Hue's Blog

  • Home
  • About Me
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Saint John of Las Vegas
My Photo

Categories

  • Film takes
  • Life
  • Media & tech
  • Press
  • Quick notes
  • Reblogs
  • Saint John notes
  • Vocation

Recent Posts

  • All Movie Sets Feel The Same
  • Dear Turntable.fm
  • Existential Sushi
  • I Hear The Dead
  • A Harry Potter Equation
  • Watching "The Social Network" with no sound
  • Tron, deconstructed
  • The Gilt Story
  • Confusion 2.0
  • A great David O. Russell interview

Archives

  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • July 2010

My Films

  • Saint John of Las Vegas
  • Tower Of Babel
Email me
Facebook
Twitter

 Subscribe in a reader

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Add me to your TypePad People list

All Movie Sets Feel The Same

If you've ever been on a movie set while they are shooting, it's thrilling.  Lots of yelling beforehand, lights, trucks, bullhorns, tension.  It is exciting to make something, and that excitement is palpable.

Notice, I didn't say being on a "good movie" set is exciting. Because on a movie set, you have no idea if the film will be good or bad.  Think of the worst movie you've seen recently - I guarantee that while the film was shooting, people felt like they were making Oscar-worthy material.  Creation is such a rush that it overwhelms other senses and makes you high.  And when you're high, everything is awesome.

Business projects are like movies.  While you are pushing to launch, or driving to close the deal, or re-branding your website - while it's happening it feels amazing.  You can even start to believe that because it feels so good, the results will be good.  People will love the new site design and flock to your business in record numbers.  The client will give you a standing ovation after your sales pitch.

But there are bad movies.  And there are failed redesigns.  And lord knows there are bad sales pitches.  If you can't trust the feeling of doing, what can you trust?  In film they say it's the script.  If the script is good and you stick to the spirit of the script, the film will be good.  Business doesn't always have a script, but I think it does have a goal, or a clear vision.  If you're launching your website and your goal is to delight customers, are you sticking to that goal at all costs?  If you are pitching a client on a new service, have you internalized the client's needs so that you understand them better than the client?

All new ventures start with an idea.  That idea is the real creation - the something new.  Keeping that initial spark or vision at the forefront of all decisions, big or small...I think that's the best guarantee that the result will be as good as the creation process feels.

Posted at 09:00 PM in Life, Media & tech | Permalink | Comments (0)

| Reblog (0)

Existential Sushi

Bond Street Sushi, 8:30 pm.

I put a bite in my mouth, and I realize with searing clarity...

That I am eating food beyond luxury.

That I am overly full, but will forge ahead.

That I am so far from the basic caloric requirements needed to sustain myself.

That this, this bite of sushi, garnished with edible gold leaf, represents excess in the sweetest, most offensive sense.

That John D. Rockefeller, the first American billionaire, never tasted the combination of flavors I am tasting.

It is so inappropriate that I am eating a living wage in every bite.

My conscience joins my stomach in signaling to my brain to stop.

And yet I do not.

Of course I do not.

And this is all before the dessert course.

Damn, that was good.

Posted at 12:59 PM in Life | Permalink | Comments (0)

| Reblog (0)

I Hear The Dead

I never liked The Grateful Dead.  I tried.  At my overly-resourced boarding school, the upside of following the Dead was substantial.  Social currency, sanctioned rebellion...dare I say, possibly getting laid?  And yet I could not.  I felt it was a case of the Emperor's New Clothes, 100%.

I just turned 40.  I have two kids.  I am traveling for work close to 75% now, and it's crushing.  My wife is wrestling with both parts of her "working mom" title.  We barely have time for a quiet meal together.

Last night, sandwiched between a weekend spent working and another week separated by Continental Airlines, we had a sushi date.  And then, pushing our luck and our baby-sitter's patience, we went for frozen yogurt.

Uncle John's Band, off of the "Workingman's Dead" Grateful Dead album, played over the yogurt shop's speakers.  It was so peaceful, so beautiful.  I started swaying, slightly, just wanting to go along with the soothing river, happy to go wherever the song took me.

My wife, a long-time Dead fan, says everyone has their moment when The Grateful Dead speaks to them.  Last night I heard it, and somehow I knew everything was going to be okay.

Posted at 10:35 PM in Life | Permalink | Comments (0)

| Reblog (0)

Confusion 2.0

In 1996 I wrote on my web page about how I felt buffetted by conflicting forces in my life.  I couldn’t tell what the future held and I was confused.  What’s changed in 14 years?  Nothing, except now I'm writing about my confusion on a blog.

Posted at 12:03 AM in Life | Permalink | Comments (0)

| Reblog (0)

  • Hue's Blog
  • Powered by TypePad