rebecca lynn eisenberg on Tue, 23 Mar 1999 08:34:24 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> jodi.org winner of webby award |
(By request ... typos courtesy of the newspaper (and me, too lazy to edit now.)) http://eXaminer.com/990321/0321skink.shtml http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/examiner/hotnews/stories/20/Bski nk21.dtl I liked it ... I really liked it by Rebecca Lynn Eisenberg NetSkink Columnist San Francisco Examiner Sunday, March 21, 1999 "Welcome!" smiled two photographers decked in retro Stetson hats, zoot suits and matching cameras directing us toward the entrance of Herbst Theatre. Flashes lighting the path from both sides, we strolled down the red carpet, smiled and waved. Four floodlights criss-crossed the horizon behind us. It felt like a Hollywood film premiere. Even though we had dressed for the part (tuxedos and all), we weren't in Hollywood, and this was not a premiere. We were in San Francisco, and the event was our own arguably contrived glam-night: the third annual Webby Awards. What started as a small awards event to promote a no-longer-published magazine has grown into a media monster. And, while it would have been easy to mock the presumptuousness of it all, I couldn't. I was having too much fun. "This is Matt Beer," I told the five Webby Award staffers guarding the press check-in area, lying about my escort, who was not the Examiner technology reporter of that name. "He is not on our list," one of them responded, paging through her lists of pre-approved guests and ultimately letting both of us in regardless (with an admonishment that only one of us could sit in the press area at the ceremony). Flanked by similarly penguin-suited judges, sponsors and other so-called digerati, we skipped up the stairs and into the VIP party, where technology stars like Esther Dyson sipped champagne in tall glasses and television crews from ZDTV and PBS Internet Cafe shined portable spotlights on guest interviews. "Two of my sites are competing against each other for the same award," said Mary Furlong, the ever-affable and charismatic CEO and founder of ThirdAge Media and SeniorNet, before disappearing into the crowd of women wearing shiny, silver, full-length evening gowns and schmoozing up tuxedo'd men. The scene had nothing in common with the first Webby Awards, held at Bimbo's in North Beach a mere two years earlier. I had attended that show as well, working on behalf of MediaCast, the company hired to conduct the Webcast of the event. Although the awards ceremony had strived to be an A-list gala from the beginning, it was not until this year that it finally came into its own. Those of us whose roots remain firmly planted in the independent home page and 'zine scene of the early Web days were supposed to be aghast at the spectacle of it all: Well-coiffed, overnight-millionaire Internet start-up entrepreneurs who couldn't write a single UNIX command if you paid them. AOL-account-holding Internet newbies who happen to be Silicon Valley venture capitalists. Scenester wannabes passing out business cards that didn't have personal URLs. But when I ran into fellow old-timers, they were smiling, too. "I had to come because of the free drinks!" laughed one woman I knew from the mailing list for San Francisco Women on the Web as we were ushered out the door of the pre-party into the red-velvet performance hall, where the ceremony was about to begin. It takes a real touch to embrace deep-pocketed sponsors without alienating computer geeks, and for that feat, credit belongs to Tiffany Schlain, the Webby Awards' original and current creative director and executive producer and a master of public relations at the young age of 28. When she took the stage to kick off the ceremony, it was clear that Schlain lives up to the hype she had generated for herself and the event. "In the '60's, we thought that we would be speaking Esperanto," said Schlain, speaking at the podium to the almost-full house (the press section having ample seats for both my Matt-Beer-imposter and me). "But now we know that the true international language is (Web hypertext mark-up language) HTML." "The Web is still the great equalizer," Schlain continued, wearing a silver shiny gown, 8-inch platform boots and a sleeveless vest decorated with computer digit 1's and 0's. She gave a nod to the indies in the audience before rattling off the list of high-powered sponsors of the evening, including Hewlett-Packard, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Intel, Levi's, AboveNet, BroadVision, local Web developer Vivid Studios, Absolut, and Visa, among others. "Doesn't she look like a digital diva," said Mayor Willie Brown, taking the stage after Schlain. "The Webbies is where it's at," he said before ceding the floor to the third and most charismatic speaker of the evening: Schlain's grandmother. "I am 941/2 years old," Francis Schlain said as she sat in a wheelchair at the stage's center, "and I have a song to sing: 'A good Web site is hard to find. You somehow get the other kind. ...' " Sure, it was cheesy, but with the master of ceremonies, comedian Marc Meron (whose geek-savvy routine was replete with Web gripes, e-mail woes and Radio Shack references); the silver-coil and latex-wrapped Awards Mistress Marina Berlin; and the five-word acceptance speech limit gratefully followed by the awards winners, the audience was entertained. Like it or not, the Web has gone commercial. Even when the same Amazon.com employee - Colin Needham of Amazon-owned Internet Movie Database - stepped up to the stand to accept three of the 22 awards, few in the audience seemed surprised or upset. And even though the eccentric winners of the art category, Jodi.org, cursed the crowd with their five-word speech ("Ugly commercial sons of bitches!") their European accents belied their complicity in the ugly commercialism they condemned: They had traveled thousands of miles to attend. Perhaps they had hoped to see the celebrity judges, whose ranks included musicians David Bowie and Bjork, X-Files actress Gillian Anderson and Mary-Ellis Bunim, executive producer of MTV's Real World as well as very few actual Web experts. If so, they left unsatisfied because the Hollywood celebrities were absent. Across the street at the Intel-sponsored post-ceremony bash at City Hall, though, there was no shortage of genuine Web luminaries among the tables of complimentary polenta, vegetarian noodles and Mediterranean wraps (not to mention a bar in every corner). "Jodi.org is punk rock," laughed Brian Behlendorf, co-founder of the Apache Group, the development team behind the world's most popular Web server software, and chief of technology of new ventures at O'Reilly and Associates. Behlendorf, who is credited with writing much of the code that powers the majority of sites on the Web, is nothing if not humble. Was he having a good time? "Of course!" "It's a great time," agreed Jeff Burchell, the UNIX guru and Web programmer who was one of the original hands-on creators of the Web's first commercial site, HotWired, and a genuine Web luminary himself. Now working as the vice president of operations for a Webby-nominated popular investment site, ClearStation (www.clearstation.com), Burchell didn't seem bitter about his site's loss in the finance sector to Webby-sponsor Motley Fool or about the event's commercial aspect. "We were happy to be nominated," he said. Amid the crowds filling the food-and-drink rooms and the halls with dozens of blazing fast Pentium III computers (which I admittedly found a tad distracting), countless old-time Web geeks were around. From founder of recently acquired 3D Web design shop Construct.net, Lisa Goldman, to Burning Man Festival mistress of communications Marion Goodell, they seemed to be enjoying the corporate-sponsored festivities just as much as I was. After the headline act, modern-retro blues performer G. Love, had played his two encore numbers, we scooped up our party-favor feather boa and exchanged good-byes. As we left the festivities, one thing seemed clear: Commercialism hasn't killed the Web. It has only brought us better parties. Copyright 1999 San Francisco Examiner and Rebecca Lynn Eisenberg. All rights reserved. Rebecca Lynn Eisenberg, Esq. * mars@bossanova.com * http://www.bossanova.com/rebeca * Columnist, Nouveau Geek, CBS MarketWatch http://CBS.MarketWatch.Com Columnist, Net Skink, SF Examiner http://examiner.com/skink/ --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl