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LittleBigPlanet

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

I’m new to gaming and game culture but this struck a chord when I saw it yesterday. Here’s something I found on the BBC’s Click, and it’s purportedly an example of Web 2.0 gaming, with enhanced control for gamers including character and world building on a completely new level. The BBC’s Spencer Kelly takes a look at LittleBigPlanet, the latest online multi-player game for PlayStation 3 and creates his own level, with help from one of the game’s creators Kareem Ettouney.

View the BBC clip here and also if you have time; have a look at the Sony official website.

The Bonfire Of The Vanities

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

savonarola 540x384 The Bonfire Of The Vanities

After a ground-breaking win in the US Presidential Election I went onto YouTube this morning and typed ‘Barack Obama’ into the search facility; 373,000 videos, 1,070 channels and 123,000 playlists; confirmation that to fully engage with your audience, social media is the new channel - traditional media is feeling the heat!

Happy 21st Birthday

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

IMG 9878 JPG 540x400 Happy 21st Birthday

Please let me take this opportunity to thank everyone who came to our 21st birthday party at the Museum of Brands in London. I hope you enjoyed the evening. Also thanks to those of you who couldn’t make it for your kind words of congratulation.

Emma’s choice of location for the party was truly inspired, not only because it’s the world we inhabit (all things brand) but also because it provided a common and fascinating topic of conversation.

Our industry, like so many others has undergone an amazing change over the past two decades. In 1987, the Apple Mac was still in its infancy, the DTP revolution was in the basement being planned and Flash was a floor cleaner not a software. To airbrush was to airbrush, ink and compressed air - not a pixel in sight. Magic markers, layout pads and Letraset, a great British invention, were ubiquitous. And how we were dependent on those “stuck in traffic” motorbike couriers. The fax was the height of technology.

A lot has changed, but a lot has stayed the same! A great creative idea is still a great idea. All that’s really different is the landscape in which the idea appears. This was driven home to me at the museum as I watched those classic commercials from the 70s and 80s. Heineken, refreshes the parts other beers cannot reach, and happiness is a cigar called Hamlet - a golden period for British advertising.

Thanks once again and especially to Andrew Gulland (07885 721 917) for taking all the wonderful pictures. A closing thought, “The only good ideas are the ones I can take credit for.” R. Stevens, Diesel Sweeties, 11-13-06