A surprisingly gripping movie on subjects that are as disturbing as they are real and present in today’s world. We can believe that these problems would go away by simply following the three wise monkeys – see no evil, talk no evil, hear no evil. That’s one option. Or, we could do something about it in our own way. I would like to believe that the director (Giuseppe Tornatore) has attempted the latter by creating awareness to one more evil dimension of the flesh trade: sex workers brutalized and exploited even more, as baby machines. In doing that however, he has created no documentary but instead a tense and suspenseful thriller that does finish with redemption at the end. Hats off to Senor Tornatore for his guts and genius!
Needless to add, this film is not for everyone. Overall there is a sense of unknown that is maintained throughout the movie about its main character, Irina. Some of the abuses Irina (Kseniya Rappoport) has suffered that she replays in her mind – and, is there for the audience to “experience” as very graphic short takes – will repulse you into disgust and squeamishness. Perhaps, it is a tad over the top but pause for a moment to ponder if such might be the condition of people reliving these horrible and traumatic experiences in their minds. Also, the scenes where Irina keeps pushing little Thea to overcome her disability crosses abusive boundaries and will be hard for most of us to watch.
If Rappoport as The Unknown Woman has done a stellar job, it also helps to have cast this unknown as THE unknown woman.
I helped a family member get going on WordPress, basically move from hand-coded HTML setup on DreamWeaver to set up, configure, publish & manage from a self-hosted WordPress for his career blog site – www.amalbala.com. New version of the site is not officially v1.0 yet. As we were finetuning his site, I sent a few pointers to him by e-mail that I thought made even more sense published as a blog post. So here it is below, using the www.amalbala.com (as of 08/24/09) site as reference:
Add something to your HTML title “the district”. Like “the district // home of amal bala” or whatever makes sense. Presently, title (“the district”) is too generic for SEO friendliness. Nice to have: create a favicon for your site using free services such as Dynamic Drive – FavIcon Generator or favicon.ico Generator.
Make it a point to write an “excerpt” for all your posts inside the WP edit-post screen. Very important for SEO and mashups with Facebook etc
Make it a point to to populate the fields (keywords, etc) under the All-in-One SEO module for each post. You can choose the dynamically generate keywords option
Get a Twitter account and install a Twitter plug-in so that all your posts are automatically tweeted when you publish or update. Better, if you can publish with a hashtag. If your Twitter account is mashed up with your Facebook account even better. Your distribution improves many folds.
Twitter plugins I use are Twitter for WordPress and Tweetly Updater. Former pulls in Twitter feed into my blog in the form of a sidebar widget while the latter can be configured to automatically tweet whenever you publish a blog post.
www.instantshift.com seems to be a nice site for web designers and developers. You will see lots of useful pointers there. Nice to have: you can increase the coolness of your blog with this WordPress plugin: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-cumulus/. It allows you to display your tags and categories as a Flash movie that rotates them in 3D.
Get a Google Analytics account (you can register with your gmail account). Install this plugin – http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/google-analytics-for-wordpress/ – to integrate with Google Analytics. Track your site! If you need realtime tracking, you can try a Freemium service such as StatCounter as information from Google is delayed by a day.
Add social bookmarking tools to your blog. Try Share This.
Add a Blog Roll section to your site. List only those blogs that are valuable to you and you want to connect and back link with. Do not dilute yourself
Start commenting on meaningful external blogs with linkbacks to your site. You have to do it subtly (and not overtly) so that it does not look like shameless plugs
Last month, some of the bHive core team went on a weekend hike up White Mountain Peak (wiMp, 14,252ft) in INYO National Forest. The third highest peak in California, it is both fair weather and friendly… only insofar as you do not take it for granted. Boy, were there simple lessons learned from this day hike? Certainly, and all are as applicable to practicing Web Presence Management (WPM) as they are to life!
All Sugar and No Salt is as fatal to your Customer as it is to the Hiker
By some miscalculation, we all carried and snacked only on sugary stuff on our uphill hike. Big mistake. The idea was to ease our way to the top on “power” snacks, eat one of those ready-to-cook “real” hiker meals and cruise on the downhill hike. Not only did our systems reject the sugar even before we reached the top, but there also was not one tiny sheltered spot for us to light our backcountry stove. The terrain was barren and winds howling. In hindsight, a few saltines, nachos or even junk food like chips/crisps snacked periodically would have helped a lot.
What’s the parallel here to WPM? Corporate communications are like sugar. Customers, like your system, will reject it to the point of fatality if that’s the only diet they are fed. However, a contextual Social Media (SoMe) practice will keep your Customers trusting and engaged, just like the right pinch of salt snacked periodically keeps the system healthy and balanced. In salt, we trust (in just the right doses, of course)!
“Done that Altitude” is PAST, “Must Do Attitude” is PRESENT
Our hiking team has had its moments. Latitudes stretched, longitudes tested. And, some record altitudes attained, all in good health. All, however, in the past still did not adjust our attitude, what’s a wiMp by any other other name?
What indifference! Continue to be stuck in the past on the only ways you have talked to Customers, taking them for granted, and rest assured the wiMps will become IMPs – InsurMountable Peaks (or, Problems). What worked then is past. What must be done today is to engage in each uphill task with full transparency and deference (or, empathy). Always respect the Mountain, high or low. We need to Listen and Learn from our Customers – and give them a Voice — daily … today, everyday!
The Curious Case of Turtle Tao
We met a septuagenarian on our climb. He was on a solo road trip from Colorado to hike in Utah and California. Let’s call this gent Turtle Tao. He was ahead of us in the morning when we were driving from the campground to get started on the hike. He was driving slow-and-steady on the single-lane dirt road. Needless to say, us can’t-wait-to-calculate-return-on-investment-(ROI) types “forced” him to yield so that we could get there sooner. We started the hike much ahead of Tao. Surely enough, he caught up with us within the hour! He gave us company for the next 1-2 hours and then moved slowly ahead even as he seemed to accelerate without increasing his speed – walking or breathing. Finally, when we reached the summit Tao was there, again pleasantly inquiring after us. Offered me a sandwich bite and did take some summit pictures for our ROI. We lost sight of Tao shortly thereafter in our downhill delirium. He was the proverbial Tortoise, seemingly slow but surely steady and earnest. We were the insolent hares…already at the finish line with ROIs and dashboards!
There seems to be this raging, current fixation on SoMe ROI. Hopefully, we all do not forget that the main goal of Social Media (and WPM in general) is the trusted ongoing engagement it facilitates. Not the arrival at any specific end points or summits. To twist a famous traveling quote: “the point of this WPM journey is not to arrive.” Instead, the engagement and participation it enables are to be enjoyed, to be learned from, and ultimately… to be continued.
Recently, one of my ex-colleagues had the following as his Facebook status message: ” .. had a Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) day today at work!”. So decided to check out what he was talking about.
Seems like an all starcast – Alec Baldwin, Kevin Spacey, Jack Lemmon, Ed Harris – enacting the ALWAYS BE CLOSING mantra for Sales teams. Might still work for cars, real estate(?), and insurance. However, the future (if not already) is all about social decision-making and commerce. ALWAYS BE CLOSING changes somewhat to ALWAYS BE ENGAGING with your leads and prospects .. listen and understand what they need to know and deliver it to them in a relevant and compelling way (content marketing).
Alec Baldwin is powerful and at his “engaging” best in the following:
“There is no such thing as a no sale call. A sale is made on every call you make. Either you sell the client some stock or he sells you on a reason he can’t.”
Well, we all know .. and are now living what the always be closing mantra has brought upon on us ..
Who is writing this blog?
inderSTADT and jambajaar are online monikers of this blog's primary author, Bala Gopalan. Bala is a Hi-Tech Entrepreneur, who is passionate about Travel Photography, Movies & Music, World History, chit.ambaram, Mechanical Timepieces, Cloud Computing and Web Presence Management. Note: postings on this site are thoughts and opinions of Bala and do not necessarily represent the position of his employers, past or present. You can connect with Bala through the following channels:
For lovers of Indian Music, do visit dhanyasy.org, a website on Carnatic Music by Dhanya Subramanian. A website maintained by Bala Gopalan.