January 18, 2009

greetings from the road…

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rut3332.jpg
[A car­toon I drew back in the mid-1990’s…]
1. January 18th. El Paso, Texas. 11am.
I’m hea­ded for Sao Paulo, Bra­zil.
Drove from Alpine, Texas to El Paso last night. Spent the night in the air­port Holi­day Inn. Ate din­ner at Rudy’s with Loren Feld­man, who was in Alpine doing some video work with me. Plane lea­ves mid-afternoon.
2. Update: January 19th, Sao Paulo, Bra­zil. 6.30pm. Just got done giving a talk on “Social Objects” to some groovy cats at Citi­corp Bra­zil.
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This is my first visit to South Ame­rica. Sao Paulo is the 4th lar­gest city in the world, I am told. 18 million peo­ple or so. Kinda reminds me of a cross bet­ween Paris, Miami and LA, if you can ima­gine that.
Jet­lag hasn’t been too bad. Slept a few hours ear­lier this after­noon. Giving a talk in front of 600 adver­ti­sing & media types tomo­rrow. I’ve never been so well loo­ked after on one of my foreign visits, before.
3. Update: January 19th.

Three days ago I sig­ned off on the first “Blue­train” prints. Loren Feld­man was in Alpine at the time and fil­med it. He wri­tes about it and posts the video here. Thanks for the kind words, Loren. right back at’cha.
4. Update: January 19th, 11.30 pm. Sao Paulo, Bra­zil.
I’m back at the hotel. There’s some big party going on, by I opted for an early night ins­tead.
Just got back from din­ner with @jeffpaiva and his collea­gues i.e the groovy cats who paid to fly me, business-class, out here.
We tal­ked about the usual “where-advertising-meets-social-media” sch­piel. To be honest, I don’t have any really huge insights you’ve not already heard before. As always, the hard part is not con­cep­tual; the hard part is exe­cu­tion. You can riff on about “social objects” all you want; but unless you have a real live one you can play with, it’s all just a lot of use­less theory.
The Bra­zi­lian advertising/marketing scene has the same pro­blem as a lot of coun­tries– a very out-there pro­gres­sive crea­tive com­mu­nity, jux­ta­po­sed against a very con­ser­va­tive busi­ness cul­ture. That being said, with the rate that the Bra­zi­lian eco­nomy is gro­wing, busi­ness will have to change, just in order to keep up.
The world has chan­ged, and every year it gets more expen­sive to keep pre­ten­ding that it hasn’t.
Update: Slightly Later.
One theme that kept on coming up over din­ner: One unseen result of elec­ting to take myself out of the marketing/social-media/consultant scene last year in order to con­cen­trate more on my dra­wing is– it actually seems to have made my advice on the for­mer far more valua­ble? Why? Because I’m not just ONE MORE con­sul­tant loo­king for a new cor­po­rate gig. I’m already busy doing other, unre­la­ted stuff. As I’m fond of saying, the best way to get appro­val is not to need it.
This got me thin­king about the “Ham­mer” post I wrote a few years ago.

Blogs are like ham­mers. They are tools for buil­ding stuff.
When you talk about buil­ding a house with a car­pen­ter, you don’t mind him tal­king about his ham­mer for a while. Nobody minds indul­ging a crafts­man, within rea­son.
“This ham­mer is great for this,” he’ll gush. “This ham­mer is great for that…“
So you think yes, ham­mers are good things, and indeed his ham­mer looks like a par­ti­cu­larly fine exam­ple.
But even­tually you’re going to inte­rrupt his joyous ode to ham­mers. After a cou­ple of minu­tes you’re going to abruptly change the sub­ject:
“Cool. Now let’s talk about the ACTUAL HOUSE you’re going to build for me…“
And if the car­pen­ter is any good, he won’t have any pro­blem with that.

We live in inte­res­ting times…
4. Update: January 20th, 10.15am. Sao Paulo, Bra­zil.
Weird bit of live blog­ging going on right now. I´m at some Bra­zi­lian maga­zine being inter­vie­wed. They´ve asked me to blog something, while they film me on video camera for some TV show. So as I write this, I´m in the maga­zine office being fil­med, with all these media and PR types stan­ding in a circle around me, watching. All kinda surreal, but in a good way…
5. Update: 12.30pm.
Just arri­ved at Cam­pus Party Bra­zil. 6,000 peo­ple, ave­rage age: 21. Vast seas of com­pu­ter tables everywhere. My talk is at 2pm. My talk is going to be mostly about “Crea­ti­vity”, with a bit of Social Object Theory and mar­ke­ting 2.0 sch­piel thrown in for good mea­sure.
6. Update: 23rd January. Alpine, Texas.
Got home yes­ter­day after a nine-hour flight Sao Paulo-DFW, then a con­nec­ting flight to El Paso. Great to be back in Texas again.
The talk at Party cam­pus went well. That day I also did a ton of inter­views for the Bra­zi­lian media. In the eve­ning I atten­ded a fabu­lous geek din­ner with some of the Bra­zi­lian 2.0 peeps, a regu­lar event they call “Nerds on Beer”.
I came away from Bra­zil thin­king, “Man, there’s a lot of oppor­tu­nity here.” One part of me is too tired and jet-lagged to think too hard about it. Another part of me sees a very dyna­mic country of a few hun­dred million peo­ple, with an eco­nomy gro­wing at 10% per year. And I have a few ideas about what to do about it.
Thanks, Jeff, for brin­ging me out there. Hope I can get back there soon. I had a hell of a time.

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18 Responses to “greetings from the road…”

  1. Aka Seltzer says:

    How do you know me so well ? No joke you were great 20 years back or so. Thank you for sharing.

  2. Tra­vel safe Hugh.

  3. bonnieL says:

    Hugh, like the Veri­zon ad, you’ll have a net­work of 10,000 tra­ve­ling with you whe­re­ver you go,
    plus bon­nieL = 10,001.
    god speed,
    bon­nieL
    triiibe on!

  4. Paavani says:

    Wel­come back!

  5. Nice, Hugh.
    I living in São Paulo, Bra­zil. It’ll be nice to talk with you! :)
    I sent an email to you with my con­tact info.
    Regards.

  6. Gui says:

    That’s cool.… what brings you down here? Let me know if I you need anything.

  7. Catherine says:

    Wish you would do more of these.… gr8 x

  8. Jake Edwards says:

    Yeah, it can be a real drag joi­ning the real world after a few years at uni‘.

  9. Hannah says:

    Thanks for brin­ging back that ham­mer post; very helpful.

  10. Aaron says:

    That post was pretty help­ful. But with no elec­tri­cian no net????!!!

  11. Jake Edwards says:

    I‘d love to get crea­tive with 3 thou­sand bra­zi­lian fema­les aged 21. And I‘d die for my art.
    I‘d spiel my lotha­rio self ver­sion 2.o big­time, throw around a few social objects (tequila, mes­cal, beer) and finish with an heart­fel exer­cise in genuine crea­ti­vity.

    not that I‘m a misogynist…more an oppor­tu­nist!
    hey…yagotta be these days riiiiight????????
    I mean I‘m only 18.

  12. vp says:

    Love your designs. Unre­la­ted: how do you bring your sketches to show up on your blog with it loo­king like a photo — you know what I mean?..
    thanks
    v

  13. A big con­grats to you and all your future success.

  14. Glad to see you back safe in Alpine, Hugh :)

  15. Jeff Paiva says:

    It was our plea­sure to have you here, Hugh.
    The guys (and girls) at Cam­pus Party keep stop­ping me along the way to con­gra­tu­late and thank for brin­ging you down here. It was ins­pi­ring and amu­sing.
    Glad to have added you to the #Nerd­sOn­Beer gang!
    We’ll pro­bably meet again at SXSW this year. Cheers!

  16. Olivia says:

    uh! pity i mis­sed you, i had to show you i have one of your dra­wings as my wall­pa­per :D \o/

  17. Thiane says:

    I loved that you lear­ned “nerds on beer”. It was won­der­ful to have you here at our office. Stay in touch. Thiane