Tag: new media

How and why to start a YouTube channel – Episode 190

The Story: The lessons learned from working on The Paradise Paradox

We live in the information age. Now it is possible for someone with a few hundred dollars to buy a smarthpone and start producing videos and podcasts, and with a few original ideas, some nowse and elbow grease, they can literally present a threat to multi-million dollar media organisations – challenging them to a battle of wits over who can hold the attention of the everyman.

Of course, for many content creators starting out, they don’t have such lofty goals of epic proportions. All they have is a tiny vision, the humble expectation that, there must be someone out there who would enjoy what I have to say, and so I will share it.

Once we were confined to a handful of symbols, a few TV and radio channels, stamping their brands into our brains. Now we literally have more channels than we could imagine watching. Millions of individuals, holding up their symbols to the world, projecting their hearts, their hopes, what limits them, and what sets them free. A worldwide conversation presents itself, sometimes civil, sometimes rowdy or even disrespectful, but almost always devoid of physical violence. What kind of neuron are you, in this international brain?

Once separate, now we are connected. Now, more than ever, your voice matters. Now, you are powerful. With enough intention, clarity and purpose, your words can change the course of lives – or even just a single life.

In this episode, Kurt explains how he and Aaron started The Paradise Paradox, with humble beginnings and humble goals, and some out of date AV equipment. Kurt tells some stories about where the project lead them, interviewing some fascinating people such as Andreas Antonopoulos, Amanda B. Johnson and Jeff Berwick, and being interviewed by some of them as well. He also explains some basic tips for getting started with a YouTube channel or podcast, and his plan for a new project, “Cryptonomics”.

Join me on a world-bending, symbol-shining, signal-boosting episode of … The Paradise Paradox!

The Eps:

Opening Yourself Up to The World, Living Freely and Enjoying the Ride with Kurt Robinson on Anarchast

The Links:

The Illuminatus Trilogy by R.A. Wilson

Auphonic – automatically clean up your audio for podcasts and video

Boombox Saintz on Facebook

Super Ego on Facebook – awesome hip hop beats

Luis Fernando Mises – Emancipated Human

Luis Fernando Mises – Liberty Memes speech

Autonomite

The Cash:

If you enjoy our posts, please become a patron on Patreon, or have a look at The Paradise Paradox’s page on Steemit where you can join, earn money, and upvote our posts to help support the show! You can also find a lot of additional content which is not posted on this site, with Kurt’s posts on Steemit.

We really appreciate all of your contributions! Every cent and satoshi we receive lets us know that we’re doing something worthwhile, that you are entertained by our program, and that you’re starting to question what you know more and more. Please be generous. Donate to The Paradise Paradox. Or buy some stuff on Amazon using this link. Or buy some of our great T-shirts here.

The Episode:

To download the audio, right click and press “save as”.

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If you enjoyed the episode, don’t keep it a secret! Feel free to share it on Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook, Reddit, or your office bathroom wall.

Steemit’s New Economic Paradigm

An introduction to Steemit

I (Kurt) have been posting on the new social media platform, Steemit, for more than a month, and it seems to be promising for several reasons.

One of the most obvious is that, people can get money on there, which means that many starving artists and writers finally have a platform where they can quickly monetise their content, without having to know too much about website design, sales or marketing.

A deeper point – one which will most likely drive the more constant growth of the platform – is that the system is structured to incentivise helpful, constructive interactions. The system is designed to encourage people to be cool. That’s no small feat. I’ve thought in the past, that if someone really wants to change the world, they have to change the incentives, and that exactly what is what the creators of this site have done.

Since joining, I’ve had to stop myself a few times on other social networks, thinking “Is this the way I would phrase this if I were writing on Steemit? Can I find a way to be softer, more compassionate, more inclusive?” Of course, some people persist in unconstructive feedback, even despite themselves, but the signal-to-noise ratio on the site is still extremely impressive.

In this video, I give an introduction to why this new platform is interesting and may be the way of the future, and I read out an article which I published on the platform, which many people enjoyed, talking about what makes the site and its associated currency, Steem, valuable, and the reasons it may well succeed in the long run.

If you enjoy our posts, please have a look at The Paradise Paradox’s page on Steemit where you can join, earn money, and upvote our posts to help support the show! You can also find a lot of additional content which is not posted on this site, with Kurt’s posts on Steemit and Aaron’s posts on Steemit.

Here’s my original article, and here is the article I mentioned by Leah “Stellabella” Stephens.

To download the audio, right click here, and press “Save as”.

 

 

 

 

Episode 34 – We the Media: We’re All Journalists Now

The Episode:

To download the audio, right click and press “save as”.

Remember to subscribe on iTunes or subscribe on Pocket Casts.

If you enjoyed the episode, don’t keep it a secret! Feel free to share it on Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook, Reddit, or your office bathroom wall.

The Cash:

We really appreciate all of your contributions! Every cent and satoshi we receive lets us know that we’re doing something worthwhile, that you are entertained by our program, and that you’re starting to question what you know more and more. Please be generous. Donate by BitCoin: 182CzJUbz8xb1JZjuVm2S4YUBfd3xk2XfM

Or donate your Altcoins using Shapeshift:

Or give us a small amount of money every month using PayPal:

Ongoing donation via PayPal



The Story:

March 3, 1991, Los Angeles, California. Rodney Glen King III was watching a ball game with a few friends, knocking back a few cold ones. After the game, King was heading west on the Foothill Freeway with two of his buddies, Bryant Allen and Freddie Helms. Around 12:30 a.m., King noticed a police car. The police also noticed him. King’s car was speeding, and being on parole from a robbery he committed in 1989, he knew that if the police pulled him over, it would lead to all sorts of legal problems. King didn’t pull over. He gunned it.

The police pursued the car, off the freeway and into residential areas, reaching speeds of 80 miles per hour (almost 130 km/h). After 8 miles (nearly 13 km) the police cornered King. Allen and Helms had the crap beaten out of them. Helms’ baseball cap was handed over the police, still bloody, and he was treated for a laceration on the top of his head. King himself, after being subdued, was hit several times. He later claimed to have received “11 skull fractures, permanent brain damage, broken [bones and teeth], kidney damage [and] emotional and physical trauma”. The footage shows moments King is laying on the ground, obviously not a threat to anybody. And yet the police continue to beat the everloving shit out of him.

All this might have just been another night on the beat for the LAPD, if not for one concerned onlooker, who decided to put the majority of the incident on video. The people (or at least some people) of the United States were shocked. Returning public perception to what it once was would be about as easy as returning a stone to the hand from which it was thrown.

The prevalence of video cameras nowadays, in combination with the World Wide Web, give this power to all of us – the power to record a single event which can change the course of a life – to change the course of history. It gives us the power to resist the oppression of bureaucrats who decide to overstep the boundaries of their office. It gives the world a voice.

How can we use this power to benefit humanity? What kind of responsibility does it take to wield a camera, or to type words into a blog? Are we yet to see the full effects of these technological developments on established media companies? Are we yet to see the change in consciousness where people can handle these new frontiers of information? We explore these questions and more, in the next exciting episode of … The Paradise Paradox!

The Links:

Rodney King Footage
Orion Martin – Sidekik app – interviewed on Anarchast
Is the Mexican Nation “Locoed” by a Peculiar Weed? (1915)
Juice Rap News – Episode 19: Whistleblower
Phantom vibration syndrome on Wikipedia
Why is Marijuana Illegal on Drugwarrant.com
Cover image modified and used under Creative Commons licence. Original image.