BlogosphereWho is your top contributor/commentor at Good Will Hinton for 2006?by Will Hinton ()Expat Teacher 44% (7 votes) gurufrisbee 13% (2 votes) Joseph Knippenberg 19% (3 votes) Dustin Kidd 0% (0 votes) Curt 13% (2 votes) Marc Porlier 13% (2 votes) Jim Keffer 0% (0 votes) jwkite 0% (0 votes) bjanaszek 0% (0 votes) Total votes: 16 Good Will Hinton Interviews David Houle About The Shift Ageby Will Hinton ()
David and I discuss future trends including the democratization of information and media, why the traditional definition of "recession" is irrelevant, peak oil, alternative energy, the end of the age of "unlimited", and David's hope for the future.
Comment Spam from the Changzhou Communist Consolidated Aliance Officeby Will Hinton ()I was checking my comments tonight on the site and found the following comment spam: Inside I recognized a lot of friends. It is good to know them, when I was bullied by other people; they always came to help me the first time. They said they have no Goonzu money, or they would give me. In this way, I would become a little terrible. I did not know from the beginning of the day, one day, I as usual medicines, upgrade practice that she suddenly appeared in my side. I did not know why I would shout out:” wife!” shouted after my heart was strange, of course she did not know I felt at this moment, and then she laughed at me. Then she ran. Fairly typical spam with a link that I have removed. Then things get really interesting. I checked my Sitemeter logs and discovered the culprit. Domain Name 163data.com.cn ? (China) So why is the Chinese Communist Party putting comment spam on my blog??? Update: Ha! And now they are trying to add the comment spam to this post! Good Will Hinton in NYCby Will Hinton ()So I am now in NYC for the next ten days. I love coming to NYC because of the tremendous energy in the city. I always feel that great things are happening here. Hopefully I will have some good things to report on this week including a few interesting interviews that I hope to conduct this week. If any of my readers in NYC would like to get together, shoot me an email at will@goodwillhinton.com. Hyper-Politicization and the Demonization of Bushby Will Hinton ()So this morning I am reading Wired.com and come across an article "What Is the Ultimate Apocalypsemobile". I am assuming that there are going to be references to Mad Max and descriptions of how to modify cars for what the author and many others fear is a coming world struggling with a lack of oil. And as far-fetched as this scenario is to some, the author Joe Brown just couldn't resist seeing the Devil at work: Through both his environmental and foreign policy, George W. Bush has set in motion events that will likely destroy the world as we know it. Our land will cease to support life, our cities will become havens for gangs of the violent undead and we will all be forced out into the scorched wasteland to fend for ourselves, looting gas stations for canned goods, stockpiling water and food. Don't forget Joe, that when children cry anywhere in the world, it is because of Bush. read more » Barack Obama and Abortionby Will Hinton ()A friend of mine posed these very thought-provoking questions:
Announcing Good Will Hinton Consultingby Will Hinton ()I am excited to announce the official formation of my new consulting firm, Good Will Hinton Consulting, a turnkey consultancy for culture creating projects. Ever since I started blogging, I have had increasing requests and opportunities to apply my skills at using online tools to facilitate community and conversation. Over the past few years I have had the opportunity to work on many great projects on the side including being part of the founding team of Paste Magazine, web consulting for Innocence Atlanta, and fund-raising consulting for FRINGE. This past Tuesday I resigned my full-time job with CoStar as a commercial real estate consultant to form this business to work with people, organizations, and companies that are doing works of significance. This could include non-profit organizations wanting to better understand how to do fund-raising with a younger generation, for-profit corporations wanting to better understand how to use capitalism for good in their communities, politicians wanting to harness the power of the Web, or artists needing a business-minded person to assist them. The consulting services I am providing include the following:
I greatly appreciate the prayers and support of all of my readers here. For more information, contact me here. Robots of the World Unite Against Bill Clintonby Will Hinton ()I'm speechless. Though I was hoping he would say "All Your Bases Belong To Us"!!! Where In the World Is Good Will Hinton?by Will Hinton ()Sorry for the lack of posting lately friends. I have never been busier in my entire life than I have been the past six months. Here is quick bullet-point list of things I am working on or people/organizations I am partnering with:
Time for a reboot of GWH! UnChristian: The Memeby Will Hinton ()My friend Gabe Lyons has just co-authored a fantastic new book, UnChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity... and Why It Matters. In it he and David Kinnaman explore many of the negative opinions that people have about Christians. Not surprisingly they learned that many people think of Christians as being judgmental, hypocritical, anti-homosexual, too political, and sheltered. (Here is an interview I conducted with Gabe) I'm curious as to what other impressions people have about Christians. I'm going to tag five of my friends to write their four things about Christians: three negative perceptions and one thing that Christians should be known for. So here is my list: 1. Christians don't create anything original. They only mimic the world around them. 2. Christians get offended at everything. 3. Christians are just waiting to be "raptured up" and couldn’t care less about this world. 4. Christians should be known for their unfailing love for others. A few of my friends are doing this. My friend Chris Heurtz of Word Made Flesh helps the poorest of the poor around the world. My friend Jamie Tworkowski of To Write Love On Her Arms helps people suffering with depression and suicidal tendencies. And my friend Daniel of Meet Justice is working to stop child sex trafficking in Atlanta. I'm tagging the following five people to answer "UnChristian: 4 Things About Christians" and link to the book to read more about this topic: You don't have to be tagged to answer these questions. read more » Site Maintenanceby Will Hinton ()Please excuse the maintenance on this site over the weekend. We are upgrading to the newest version of Drupal, our back-end software. Web 2.0 vs. The Mainstream Media: Why Andrew Keen is Wrongby Will Hinton ()Last week a friend of mine sent me a link to this New York Times review of Andrew Keen's new book "The Cult of the Amateur". Keen is often referred to as the leading contrarian and critic of Web 2.0. and ironically has his own Typepad hosted blog to discuss his disdain for blogs, social media, etc. (I wrestled with linking to his blog or not.) This from the NYT review: "Mr. Keen argues that what the Web 2.0 revolution is really delivering is superficial observations of the world around us rather than deep analysis, shrill opinion rather than considered judgment. In his view Web 2.0 is changing the cultural landscape and not for the better. By undermining mainstream media and intellectual property rights, he says, it is creating a world in which we will live to see the bulk of our music coming from amateur garage bands, our movies and television from glorified YouTubes, and our news made up of hyperactive celebrity gossip, served up as mere dressing for advertising. This is what happens, he suggests, when ignorance meets egoism meets bad taste meets mob rule. I couldn't disagree more with Keen. Not because I blog. But because Keen is wrong. read more » Commenting problem updateby Will Hinton ()I know some of you who are not registered users have had problems with your comments disappearing. I won't get into the gory technical details, but I believe that this problem has been fixed for good. In order to keep comment spam off the site, I will be moderating comments. But legitimate anonymous comments should now be working. Sorry for the inconvenience. To be partisan is human, to forgive is divineby Kate ()I was going to make a comment to Will’s piece, “Beyond Partisanship,” but it has become long and I decided to make it a blog. It will be easier for everyone to tell me I am wrong if I do it this way. This is what I see as the lowest common denominator between those on the right and on the left. We are all too regrettably human. It is a flaw easier to see in others than in ourselves, where we develop a god-like sense of self by being the center of our own universes. Taking a stand, being partisan, is merely human. Forgiving one another an opposing position, might require being God-like. That is a lot to ask. read more » Is Markos Moulitsas a Realist?by Curt ()
Lights...Camera....Fascismby Will Hinton ()Here is a great example of citizen advocacy journalism: New Media Questions: The Fall of Mainstream Journalismby Will Hinton ()I just read an outstanding piece by James at GriftDrift about the decline of traditional media and the rise of new media in the form of blogs, vlogging, and podcasting. In my city of Atlanta and in many other cities across the land, we are witnessing the pained throes of animals on the edge of extinction. Television stations pay huge sums of money to talking hair-dos and nobody tunes in. Print media continues to huddle in the smallest corner of the online world, wringing ink stained hands over staggering drops in circulation. Money pours forth from the wounds of a thousand cuts. Some self-inflicted. Some not. I highly recommend reading the entire post. I have been particularly amused by the mainstream media's attempt to co-opt blogging. I occasionally read the "blogs" at the Atlanta Journal Constitution. But it is so apparent that they don't "get it". Rarely are the blog posts timely and rarely do they link to other blogs. I'll give them credit for at least allowing commenting, but calling something a blog doesn't make it a blog. Unintended consequences of the Edwards blogger "scandal"by Expat Teacher ()One of the unintended consequences of the Edwards' blogger "scandal" is that bloggers now are less likely to be hired by campaigns if they've said anything inflammatory on their blogs. I'm not sure that is bad thing, but it does mean two things.
So the Edwards-Blogger "scandal" has pushed me even further into my online presence. Expat Teacher I shall stay. John Edward's Blogger-Gateby Will Hinton ()I generally avoid "meta-conversations" about things going on in the blogosphere. While blogs are gaining in influence, often the discussion is much-ado about nothing. However, this latest flap over the hiring of two bloggers by the campaign of John Edwards is worth mentioning. I won't bother going into details on the story as many other blogs have covered this (non) story ad naseum. (I especially enjoyed Rod Dreher's Myrna Minkoff comparison. Spot on, my friend!) Perhaps the most disturbing thing about this story has been the almost complete silence from left-leaning Christians in the blogosphere on this topic. Most on the left have stood by Amanda Marcotte to the point of threatening to withold support of Edwards if his campaign fires Marcotte. I do say "almost" as I discovered last night that my old friend Faithful Progressive has stepped up to the plate in condemning Marcotte and the Edward's campaign for such a bone-headed move. Big kudos to my friend for speaking the truth, even when it isn't convenient. read more » Should Good Will Hinton start podcasting?by Will Hinton ()Yes 65% (20 votes) No 35% (11 votes) Total votes: 31 |