paraphrase, it said that he was in the delivery room, using a wireless connection, and the baby was on its way.

What a funny world we live in. I hadn’t known he was an expectant parent (we’re not that close, and we’re separated by thousands of miles). Now I know. And I’m happy for him.

Of course, in my daily information flow, or lifestream if you prefer, my friend’s headline carried just as much weight as news of the latest presidential poll rankings; the impeding Beijing Olympics; invoices I needed to pay at work; and the 15:43 train I needed to be sure to catch. They all flowed equally across my screen, carried by one of the many tools I have installed for sending chunks of information this way and that. These tools do not discriminate; they do not care what it is they’re sending. Making sense of it is up to me.

Arguably the birth of a baby is most important of all of these bits of information. But in the old days, given the extent of my acquaintance with this person, I might have learned of the blessed event closer to the child’s first birthday. Which is just about where it should be in my list of personal priorities (with no offense intended to my distant friend).

But we all live in public now, to paraphrase another friendly old acquaintance, Josh Harris, who realized this earlier than most of us. And this made me wonder what my friend’s partner, who was presumably in the delivery room groaning while he was tweeting, would have made of this.

I asked my one-person focus group, my wife, who in her deprived existence does not tweet, or twhirl, or jabber, or tumble or twitter (in the old days people were institutionalized for doing such things, especially all at once). She assumed that my acquaintance must have been joking. She made it very clear that should we ever find ourselves in the delivery room again (however unlikely), I’d best not be sending messages out until her work was done.

For all I know, my friend’s spouse may be an executive at one of these services. But my wife is not. Therefore, here are some tweets you will surely never receive from me:

 “Wife is ovulating – wish me luck dudes”

“Never mind – she wants to finish that New Yorker article first”

“Still in the delivery room – everybody tweet her to push!”

“Wow - the afterbirth is nearly as big as the baby -- see photos on Flickr"

21 July 2008

Graffiti: 19th-Century Version

One of the many pleasures of living in a place like Bath, England, is walking in the footsteps of the people who came before -- the same footsteps, in the same places, preserved and still lived-in.

Grafitti: 1802A short walk from our flat is the Kennet & Avon Canal, the nearby section of which was built in 1810. Once used for commercial navigation, it now is a lovely waterway upon which canal boats putter past as walkers and bicyclists amble along -- stopping for refreshment at fantastic pubs like The George in Bathampton.

Under the stone bridges that cross the canal one can find carved into the walls graffiti left by previous walkers. But this graffiti is as much as 200 years old.

On our walk yesterday we stopped to take a closer look. "Were they naughty teenagers?" asked my five-year-old son.

"Probably," I answered, "but two centuries ago."  My son ran on ahead, little burdened by the passage of time.IMAGE_106

These graffiti artists were never celebrated like Banksy is today, and are now lost to time. But interestingly, they took great care when carving their legacies into the cream-colored Bath stone. Most impressively, they used a serif font, or great flowery flourishes.

 They did very good work. And maybe afterward they stopped at The George for a drink.

22 November 2007

Cannibal Dad

After I had returned from an overnight in London my nearly-five-year-old son crawled into bed with us.

"What did you do in London?" he asked.

"I was at a dinner," I replied.

"Who was with you at the dinner?"

"Well, there were eight people," I told him.

He paused for a moment and then asked, "Why did you eat people?"

Funny. But somewhat disturbing that my son considers it plausible.    

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