Archive for January, 2009

Anthony Bourdain podcast – Part 1

| January 19th, 2009 | No Comments »

Raincoast Books of Vancouver has always been an innovative company. I was thrilled when (then) digital marketing manager Monique Trottier asked me to help create a series of author podcasts for the company.

Many of the titles we worked on are now with other publishers, but the podcasts still hold up. Enjoy.

dotted_line_490

On June 12, 2006, Anthony Bourdain, the best selling author of Kitchen Confidentialand host of the TV show No Reservations, spent a day in Vancouver doing media interviews and bookstore appearances to talk about his new book The Nasty Bits.

He wore a lapel microphone during the entire day, allowing me to record Bourdain’s casual conversation with fans, private moments in the car, and regular interview style questions. It’s Bourdain as you’ve never heard him before.

Part One: Bourdain’s World includes…

Anthony Bourdain’s most surprising questions.

  • How to train for a career in the entertainment business
  • Listener mail
  • Grossest Canadian Food
  • Getting sick from food
  • How Anthony stays trim
  • How to succeed in just about anything you do
  • Advice to would-be culinary school students

Runs: 14:57
 

click to play

dotted_line_490wspacer

Anthony Bourdain podcast – Part 2

| January 19th, 2009 | No Comments »

Raincoast Books of Vancouver has always been an innovative company. I was thrilled when (then) digital marketing manager Monique Trottier asked me to help create a series of author podcasts for the company.

Many of the titles we worked on are now with other publishers, but the podcasts still hold up. Enjoy.

dotted_line_490

On June 12, 2006, Anthony Bourdain, the best selling author of Kitchen Confidentialand host of the TV show No Reservations, spent a day in Vancouver doing media interviews and bookstore appearances to talk about his new book The Nasty Bits.

He wore a lapel microphone during the entire day, allowing me to record Bourdain’s casual conversation with fans, private moments in the car, and regular interview style questions.
Part Two: The Book Signing
8 a.m. at Barbara-Jo’s Books to Cooks in Vancouver

  • Anthony is greeted with a breakfast of champions.
  • Barbara-Jo talks about why she had to have Anthony visit her store.
  • Anthony meets the fans.
  • Anthony gives advice on “must sample” street food vendors in New York City.
  • He talks about who comes to book signings and why.
  • Bourdain just doesn’t seem like your usual kind of cookbook author
  • He reveals the best hidden cooks in New York.
  • And Bourdain talks about turning 50 and why life is like pinball.

runs 12:46

 

click to play

Anthony Bourdain podcast – Part 3

| January 19th, 2009 | No Comments »

Raincoast Books of Vancouver has always been an innovative company. I was thrilled when (then) digital marketing manager Monique Trottier asked me to help create a series of author podcasts for the company.

Many of the titles we worked on are now with other publishers, but the podcasts still hold up. Enjoy.

dotted_line_490

On June 12, 2006, Anthony Bourdain, the best selling author of Kitchen Confidentialand host of the TV show No Reservations, spent a day in Vancouver doing media interviews and bookstore appearances to talk about his new book The Nasty Bits.

He wore a lapel microphone during the entire day, allowing me to record Bourdain’s casual conversation with fans, private moments in the car, and regular interview style questions.

Part Three – Not All Nasty Bits

Anthony Bourdain talks about:

  • What chefs have in common
  • Whether he misses day to day restaurant work
  • What he’s afraid of

Bourdain also discusses:

  • Work ethic
  • The Omelette of Truth
  • Human nature
  • Advice for the fast foodie
  • Pub food
  • Tattoos
  • How he started writing
  • What he’s working on next.

Runs 16:10

 

click to play

Northern Voice 2009

| January 13th, 2009 | 1 Comment »

20090109_nv2009mooseI’m starting to measure my year in terms of Northern Voice, the Vancouver social media and blogging conference.

As I write this, the 2 day passes are already sold-out, less than a week after going on sale, with some spots left in the Friday un-conference (which is well worth attending).
Northern Voice really reminds me of the early days of the Vanouver Fringe Festival in Vancouver. Back when the Fringe was on Main Street and run by Joanna Maratta.

Like the Fringe, Northern Voice is really about a community of people passionate about what they do, people who are highly experienced sitting next to someone who’s just starting out. It’s about people who are at the top of the field interacting with people who are just being introduced to social networking for the first time. It’s about sharing experience, desires, business practices, crazy ideas and a lot of long conversations at the bar.

Back when the Fringe Festival was a real grass roots thing, anyone with 100 bucks could put on a play. Ticket prices were cheap and lineups were long. Shows sold out on word-of-mouth. On any given day you could see shows featuring some of Vancouver’s top actors (like Angry Actors Co-op) as well as total neophytes who while not experienced, shared the same passion and excitement about their craft. It’s intoxicating to be around, and even more so to be part of.

20090109_northernvoicepullquote
Northern Voice features an un-conference format on the 1st of the 2 days. Literally anyone can host a session on a topic of their choice; sometimes to a packed room, sometimes to a handful of people. Its a wonder to behold as people stand up and announce their ‘session’ to a gathered crowd. It’s real honest to goodness sharing. It’s learning and teaching and experimenting and collaborating and master-class all rolled into one.

The Fringe festival used to have its own version of an un-conference. It was never articulated as a stream at the Fringe, but it was understood by everyone that the de facto conference centre was the Fringe Club in the Main Street legion. This is where you could learn from the best, trade tips and tricks with performers and technicians and stage managers from around the world. I learned tons sitting at those plywood tables drinking draft, listening, laughing, arguing and learning. Perhaps most importantly, I made lifelong friends and was introduced to lifelong colleagues in the process. Like Northern Voice, some people even met their future professional-and-or-personal-or-both partners there.

Northern Voice has a spirit fueled by people who genuinely love what they do, are intrigued by what’s possible, and who dream of what’s to come.

I used to measure my year by the advent of the Fringe – sadly I don’t anymore more.

But I’m glad to see that same spirit alive at Northern Voice.