PLEASE by all means... check it out. It's about the war. I interview
three soldiers who served in Iraq, one of whome adamently disagrees
with the war. I interviewed a woman who's husband was killed in Iraq.
I interview an actual Iraqi citizen who says what he thinks should be
done with Saddam. I call Senator Edwards out on not taking my
questions. I call Margaret Cho out on a blog post she wrote that
makes me sick. I start my independent journalism series where I'm
gonna teach you how to start your own news cast.

Watch the first three minutes. Thats all I ask.

Jamie
thekeverreport.com

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Steve Watkins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> I like small chunks, but I really love long stuff too.
>
> Some stuff just cant be handled in little chunks, I like epics. The
> temptation to talk of legendary lower attention span in certain
> nations is almost too much to resist, but I will try.
>
> Or do a combination. There is the video of lecture
series 'Everything
> I Know' by R Buckminster Fuller available free online, I believe it
is
> 42 hours long. But it is also broken down into many hundreds of
> shorter clips.
>
> Anyway there is no right or wrong, people differ, and generally I
> think anybody could be captivated for longer periods of time IF the
> content kept them captivated. Still its hard to create captivating
> epics, so its more likely people would watch longer stuff thats on a
> specific theme  thats of special interest to them.
>
> To say whether the video in question should be 28 minutes or not,
well
> I could not say without seeing it first.
>
> Cheers
>
> Steve of Elbows
> --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Joshua Kinberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > > So, josh, I would encourage you to think "out of the Web" ;-)
> >
> > I can't watch anything longer than 5 minutes anywhere (5 minutes
is
> > really pushing the limits of my attention span), not just on the
web.
> >
> > I won't watch a 28 minute segment on TV, or listen to 28 minutes
> > straight on the radio without checking what else is on, or
jumping up
> > to check email.
> >
> > I don't think I'm alone. I really wish maintream content producers
> > would htink in smaller chunks. There are only 2 good minutes
maximum
> > of just about everything on television or in the movies, the rest
is
> > filler.
> >
> > -josh





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