words, pictures, and thoughts from Misha Cornes

Male Bonding

Few things are more fascinating to me than trends in popular culture. The latest trend to bubble up- “bromances”. Honestly I think the beginning of the trend (in recent times) was Brokeback Mountain, even though the most recent incarnations (MTV’s Bromance, TNT’s Trust Me, Dreamworks’ I Love You, Man) are all about two straight guys who, uh, happen to enjoy one another’s company.

My first glimmer that this whole thing had legs was the relationship between (gay) Ronnie and (ostensibly straight) Ben on Bravo’s Make Me a Supermodel. Something about their friendship/sexual tension clearly appealed to the young female demo that supported the show- they both stuck around until the very end despite otherwise inferior talent. So to me it’s a misreading to that this is a genre that men want to see, but rather about what women find sexy and appealing. It ties back to the NYT Magazine article on What Do Women Want. At least according to plethysmograph studies (a plastic probe that sits inside the vagina and measures genital blood flow), women find two men together (subliminally) hot.

MediaWeek has this round-up:

Career Advice to Myself

Sometimes I lose sight of why I am interested in design, experience design, new product development, customer insights, digital innovation- whatever it is I do. I despair (and rejoice) that there are no elders in this field and there is definitely a very poorly defined career path. Then every now and then one of these design institutions actually comes through. Listen to this Design Global Agenda Council Manifesto (ugh) written in Dubai (double ugh) for Davos (triple) via Bruce Nussbaum:

“ON DESIGN

Throughout history, design has been an agent of change. It helps us to understand the changes in the world around us, and to turn them to our advantage by translating them into things that can make our lives better. Now, at a time of crisis and unprecedented change in every area of our lives – economic, political, environmental, societal and in science and technology – design is more valuable than ever.

The crisis comes at a time when design has evolved. Once a tool of consumption chiefly involved in the production of objects and images, design is now also engaged with developing and building systems and
strategies, and in changing behaviour often in collaboration with different disciplines.

Design is being used to:
· Gain insight about people’s needs and desires
· Build strategic foresight to discover new opportunities
· Generate creative possibilities
· Invent, prototype and test novel solutions of value
· Deliver solutions into the world as innovations adopted at scale

In the current climate, the biggest challenges for design and also its greatest opportunities are:

· Well-being – Design can make an important contribution to the redefinition and delivery of social services by addressing acute problems such as ageing, youth crime, housing and health. Many
designers are striving to enable people all over the world to lead their lives with dignity, especially the deprived majority of the global population - “the other 90%” who have the greatest need of
design innovation.

· Sustainability – Designers can play a critical role in ensuring that products, systems and services
are developed, produced, shipped, sold and will eventually be disposed of in an ethically and environmentally responsible manner. Thereby meeting - and surpassing - consumers’ expectations.

· Learning – Design can help to rebuild the education system to ensure that it is fit for purpose in the
21st Century. Another challenge is to redefine or reorient the design education system at a time of unprecedented demand when thousands of new design schools are being built worldwide and design is increasingly being integrated into other curricula. Designers are also deploying their skill at communication and visualization to explain and interpret the overwhelming volume of extraordinary
complex information.

. Innovation – Designers are continuing to develop and deliver innovative new products at a turbulent time when consumer attitudes are changing dramatically thereby creating new and exciting
entrepreneurial opportunities in the current crisis. They are increasingly using their expertise to innovate in new areas such as the creation of new business models and adoption of a strategic and
systemic role in both the public and the private sector.”

Social Media Predictions 2009

Reading Peter Kim’s Social Media Predictions 2009 roll-up of various Social Media gurus while I wait for my new Mac to finish target disk-ing with my old Mac. Net: look for a “conversational ecosystem” from brands, not just a Twitter program. Look for humans to supplement automation.

Like this quote from Pete Blackshaw of Nielsen Online: “Along the way, we’ll rediscover timeless truths: friendship must be earned, fame is fleeting, excess begets backlash, it always pays to listen, and credibility is our most enduring marketing asset.”

Alonzo King at Frog Design Mind

Last night I went to a the Design Mind event at Frog San Francisco. I love it when companies have the chutzpah to throw open their doors and talk about what goes on inside their walls.

An open interview with the choreographer Alonzo King really blew my mind. He talked so articulately about dance and with a totally unselfconscious nod to dance’s place not only in human expression, but in the heartbeat of life itself. Example: “What is a pirouette but one of nature’s constants, the earth revolving around the sun”.

He had a lot to say about dance, but what really stuck with me were his thoughts on the differences between people and the need to find and love that otherness in yourself. He came off sounding sincere and incredibly wise. Made me wish to dare to be more foolish.

Ducking iPhone

I’ve been having some fun (?) trying to turn off Autocorrect on my iPhone. Looks like I need a firmware upgrade. Too much trouble. However, I did learn a few workarounds for foul-mouthed types who are sick of “ducking” being substituted for you-know-what. Check out http://www.duckingiphone.com

The New York Times and LinkedIn

LinkedIn is powering customized headlines on NYT based the industry that you self-identify. I’ve been getting Design articles.  Very nice.  Very smart.

American Idol OMG!!!!

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