January 30, 2007

loren feldman is my new hero

Mygirl28877.jpg
Sco­ble just tur­ned me on to Loren Feld­man and his 1938media.com. Fan­tas­tic.
I just saw the future of adver­ti­sing as Loren sees it, and I want it [Bows down to 1938media etc]. Check out the video for that Ita­lian res­tau­rant on the page. An idea so won­der­fully sim­ple and ele­gant, it hurts.
[Yes, I know, two links to Sco­ble within hours of each other. Yes, I’m a sha­me­less link whore. Every schoolchild knows this. Oh, and did I men­tion gaping­void was more evil than Mic­ro­soft? Every schoolchild knows this as well etc.]

14 Responses to “loren feldman is my new hero”

  1. Dean says:

    Are you kid­ding me?
    That was painful.

  2. Drew Bell says:

    Yeah, I’m curious about the Étoile video too. Do you like the idea of com­bi­ning low pro­duc­tion values and You­Tube to make it easy for mic­ro­brands to poke into the web? Because I can see some ele­gance in that.

  3. hugh macleod says:

    Dean, try to see the forest from the trees ;-)
    Drew, you got it in one ;-)

  4. Thanks for the very kind words Hugh, nice to meet you. Are you Hugh Mac­leod from the Clan Mac­leod? Sorry, bad “High­lan­der” reference.

  5. Robert Bruce says:

    Yep, he’s one of the few in this web video game who really knows what he’s doing, a mad-dog visio­nary for sure.
    But more impor­tantly, he’s the type of guy who would give you the shirt off his back if you nee­ded it.
    The real deal if there ever was one.

  6. Pat Phelan says:

    I have been worshi­ping at the Feld­man altar for quite a while now.
    Below is my favo­rite, the guy’s a genius
    http://www.1938media.com/bathing-in-the-bloghaus

  7. Tim Clague says:

    I’m not sure here Hugh. As someone who went around all this in the 1980s this style of shoo­ting and the sug­ges­ted uses for video seem very fami­liar.
    A lot of my (older) collea­gues remem­ber the 80s as a video hey­day and then the bub­ble burst. Could we be hea­ding that way?

  8. crawford says:

    So, how much were the music rights?
    What? How much?

  9. Keith says:

    Coming from broad­cast tele­vi­sion, I’ve often won­de­red why more busi­nes­ses aren’t thro­wing little two or three minute info­mer­cials on their web sites. Hell, low-cost video edi­ting tech­no­logy has been around for more than a cou­ple of years – and the band­width is there. How come we aren’t seeing more of this?

  10. hugh macleod says:

    Tim, point taken. But I’m seeing it mainly as something very use­ful for the busi­ness owners.
    Whether there’s lots of money in it for video pro­fes­sio­nals is another ques­tion altogether.

  11. Dean says:

    Got it.
    Low pro­duc­tion values and You­Tube. Love it.
    Just didn’t get that par­ti­cu­lar exe­cu­tion of it.
    Just sayin’.

  12. Keith says:

    I believe that Hugh is right. I doubt that there is a lot of money in this for video pro­fes­sio­nals. Back in the 1990’s, the going rate for a cor­po­rate video was around $1,000 a finished minute (i.e. a five minute trai­ning video would cost about $5,000). The eco­nomy tan­ked around 9 – 11, the mar­ket for cor­po­rate video died and it never came back.
    Came­ras and com­pu­ters got chea­per, bet­ter and fas­ter. Mac OS and Win­dows now come with video edi­ting soft­ware that’s actually pretty good. Now, any zit-faced geek can shoot and edit – gene­rally– some pretty dread­ful video. They need to learn pro­duc­tion values such as ligh­ting, audio and loc­king the camera down on a tri­pod.
    Maybe the oppor­tu­nity here is to train the geeks how to shoot and edit.

  13. I like Loren Feld­man, but the fled man, where is he: Chartreuse?

  14. Den Leola says:

    Its bad enough you do it, you do it to your­sel. Den Leola.