Thu, 29 November 2007 The comment line number for my podcast has been changed to 206-350-8045. Sorry for the confusion! --Len Edgerly Comments[0] |
Wed, 28 November 2007 An interview November 27, 2007 at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard with Nolan Bowie, senior fellow and adjunct lecturer in public policy, after a class in his course, "New Media and Democracy." Addressing issues of propaganda and the internet. Comments[1] |
Wed, 28 November 2007 Jeff Pulver hosted a social networking breakfast this morning at the S & S Restaurant and Deli in Cambridge, Mass. This podcast episode contains excerpts of conversations I recorded during the two-hour event. Included are Bryan Person, Israel Drori, Chris Brogan, Joyce Bettencourt, Michael Mikek, Oleg Puzyreff, Ian Carpenter, Steve Garfield, and Jeff Pulver. That much creativity in one room left me energized and glad for the chance for face-to-face time with people I find so intriguing when I encounter them on my computer screen. Many photos were taken and uploaded, mostly to Facebook, as well as some to Flickr.The music for my podcast is "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig, and Matthew Lyon, from their Glacier Journey CD. Comments[2] |
Wed, 14 November 2007 Music for my podcast is "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig, and Matthew Lyon, from their Glacier Journey CD. Comments[0] |
Wed, 31 October 2007 Loïc Le Meur, the charismatic Frenchman who is starting a video conversation startup named Seesmic, spoke with me in the hallway today at Video on the Net (VON) in Boston. Loïc explained why radical transparency in his venture is not a risk, but a competitive advantage. That's why he and his team are posting videos five times a week, showing every detail of the startup and asking for help from the approximately 2,000 people subscribed. They give lots of it. Tres interessant! The waiting list to join Seesmic stands at about 5,000 and I'm right in there, hoping to get a chance to try it out. Loïc is wisely waiting until the alpha program is well tested before opening up to everyone who is eager to join the video conversation. He says in this interview that we will only have to wait another month or two. Photo by Nate Aune. Thanks, Nate! Comments[1] |
Wed, 31 October 2007 Veteran Podcaster Dean Whitbread, a founder of the UK Podcasters Association, was in town this weekend for Podcamp Boston 2. We met online mainly through Twitter, and I enjoy following his smart and artful blogs, The Blog of Funk and Dean Whitbread. The iTunes Music Store contains his audio podcast, the Pod of Funk, and his video podcast, deek deekster: innit, both highly recommended. He also introduced John Cleese to podcasting. All this gives Dean lots of experience in podcasting and blogging, so it was a great opportunity to learn from him.Also on this episode, I hear from Simon Young of Auckland, New Zealand, who left an audio comment at the Pod Chronicles line, 206-202-0890. Simon and his wife have a new consulting venture, iJump, helping organisations jump into the social media playground. I first heard about him in an interview he did with Anna Farmery of The Engaging Brand podcast, and I was very impressed with what he had to say about different kinds of writing styles. Music is "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon. From their Glacier Journey CD. Comments[0] |
Thu, 18 October 2007 I'm glad I had a quick trip scheduled to Denver this week, because it gave me a chance to experience the stunned joy of Colorado Rockies fans looking forward to the club's first-ever World Series. I turned to two of my most baseball-savvy friends for explanations, Kes Woodward who was in town from Fairbanks, Alaska, and Michael Drummy, a longtime Red Sox fan who moved to Colorado 10 years ago. This episode has other voices, all helping tell an amazing sports story.Music is "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon. From their Glacier Journey CD . Comments[0] |
Wed, 3 October 2007 Comments[1] |
Wed, 19 September 2007 Erin Trapp, director of the Denver Office of Cultural Affairs, talks about how a new cultural center could reinvigorate Denver and help establish the city's claim as the Creative Capital of the West, as Mayor Hickenlooper likes to say. In this interview in Erin's office today, I learned some things I didn't know about the historic Carnegie Library/McNichols Building, where a cultural center might be created in Civic Center Park. The Audio Pod Chronicles theme music is "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon, from their Glacier Journey CD Comments[0] |
Thu, 6 September 2007 Rob Simon, the founder 30 years ago of Denver's well-known alternative weekly, Westword, has in the past few years turned his creativity and entrepreneurial talent toward podcasting. His company, BurstMarketing, created the impressive Cherry Creek Arts Festival podcast and continues to help business clients find solutions in podcasting. In this interview on Sept. 4, 2007, at Common Grounds Coffee Shop at Wazee and 17th Streets in Denver, he talked about what makes a successful podcast and about what he's looking for in the podcasting contractors whom he's hiring to help keep up with the opportunities. Special thanks to Twitter friends Goldiekatsu and Genuine for suggesting questions to ask Rob! Comments[0] |
Wed, 22 August 2007 Yesterday I took Amtrak's Downeaster from Boston to Old Orchard Beach, Maine, hoping to capture words and sounds reflecting my lifelong love of trains. I also hoped I'd find someone to interview. Enter Peter McHugh. I think you'll enjoy his story.Flickr photo by Eric Olson (username: broccolbee) "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon. From their Glacier Journey CD Comments[8] |
Tue, 7 August 2007 August 4, 2007 was the 46th birthday of Barack Obama, and the New Hampshire campaign celebrated with a canvass in several cities. I answered the call to go to Portsmouth, where I spent four hours in very hot weather knocking on doors in nearby Dover. My partner was Will Gattis of Falmouth, Maine, who happens to be a terrific singer-songwriter, as well as a young man who believes Obama is a dream candidate who just might change the country. You can hear "Christopher," Will's song that closes the podcast, and several others at his MySpace page . Comments[0] |
Wed, 25 July 2007 Via phone, I caught up last night with Baratunde Thurston, a Boston-based writer, comedian and vigilante pundit whom I first met on Twitter . It turns out that Baratunde and I share a couple of common experiences, more than twenty-five years apart in Cambridge. In this interview, he talks about his personal history, his approach to comedy, his podcast, Twitter, and the recent Democratic presidential debate.Intro and outro music from "Going to the Sun" composed and performed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon. From their Glacier Journey CD. Used by permission. Comments[0] |
Wed, 11 July 2007 Background music is taken from the live performance before dinner by Thawn Harris and his wife Elanor Dove Harris, members of the Narraganset tribe in Rhode Island. Comments[1] |
Thu, 28 June 2007 I think I've uncovered something that connects Barack Obama and Mitt Romney, in an odd sort of way. I'm an unabashed Obama backer, but I am also intrigued by Romney. This episode contains excerpts of a huge conference call with Obama, as well as Romney on Leno and a famous quote from Romney's father, George.(Note: Despite what I say in the audio, this is Episode 36) Comments[2] |
Wed, 13 June 2007 Comments[0] |
Wed, 23 May 2007 http://www.maho.org/Tomorrow morning I leave for St. John, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, to spend two weeks with my wife and her family at Maho Bay Camps. It's a very rustic setting, and I've decided it's not worth the hassle to try and keep to my weekly podcast schedule while I'm there. So I'll be back with the podcast in early June. Comments[0] |
Sat, 19 May 2007 This evening at the Plus Gallery at 2350 Lawrence St., Denver, three artists gave talks about their work, and afterward I spoke with gallery owner Ivar Zeile about how he groups artists in a show and what he hopes to hear in Artists' Talks. The artists were Bruce Price, John McEnroe, and Evan Colbert. Comments[2] |
Fri, 11 May 2007 At the Salt Lake City Airport before flying home to Denver, I begin a recap of the presentation I gave today at the Mountain West Conference on the Arts. My talk was titled "What the Heck is Web 2.0 and Can It Save the Arts?" The room was filled to overflowing, about 60 people, and they seemed to enjoy the tour I took them on of seven sites showing new ways the internet is being used to connect people. I hope lots of seeds were planted that may help arts organizations leaders and artists at the conference experiment with these new capabilities. I'm exhausted after a short night last night, and I can relate to the little girl crying in the background here in Terminal 2.I have links to the seven web sites I presented here. And here are another seven I didn't have time to discuss. Comments[0] |
Fri, 4 May 2007 After Mike Daisy's powerful one-man show, "Monopoly" last night at the Zero Garden Street Theatre in Cambridge, Mass., I spoke with him briefly about how he came to be fascinated with inventor Nicola Tesla, and I found out he makes none of his material up, including inside stories from his friend Ray who works at Microsoft. "Monopoly" continues for three more shows, followed by a final monology, "Tongues Will Wag," Daisy's take on pets, to be performed Tuesday May 8. Highly recommended!Comments[0] |
Fri, 27 April 2007 Drawing on examples from Adam Curry, David Allen and Adam Weiss, I arrive at five rules for good podcast interviews. Tim Donovan of Mowhawk Shade & Blind Co. in Cambridge was here at the house while I worked on the podcast, and he agreed to an interview. This gave me a chance to practice my new rules! Comments[0] |
Sat, 21 April 2007 Leaders of the six regional arts organizations in the U.S. gathered during the past two days at the Admiral Fell Inn, in Baltimore, for a planning meeting led by Toby Herzlich of Santa Fe. This podcast episode comprises thoughts about the future by the executive directors of the RAOs, in this order: David J. Fraher, Arts Midwest; Alan W. Cooper, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation; Gerri Combs, Southern Arts Federation; Mary Kennedy McCabe, Mid-America Arts Alliance, Anthony Radich, Western States Arts Federation, and Rebecca Blunk, New England Federation for the Arts. Major funding for the RAOs is provided by the National Foundation for the Arts. Comments[0] |
Fri, 13 April 2007 Yesterday I attended the first meeting of a Project Evaluation Panel at Denver International Airport, convened to guide the process of choosing three new, temporary artworks from emerging Colorado artists. Two will be on a median strip of Pena Boulevard leading to and from the airport. The other will be on a new Regional Jet Facility nearing completion on Concourse B. This podcast contains interviews with panel members after our meeting, as we took a hardhat tour of the Concourse B area.Comments[0] |
Fri, 6 April 2007 This book review of The Laws of Simplicity by MIT professor John Maeda follows David Tames's compelling recommendation of the book at last week's Boston Media Makers meeting. I loved this book and plan to read it again and maybe again. The writing is playful and clear. The concepts are subtle and powerful. Highly recommeded. Flickr photo of John Maeda by Keith Jenkins, Picture Editor of the Washington Post. Comments[2] |
Fri, 30 March 2007 I loved the high energy of their funky offices, filled with bicycles and more than 25 (to me) very young employees. When I suggested a photo, Dean and Tobias left the conference room to don company T-shirts, a spontaneous bit of corporate enthusiasm and pride that I never saw when I worked for a natural gas utility. Me.dium is a potent evolutionary advance for browsing the internet. When the Twitter buzz dies down, I can imagine an even bigger phenomenon: people realizing they don't have to browse the internet alone anymore. If as many people cross over as Dean and Tobias and their gang hope, one day in the foreseeable future it may well be all about Me.dium. Comments[1] |
Sat, 24 March 2007 OK, I admit it. I'm hooked on Twitter, the deceptively simple site that asks "What are you doing?" and gives you 140 characters to answer the question. I can't help posting these microblog entries, and I look forward to receiving them from my friends on my Motorola Q phone, a steady stream of innocent little posts which delights me, especially when I hear from my "real-world" buddy Kes Woodward in Fairbanks. Others on my list include Dave Winer, Cali Lewis, Kris Krug, Will Pate, Leo LaPorte, and Stephanie Booth of Lausanne, Switzerland.Music: "Going to the Sun"on the <a href="http://www.earthpassage.com/glacier.htm">Glacier Journey</a> CD composed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon Link <a href="http://www.earthpassage.com/glacier.htm">here</a>. Used by permission. Comments[0] |
Fri, 16 March 2007 I've been thinking about how the internet is changing what we mean by "friend," and how technology such as podcasting makes it possible to reach out to strangers despite differences in geography, ethnicity and other ways by which we separate ourselves from others. For specifics, I turned to a new friend on the excellent Me.dium site, and to a few strangers on the Boston subway's red line this morning. Music: "Going to the Sun" on the Glacier Journey CD composed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon Link here. Used by permission. Photo of a Boston subway station by Michelle Barrette of Kingston, Canada, courtesy of Flickr. Comments[2] |
Fri, 9 March 2007 Merle Goldman, professor emerita at Boston University and an associate at the John K. Fairbank Center for East Asian Resarch, last night addressed the Mothers' Club of Cambridge Thursday night open meeting, hosted at the Cambridge Historical Society on Brattle Street. My mother has belonged to this club for decades, and I can see why she seldom misses its events, even in bone-chillingly cold weather like we had in Cambridge last night. This episode contains a brief interview I did with Prof. Goldman during the reception after her talk, in which she put China's incredible economic growth in historical perspective and posed questions about whether the nation of 1.3 billion can make political changes fast enough to sustain the ongoing economic phenomenon.Music: "Going to the Sun" on the Glacier Journey CD composed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon Link here. Used by permission. Comments[0] |
Fri, 2 March 2007 Blake Allison of Dingman Allison Architects in Cambridge, Mass., has begun work on our home remodeling project. After our first meeting this morning with our contractor, I asked Blake some general questions about the role of an architect. Afterward, we had a chance to admire his and his partner Nancy's work in a completed remodeling project, also in Cambridge, courtesy of Polly, who showed us through her remarkable transformation of a 110-year-old home.Music: "Going to the Sun" on the Glacier Journey CD composed by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon http://www.earthpassage.com/glacier.htm . Used by permission. Comments[0] |
Fri, 23 February 2007 This visit to Cambridge marks the beginning of our remodeling plans for our new home here that will complement our base in Denver. I've combined two artistic impressions of Cambridge in this podcast, a poem I wrote about the birth of my grandson a year ago, and an anthem sung by the Fellows of the University Choir this morning at Harvard's Appleton Chapel. Comments[3] |
Fri, 16 February 2007 John Joseph of Denver responded to an invitation to a podcast interview that I posted through the Mile High for Obama group at BarackObama.com. Having just finished The Audacity of Hope, I was looking for someone to discuss the book with me. John, who is 27 and a programmer, met me at a Starbucks and shared insightful perspectives on the book and what he thinks may be ahead in the long campaign. I liked the originality and nuance of his opinions. For example, near the end of the interview he revealed why, even though he is a huge fan of Obama, he might actually prefer another Democrat to win the nomination this time, with Obama as Veep. Not that he wouldn't be thrilled to see Obama elected president in 2008. Anyway, it was great getting to know John through the Obama web site, which is smartly designed to make it easy for Obama supporters to connect and share ideas and activities.Comments[0] |
Fri, 9 February 2007 Comments[0] |
Sat, 3 February 2007 I am working on a presentation to the Denver Commission on Cultural Affairs about how we might use Web 2.0 capabilities to advance the arts in Denver. As part of my cogitations, I spent some time learning about Me.dium, a Boulder-based startup which hopes to transform the way we browse the web. A more modest Web 2.0 initiative, goodreads, pointed me to possible communities in Denver which could be brought together using these new internet tools. Comments[0] |
Fri, 26 January 2007 Which presidential aspirants are taking the best advantage of podcasting's potential? A review of the candidates' offerings on iTunes shows John McCain and Rudy Giuliani as no-shows. Hillary's well-done video chats don't show up in iTunes, but there is an old podcast in the directory which doesn't do much to help her, and she should take it down ASAP. At the head of the presidential podcasting class are Tom Vilsack, John Edwards, and Barack Obama. Mitt Romney has an effective enthusiast's site up, MyManMitt.com featuring the MittCast, hosted by Justin Hart. This episode of the Audio Pod Chronicles, recorded in Denver, contains excerpts from the podcasts and thoughts about what works and what doesn't in this powerful new medium.Comments[0] |
Fri, 19 January 2007 Each year the Brown Palace Hotel in downtown Denver hosts the top steer from the National Western Stock Show. This year's top steer was deemed too skittish to make a solo appearance in the ornate hotel, so his runner-up came along for company. I interviewed the hotel general manager, Miss Colorado Rodeo, the boy who raised Titan, and my friend Michael Drummy and his sister-in-law, among others. I love this event for combining Denver's elegance with its cow country history. Comments[0] |
Fri, 19 January 2007 I have deleted the original episode 15, recorded a week ago after my return from Macworld Expo in San Francisco. What happened is that the person I interviewed ended up feeling very nervous about having his words up on the internet, so he asked me in very strong terms to take it down. He needn't have pressed so hard, because I had no intention of making him uncomfortable. I'm sad, because I loved his story and have listened to it several times for my own pleasure. But I completely honor his desire for privacy, so I immediately deleted the episode when I received an e-mail from him. I'm putting this episode in its place, so my numbering isn't thrown off, and to explain what happened.Comments[0] |
Sat, 6 January 2007 Can Hillary overcome the shrillness of her voice? Can Obama demonstrate substance worthy of his own charismatic voice? I pondered these questions as I spent much of today listening to a speech which Hillary Clinton delivered last October to the Council on Foreign Relations, comparing it with the latest episode of Barack Obama's weekly podcast. What I thought would be a simple win for Obama turned out to be a little more complicated. If all goes as expected, this will be a most interesting contest. Comments[0] |
Fri, 29 December 2006 I didn't think much of a criticism that Gary Hart made about Obama in a recent podcast interview with Sam Tanenhaus, editor of the New York Times Book Review. But it roused me to prepare this consideration of Obama in light of John F. Kennedy's leadership during the Cold War. And I did agree with most of what Hart had to say in his Times review of Obama's The Audacity of Hope. I can't say enough good things about the three-part podcast from which I excerpted audio on JFK and the Cold War. I found it on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's "The Best of Ideas Podcast" hosted by Paul Kennedy. The web site says the links won't be up permanently, so grab them soon if you're interested. Here they are: Part One, Part Two and Part Three. "Going to the Sun" by Montana musicians Christine Dickinson, Janet Haarvig and Matthew Lyon is from the Glacier Journey CD. Used by permission. Comments[0] |
Sat, 23 December 2006 My uncle Bert Tighe in 1963 began a new water works supply business, Ti-SALES, in Sudbury, Massachusetts. He and Aunt Edna this morning talked about the single quality which seems to have led to that company's current success: the refusal to quit. We also heard from Peter, my cousin who worked for the family company for 18 years, and Kevin, who is now president. I remember when Uncle Bert's office was in the basement of their house, and we kids had to be quiet around the stairway, because he was working hard down there to get his new venture going. Now the company employs 29 people and has annual sales of more than $20 million. It's a great story of the value of persistence and the wisdom of figuring out new ways to do things when the old ways won't work. Music for this episode is "Until Dusk" from "When You're There" by Frank LoCrasto, courtesy of the Independent Online Distribution Alliance (IODA) Promonet. Comments[0] |
Fri, 15 December 2006 Every time I fly the JetBlue red-eye from Denver to Boston, I hope I will sleep. This week, I armed myself with a geeky audio eyeshade from Brookstone and a horseshoe pillow made of space-age material, and I interviewed several fellow passengers in Denver, asking for their sleep tips. The result was maybe an hour of sleep, or was it an hour of simply tossing and turning in a row I had all to myself? In any event, I'm still looking for ideas on how to sleep on planes. Feel free to add your own suggestions!The photo is from JetBlue's Flickr photos, taken on the company's first flight to Tuscon. The music is “Seven Days of Falling� by Esbjorn Svensson Trio, courtesy of IODA Promonet. Comments[0] |
Mon, 4 December 2006 On a visit to Hartford, I thought I was following in the footsteps of Wallace Stevens (1879-1955), the renowned poet, on the two-mile walk he took each day from work at the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company to his home at 118 Westerly Terrace. In the way of poetry, things didn't turn out the way I planned, and my walk ended up being as disorienting and oddly satisfying as a difficult Stevens poem. To listen to Stevens reading "The Idea of Order at Key West," click here, courtesy of the Academy of American Poets. "In an Instant" from the CD Make or Break by Incognito courtesy of IODA Promonet. Comments[0] |
Sat, 2 December 2006 Last night I finished reading The Varieties of Religious Experience by William James (at right in photo, with his brother the novelist, Henry James). In this book review, I describe how the book inspired my own variety of religious experience, and I offer some musings about what James's approach implies for the religious landscape in America 100 years after he delivered the 20 lectures on which the book is based. Comments[0] |

An interview November 27, 2007 at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard with 
Loïc Le Meur, the charismatic Frenchman who is starting a video conversation startup named
Veteran Podcaster
I'm glad I had a quick trip scheduled to Denver this week, because it gave me a chance to experience the stunned joy of
Erin Trapp, director of the
Rob Simon, the founder 30 years ago of Denver's well-known alternative weekly,
Yesterday I took Amtrak's
August 4, 2007 was the 46th birthday of
Via phone, I caught up last night with
I think I've uncovered something that connects Barack Obama and Mitt Romney, in an odd sort of way. I'm an unabashed Obama backer, but I am also intrigued by Romney. This episode contains excerpts of a huge conference call with Obama, as well as Romney on Leno and
http://www.maho.org/Tomorrow morning I leave for St. John, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, to spend two weeks with my wife and her family at
This evening at the
At the Salt Lake City Airport before flying home to Denver, I begin a recap of the presentation I gave today at the
After
Drawing on examples from
Leaders of the six
Yesterday I attended the first meeting of a Project Evaluation Panel at Denver International Airport, convened to guide the process of choosing three new, temporary artworks from emerging Colorado artists. Two will be on a median strip of Pena Boulevard leading to and from the airport. The other will be on a new Regional Jet Facility nearing completion on Concourse B. This podcast contains interviews with panel members after our meeting, as we took a hardhat tour of the Concourse B area.
This book review of
OK, I admit it. I'm hooked on Twitter, the deceptively simple site that asks "What are you doing?" and gives you 140 characters to answer the question. I can't help posting these microblog entries, and I look forward to receiving them from my friends on my Motorola Q phone, a steady stream of innocent little posts which delights me, especially when I hear from my "real-world" buddy Kes Woodward in Fairbanks. Others on my list include Dave Winer, Cali Lewis, Kris Krug, Will Pate, Leo LaPorte, and Stephanie Booth of Lausanne, Switzerland.
I've been thinking about how the internet is changing what we mean by "friend," and how technology such as podcasting makes it possible to reach out to strangers despite differences in geography, ethnicity and other ways by which we separate ourselves from others. For specifics, I turned to a new friend on the excellent 
Blake Allison of
This visit to Cambridge marks the beginning of our remodeling plans for our new home here that will complement our base in Denver. I've combined two artistic impressions of Cambridge in this podcast, a poem I wrote about the birth of my grandson a year ago, and an anthem sung by the Fellows of the University Choir this morning at Harvard's Appleton Chapel.
John Joseph of Denver responded to an invitation to a podcast interview that I posted through the
I am working on a presentation to the
Which presidential aspirants are taking the best advantage of podcasting's potential? A review of the candidates' offerings on iTunes shows John McCain and Rudy Giuliani as no-shows. Hillary's well-done
Each year the
I have deleted the original episode 15, recorded a week ago after my return from Macworld Expo in San Francisco. What happened is that the person I interviewed ended up feeling very nervous about having his words up on the internet, so he asked me in very strong terms to take it down. He needn't have pressed so hard, because I had no intention of making him uncomfortable. I'm sad, because I loved his story and have listened to it several times for my own pleasure. But I completely honor his desire for privacy, so I immediately deleted the episode when I received an e-mail from him. I'm putting this episode in its place, so my numbering isn't thrown off, and to explain what happened.
Can Hillary overcome the shrillness of her voice? Can Obama demonstrate substance worthy of his own charismatic voice?
I didn't think much of a criticism that Gary Hart made about Obama in
My uncle Bert Tighe in 1963 began a new water works supply business,
Every time I fly the
On a visit to Hartford, I thought I was following in the footsteps of
Last night I finished reading