So, here's the link:
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=411B99FD9018B271
but here it is embedded:
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Friday, November 19, 2010
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
"Christmas Rappin'" for Sears...
When I got hired to be Sears' SANTAMAZING, I had no idea that we'd be doing a rap video...
One of my friends said that I look natural, so that's good!
I used to do rap performances in college; my name was "Bone-E-Luv"- must be why I'm such a pro here.
One of my friends said that I look natural, so that's good!
I used to do rap performances in college; my name was "Bone-E-Luv"- must be why I'm such a pro here.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
I am SANTAMAZING!
So, I shot the stuff for SEARS a few weeks ago, and now the website is up!
It;s all about doing Christmas shopping at SEARS, and my character, "Santamazing" gets great gifts for people by learning about them and going all out. I like the behind the scenes footage they shot in the parking lots and just all around the place. I hope they crank out more stuff!
http://www.Sears.com/Santa
It;s all about doing Christmas shopping at SEARS, and my character, "Santamazing" gets great gifts for people by learning about them and going all out. I like the behind the scenes footage they shot in the parking lots and just all around the place. I hope they crank out more stuff!
http://www.Sears.com/Santa
Friday, September 24, 2010
WGirls NYC First Fall Fling - 4th Annual Bachelor/ette Auction - 357054.jpg - Image 301
Last night I hosted a rather swanky charity auction. I MC'd while we auctioned off eligible bachelors and bachelorettes to raise money for Odyssey House. One of the WGirls- Meghan Goddard asked me to do it, and I was THRILLED.
Everyone had a GREAT time, and we raised about $40,000 fro Odessey House!
Monday, September 13, 2010
I like Seth Godin
Ok, so I have a TON of Seth Godin's Books, and I get excited everytime he releases a new one. I'm also a subscriber of his blog. Today's Blog post goes with my philosophy of "Half-Assed Life":
The myth of preparation
There are three stages of preparation. (For a speech, a product, an interview, a sporting event...)
The first I'll call the beginner stage. This is where you make huge progress as a result of incremental effort.
The second is the novice stage. This is the stage in which incremental effort leads to not so much visible increase in quality.
And the third is the expert stage. Here's where races are won, conversations are started and sales are made. A huge amount of effort, off limits to most people, earns you just a tiny bit of quality. But it's enough to get through the Dip and be seen as the obvious winner.
Here's the myth: The novice stage is useful.
If all you're going to do is go through the novice stage before you ship, don't bother. If you're not prepared to put in the grinding work of the expert stage, just do the beginner stuff and stop screwing around. Make it good enough and ship it and move on.
We diddle around in the novice stage because we're afraid. We polish (but not too much) and go to meetings (plenty of them) and look for deniability, spending hours and hours instead of shipping. And the product, in the end, is not so much better.
I'm all for expertise. Experts, people who push through and make something stunning--we need more of them. But let's be honest, if you're not in the habit of being an expert, it's unlikely your current mode of operation is going to change that any time soon.
Go, give a speech. Go, start a blog. Go, ship that thing that you've been hiding. Begin, begin, begin and then improve. Being a novice is way overrated.
Go sign up for Seth's blog HERE
The myth of preparation
There are three stages of preparation. (For a speech, a product, an interview, a sporting event...)
The first I'll call the beginner stage. This is where you make huge progress as a result of incremental effort.
The second is the novice stage. This is the stage in which incremental effort leads to not so much visible increase in quality.
And the third is the expert stage. Here's where races are won, conversations are started and sales are made. A huge amount of effort, off limits to most people, earns you just a tiny bit of quality. But it's enough to get through the Dip and be seen as the obvious winner.
Here's the myth: The novice stage is useful.
If all you're going to do is go through the novice stage before you ship, don't bother. If you're not prepared to put in the grinding work of the expert stage, just do the beginner stuff and stop screwing around. Make it good enough and ship it and move on.
We diddle around in the novice stage because we're afraid. We polish (but not too much) and go to meetings (plenty of them) and look for deniability, spending hours and hours instead of shipping. And the product, in the end, is not so much better.
I'm all for expertise. Experts, people who push through and make something stunning--we need more of them. But let's be honest, if you're not in the habit of being an expert, it's unlikely your current mode of operation is going to change that any time soon.
Go, give a speech. Go, start a blog. Go, ship that thing that you've been hiding. Begin, begin, begin and then improve. Being a novice is way overrated.
Go sign up for Seth's blog HERE
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