Tag Archives: USC Annenberg

Bees, The Talk of the Day

I’m using every ounce of fingertip energy to avoid bee-related puns in this post. Brownie-point me.

Photo courtesy autan via flickr

Conversations about bees have exploded on the web today. What’s up with the synchronicity?

This morning, my sister even randomly emailed me the beautiful trailer for Taggart Siegel’s 2010 documentary “Queen of the Sun: What Are the Bees Telling Us?”

Discovery News reported today…

…findings from a study that showed bees to have personality akin to extreme-sports-minded humanoids. They take risks. They seek adventure. They dance, for crying out loud (although that does have a more practical function). Check out the article by Emily Sohn to learn more about the biological view of risk-taking behavior.

Oh! And if you think you’re some bee expert, take a gander at Discovery News’s interactive quiz about bees.

When I was 8-years-old, I opened up the tailgate door of my dad’s pickup truck to accomodate my sister’s birthday party tables and chairs. I was a helpful twerp. The truck bed was covered with one of those blue protective blankets. I lifted it to shake some dust off, and suddenly, my wrist was enveloped in molten, searing pain. I was convinced the tailgate door had clipped off my arteries and I was gonna bleed out any moment (perhaps I was a morbid twerp). Turns out, an angry bee had been stuck under the blanket for who-knows how long and came zooming out, straight toward at the tender flesh of my pre-pubescent wrist. When my dad came over to remove the now-dead bee from my swollen arm, I felt kind of bad for it. Now, almost two decades later, I feel slightly guilty for contributing in minutia to the decline in the global bee population.

What? The bees are disappearing? Yeah, you need to hear about this.

Gretchen LeBuhn, associate professor of biology at my alma mater, San Francisco State University, launched The Great Sunflower Project a few years back. It culls the help from ordinary people around the globe to help track bee populations. People can request seeds and plants to put in their yards. Then, they take 15 minutes out of their day to count the bees that visit and report back to the Backyard Bee Count. Collaboration makes the world go round. And so do bees, apparently.

Image courtesy YourGardenShow.com

Watch Grethcn LeBuhn’s eloquent explanation of on YouTube.
She makes me smile.

Another bee finding to hit the web today was Katherine Harmon‘s article about the concept that bees have as individualistic personality differences as our own. If you’re a cat owner, this non-human similarity may not strike you as particularly exceptional, but it’s good science, published today in Science.

For the final installation of today’s bee roundup (seriously, it’s so hard to avoid bee puns), USC Impact broadcasted a story about urban beekeeping, a segment of Episode 45 which won 1st place at the Emmys Foundation 2010 College Television Awards.

Check it out:

Oh! One more thing.

Did you know there’s a jammin’ Twitter account devoted soley to bees in art?

Guess what it’s called.

@BeesInArt

@BeesInArtAND, they’ve curated a list of 192 Twitter uses who are super-interested in bees. @VanishingBees is another game-changer in the save-the-bees endeavor. Sweet.

Damn, I couldn’t make it through. Is it any excuse that I legitimately am craving honey?

Alternative SoCal Living

Do you drive? Take the bus? Bicycle, perhaps? Well, none of these work for you if you live in Santa Anita Canyon, a rustic enclave just east of Pasadena. Here, some residents are taking life at a slower pace. How slow? Well, let’s just say it has something to do with pack mules.

Check out this episode of Impact, the television show for which I’m supervising producer. Impact is the focal point of my graduate program at USC Annenberg. Producers have the opportunity to host one episode, and I was stoked to host this one, if only for the independent spirit of the characters featured.

Impact Episode 66: Santa Anita Canyon from USC Impact on Vimeo.

The second part of this episode features Eco-Domes, the desert’s version of igloos. They are constructed using dirt, sandbags and barbed wire, and residents are happy to show us around.

Impact Episode 66: Eco-Domes from USC Impact on Vimeo.

This one time, in grad school…

A few months ago, a techie classmate and I decided that L.A. needed a tech podcast, and HTMLA was born.

We tinkered with our school’s radio booth, lined up some interviews and tossed up a website. Twitter account in tow.

Six episodes in, and we’re ready to take a step back to re-evaluated our BETA project. We nursed this geekie baby during grad school madness, and now we have the summer to think about where to take it. Inspired by Leo Laporte’s TWiT and The 404, we want to fill a niche. If only to argue over whether it rhymes with rich or quiche.

L.A. already has socaltech.com, and we enjoy being the scrappy grad students who throw around some of the L.A. tech buzz, whether it be startups, crazy inventions, university developments or human-shaped cell phones. But we recorded our last episode (unreleased) on the USC Annenberg lobby floor, for crying out loud. Summer radio booth hours are short.

Episode 6 is our pride and joy, and we invite you to take a listen.
If only because we name-drop Captain Planet.
Or… download on iTunes!

Creative Collaboration

Traditional journalism is dying, wah! We know! So how can we foster new ideas with journalistic, technological and business vision?

Lock up grad students from these fields in a room for 9 days, and see what happens.

That’s where I’ve been with 17 other USC students from journalism, engineering and MBA programs, collaborating on mobile tech for news outlets.

A charming engineering student and two brilliant MBA grads were on my team to develop a new mobile app concept for KCRW. The station told us they wanted new ways to engage listeners, so we proposed a technology that allows users to select and share just a snippet of a program. Courtesy of Ben Moskowitz, we learned this is already being prototyped with Mozilla’s new open-source language, Popcorn.js. Demo audio-snippet sharing here.

And here’s our concept video (turned around in a 48-hr timeframe):

Now that we’ve been released from the 9-day boot camp and are decompressing from the collaborative buzz, I look forward to what develops. Perhaps we’ll continue to engage with KCRW over this concept, and I’m excited to delve into popcorn.js and learn more about the beautiful things they’re making. WordPress says it best… Code is poetry.

Game Theory & Giving

Ideas for Round III?

Here’s a graphic that didn’t make it into the video:

Think of it as a simplistic way to view a ping pong match through the categorical, mathematical lens of game theory.

(Illustrations by Lisa Rau)

*Update*

Check out some press about our project, courtesy of reporter Katherine Harwood, a journalism grad student at USC: