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@ Arin Crumley: “How Do You Compartmentalize Your Audience Community Into The Big Picture Of What You’re Doing?”

November 10th, 2008 Posted in update

Here’s Arin’s answer to the last of my three questions: How do you compartmentalize your audience community into the big picture of what you’re doing?

Interestingly, he interpreted the question in a broader way - how do you compartmentalize your life, using the tools now at your disposal in this new culture of communication?

Arin sees categorization as a way of navigating our new social space more efficiently - because a new social environment necessitates new social rules. - Not the internet as a separate space but as an extension of every other aspect of our lives and world.

Because of this, in the last part of our interview Arin talks about the ‘mashing up’ of personal and private life, and compartmentalization as a means to filtering out noise.

Continuing the theme so far, he talks about embracing what is now at our fingertips and “Being willing to be an interacting human being in this new era” and how that is “going to make it a little easier for the compartmentalizing to happen a little more automatically.”

Click here for Arin’s full answer to question 3 >>>>>>

Click here to hear Arin’s answers to questions one and two.

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    • CONTRIBUTORS

      LISA SALEM set out to walk the whole of LA pushing a baby-stroller with a video-camera attached to the end of it, facing inwards. When people approached her, she invited them to walk with her while she videoed their conversations. She posted those videos to a blog and in the process attracted a large and intrigued audience to what she was doing. Since then, Lisa's been looking at the process of audience-building in detail. She lives in London now and when not working on her film-portrait of Los Angeles "WALK LA WITH ME", she runs workshops that help filmmakers be more independent.

      LANCE WEILER has written and directed two feature films (Head Trauma, The Last Broadcast) which he self distributed all over the world. Lance is the founder of the Workbook Project, and is currently working on a number of film, TV and cross-media projects.