Posts Tagged ‘dan viens’

BDW @ CP+B OMG!

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Crispin Porter + Bogusky's appropriation of the Colorado state flag.

Crispin Porter + Bogusky's appropriation of the Colorado state flag.

For a minute I thought my phone was vibrating. Then I realized it was the air.

Crispin Porter + Bogusky’s Boulder office was literally buzzing when I visited last Tuesday along with my fellow Boulder Digital Works students, the program’s coordinators and one of our interns.

We rode some of their low rider bikes around the entry area, watched a dog piss on a pole and got the grand tour of the place that we had been hearing so much about during the previous six weeks.

The tour was an eye opener. There were people everywhere. In much of Colorado’s Front Range people don’t have big yards so they head to parks, open space and trails to spend time outdoors. At CP+B, a similar principle seems to apply.

All but the top dogs have insignificant workspaces. This spreads people all over the warehouse space to work. There were people on the patio, in the kitchen, in the entry, on the bleachers and everywhere in between.

They call it a factory and in a lot of ways it looks like one. The ducts in the ceiling are exposed, the floor is a smooth grey and there is plenty of exposed plywood. A second “floor” was added as the office grew from the original 40 that started in Boulder to the hundreds there now.

We saw familiar faces, checked out their 3-D printers used for product prototyping and finished our day with a two hour session in one of the conference rooms learning about account management with Acct. Manager Jeff Graham.

Throughout the session footsteps above were audible and outside a constant smattering of voices could be heard. The mildly chaotic scene was a stark contrast from life at Boulder Digital Works.

Things at BDW are relaxed, safe and quiet, like a womb. Seeing that real world out there was important. But equally as important was hitting the snooze button on that wake up call, knowing we have another year to try, trip, fail, succeed, experiment and dream within our safe training grounds at BDW.

Bogusky in The Schoolhouse

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Alex Bogusky came into Boulder Digital Works last week.

He’s part of a little shop in town called Crispin Porter + Bogusky. They’ve done work for car companies, food companies and software companies.

He came in to critique the final breakout session of the latest Boulder Digital Works 36 hour workshop. Each group in the workshop had about an hour to come up with a product and a digital ecosystem around the product. The products ranged from a self-guided lawn mower to a campaign based around a minor league baseball team. Each had some very cool ideas attached.

Bogusky listened to each presentation intently along with the workshop’s instructors. After each, he gave some constructive criticism.

Here is what it boiled down to.

1. What’s the big idea?

A lot of the groups got caught up in a flurry of multimedia concepts, but forgot to attach their product to a central idea.

2. Make the thing, the thing

Several of the groups had great ideas, but often forgot to relate them to the central product. As a result they strayed far from the basic concepts their product represented.

3. Present ideas not media plans

A couple of the groups presented plans for extensive strategies that encompassed everything from TV spots to augmented reality. However, many of these plans forgot to include the big idea. No big idea with a big media plan means a lot of money spent on nothing in particular.

4. What is the big thing you’re trying to overcome?

Bogusky encouraged each group to find the cultural tension in the lives of their customers and to figure out how their product or service could address that tension.

His ideas and feedback were right in line with a lot of what we’ve been talking about in BDW 60 Weeks. It’s not rocket science, but Bogusky’s comments show sometimes it’s easy to get caught up in technology and forget about your users or the central idea that reflect the main product or service. It’s great to hear one of the top dogs in the game reiterating the thoughts my classmates and I have been having over the past five weeks and change.

55 more weeks and we’ll be taking those ideas for a long walk in the big wide world.

Design Thinking: It’s about the people stupid

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Week two was a “Creative” week on the calendar at Boulder Digital Works, although the previous week’s “Business” focus and this week’s “Technology” leaning have brought out plenty of creativity from the 12 of us.

The main focus of week 2/60 was Design Thinking. We started by watching a couple videos from Tim Brown of Ideo, moved on to redesign the water fountain and a system for getting people to drop bottled water and then were exposed to Lane Becker, founder of GetSatisfaction.com and Winston Binch of Crispin, Porter + Bogusky.

Two crucial elements of design thinking that we explored throughout the week were returning design to the big time by using it to create tools and systems not just objects and products and putting the user at the center of everything you do. These notions are changing the world of design and that’s almost hard to believe because they’re so basic. If the user isn’t at the center of design considerations who is? Wouldn’t every system and product be better and more successful if the creative team behind it considered the end user in the design process?

The concept of user centered design doesn’t blow your mind, but the idea that this hasn’t been the norm does. Alex Bogusky and John Winsor explore this in their new book Baked In.

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Crowdsourcing My Bio

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

crowdsourcingI’ve got to put a bio on the student page for Boulder Digital Works. I decided to crowdsource it. I asked acquaintances, friends, family and colleagues to tell me who I am.

I’m in the midst of the book Groundswell and thought this would be a great exercise. Groundswell is essentially about how communities of people have come together via social media and the digital universe and how their contributions determine brand identity as opposed to the it used to be with companies controlling their images unfettered.

The groundswell comments I received varied from “best son-in-law” to “Dan is a fucking loony” and “modern day Rasputin.” They said things I never would have thought of or said about myself. This was a lot of fun.

Here’s the amalgamation from what everyone said that I plan to put on the site:

Dan crowdsourced his bio. He is a storyteller who has told some unforgettable tales, both absurd and true. Dan gets off his ass to do things. He’s the guy in the dance off,  a f@#*ing loony, a modern day Rasputin, the best son-in-law, the worst cook and a little stinker. He’s hilarious, confident, creative, industrious, independent, thoughtful, optimistic and sarcastic. Dan’s got a zest for life and a bit of swagger. He is a fountain of the unexpected and a loyal friend. Olives are his enemy and fresh powder is his ally. A deep curiosity for the world drives him. He’s a passionate multimedia producer, filmmaker and writer. Dan’s a dog lover, traveler and a lucky man to have a wife who deals with him, inspires him and partakes in his shenanigans.

Here’s what they said exactly.

Up to the line below was added on Nov. 4, 2009

You are the same as when you were born. Happy, totally non traditional! Never one for the big block buster, more the sleeper independent film. Happy! The last thing you on your list of things to do was watch TV. A true baseball kid, loved to play the game, watch the game, talk about the game, go to a game and knows the statistics. Happy! Definitely self confident, always an excellent sense of self. One characteristic I never realized was so neat, was your wanting to be a part of something but not needing to be the star. Of course wonderful sense of humor, and a lovely way of connecting with people…and dogs!

One thing you left out is that you are really good at asking questions.  Not just stupid questions like such as “how is your day going” more like you ask thoughtful insightful questions about peoples livelihoods because you truly care and want to learn about them.

You are: Red Sox, Patriots, kind, funny, and creative.  You’re also a listener, smiler, and go-getter.  You make people want to be around you.

Dan Viens is a rare concoction of ambition, cognizance, and bedlam best served at room temperature.

Gives great advice on your wedding day.

Is a Blazers fan. Was there when Brandon Roy hit “That Shot” against the Houston Rockets. Go Blazers.

Knows that a text message reading “are you watching this game” actually means “I don’t want to ruin anything for you, but if you’re not watching this game then turn it on right now.”

funny, witty, fast, sharp, stubborn, realistic, sensitive, creative, serious, dog lover, nature lover, trendy, foodie, drinkie, fun

I think you are someone people can always count on. Someone with a witty sense of humor, someone people trust, someone that cares, someone that makes people laugh. And most importantly someone who likes to have fun and make sure everyone around you is having fun

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I shaved

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009
smooth as a baby's bottom.

smooth as a baby's bottom.

My friend Thomas drew my portraits for the web site and business card. We went with the beard for the main image. However, he also did one of me clean shaven and since that is the current state of my face, I thought I would share that image.

The Kids

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

The language barrier often made the mural process in Bamako very difficult. From understanding the guys at the paint store to our hosts and getting directions to settling a bill – things could be difficult and sometimes that wore on us.

One way to escape that was interacting with children.

Their curiosity and interest in the mural, my camera and us three toubaboos always transcended the barriers of language. Here Eduardo talks about those playful interactions.

Speaking without words from Real Earl Productions on Vimeo.

The Stigma of HIV

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Throughout the world HIV is stigmatized. One of the roles GAIA VF plays in Bamako, Mali is to help educate to remove the stigma and to help HIV positive people and their families deal with the social aspects of the disease.

In this video, Annie talks about how GAIA creates a medical home for these people at the clinic in Sikoro. She also talks about how the mural painted by Eduardo and Teresa at the clinic will be a PR piece for the work done by GAIA, its peer educators and the clinic.

Dr. Anne De Groot: Full Spectrum HIV care in Bamako & How a Mural Can Help from Real Earl Productions on Vimeo.

To donate to GAIA click here.

A Cause Worth Your Cash

Monday, May 4th, 2009

GAIA Vaccine Foundation, which stands for Global Alliance to Immunize against HIV and AIDS, is the organization that put me up while I was in Bamako in January. It was their clinic where Eduardo and Teresa painted the mural.

The founder, Annie DeGroot, is the most driven person I’ve ever met and her organization is among the most legitimate I’ve ever encountered. In addition to building and running the health clinic, GAIA is involved with HIV vaccine research in both Bamako, Mali and Providence, Rhode Island.

The organization is having its most difficult fundraising year ever and they are having a very hard time finding funding for three Brown University students to work in Annie’s Providence lab this year and then travel to Mali this summer. The research and work GAIA is involved with has the opportunity to benefit every person on the planet who is HIV positive and eventually everyone on earth. They need to raise $12,000. Annie is matching every donation dollar for dollar.

If you can donate some cash that would be amazing. I’ve given $50, but I’m sure they wouldn’t turn away donations of $5, $10, or $25. Thanks very much. The link to donate is below and I’ve also pasted Annie’s recent email.

GAIA Donation Page

GAIA Homepage

Here is the excerpt from Annie’s email

Please meet Julie CaplowSharon  Makava, and Lauren Pischel. These three young women would like to intern in my lab this summer (at EpiVax, where we’re still working on the GAIA Vaccine) and then go to Mali to work in the field. They will intern for free at the lab, but they need funds to travel. Their project is described in the attachment to this email.
We tried to fund them through the ARRA (Obama stimulus package) but they missed the cutoff. We’ve tried to fund them through Brown but Brown chose not to fund them. These are some of the greatest young women you’ll ever meet – - they volunteered for World AIDS day at Brown, they organized free HIV testing days, they’ve written grants and worked hard to get the funds to travel, but no luck, and time is running out. . .  and GAIA is experiencing one of the most difficult years ever for fundraising.
Will you send a check to GAIA to support their work in Mali? I will match every dollar you send. We need to raise $12,000. Can you give $500? $1,000? $100? I hope you can.
Here’s the address to send donations if you don’t want to use the web: 
GAIA Vaccine Foundation
146 Clifford Street
Providence, RI 02903
GAIA Is a 501c3
_________
Thanks for helping if you can. Spread the word.
Dan

On The Wing – On The Island

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

The Vashon Audubon Society welcome my film, my entourage and me up to their lovely island town last week for an Earth Day screening of On The Wing. My entourage consisted of my wife Sue and my mother in law Janice.

Vashon really hooked it up. We had a great screening with about 30 people. Everyone enjoyed the film and there were a lot of question. I was able to answer most of them.

We had a wonderful lunch at Sea Breeze Farm’s restaurant La Boucherie. The farm supplies food to the restaurant directly. The food and service were great and Matt our server, even showed up to the screening.

To top it all off we stayed the night at the home of a wonderful couple named Lindsay and Dana Hoffman. They graciously let us stay the night and served us a wonderful breakfast of scrambled eggs directly from their own chickens.

Many thanks to everyone at Vashon’s Audubon Society and especially Laura Bienen who set the whole event up. If you live in the Pacific Northwest and haven’t been to Vashon, you’re totally missing out. Check it out – it’s only a 15 minute ferry from Tacoma or Seattle.

Here are some photos.

The Power of Murals to Inspire Change

Monday, April 20th, 2009

This video is an excerpt from an interview done with Ray Patlan. Ray is a prominent Bay Area muralist who grew up in the barrios on the south side of Chicago. He has partnered with Eduardo Pineda on several mural projects.

In this video he talks about how murals can inspire change in impoverished areas where people have never realized a sense of power in any aspect of their life. It’s pretty inspiring stuff and it definitely has a bearing on the work Eduardo and Teresa did at the clinic in Sikoro and overall the work GAIA is doing at the clinic.

I think very often we judge people whose lives we truly can’t fathom. Ray’s comments definitely helped me to understand that there are many people in our own country and around the world who have not had the opportunities I’ve had and don’t feel empowered to make change in their lives and in their communities the way people who have been privileged throughout their lives do. 

I agree with him that a simple artistic change of scenery can help to inspire that change.


Murals and Their Power to Change: Video from A Real Earl Production Documentary from Real Earl Productions on Vimeo.