Georgia Podcast Network blog

Local podcasting news and announcements, with side trips into other topics.

Georgia Podcast Network redesign is live!

The redesign of the Georgia Podcast Network is live!

The short version of what's new is:

  • Create podcasts, add episodes to them, or add your affiliate podcast to the directory without having to go through an administrator. Podcasts now work sort of like diaries on Tondee's Tavern and other group blogs. Everybody can have one, but not everything makes the front page.
  • Let other members post episodes to your podcast. You can name co-hosts individually, or set the "group podcast" option to let any registered member post an episode. For examples of group podcasts, see (un)ConCast and Politics is Vocal.
  • Album art, channel, and other meta information can be attached to podcasts
  • Post M4V video in addition to MP3 audio
  • Nifty Flash uploader
  • Embeddable players and widgets
  • iTunes meta information in podcast RSS feeds
  • Can redirect podcast RSS feeds to Feedburner
  • Webplay and download statistics
  • Rebuilt podcast directory
  • Pretty new theme
  • Better performance. Up to 8 times faster under normal server load

That's not everything, but that's the important stuff. There are still some minor CSS issues to work out in Internet Explorer 6, but it should be relatively bug-free other than that. Have a look and let us know what you think!

Mostly ITP live tonight

Assuming our Internet connection doesn't crap out and any of a million other technical maladies don't afflict us, we're going to attempt a live episode of Mostly ITP tonight on Talkshoe. The only things we have planned right now are to play a couple of listener voicemails and to talk a little about Sex 2.0, which is coming up next Saturday. That's maybe 10 minutes of material. If people actually call in, we'd like to spend the rest of the time addressing topics from live callers. If you don't, I guess we'll just bullshit for 20 minutes.

Here is the relevant info:

Time: 9 p.m. EST
Stream and web chat URL: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/17403
Phone: (724) 444-7444, call ID 17403
Twitter: amberlrhea and rustytanton

Update April 7, 10:15 a.m. Comcast crapped out on us about 12 minutes in, causing about 3 minutes of dead air (which we edited out after the fact), but it went fine otherwise. You can listen here.

After Amber's conference is over, we may try to regularly schedule one or two live podcasts a month and balance that out with interviews like we had been doing. Let us know what you liked and didn't like about this first edition.

Sex 2.0 is next weekend!

Sex 2.0

What is Sex 2.0?

Sex 2.0 will focus on the intersection of social media, feminism, and sexuality. How is social media enabling people to learn, grow, and connect sexually? How is sexual expression tied to social activism? Does the concept of transparency online offer new opportunities or present new roadblocks -- or both? These questions, and many more, will be addressed within a safe, welcoming, sex-positive space.

Respecting the confidentiality and protecting the identities of participants who wish to maintain a degree of anonymity will be a top priority at Sex 2.0.

When? April 12, 2008
Where? 1763~A Deviant Place of Decadence, 1763 Montreal Circle, Tucker, Ga., 30084
How much? $50.

REGISTRATION IS MANDATORY. We will not be taking any walk-up registrations at the door.

At Sex 2.0, everyone is a participant rather than a passive attendee. This is YOUR event!

New Sex 2.0 podcast promos

We've updated the podcast promos to reflect the change of venue to 1763. They're identical otherwise:

15-second meat-and-potatoes
http://sex20con.com/promos/sex-2.0-promo-2.0-15sec.mp3

30-second with-a-flourish
http://sex20con.com/promos/sex-2.0-promo-2.0-30sec.mp3

Thanks to everyone who has been using the promos in your podcasts! Please be sure to download these updates.

New Sex 2.0 press release ready for prime-time!

Many thanks to Bitch | Lab for writing this press release and Kristi Kane for making edits! Please spread it far and wide, on your own blogs and to any media pals you may have.

---
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:
Amber Rhea
Main organizer, Sex 2.0
678-389-9441
Email: sex20con@gmail.com
Web site: www.sex20con.com

Sex 2.0 will explore sexuality, feminism and social media

ATLANTA -- What happens when technology, sex, knowledge, and power enable women to meet up, act up, and hook up like never before? These questions and more are the focus of the Sex 2.0 unconference in Atlanta, Georgia on April 12th, 2008. Held at 1763, a 10,000-square-foot, fully equipped dungeon located 10 miles north of downtown Atlanta, the unconference will feature conversations among activists, social networking pioneers, bloggers, swingers, cruisers, sex futurists and kinksters who have been sexing up Web 2.0 from the beginning -- whether in Bangalore or Bangor, Maine.

Maybe you've heard of Web sites like Facebook, Craigslist, or Flickr. They're all social networking sites, the heart of a revolution in the way people produce and share knowledge, make friends, reach out for support, and create professional and personal networks.

When women need help with health, sexual, or personal problems, where do they turn? In a recent Pew Poll, researchers found that women were more likely to turn to the Web for knowledge and support. (Reference: Pew Internet & American Life Project, "How Women and Men Use the Internet," online at http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Women_and_Men_online.pdf).

It's that heady combination of technology, sex, and knowledge in the hands of women (and men) that fascinates well-known Atlanta-area tech/sex blogger Amber Rhea and inspired her to organize the event. She's not alone. The grassroots unconference will explore these issues with notable and notorious Web-based activists. On April 12, Sex 2.0 participants will:

  • Hear keynote speaker Audacia Ray -- blogger, video podcaster, award-winning porn director and author of Naked on the Internet - Hookups, Downloads, and Cashing in on Internet Sexploration.
  • Stimulate your "Sex Drive" with Regina Lynn, Wired magazine's sex-tech columnist and author of Sexier Sex: Lessons from the Brave New Sexual Frontier. In her session "How Love/Sex Happens Online," Lynn will explore the powerful and unexpected experiences people have with online lovers and what it all means inside the hearts of geekdom. Because sex is the first use for any new technology, Lynn will demonstrate how to get the most out of your phone, webcam or laptop and how to use your everyday gadgets to enhance intimacy, pleasure and fun.
  • Explore sexual relationships that spring from online meeting places like blogs and forums in sessions with sex futurist Melissa Gira, who runs the award-winning sex blog Sexerati, and contributes to $pread, WHORE!, Best Sex Writing 2008, and Dirty Girls.
  • Make history with T.A. Hines' session, "A Brief History of Sex." Hines is the irreverent, popular podcaster and Nerve magazine columnist who chronicles her funky brown chick take on sex and New York City in her weekly Internet radio show Dating Roadkill.
  • Tempt your inner erotic writer with sex bloggers and writers like Rachel Kramer Bussel, who keeps things tingling at her Lusty Lady blog, and Viviane, who heats up the Web with her blog Viviane's Sex Carnival.
  • Mix it up with j. brotherlove, Joseph G., Minx and Ren, who'll host rollicking sessions about online dating, cruising, hooking up, BDSM, and swinging whether for kinksters, sexual, ethnic and racial minorities, straight, curious, and in-between

Rhea says she wants the interactive sessions to be a place where people create the experience they need. "This is not your father's sex conference," she said. "An unconference belongs to the people who come -- double entendre intended."

People are often puzzled by an unconference, said Rhea, but it's almost always an experience that makes you never want to attend an ordinary conference again. "You won't be in a room, sitting on your hands, waiting for a one-way presentation. It's just like sex, really: a powerful interaction between people that makes the experience more than the people involved."

Registration for the event is $10 by February 17, $40 until March 28, and $50 after March 28, with the rest of the cost underwritten by volunteers and sponsors. There are still opportunities for sponsors who want to reach their audience -- people at the center of a new media that's changing the way we live.

Rhea thinks that the approach will attract a wide audience: "Everyone will be there to both raise and answer questions, teach and learn -- you can do both in one session. It's up to you."

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My letter to Creative Loafing

The new issue of Creative Loafing is out, and they didn't run my letter to the editor. I had gotten an email from someone on their staff saying they might run it, which is why I waited before posting anything on my blog. So here it is. Later I might do a follow-up post on my blog, expanding on some of these points and including some other points that I had to cut out in order to keep it around 500 words.

Also, if you have not contacted Creative Loafing regarding this story, please consider doing so. Nothing will change if people don't speak up, loudly and unapologetically!

---

I'm writing to express my disappointment with the 1.16.08 feature, "One man's battle against Midtown prostitutes and their johns," by Andisheh Nouraee.

There are two separate matters here. The first, and most obvious, is that Gower and Denby are dangerous vigilantes. I am glad that their deplorable tactics are being exposed.

It should go without saying that posting videos of sex workers on YouTube is a horrible idea. What is the goal? Sex workers – especially street prostitutes – are disproportionately the targets of violent crime. Violent criminals target sex workers because they know they can get away with it. (In fact, this was the exact justification given by Gary Ridgway, who was convicted of the murders of over 40 prostitutes.) Gower's dehumanization of sex workers through his behavior and language perpetuates the cultural mores that make such violence acceptable.

But I am also disappointed with Nouraee's treatment of the issue. Nouraee learned about Gower's harassment of street workers at an event I helped organize at Charis Books, commemorating the 5th annual International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers. After the program, he spoke with the other two organizers and me and expressed interest in learning more and possibly doing a story.

Nouraee sat through our program that night and listened as people recounted individual encounters with Gower, citing Gower's blatant homophobia and transphobia. He listened as we discussed the glaring absence of sex workers' voices in the media, as well as the fact that when sex workers are mentioned in the media, they are either troublemakers or victims – in other words, they're not people; they're useful objects in making a point and reinforcing a stereotype.

He spoke with several sex workers that night and a few weeks later, while doing research for this story. He expressed concern about making sure to include sex workers' voices.

If Nouraee tried to speak with street prostitutes in Midtown and they did not want to speak to him, he could have mentioned it in the article. Reporters do this all the time ("so-and-so declined to comment"). If that were the case, he could also reflect on why sex workers might be wary of talking to a reporter. Could it be because they're tired of having their words (and existence) twisted to fit whatever agenda is at hand?

Nouraee fails as an investigative reporter with this piece, especially as one for a paper that claims to be alternative. Terms like "transvestitute" and "real female" go unchallenged and uncorrected. Nouraee does not probe Gower about why Gower is so fixated on harassing prostitutes. He does not examine how the criminalization of prostitution perpetuates the violence that many people associate with street prostitution. He does not discuss the societal and economic conditions that lead to many transpeople working on the streets.

For people who are interested in learning more about sex workers' rights activism, some good sources of information are SWOP-USA, Desiree Alliance, COYOTE and $pread Magazine.

Sex 2.0 seeking a new venue

Sex 2.0 has lost its venue. Spring4th has been forced to close its doors due to the meddling of the Midtown Neighborhood Association (the same people responsible for the appalling harassment of street prostitutes) and the arcane hoops through which the City of Atlanta has forced them to jump. We are currently seeking a new venue. We need all the help we can get - time, energy, MONEY, resources, everything.

If you can help, please join the Google group ASAP.

More details to come soon.

[Cross-posted on the Sex 2.0 blog]

Amber is on the TeeVee!

Check it out, Amber is in the latest Download Squad Squadcast!


Wherein she talks about (what else?) podcasting. I know she's a little self-conscious about being on video, but I think it went smashingly.

Like Amber says in the video, the main thing that's fun to us about podcasting is it gives us an excuse to go out and talk to people we think are interesting. To a lesser degree, that's what remains fun to me about blogging. I think if I was just sitting around typing words and sending them out into the ether without meeting new people, blogging would get boring to me very quickly.

Also, since it's Amber Press Day, check out this article titled Ten Hot Sexuality (And Gender) Issues of 2007 by our friend Audacia Ray. The GDGF is quoted about pole dancing.

Cross-posted to Radical Georgia Moderate

Sex 2.0 podcast promos available

On the Sex 2.0 Promotion page, we've posted two audio promos that you can download and include in your podcasts. The 15-second promo is all business; no funny stuff. The 30-second promo has a little humor to it. Please include one of them in your podcast if the spirit moves!

[Cross-posted at the Sex 2.0 blog]

End of year podcast coming soon: leave a message, we'll play it!

Mostly ITP

The end of another year is coming soon, which means another end-of-year episode of Mostly ITP! Here's last year's episode.

We try not to get all PBS-beg-a-thon about asking people for participation in things, but it would be nice if y'all would leave some voicemails for us to play. Have a favorite episode? Have an episode that made you want to veer off the road into a telephone pole in disgust? Don't listen to the show, but do a great impression of Charles Bronson baking a pie wearing nothing but an apron and a smile? We'd love to hear from you.

You can call and leave us voicemail at 678.389.9441, or you can leave a message on my Skype account at rustytanton.

Thanks!

Cross-posted to Radical Georgia Moderate