A Bag of Gold

I really liked Gardner Campbell’s “No More Digital Facelifts” talk that was recommended watching for #ds106 (embedded below).

I like it enough that I decided to remix it. I don’t claim to have captured all, or perhaps any, of the spirit/content of Gardner’s talk but it was an interesting experiment and hopefully one that entertains a few people. If anything it should encourage you to listen to the actual talk. It really is good and I don’t like talks.

bag of gold

Limitations

I limited myself to the length of the instrumental (Nas – If I Ruled the World)
I limited myself to under an hour of editing.

Some Notes on Process

I chose the Nas song after browsing around looking for instrumentals that were titled something to do with gold and being unhappy with what I found. One easy way I use to get a feel for a good song is to set the audio of the speech playing and then browse for music. That way, when I preview various songs, I’m hearing the voice over the music like I would in the final product.

I did all the editing in GarageBand. I tend to cut up the speech as I listen and pull clips that I especially like into a different track. Once I’ve got them there I drag them over the music and start to shuffle things around. It’d be nice if I could separately label the diced up pieces but if you can do that in GB, I don’t know how.

Yes, that is Jim Groom laughing hysterically in the audience.

32 comments on “A Bag of Gold

  1. Pingback: Tweets that mention It’s a Bag of Gold « Bionic Teaching -- Topsy.com

  2. Pingback: Bag of Gold | Network Effects

  3. Pingback: Bag of Gold (Red 5 Remix) | Network Effects

  4. Jim Groom on said:

    I love the chorus,
    “This is a bag of gold, what part of that do you not understand?”

    So brilliant, and now you have Grant Potter mixing it all up—how awesome is this. You’re out of your mind right now Tom, ride that wave. The art is a flowing.

    • Gardner has just the right level of anger in his voice when he says that. Clearly, I love that line.

      Grant’s remix is perfect. You’ve gathered some really cool people together for this. Hats off to you for that. It’s going to be an interesting ride.

      As a side note, I stole that “Digital Facelift” assignment for my instructional tech class. They will be responding via blog and letting me know how that idea impacts what they plan to teach in k12. It’ll be interesting to see what non-ed tech people think of that.

  5. Jim Groom on said:

    I can nenver get enough of this talk by Gardner, and setting it to music suggests what a song writer Gardner really is when it comes to presentations. And this is the favorite I have heard from him, and there is an edge to the presentation that makes it that much more powerful, and like you note, it is all in the tone of his voice.

    As for Grant Potter, he is totally awesome, and he will be at NV (at least I think he will) and he jams even harder in person.

    Looking forward to your students reactions, are you gonna feed there work in ds106? Or at least select parts of it?

    • NV is a siren song. I have wanted to go for some time. If I can get funded I’m there.

      We’ll see what the students say. It’s a little far out for them based on what I know of the rest of the program. I’ll likely invite comment from the #ds106 field.

  6. Todd Conaway on said:

    Oh man, the cut of of old beat days remastered and placed in a more shareable space without the press or ink or tree
    not better in construction, just different and viewable readable sharable too and mashable

    beautiful
    Ginsberg would smile and the pranksters would giggle and grin
    perhaps begin to speak
    and we could capture the minutes moments and splash them on an audio canvas
    and spit them out to the You
    Tube if television or iPod

    beautiful.

  7. D'Arcy Norman on said:

    Tom, this is genius. I love it. I was in the room for Gardner’s presentation, and this version captures it so well.

  8. D'Arcy Norman on said:

    also, I can neither confirm nor deny that this file has found its way onto my iPhone for addition to the shuffle playlist.

  9. Grant Potter on said:

    Tom – your work has motivated me to take things up a notch – really looking forward to the coming weeks.

    I can confirm that by hook or by crook I will be throwing down for NV2011 – wouldn’t miss it for anything.

    • D'Arcy Norman on said:

      ditto, on both fronts. I’ll be at NV011 if I have to start walking now.

    • Why do all cool conferences and people tend to be in Canada or Australia? I’m going to have to pitch the idea to the powers that be, despite their mandates forbidding out of state (no mention of out of country though . . . ) travel.

  10. Pingback: DS106 week 1: Introductions, webhosts, and domain of your own « bavatuesdays

  11. Noise Professor on said:

    Oh hells yeah – this is quality.

  12. Jabiz Raisdana (Intrepid Teacher) on said:

    This is awesome. Oh no…another currency to master ;)

  13. Pingback: Chronicles of the House

  14. Pingback: How to make Gardner Campbell even more hip « ConnectedEd – A blog about learning and technology

  15. Pingback: Out of the box and off the hook | beespace.net

  16. Pingback: working on the railroad - fingerpickin' good

  17. helena ramos on said:

    This is really good. This sound can be a pluging for everything no matter the situation.

  18. Pingback: Bags of Gold | Intrepid Teacher

  19. Pingback: Newspaper Blackout Poetry « gforsythe.ca

  20. Pingback: Filtering for Bags of Gold | gforsythe.ca

  21. Pingback: Digital Facelift / Cyberinfrastructure Discussion | ds106 tricks

  22. Pingback: Slice 008: Leaving Arizona - CogDogBlog

  23. Robin Heyden on said:

    Loved this! Terrific idea to do and just shines a light on how “made for the stage” Gardner really is. I recently put together a comic homage of Gardner’s “bag of gold” talk: http://robinscomics.posterous.com/40605490
    Thanks for bringing it to us in a new way.

  24. Pingback: DS106 Assignment 2 A personal digital space | 106 drop in

  25. Pingback: What Transitionary Personalize Learning Might Look Like | Bionic Teaching

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

69,793 Spam Comments Blocked so far by Spam Free Wordpress

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>