By Lance Weiler, August 1st, 2009

Thanks to all the volunteers, speakers and attendees who helped to make DIY DAYS Philadelphia such a success. Close to 300 people attended the day which included 40 speakers and 22 sessions in two different spaces.

The event yesterday showed the power that a community can have as people traveled in from all over the US not only to attend but also to volunteer their time and talents.

Over the coming days we’ll be releasing photos, video and audio from the event. It is all open media and you’re free to embed and spread.

And as we plan additional locations for DIY DAYS we welcome your suggestions. work [@] workbookproject [dot] com

Here’s a sampling of some images from yesterday. Check back for more. If you shot any photos, video or recorded audio please send us a link. We’d love to include it in the overall archive of the day. For those who shot photos feel free to share them via the ‘diydays‘ photo pool on Flickr.

Special thanks to Rich Hoffman, Aaron Matzkin, and Bruce Pinchbeck for snapping photos throughout the day.

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted in DIYDays event

Lance Weiler is the founder of the WorkBook Project and also a story architect of film, tv and games. He's written and directed two feature films THE LAST BROADCAST and HEAD TRAUMA. He's currently developing a number of transmedia projects.

RELATED
COMMENTS

  • Ian
    Does anyone have a link to a recording of the full 2010 Filmmaker Summit? I listened that day live but want to share it with our team. Thanks!
  • I had a thought after listening to Tim Westergen talk about Pandora Radio and the Gnome project, and how that should be applied to films. Many filmmakers are frustrated with the rejections they get from film festivals. Arin Crumley and Susan Buice really shed a lot of light on this process with Four Eyed Monsters and the accompanying vlogs where they talk about the festival and marketing processes they went through. So add 2+2 and what you get is this: a gnome film festival.

    If you're not familiar with gnome, listen to Tim on the Workbook Project's This Conference is being Recorded archives. The Gnome project categories music, one track at a time into a multitude of categories with ratings in each one (as I understand it). As Tim says, this translates into a truly democratic form of music promotion based on these categories and based on comparing the music that a listener wants to hear with other music that has the same characteristics.

    So there would really be no direct all encompassing human judgment factor on rating an entire film. It's more on these individual traits. In film you could have categories like acting, actor, directing, director, photography, DP, genre, running time, locations, production company, on and on.

    This makes so much sense for film festivals where fairness really is an important issue and one that is now clearly forsaken over branding, theme, diversity and other marketing factors that really are what drive film festivals.

    Of course the gnoming [sic] of thousands of films submitted to festivals would be a monumental undertaking. So I think it would have to be something of a universal service for all festivals (like Withoutabox, which in fact already does this on a very small scale of non-merit factors), where you have a company categorize films and then you'd have festivals look at that database and select what they want. But again you could end up with festivals choosing films based more on marketing factors than quality or originality or other more merit type factors, and you'd also have to deal with devising a good objective way to rate acting, writing, directing and artist type performance.

    Perhaps there could be a new wave of festivals that would choose film solely on the merit and quality categories, or at least those could be the primary factors with marketing playing a secondary role.

    Another important point here is that filmmakers need and even crave objective feedback. This would give them that feedback and could even serve as a marketing information database for the entire industry. Filmmakers, studios, distributors and anyone involved with film production or distribution should be willing to pay at least something for such a service.

    I'm both a filmmaker and an experienced data-driven software project developer and I think his would be really not a big deal to make happen. But it would cost. It would take a lot of labor to categorize films, and ongoing labor to maintain it; plus coming up with categorization strategies would also be a major hurdle. But probably Tim and the Gnome Project could help out with some insight on that.
blog comments powered by Disqus
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • delicious
  • youtube
  • vimeo

Join the WorkBook Project mailing list - enter your email below...

WORKBOOK PROJECT flickr
Picture 1.pngDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall PanelDIY Days: Town Hall Panel
WORKBOOK PROJECT twitter
READ

Today

generic (feed #11)
6:40pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #11)
6:31pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #11)
6:15pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #11)
5:56pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #11)
5:50pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #12)
5:44pm via Mashable
generic (feed #11)
5:25pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #10)
5:21pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #17)
5:15pm via Pitchfork
generic (feed #10)
5:01pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #11)
5:00pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #12)
4:53pm via Mashable
generic (feed #10)
4:52pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #17)
4:45pm via Pitchfork
generic (feed #12)
4:33pm via Mashable
generic (feed #10)
4:28pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #11)
4:11pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #17)
4:10pm via Pitchfork
generic (feed #10)
4:08pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #10)
4:05pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #17)
4:00pm via Pitchfork
generic (feed #7)
3:52pm via FM Blog
generic (feed #12)
3:44pm via Mashable
generic (feed #8)
3:40pm via Hammer To Nail
generic (feed #12)
3:36pm via Mashable
generic (feed #11)
3:32pm via Read Write Web
generic (feed #10)
3:21pm via Tech Crunch
generic (feed #17)
3:10pm via Pitchfork
generic (feed #12)
2:56pm via Mashable
generic (feed #17)
2:55pm via Pitchfork
generic (feed #12)
2:40pm via Mashable
Podcast Archive