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Obey. Consume. Watch TV. Conform. Submit. Buy.

Obey

This is a still from a 1988 film called "They Live" directed by John Carpenter.

From Snarkerati's Top 50 Dystopian Films of All Time: "Set in the future, a drifter discovers that alien beings are controlling the minds of the masses by use of subliminal messages urging apathy and obedience. Nada, a down-on-his-luck construction worker, discovers a pair of special sunglasses. Wearing them, he is able to see the world as it really is: people being bombarded by media and government with messages like “Stay Asleep”, “No Imagination”, “Submit to Authority”."

10 Interesting Nuggets

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An eclectic selection of 10 nuggets from my Bank Holiday reading:

  1. 51% of live births in London in 2005 were to a mother who was herself born overseas (The Guardian)
  2. The UK has the fourth highest population density within the OECD behind South Korea, The Netherlands, Japan and Belgium (BBC)
  3. More than 70% give up watching a video within 10 seconds if presented with a pre-roll ad (YouTube)
  4. Only 5 houses and 3 bungalows were demolished to build the initial 72 mile southern section of the M1Motorway in the 1950s (quoted in BBC4's Secret Life of the Motorway)
  5. 80% of work conversations happen when one person simply passes another's desk. (UCL / Space Syntax)
  6. Office paper consumption has increased 40% since the introduction of email (The Myth of the Paperless Office)
  7. In 1949, 81% of British men and 39% of women smoked (Matthew Hilton's Smoking in British Popular Culture 1800-2000)
  8. In the 5 years following the introduction of PowerPoint the time spent making speeches or presentations in British firms increased by 31.9 per cent (Exclusion, Employment and Opportunity)
  9. In the four months after the introduction of the Belisha Beacon road crossing scheme, 3,000 of the 15,000 that had been installed in London had been destroyed! (Daily Telegraph, 4th Jan 1935)
  10. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the amount of walking in Britain reduced by 25 per cent (The Cost of Bad Design, CABE)

Credit: Nuggets 4,5,6,7,8,9 and 10 were all found in Joe Moran's excellent book about our changing daily lives 'Queuing for Beginners'.

Note on the photo: I took the photo above with my back to Durdle Door in Dorset. I bet it will be busier today!

A roundup of the week

A hasty roundup of some interesting things I've chanced upon in the last week...

  • Management Today asks "Has the ad biz lost it's lustre?";
  • The Guardian reports on a documentary maker who purposefully overdosed on the output of The Daily Mail in the interests of science and entertainment (via Ben);
  • The New York Times discusses the perils of asserting idea ownership ... "a great idea is owned by whoever expresses that idea most successfully" (via Cubemate);
  • Spiked analyses the contradictions inherent in what we believe and what we do in the name of saving the planet;
  • Time magazine reviews some newly published research on buyer behaviour;
  • The New York Times crunches the old 'ads as entertainment' chestnut; and
  • A special edition of ICON magazine presents 50 manifestos by well known architects (and a contribution from London's mayor, Ken Livingstone)

Then, on a lighter note...

  • This is a video news report on the annual Chav Hunt;
  • It seems that we have been honoured by a visit by the Flying Spaghetti Monster;
  • Here's some help if you were looking for a place to buy a chicken suit (that's a suit for a chicken btw);
  • This company specialises in helping with some of the less pleasant aspects of rural life; and
  • The boffins at MIT are proposing a way of harnessing the power generated by our addiction to retail.

10 curious facts

10_2 10 curious things I found out on my interweb travels this week ...

1. Europe's share of global population will fall from 21% now to 7% by 2050 (The Economist)

2. Just 3% of commuters in the UK cycle to work even though 4 million people drive less than three miles to work (The Guardian)

3. The number of stay-at-home mothers fell by nearly a quarter from 2.7 million to 2.1 million between 1993 and 2007 and the number of "housedads" has doubled from 100,000 to 200,000 (The Guardian).

4. A London house that sold for £100,000 in 1976 would now be worth £4.2 million (The Telegraph)

5. Nearly one in 10 UK households now employs domestic help to do cleaning, cooking or ironing (The Telegraph)

6. One fifth of British people are unaware that bacon and sausages come from farms (BBC News Online)

7. Students graduating last summer were saddled with an average total debt of just over £13,250 per head (The Telegraph)

8. Whilst 69 per cent of mothers start out breast-feeding their newborns, 21 per cent stop within the first fortnight (The Telegraph)

9. More than 1.1 billion of the world's estimated 6.6 billion people are online and almost a third of those are now accessing the internet on high speed lines (The Guardian)

10. In the USA in 2006 nearly 14,000 boys age 13 to 19 underwent surgery to reduce the size of their breasts (New York Times).

Picture Credit: Russell Davies

Vidmeter > New Video Aggregator

Vidmeter is a new mega aggregator of online video content.

It tracks the top videos from Break.com, Daily Motion, Google, iFilm, Metacafe, Myspace, Revver, vSocial, Yahoo, and Youtube and then ranks them.

The list is updated every 5 minutes and a daily chart stored at the end of each day. This is the top 10 online videos of all time according to the Vidmeter on January 16th 2007:

Top_videos_of_all_time

Click here to browse the latest chart and to view the videos.

They explain how they have attempted to get around the tricky issue of double-counting here.

Protologisms: newly invented words

ProtologismStumbled across a fantastic invented word on Wiktionary yesterday: Protologism.

Protologism is a term invented by Mikhail Epstein of Emory University to refer to a newly created and proposed word which has not yet gained acceptance. As the inventor characterizes it, "It is a prototype or a hypothetical projection of a new lexical unit before it may become current in writing or speech."

This contrasts with Neologisms:

Neologisms are words that have already been in public usage by authors other than their inventors. As soon as a protologism finds its way into newspapers and websites, journals and books, it becomes a neologism.

Trendspotters like Faith Popcorn and Marian Salzman frequently utilise a snappy little protologism to generate some publicity for their prognostications (e.g. Salzman's MetroSexual). A good protologism can obviously come in pretty handy to sum up a concept but I'd argue that the teams over at SpringWise and Trendspotting might have taken this just a teensy little bit too far.  They seem to think that every observation they make about the world needs a protologism! What on earth is Gravanity all about, for example?

There are quite a few protologism projects on thet net including the rather base Urban Dictionary and its fularious daffynitions and the ever splendid British institution that is the Viz Profanisaurus.

Wiktionary maintains a slightly more sensible list of protologisms contributed by members of their community. Anyone can post one and, in theory, create a new word.

The protologisms that I think deserve to be neologisms are:

Abreticulate: to copy from the internet without attribution.

Aproctosis: a period of extended apathy, disinclination and propensity to indulge in displacement activities (from the Greek for can't be arsed)

Blogamy: the act of maintaining more than one blog at a time

Buffle: To rub the top of one's head against another's belly

Cryptophilia: an undefined urge; to want something but not know what you want

Eboniciser: A person who frequently invents words to add to online slang/protologism lists. (cf. ebonics and improviser)

Etceteric: Of or relating to a person who is like others of his or her kind; not deserving to be named individually; marginal, anonymous, obscure.

Fleege: a group of co-workers who socialise outside work but are not actually friends

Fugle: a futile search of the Internet

Guybrows: unplucked, bushy eyebrows on a woman

Homogenism: the belief that intergroup differences are divisive and destructive to society

Incommodocado: The state of being unable to reply because you've had an urgent call of nature.

Intolerista: those who are ostensibly advocates of openness, diversity, multiculturalism, and tolerance, but who are in practice viciously intolerant of any ideas that conflict with their own.

Limpathy: The attention earned by a child's feigned or exaggerated response to a trivial injury.

Markeneering: 1) The process of subverting good engineering practice for the sake of better market potential. 2) The use of irrelevant engineering jargon to improve the marketability of a product or service

MilliHelen: The amount of beauty required to launch a single ship.

Mojo Crash: The end of a run of creativity due to fatigue or exhaustion.

Mooby: The one after next i.e. Turn left at the mooby junction. Or Are you free mooby Tuesday?

Neodontia: The practice, far from being perfected, of inducing the growth of entirely new teeth in mature individuals. One form is to transplant individual tooth buds into the jaw; another form is to induce the growth of an entire new set of teeth.

Nibling: The son or daughter of your sibling, regardless of sex. A niece or nephew. Usage: 'I'm babysitting my niblings John and Kerry.'

Omniphobia: fear of everything

Phobophile: One who gains pleasure from being noticably feared by those around him.

Phobile moan: a complaint about mobile (cell) phones (e.g. regarding their ubiquity, inappropriate use, etc.)

Proctosculocracy: A social system in which advancement is based on fawning and flattery.

Prospiruption: a sound one makes the moment just before one sneezes; the "ah" in "ah-choo!"

Pseudolixir: Something which appears to be a miraculous cure or beneficial product, but is in fact no more effective than a placebo (e.g. Homeopathy).

Sarconym: The meat name for a specific animal. The word beef is the sarconym for cattle. Venison is the sarconym for deer.

Terrorocracy: To govern by fear / government as protection racket

Testiculate: to wave one's arms around while talking bollocks

Uterosexual: An emacipated woman of the new millennium who does not feel oppressed by masculinistic oppression, and instead is immensely proud of being female.

Vegemarian: A vegetarian who also consumes seafood.

Vommunition: The meal you have planned out before a night of heavy drinking.

Viz Top Tips are still great

Viz_logoViz Top Tips still do it for me  ...

ESTATE agents. Please look up the words luxurious, stunning and spacious in a dictionary so as I don't have to spend my weekends being shown around badly-built shoeboxes.

EXPERIENCE the thrills of a skiing holiday without the expense. Simply sellotape two planks of wood to your feet, sit in your freezer for three hours, then run into a tree as fast as you can.

FOOL your friends into thinking you use expensive butter by simply using cheap margerine and ripping holes in the bread.

MOBILE phone users. On trains always choose a seat in the last carriage. Then, when a train enters a tunnel, run as fast as you can towards the front of the train. This will ensure that you are in the tunnel for the shortest possible time and are less likely to miss that all-important call.

As the publisher says, Viz is a national institution.

How common is my surname?

Mcewan

Thanks to this little online app I now know that there are 3,385 people in England & Wales who share my surname (McEwan). I was surprised to find that there are nearly twice as many people with the alternative spelling of McKeown.

The ten most common surnames in England & Wales on this dataset are:  SMITH, JONES, WILLIAMS, TAYLOR, BROWN, DAVIES, EVANS, THOMAS, WILSON and JOHNSON. Given that the population of Wales is far smaller than that of England this clearly demonstrates the concentration of Welsh family names.

A few directed searches then revealed there were 419 people who are burdened with the surname of Daft and 31 with the surname Slapper!

Which reminds me of a story ... I worked for BT back in the early 90's whilst I was studying for my Masters. Back then they more or less had a monopoly on fixed line telecoms. Twice a week I used to sit in a dreary open plan office for 14 hours at a time taking customer complaints to their "151" fault line. On one excrutiatingly quiet Bank Holiday afternoon I rather childishly searched their vast customer database for names that contained any one of a number of expletives or pejoratives. Strangely I found that the database always returned the same woman! Apparently she was the ex-wife of one of the engineers. He had entered a series of pseudonyms into the database alongside her name (slapper, cow, whore etc.) and if you searched for them, up she popped! Nice.

Picture Credit: Spell with Flickr

2006 Dream Toys

Dt06logo_2 Earlier this month the UK Toy Retailers Association (TRA) released their official Top Toys for Christmas predictions. Ignoring the fact that the word "official" is becoming increasingly meaningless, I have reproduced the list in full below in alphabetical order.

Baby Born with magic eyes, Zapf (RRP £39.99)
Bratz Forever Diamondz Assortment, Vivid (£24.99)
Cars Fast Talkin’ McQueen, Mattel (RRP £39.99)
Deal or No Deal Electronic Board Game, Drumond Park (RRP £29.99)
Dr Who Cyberman Mask, Character Options (RRP £29.99)
Let’s Dance Barbie Doll, Mattel (RRP £39.99)
Paper FX, Flair (RRP £19.99)
Pixel Chix Mall, Mattel (RRP £29.99)
Tamagotchi Connexion V3, Bandai (RRP £12.99)
Thomas Aquadraw, Tomy (RRP £29.99)
Trivial Pursuit 90’s, Hasbro (RRP £29.99)
V.Smile Baby, VTech (RRP £39.99)

The Top 12 is selected from the TRA’s ‘Top 72’ covering six popular categories: Pre-school, Boys, Girls, Hip ‘n’ Kool, Games and Creative. Given that or clients frequently agonise over the meaning of cool, let's look at the list of "Hip'n'Kool" toys (a new list for 2006 apparently) ...

Cube World Packs Series 2 Radica £19.99
Digi Makeover Radica £59.99
Dr Who RC K-9 Character £39.99
Fur Real Cuddle Chimp Hasbro £34.99
Littlest Pet Shop Digipet Hasbro £12.99
Magnetix-Specials 90pcs Clear Light Cubes MegaBrands £24.99
Mindstorms NXT Lego £179.99
NSECT Mattel £89.99
Pixel Chix Mall Mattel £29.99
Roboreptile 1 Character £89.99
Tamagotchi Connexion V3 Bandai £12.99
Teksta Vivid £39.99

I'm not sure why some of these are worthy of being called "Hip'n'Kool". For example, this is the Hasbro Fur Real Cuddle Chimp:
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The Radica Digi Make Over is pretty interesting though. Aimed at girls it allows them to upload pictures of themselves and their friends and carry out virtual makovers, changing hair and make-up using the touchpad. The device then allows you to show the finished images on your TV. That could get nasty....

Digi_makeover_1
At the moment I still think of kid's toys as unwelcome clutter. I wonder if I will ever really get over that. By the way note that we still unashamedly call that holiday that takes place at the end of the year Christmas in the UK. I wonder how long that will last.

H2 viral

Will Video for Food has posted the seven deadly sins of advertising via viral video ...

1. Make a white and brown cow.
2. Pretend you’re not advertising.
3. Spend a fortune on production.
4. Tell consumers instead of engage them.
5. Do a video contest because everyone else is.
6. Set unrealistic conversion metrics.
7. Throw in the towel and decide to just advertise around viral videos.

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