Archive for March 28th, 2008

28
Mar

amazing little things great friends do

Over at the fabulous MetaFilter, someone has asked an amazingly cool question: What little things do great friends do that sets them apart from others?

Some of the best answers are below:

Great friends are people who

  • remember your preferences for food/drink stuff and always make your coffee the way you like it
  • send you little fun stuff in the mail for no reason
  •  remember things that are going on in your life and ask you about them
  • have some magic ability to give advice when you want it and not when you don’t
  • adjust to your level of feeling like you need a friend so if you’re in a bad place, they’re helpful and available, and if you’re busy they’re not overly needily trying to get some of your time
  • have their own lives and friends that enrich yours
  • don’t talk smack about all their other friends making you wonder if they talk that way about you when you’re not around
  • introduce you to other people they think you might like, but also make time to spend time with you one on one
  • have a general sense of your family situation and may ask about it without being obtrusive or stalkery
  • say nice things for no reason. One of my minor adjustments for me trying to be a good friend is to make a real effort to compliment and also accept compliments gracefully
  • don’t dredge up old bad situations and go over them endlessly. Good friends forgive or at least pretend to forget.
  • turn the heat up when you are visiting [I live in New England, this is a HUGE thumbs up]
  • are good talkers and listeners and are decent at adjusting when you are feeling like you need to be more one way than the other
  • are proud of you and your accomplishments and say so
  • don’t always expect 1:1 reciprocation for everything and don’t put you “on the clock” as soon as you ask a question or need advice in their professional specialty
  • do things that require effort sometimes like give rides to the airport or helping move
  • try to say yes instead of saying no, but can say no without it making you feel bad
  • introduce you to new things without pushing you way outside your comfort zone [unless that's the sort of thing you like]
  • can just hang out without there always being some sort of planned activity
  • The first piece of advice, from milarepa, can’t be stressed enough. I learned this in business from a great mentor; she always had the nicest things to say about *everyone*. I thought, “She can’t possibly think so-and-so is ‘brilliant’ or that person is ‘amazing’ at what they do.” In a candid moment, she conceded she didn’t, but no good ever comes of speaking ill of others. So, especially with friends, try hard to seek out their most positive qualities, and praise them often, both in their presence and to others.
  • Respect a secret. Goes without saying, so to speak.
  • Let go of things. There’s nothing more awkward than that ‘friend’ who remembers and every-so-often brings up that time 5 years ago when you missed his big birthday bash to attend a sales conference. People are imperfect; expect them to be so occasionally.
  • Just listen. There are times when being together means commiserating about how sh*tty both of your jobs are, and there are times when your friend just needs you to truly, activally listen to him about a rough patch without interjecting about your own troubles.
  • Send them birthday cards. Or a thank you note. In the mail. Like their grandmother used to do. It sounds Hallmarkian, but there’s something about receiving a piece of mail that opening an email will never, ever equal.
  • Give them unexpected compliments, out of the blue. I have a platonic girlfriend who, one time over lunch 13 years ago, smiled slightly and said, “You’ll be such a handsome guy as you get older. You look a little like Cary Grant.” I thanked her, and we went back to lunch. I still remember it, and it makes me feel good to this day. Be genuine, but again: seek out the best in others.
  • Choose wisely. You can’t devote the necessary time and energy it takes to be a good friend to a large audience of people. In my experience, it’s the quality of relationships that counts, not the quantity. So, decide who amongst your current crop of friends is worth this investment - typically, those who similarly reciprocate kind efforts - and apply what you’ve learned to them.
  • An admirable goal. I often “offer to help” rather than “step in and help,” and I think it is the “stepping in and helping” people that really show their caring. That is, it’s nice to tell someone who is in the process of moving that you’re available to help them move, but a friend who is being really thoughtful is more likely to simply act and provide something helpful, such as a gift certificate to a bed/bath store, or a freezable casserole for the early move-in days before kitchen tools are unpacked, or some DVDs to watch before the cable is turned on. I think it’s about really taking the time to think about what’s it’s like to be in the other person’s situation and what you would need were you in their shoes.

    Never speak ill of people when they are not there, or for that matter, when they are there.

    More: http://ask.metafilter.com/83444/Becoming-a-better-friend

    28
    Mar

    anti-emo riots break out in mexico

    It would seem that the backlash against depressed attention-seeking teenagers broadcasting their childish and self-indulgent inner anguish on MySpace and Bebo is gathering speed and the days of crying about how life isn’t fair are soon to be coming to an end.

    Emo kids are getting the crap kicked out of them, and it’s long overdue. Presumably there will now be a onslaught of depressing haunted songs about self-harming because of it, and MySpace will be filled with bulletins and little “nobody cares about me” pictures.

    “A series of attacks on dyed-hair, eye-makeup-wearing emo kids began in early March when several hundred people went on an emo-beating rampage in Querétaro, a town of 1.5 million about 160 miles north of Mexico City.

    The next week, shaggy-haired emo teenagers were harassed again by punks and rockabillys in the capital, prompting police protection and a segment on the TV news. Most recently, a Mexican newspaper reported that metal heads and gangsters have warned Tijuana’s emo kids to stay away from the town’s fair next month.”

    More: http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2008/03/anti-emo-riots.html

    Update: Just noticed this on Facebook:

    Amy Tipper
    wants to thank Alexander Cameron for saving the day with his blog, Again.

    My pleasure. :)

    28
    Mar

    home entertainment summit chaos

    For those who fancy a day our learning about all things digital, i’m speaking at the Home Entertainment Summit at Vinopolis (SE1 London Bridge) this Tuesday April 1st.

    Home Entertainment Summit 2008 @ Vinopolis
    http://www.hewsummit.co.uk/site.asp?id=40

    • Simon McDowell - SVP Europe, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment,
    • Charlie McAuley - MD, Paramount
    • Chris Weller - MD, Home Entertainment BBC Worldwide
    • Alex Cameron - Entertainment Consultant, Digital TX
    • James Cashmore - Industry Leader Entertainment, Google
    • Lloyd Wigglesworth - Former MD, EUK
    • Neil McEwan - Former MD, Warner Home Video
    • Simon Morris - Marketing Director, Lovefilm
    • Guy Phillipson - CEO, Internet Advertising Bureau
    • Tom Williams - Head of DVD, Abbey Road
    • Martin Talbot - MD, The Official Charts Company
    • James Cashmore - Industry Leader Entertainment,Google
    • Chris Reiser - EVP, Sony DADC
    • Neil McEwan - Former MD, Warner Home Video
    • Simon Morris - Marketing Director, Lovefilm
    • Chris Weller - MD, Home Entertainment BBC Worldwide
    • Ben Drury - CEO, 7 Digital
    • Alexander Bolker-Hagerty - EVPBusiness Development, NME
    • Federico Grosso - SVP Business Development, blinkx
    • Mike Clubbe - Warner Bros Home Entertainment, UK Director of Research

    Google map is here:
    http://maps.google.com/maps?q=SE1+9BU

    28
    Mar

    frank coppen: like father, like grandson

    My mum is forever banging on about how i’m like her father, but it would seem the resemblance is not passing anymore - it’s quite uncanny. His name was Frank Coppen and it’s a wonderful compliment as although i never knew him, he was a great man who was deeply loved by so many people for his character, generosity and warmth.She describes him as the best father she could have ever wished for and said she could talk to him about absolutely anything at all. When he died, he left a huge hole in my family.

    My grandad was a very, very wealthy and successful man who worked his way up in the construction industry to run his own empire in the business world. He was a dominating mason who was hilariously uncouth, weighed over 20 stone and smoked 60 a day, which meant he died from heart disease at 56. Not before he’d set a whole heap of people up in business, put my mum’s cousin Murray through music school, built Thorpe Park and the London Hilton, spent a fortune taking the whole family on holiday every year, or gone through a few Rolls Royces. Apparently he used to lie on the floor and fall asleep on the carpet at Christmas and rip the piss out of my mum’s image-conscious friends.

    But most interestingly, my mum told me a story today about how he gave her a shilling to reward her for telling the truth when he asked her to. So now i realise where my need for absolute honesty comes from. If i could be half the man he was, i’d consider myself a success. Even this year, there are still people saying how much they miss him. Even now.

    Him and i would have got on rather well i think.





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