Urban Tribes

Urban Tribes

Urban Tribes, the book provided an intriguing title to the workshop, perhaps the only workshop I was really looking forward to, but I also suspected, with a complete title like: “Urban Tribes the social dark matter that binds us together,” I might be set up for disappointment. The author walks in, sits down, fusses with the computer for moment, then announces that he’s the panel. Looked a little lonely up there, all by himself.

Ethan Watters is an unlikely spokesperson for a generation, and yet, he’s somehow got himself shoveled into that slot. Plus, as he pointed out, he was a non-techie at a techie conference. He didn’t understand that, and he seemed a little surprised about being there.

I’d never even heard of the book before, much less the author, and I was pleasantly surprised by his attitude, his gentle manner, and the way he presented his material. From his talk, I was doing the math in my head, trying to work backwards, married for so long, has a child now, daughter’s so old, think and coming up with a year of birth for him at 1965. Just a guess. Plus, he was talking about all the markings that I find in that particular generation, my point of view, though, is as an astrologer.

The ones I’m always most curious about are the 1965-66, Pluto conjunct Uranus in Virgo, grouping. I’ve looked at this before, and I can stretch that to encompass 1964 to 1967, and there’s a fudge factor, too, available, as long as the parts in the charts add up.

After the presentation, and there were a couple of questions from folks who’d actually read the book, I stopped to talk. He was addressing a matter I’ve looked at for years now, only, doing so from an entirely different point of reference. The only question I had for the guy was, “What’s your birthday?” Cancer. 1964. I was off by a year, maybe six months.

After another workshop, I wandered off to the trade show to buy the book and get it signed. Two cute tricks: one, he was using a rubber stamp to add a little extra decoration to his author’s signature, and two, he pointedly included his birthday and a question, “what’s it mean?”

I know and understand next to nothing about demographics, audience, metrics, or, for that matter, any scientific (sociological, anthropological) methods of study. I can’t rate his methods of quantifying or qualifying his information.

But I did sit down, outside a favorite coffee stop, with a steaming double espresso, and I proceeded through the introduction, and headed on into the first chapter. The sun came out, I shed my shirt, pulled the bill of the hat down lower, my convention badge in my pocket and safely out of sight, and I read for a bit, waiting on the next workshop.

The book is on my “currently reading” list. I’ll leave a plug for it on the first page for a while. Might have been the espresso, but I found the style of writing to be engaging, self-deprecating, and wryly amusing. Bonus. He’s a good stylist. The topic? I can’t answer for sure, but I was so pleased to stumble into a text that dealt with the same issues, although, it’s not in the same framework I’m accustomed to.

Just a higher casualty rate
It was a late quote. The first workshop’s panel was one author, more about that later . There’s a new book on the recommended list: Urban Tribes.

The other workshops I attended? Yes, well, I laughed, enjoyed, and as usual, was greatly amused. A thoughtful comment, to answer the question, “Where is personal publishing going to be in ten years?” was answered, in part, while a girl held up a phone-camera, took a picture, and seconds later, it was on the screen, having gone from her phone to email to a web server, and then being automatically posted. Whizz-bang techno.

At another panel, there were three guys with phone/cameras and three different sets of tools for doing that exact same thing. “Who’d a-thunk it?”

One woman’s site flashed on the screen, then another, and at one time or another, I’ve linked to both their sites. Rogue librarians, thrill seekers, maybe a note about a sun sign, other clues. Whatever. But what scared me was realizing that this was starting to turn into a a slightly incestuous group.

Funniest off-the-cuff comment, heard outside the rooms? “It sometimes cheaper to just mail the client some more RAM instead of spending the production time to re-work a site so it’s compatible with their old browser.”

I didn’t actually get a lot out of those the last couple of workshops. How about a long list of links? With a comment at the end. Geeks will be geeks. Pud moderated one rousing panel, and I kept thinking there was something up.

Danah Boyd
Games Forecast
Blogger
Hot or Not
Server Beach
Rackspace
Razorfish
Fucked Company
Our Type
2 advanced
Naezke
Perfect Fools
Flash forward
Yugop
U Texas
Intentionallies
We Fail
Bob Schneider (award winner)
Enthrallogy
Donny Darko
Hi-res
Troll back
Joshua Davis

A closing comment, to one of the more entertaining, if not enlightening workshops, “Didn’t we do group therapy for everyone with a personal home page – five years ago?”

About the author: Born and raised in a small town in East Texas, Kramer Wetzel spent years honing his craft in a trailer park in South Austin. He hates writing about himself in third person. More at KramerWetzel.com.

Use of this site (you are here) is covered by all the terms as defined in the fineprint, reply via e-mail.

© 1993 – 2024 Kramer Wetzel, for astrofish.net &c. astrofish.net: breaking horoscopes since 1993.

It’s simple, and free: subscribe here.