Maybe arguing is one of the easiest forms of collaboration or conversation, and thats why such things always generate the most traffic.
It also hints that vlogging will never lead to the death of the sitcom or cheesy drama ;) Im no language specialist but I wouldnt be at all surprised if we've got a richer variety of words to use in the causes of conflict and competition, than for any of the more beautiful forms of human engagement. I want to watch stuff with people stroking their chins and having 8 hour debates about interesting subjects. But people will really tune in,a nd in honesty my own attention would peak, if a foodfight broke out instead. Cheers Steve Elbows --- In [email protected], "Jay dedman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Steve and Zadi are pioneering not only a format, but the very landscape of > > New Media. > > They produce an excellent, entertaining show about modern culture, and I > > feel they shouldn't be forced to defend their professionalism and talent. > > Agreed. I'm sorry that if anyone got a different impression. > I know Steve and Zadi well and how hard they work on their show. > Straight up professionals who are setting the pace. > We are all in this together. > > Someone emailed me offlist: "from start to finish, it was clear that > we valued the drama more than the issues at hand. Crazy making." > Looking back, I am definitely guilty of this which I regret. > I seemed to end up arguing about everything under the sun for the sake > of argument. > I have an ego as big as anyones. > All the strange old grudges seemed to have popped up for the event. > > Anyway, let's enjoy this week of relative quiet in our work lives. > Plenty more to come. > > Jay > > -- > http://jaydedman.com > 917 371 6790 > Video: http://ryanishungry.com > Twitter: http://twitter.com/jaydedman > Photos: http://flickr.com/photos/jaydedman/ > RSS: http://tinyurl.com/yqgdt9 >
