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on the speculations that Apple is trademarking the generic term ‘podcast’

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From rob @ podcast 411 podcast on the speculations that Apple was trademarking the generic term podcast.

I wished people out there, when you are writing these blogs, you take some time and do some real journalistic research before you go out and start claiming things that just plain aren’t true.

If you have a bigger audience reading your blog - i agree: you have the same responsibility as any major magazine to make sure what you are claiming is true. The fact that you might manage the art of copy-and-pasting, should never be seen as an advantage - and never to be used as a weapon in a battle of trying to generate content.

Under Italian law, wine can be sold only in bottles.

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In Sweden, wine needed to be sold in Tetra Pak - box model - before people started buying it. The illusion that it’s cheaper to buy 3 litres, and that it is easier to ‘just drink a glass’ seem to be the main reason for it success.

Being raised with an Italian kitchen culture, this seem very very wrong and unrespectful. Shocking really. I have said many time that selling wine in Tetra Pak is something they would never allow in Italy.

What I didn’t know, until reading this past Sundays Observer, was how right i really was.

The article in the Observer, title: Canned wine is fine for Paris but not in Italy, said:

Under Italian law, wine can be sold only in bottles.

The article was about how the people in the Conegliano/Valdobbiadene region in Italy were angry and upset over the fact that their famous grape, used to make their famous white sparkling wine with the same name, Prosecco, was sold in Red-Bull-looking cans, labeled Rich, and marketed with the face of Paris Hilton in order to target a shallow audience in countries such as Britain, Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
Rich Prosecco have basically bypassed the ‘bottles only law’ by distributing the canned wine abroad only.

Giancarlo Vettorello, director of Consorzio del Tutela del Prosecco:

It is a debasement of our product and something that we will not passively accept.

It’s not the first time that countries outside of Italy have been served an fabricated story about a product and it’s connections to the Italian lifestyle and culture. Quite often products gets anchored in lies - “given values” - in the aim to get a bigger or another revenue stream.

You can’t, for instance, buy the Peroni Nastro Azzurro beer in Italy, even though it’s market as “Peroni Nastro Azzurro is Italian style in a bottle. It brings out the Italian in you.”

In Italy, Peroni is one type of beer and Nastro Azzurro another. Peroni Nastro Azzurro is just a re-branded Nastro Azzurro that’s been given a few new values so that it can be repositioned in the beer market - made it into ‘fashion’ - in an attempt to bring in more revenue from another consumer channel.
This is nothing new, barely an example.

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But I absolutely love the transparency, and the deep shallowness and stupidity of the Prosecco campaign. I think Paris Hilton says it best her self, in her song, which is also brilliantly tied to the campaign and available on the Prescco website, Stars are Blind.

Even though the gods are crazy
Even though the stars are blind
If you show me real love baby
I’ll show you mine


Some external links:

A simple formula for the lazy designer who wants to be successful.

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A simple formula for the lazy designer who wants to be successful: Set everything in Helvetica (above); “flush left, ragged right�; don’t center anything; make sure everything lines up with something else and leave plenty of creative “white space.�

Appeared in the April 19, 1977, issue of Metropolis, the Weekly Newspaper of Minneapolis.

Tindersticks at Barbican, London, 17 September 2006

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Lets go back in time. Back to 1996 and the year that I bought the album ‘About to Choke’, by Vic Chesnutt, from the record shop ‘Rock On’ in Skelleftea. I loved that album from day one, and within a year I owned all Vic’s albums: Is the Actor Happy?, Drunk, West Of Rome and Little. My good friend Marcus Burman and I were totally absorbed and adored Vic and his albums to bits. Even thought they were all good, About to Choke remained the favorite.

Then in 1998 we found out that Vic was playing in Stockholm, and within a few hours, the flight and concert tickets were booked. Moonspell and Therion was also playing that same weekend, so more tickets got booked and another friend, Johan “Jorra” Radstom, decided to come along as well. Even though I really like Moonspell and Therion, the trip was all about Vic.

It was the 3rd of October 1998. As we arrived at the venue a poster said that the special guests for the evening were Calexico and Lambchop, and, to our surprise, that Vic had released a new album called The Salesman and Bernadette.
The initial thought was: F**k - I didn’t know he had released a new album! The initial hopes were: I hope the new album is as brilliant as the rest of them and that he will mostly play songs from About to Choke.
It turned out that Vic did not only play songs from the latest album The Salesman and Bernadette, the album was also far from anything similar to any of his other albums. Instead of a naked acoustic singer songwriter sound, it was an experimental music cooperation with Lambchop and their 21 piece band. I hated it.

Still today - 10 years later - About to Choke is one of my absolute favorite albums. Vic Chesnutt is still one of my favorite musicians and song writers. But my so far only Vic Chesnutt gig is one of my worst and most disappointing concert experiences.

I think we all have had similar experiences, maybe not to that extent, but I bet we all have been to a concert where the band didn’t play ‘That One Song’. That song that is a bit special to you. The song you think is better than the hit song that made the band famous. Your song. That song.
I have many times gone to a concert and wished they would only play songs from ‘That One Album’. You know - you don’t care about the latest album, even if the latest album is ok, you prefer if they could promote it some other time, and not when you have made the effort to attend the show.

It’s a bit of a Catch 22 - you need to know an album and it’s songs to truly enjoy a concert , and once you know the album, the tour to promote the album is over and the next time the band is in town, they are already promoting the next album.

Now let’s go back to 2006 and last sunday when I arrived to the Barbican with Willow, her friend Lucy and Lucy’s boyfriend Scott, to see Tindersticks. This time a flyer said:

Welcome to the second year of Don’t Look Back, the season that invites a diverse range of artists to preform a retrospective of one of their works. In most cases this means seminal or great albums live in their entirety. This is all about records we endorse - not necessarily how many copies they have sold, but more about how they have touched our hearts and minds. In the age of the iPod where many people pick and choose tracks, Don’t Look Back encourages fans to preserve the album as an art form.

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Tindersticks, will be preforming Tindersticks II.

I pinched my arm. It can’t be true. It’s to good to be true.

When they all came on stage, the singer, Stuart A Staples, leans towards the mic and says;

I think we all knows what’s gonna happen next.

It was amazing. Breath taking. Blown away. Stupendous. Electrifying. Non stop action. Thrilling. World class. A masterpiece. A triumph. Truly compelling. Superb. This year’s most sumptuously enjoyable gig. Expansive and radiantly generous. A transatlantic epic.

No need really for me to write a review in detail. If you know the album you know what you missed, if you don’t, you don’t. And if you don’t, just try to imagine one of those albums you just totally adore and imagine you seeing that album being preformed live.

What I found out as well, that I didn’t know, and that adds even more value to it, is that the Tindersticks don’t longer exist as a band. The lead singer, Stuart A Staples, have gone solo. The concert was a one-off.

I feel privileged to have experienced this, and I would like to thank Tindersticks, my lovely girlfriend willow for purchasing the tickets, and the organiser ATP for making it happen. The concept of getting an artist to preform an album is just brilliant. Me like it a lot and me will definitely keep me eyes open for the 2007 brochure.
It says on the ATP Don’t Look Back website that they take suggestions on future artist and album… maybe I will get to see Vic Chesnutt performing About to Choke after all. Knock on wood.

Running into people

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Yesterday, while I was being a good citizen of the society by giving back some of the money I have earned through some general consuming, I ran into two old friends from school: Johan Haren and Magnus Nilsson. It is a bit weird that you can run into people in a huge city like London - but this is not the first time it happens and definitely not the last, and it’s times like these that you really appreciate that it do happens.

So if I’m not totally wrong, at the moment we are 7 people from my old crew living in London.

links for 2006-09-15

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Did you know, that if you search for ‘I would hereby like to’

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Did you know, that if you search for “I would hereby like to“on Google, the first search result is a word document titled “The County Council of Västerbotten would hereby like to give its first comments on the State Aid Action Plan.“?

37 = missionary position

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This:

Our market is people who just want to get the shot. People who are in a hurry. They’re not trying to create an artistic masterpiece, they’re trying to manage a project or organize information or communicate efficiently. They’re willing to satisfice if it makes their lives easier.

makes me want to do the same thing The Joker did in the first Batman movie back in 1989:

I have given a name to my pain, and it is Batman

assign something a name.

But unlike Mr Joker and his ‘pain’, I would hereby like to assign the number 37 to the ‘missionary position’. The number 69 is also know to be a sexual position and symbolise two people rotated 180 degrees. 3 and 7 are two digit looking the same way. See also: marine blue.

Hel Aint a Bad Place to Be

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hel1.jpgI received two main reactions from people when I told them that I was going on holiday to Hel, Poland. Swedes tended to say “Poland?”, as in “Why?”, while English speaking people instead, picked up on the fact that Hel is pronounced Hell - as in opposite to Heaven.

It turns out that it is quite difficult to talk about Hel without making episodes of the holiday sound ironic. Like “The first day in Hel we experienced a thunderstorm”, “The only church in Hel has been turned into a museum”, “Most people in Hel are Polish”, “Hel is a small fishing village”, “The fish is great in Hel” etc and so on - the list is never ending.

So anyway - enough about that.

First we flew from London to GdaÅ„sk. The pre and post flight experience was horrible. I don’t blame this on the airports (Luton and GdaÅ„sk) or the airline (Wizz) I blame it on the security procedure now put in place for flying. Flying feels less glamorous then eating a egg and mayo sandwich. Surely it’s for safety. But I bet it’s not for our (the passengers) safety - since then the same procedure should be employed on all collective transports (train, buses). I bet it’s for the safety of people who are not in the plane. I bet it’s for the safety of the people the plane might crash into. Now, I wonder, statistically, how many people get killed from bombs on buses and cars in comparison to hijacked airplanes. And I also wonder what kind of security more important citizens have, and can have, against a threat from the ground vs the threat from the air. Im sure they have radars and military on stand by but… just some thoughts. Enough about that.

So after we had landed in GdaÅ„sk, which is the sixth-largest city in Poland, we took bus 110 to Wrzeszcz train station. Bus 110 was, as the travel guide mentioned, very very slow. What the travel guide didn’t mention was that the buses on monday mornings might be dominated by the female gender. At least that was something that struck me that day on that bus at that time. They were everywhere. And they looked very very healthy and the majority, I would say, fall way over the standards of what the media has developed as the beauty standard of 2006. That was then something that just stayed with me the entire time - people from Poland look so much healthier - and the girls, young and old, are very attractive. Izabella Scorupco (Poland). Eva Herzigová (Czech). Anna Kournikova (Russia). They have all shown the world that east European women are very attractive. But who knew that a Tuva Novotny would be average in Poland. Now I am in a very happy and wonderful relationship but back in 2002 I was miserable and single living in a town in Sweden called Karlskrona with the slogan - ‘a short cut to Poland’… not once did I take the boat over. Hows that for rubbing salt in the wound!

The train we got, which seemed to be the trains you get, was one of those old cute classical trains with a hallway next to the windows on one side and with booths on the other side of the train. The type of train with passenger car you have seen in old James Bond movies, the kind you see on old steam trains. The town Hel is located on the tip of the 35 Km long sand bar peninsula with the same name - Hel Peninsula. So the train out there is very nice and runs mostly right next to the sea, with a road on one side of the track and a sand beach on the other. The whole journey from the airport to Hel took about 2 hours. When the old and very classic train rolled in to the 84 year old train station it set an atmosphere that would maintain throughout the holiday. A feeling that we had travelled back in time.

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My choice of travel literature also turned out to be a travel back in time. Back to 2000, Naomi Klein and her No Logo. Reading it in Hel definitely added depth to the book that I probably wouldn’t have noticed or reached if I read it in London. Not a lot of things in the book had relevance to Hel. Except maybe two sentences on page 118, which say:

Of course not everyone is equally amenable to the idea of treating culture and nationality as fashion accessories to be slipped on and off. Those who have fought wars and survived revolutions tend to be more protective of their national traditions.

Many people in Europe are aware of the fact that Adolf Hitler triggered the outbreak of the Second World War by invading Poland on the 1st September 1939. That was almost exactly 67 years ago. The 1st September was actually our last day in Hel. But I was unaware of Polands heavy involvement in the First World War. And the rest of their rollercoaster history. A short extract from wikipedia.org

It regained independence in 1918 in the aftermath of the First World War as the Second Polish Republic. Following the Second World War it became a communist satellite state of the Soviet Union known as the People’s Republic of Poland. In 1989 the first partially-free elections in Poland’s post-World War II history concluded the Solidarity (Solidarność) movement’s struggle for freedom and resulted in the defeat of Poland’s communist rulers. The current Third Polish Republic was established, followed a few years later by the drafting of a new constitution in 1997. In 1999 Poland acceded to NATO, and in 2004 it joined the European Union.

What I also didn’t know, is that the Hel Peninsula, together with the town of Hel, was one of the longest-defended pockets of Polish Army resistance against the German invasion.

So in Hel you are far away from the plastic lifestyles and the fast lanes of the west. And the only persons wearing anything branded was probably myself. The No Logo as a concept, and a book, to be honest, came out as transparent as an empty cd jewel case. But it still is a good read. I will write a long review on the book when time allows.

Most people live under the impression that if you can speak English you can be understood in most places around the globe. Well I don’t believe it’s true (and most of you have probably experienced it).
I find it really refreshing to visit countries where you either speak their language - adapt and learn - or bring out the guide book, the lexicon or you bring out your old charade skills. But even if the locals couldn’t speak or understand English, most of them were very helpful.
I must say that the Polish language, in rhythm and tone reminded me a lot of the Italian. I was quite surprised by this.

The food in Hel is good. Even though I don’t eat fish, which is supposed to be amazing in Hel, I found that the food was very tasty and well done. The portions were very small… or, the correct way to say this is probably that they served healthy-sized portions.
What was a bit weird was that they sold portions by their weight. Like 100g or 200g portion. At one restaurant we went to (outside of Hel), they couldn’t tell us the price of the dish before it was made and weighed. One place even sold wine by it’s weight. Now that can’t be right.

I don’t think Hel is a place for everyone. I don’t think everyone would appreciate it as much as Willow and I did. But if you are looking for a place where you can unplug from plastic lifestyles, and shallow end values; a place with brilliant sea food, a lot of small restaurants and a 35 Km long sand beach, then maybe you should go to the Hel Peninsula and it’s cute small towns.

When we got back to London Luton airport, we stood in the queue for passport control. The passengers from our flight got mixed-up with some fat annoying kids with english accents, wearing Umbro sports gear - well, I took that as a welcome home.

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This is the first official photograph of me wearing one pair of my new glasses.

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 Rewind