Hello Animoto

It turns out that “video slideshows” don’t always have to be the type that crash your browser after clicking a friend’s chaotic MySpace profile. Animoto is now making it easy for those of us who know little about multimedia (and even less about editing and syncing audio) to create nifty little slideshows.

The startup keeps it simple with two account options. You can choose a free account which allows you to create all the 30-second videos that you like. (Approx. 15 uploaded images). Or, you can pay $3 for a feature length video.

Quote of the Day

You’re just trying to do something natural and normal, but you’re being treated like a second-class citizen… You have a country that sees breasts only for sexual purposes.

Maren McGimsey, who joined about 200 others to demonstrate in support of breast-feeding at a Lexington Applebee’s.

Makes you want to start skating again

Yonder Nation

yonder-screenshot.jpg

According to Bill Bishop and Julie Ardery, information inequality between rural and urban America is widening into a canyon:

“Our cousins can’t buy a Dallas Morning News in San Angelo. It used to be delivered, but the paper has pulled out of rural Texas — just as the Louisville paper has closed its bureaus in rural Kentucky. Meanwhile, small-town weeklies are shrinking, too – fewer ads, skinnier editions, less news coverage.”

Enter The Daily Yonder, a recently launched online publication with a goal to “promote a vigorous and honest debate about the life, culture, and social issues of rural America.” The Yonder is produced by the Center for Rural Strategies, a group featured on this site back in 2003 for their efforts to stop CBS from creating “The Real Beverly Hillbillies.” The project has also received financial backing from organizations such as the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the Nathan Cummings Foundation, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

Initial response to the publication looks strong and the Daily Yonder has popped up on everything from the Daily Kos to small rural blogs.

I got involved with the Yonder project this past February, consulting on CMS decisions (they wisely chose Drupal) and doing the visual design. Congrats to Bill, Julie, and the Whitesburg group for launching such an urgently needed rural voice.

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