Media Impact Spotlight – Ep6 – Jon Siskel & Greg Jacobs

LTAB PosterLouder Than a Bomb is a documentary featuring some of the most brilliant youth across Chicago competing in the world’s largest youth poetry slam. Watching its trailer was enough to get me inspired, give me goosebumps, and leave me wanting to see more. Winner of the Audience Choice Award and Standing Up Film Competition (for films that celebrate social justice and activism) in the Cleveland International Film Festival, Louder Than a Bomb shows you the incredible power that spoken word has to move an audience and bring community together. And now, with its television release on the Oprah Winfrey Network as part of the OWN Documentary Club set for this Fall, LTAB is poised to spark change across the nation; especially timely now, when arts education programs are being cut at an alarming rate.

As part of my learning journey of how media can be utilized as powerful tools to engage our communities, I asked to meet with Louder Than a Bomb directors Jon Siskel & Greg Jacobs. Hear what they have to say about the impact they want to create with their film and how they plan to maximize it.

Thank you, Jon and Greg, for being most welcoming to me. It was a fun visit! :)

Media Impact Spotlight is a web video series featuring professionals utilizing various forms of media for positive social change. Watch previous episodes and subscribe to the series here.

Entrepreneurs Unpluggd in Chicago!

The first ever Entrepreneurs Unpluggd event in Chicago, organized by Stella Fayman and Tim Jahn, was a relatively intimate gathering of like-minded individuals, brought together to hear the stories of some of the most successful online business owners around. Since I’m on a journey to starting a media social enterprise of my own, I figured it’d be a really good learning opportunity. The lineup for the night? The founders of Sittercity.com, ContactKarma.com, FoiledCupcakes.com, crowdSPRING.com and GrubHub.com. Pretty impressive stuff!

Missed out on the event? No worries. Here’s a quick re-cap of what went down:

Genevieve Thiers – SitterCity.com SitterCity Logo

“Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good.”

  • Started what’s essentially a match.com for parents and caregivers when she saw a pregnant woman walking around campus flyering for a nanny.
  • Startup cost was $12K and it was just her and her laptop for the first 4 years.
  • Marketing your online company has 3 stages: Grassroots level -> Direct Marketing -> Brand Marketing
  • Pitched herself as the “babysitting expert”, which later landed her 6 segments on The Today Show.

YSL: She’s essentially taken what people were already doing, and put the process online. Brilliant.

Dan Ratner – ContactKarma.com ContactKarma Logo

“Customer = someone who pays you for stuff.”

  • Started a service for finding vendors your friends use. Site’s still in beta.
  • Selling to small businesses is just as hard as selling to big ones
  • Get the customer to tell you what they need
  • Talk about your product. A lot.
  • Sometimes intuition is not the same as reality

YSL: Interesting concept that’s kinda like yelp.com and facebook rolled into one. Injects some fun into searching for services.

Mari Luangrath – FoiledCupcakes.com FoiledCupcakes Logo

“People love opportunities to interact with other people with common interests.”

  • Found there was no bakery around that would deliver cupcakes to her without charging exorbitant delivery fees.
  • Started this online cupcake store 1.5 years ago with social media as her only form of marketing
  • Targeted office admins because they wanted to sell by the dozens. Who organizes parties? Who has $$?
  • Hire people who are smarter than you

YSL: Those cupcakes look delicious. Keeping them in mind for my company’s next event! I loved the way they handled a mistake they’d recently made. It’s a great example of what to do.

Ross Kimbarovsky – crowdSPRING.com CrowdSpring Logo

“Look bigger than you are.”

  • Wanted to help small and mid-sized businesses find graphic design services more easily
  • Found first buyers by paying friends to post projects on their site
  • Held a public project where designers were invited to compete to design the crowdSPRING site.
  • Had to very carefully manage the backlash from the design community because they were changing the way the world of design worked.

YSL: I love this. Crowdsourced design services. Just what I’ll need for when I revamp my website! Discovered them when they featured JJ’s List on their blog as one of the top influencers in the world of crowdsourcing.

Matt Maloney – GrubHub.com grubhub logo

“Find a good partner who brings different perspectives and skill sets to the company.”

  • Started online food delivery directory in 2004 when he got sick of pizza delivery from this one place
  • Started with 2 people in his house
  • Customer Service must be at the core of his business.
  • In case of a screw up, make the resolution A LOT better than the problem.

YSL: This is the only service that I’d actually used before the event. Definitely made my being sick and unable to go out to buy food a lot easier to manage. Their ads are peppered all over the trains… which I would imagine has paid off well for them, since that’s how I discovered them in the first place.

What a great event. Thanks Stella and Tim for organizing this. I can’t wait for the next one!

Media Impact Spotlight – Ep5 – Van Jones

I had the opportunity to meet Van Jones recently. Best known for being an environmental advocate and bestselling author of The Green Collar Economy, President Barack Obama appointed him as the Special Advisor for Green Jobs back in 2009. Hear what he has to say about the most pertinent issue we need to tackle in 2011, and what the media’s role should be.

Thanks to Northwestern SEED for organizing the event and inviting Van Jones for their Fall Speaker series. It was incredibly inspiring and enjoyable.


Media Impact Spotlight is a web video series featuring professionals utilizing various forms of media for positive social change. Watch previous episodes and subscribe to the series here.

How to make GMOs

Vandana Shiva, noted environmentalist in 2007,...
Image via Wikipedia

I’m sure you’ve come across the words GMO or generically modified organism at some point, but what does it really mean? Is genetically modified food truly safe for consumption?

My dear friend Taylor McNulty’s been working on a documentary about genetically modified food in India and how it’s adversely affecting the farmers there. She had an amazing opportunity to work closely with a physicist and environmental activist Dr. Vandana Shiva, who created Navdanya, a movement to “protect the diversity and integrity of living resources, especially the native seed, the promotion of organic farming and fair trade“.

To help us understand just how GMOs are made, Taylor asked me to create some simple animation to accompany Dr. Shiva’s explanation of the process. I agreed in a heartbeat. :) Check it out: