Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Video Book Review

So here's my video book review of Marshall McLuhan's Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man (or follow this link for just the powerpoint version without voiceover). PS - don't know why the graphic is blurry for the voiceover version and not the music version, but I can try editing that later.


Steps:
  1. Think a really long time about what to do to be creative at least a little
  2. Go to YouTube and click on creation tools (that you read as curation tools and got really excited for but then realize you read that wrong)
    • Let their free audio library entertain you for about ten minutes
    • Download three of their free audio clips to use for video
      • Of course reading the terms and conditions first to avoid copyright issue
  3. Realize your camera on your computer is feeling uncooperative but no fear because creativity is here!
  4. Make fun powerpoint to explain points of book and use microphone to do voice over parts do give it that personal connection feel
  5. Edit a bit using Windows Live Movie Maker
  6. Post it and tag it with digiculture326
  7. Wish you had your puppets from last semester's videos with you and not at home so they can make a surprise cameo appearance (and then proceed to watch those videos again and appreciate the cheap quality and brevity there too)
Advertisement for Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man in the Whole Earth Catalog
I didn't find any video book reviews (and I've made a post before on how many interviews there are on YouTube) but I did find this fellow blog post that mentions how the book was meant to stir questions about the technological world and not meant to ask and answer those questions. I also found this cool image (left) on http://www.moma.org (click through for full link, scroll down a little more than half way to find subheading Mediated Art) and a mini review of McLuhan's Understanding Media. I thought it looked pretty cool. Plus it's a short review (tiered content model with this little ad and review all in one, yeah?) to get the book noticed and selling.

Lots of fun with making this review and researching this book. Hopefully all my mentions of it on here and Google+ (as well as to friends of mine) will spread the word some more about McLuhan's contributions to digital thought!

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