“Print is Dead” How Creative Professionals will Survive the Internet Tidal Wave

Author @thatjeffgomez
I just wanted a book about the Publishing Industry. Okay, what I really wanted was an eBook about the Publishing Industry, published in the last five years. What I found was much, much, more.

The more you try to understand what’s happening to the Publishing industry, the more you start thinking about what’s already happened to the Music and Film industry. It’s all part of the same story.

The Internet = Disintermediation. Taking out the middle man. Here we are, in 2011. Gone are Tower Records and Blockbuster Movie rentals. Many of their competitors have been sold off, and everything (legal and illegal) is going digital, and put up on the web, to be shot between our phones, tablets and connected TVs. This is the dream, right? But if it means Artists aren’t making any money (so they quit making art, and become bankers) then what’s it all for? We need to understand how creative professionals (no matter what form their creativity takes) are going to deal with the onslaught of the Internet. Continue reading

“Blink” Learn to Speak the Language of Intuition

Author @gladwell

Years ago, Legendary NBA Coach (recently retired) Phil Jackson started handing out books to his players, to rectify any flaws or hone any mental aspects of the game in the offseason. If a player had a problem with his jumpshot or defense, that could be rectified in practice, but if a player had an overarching attitude problem, or consistency problem, maybe that would have to be rectified with reading, and contemplation. And so, as far back as the Chicago Bulls era, Phil was handing out what he thought were great books, each one suited for each unique player’s game, personality and weaknesses.

A few years ago, I remember hearing he gave “Blink” to Kobe Bryant. Kobe, more than anything, has been known for these insane last second buzzer beater shots. He’s taken tons of them. And if you factor in all the shots he missed, frankly, his hit/miss ratio isn’t even that good. As the leader and captain on the team, he keeps finding himself with the ball in his hands at the end of games, and usually, he can get a shot off. Phil knew that Kobe was under incredible pressure late in games, in moments where every millisecond counts, and that’s why he gave Kobe this book. If Kobe could just stop thinking altogether, he’d know exactly what to do. What could you improve if you could switch off your mind in the clutch?

This review is going to sound like a Coda to the Steve Jobs book from last week. It just turned out that way. Steve, time and time again, relied on his intuition, laying waste to months and months of work, design, coding, budgets etc. What is our Intuition, really, and why is it so damn smart (at some things), if our senses and hunches seem, at first, so vague? Continue reading

“Steve Jobs”: Asshole. Impresario. Artist.

Author @WalterIsaacson Recommended@gruber

Before I’d even got this book on my Kindle,I’d already written about 3000 words of ‘notes’ for this review. After all, I’d been using Apple products my whole life. Surely, I thought, there’s nothing in the book that’s going to change my opinions. Boy was I wrong. A word of warning: if you love Apple, or its co-founder, or its design aesthetic, or its amazing brand, be prepared to see everything in this book, including things you don’t wanna read. Finding out intimate details about Apple, is kind of like going backstage at a Led Zeppelin concert in the 70′s and seeing your heroes wasted, and babbling like babies, surrounded by bimbos. You might not be ready to meet your heroes, and find they’re human. Maybe that’s what’s so heartbreaking about Steve’s passing. He was human after all. And we wanted him so bad to live up to his image, as a perpetually young, dashing, charismatic genius, who seemingly waved his hands, and showed us the future. Continue reading

“Your Brain At Work” The User Guide for that great big brain of yours.

Author @davidrock101

I know what you’re thinking: a book on how to use your brain? It’s not so intuitive as you think. As it turns out, the brain has been one of the least understood ‘realms’ in science, and only very recently are some huge discoveries being made that totally change the way we view, and hopefully, use it. Continue reading

“Leonardo” by Martin Kemp

Leonardo da Vinci has always been a hero of mine. While we have many academic and mathematical geniuses to pick from ( Galileo, Einstein, Newton etc), only a few of them revealed themselves to truly multifaceted as did Leonardo.  It is for this reason that Leonardo is referred to as a Renaissance Man. It’s not just that he seemed to be multi-talented (and alas, ambidextrous, as his reverse writing seemed to flaunt), but that he was so delightfully curious and interested in much of life, and never resigned himself to just music, or just painting, or just calculation.

How is this possible? And what was his method? What was it that drove him? Continue reading

“The Why of Work” by David Ulrich and Wendy Ulrich

Author: @dave_ulrich

On a recent business trip, I cut some Sherlock Holmes browsing on my Kindle to, like a addict, stroll into another bookstore. Most of what I saw was pretty blah (some very overpriced books on ‘How to think like the Chinese’ in business), but this thing caught my attention straight away. Putting Dr. Watson aside for a moment, I downloaded the free sample onto my Kindle, and checked it out. I know, I know. I’ve been burned by this in the past–a great title, a great cover. But this Why thing was gnawing at me.

I guess it was Simon Sinek’s fault.
Continue reading