Posts filed under 'blogging'
The smartest guys in the room

Thursday saw Catherine and I host a Smörgåsbord (as well as a hastily put together cheese board*) of blogging and food-loving folk at C4. Present were Hannah from C4’s editorial partners Zone, Producer Catherine, Walid from Trusted Places, Dr Patrick Fullick, Anthony Silverbrow, Chris from Cheesenbiscuits, Ali from C4, Russell Davis, Chris Heathcote, Seb from London Review of Breakfasts, Louise from C4, Andy Pipes also from C4, and me.
The aim was to show our current thinking, tell people what we’re doing and listen to their feedback. We also wanted to have them help bake the idea a bit, and it gave us a chance to discuss the idea - amongst friends, peers and people we respect - and how we see it working. The final aim was to hear their thoughts on how best to approach other bloggers and interested people and invite them to be part of this.
The recent Next on 4 announcement had a large section devoted to new talent. So that’s not just me (blushes) but other voices being given the space to speak on C4. I think sometimes people confuse new talent with young talent, and perhaps this may be true for the likes of E4, but Channel 4’s actually quite a broad church in its output. And one desired outcome of the Big Food Map is to give space to some new regional voices after I’ve departed. We asked the question, what does that relationship and protocol look like?
So how did it go? Well, I was gulping the red down for dutch courage, and though I’d planned a loose agenda, within three minutes I’d abandoned it. I’m rubbish at presenting, great at talking, fantastic at chatting, excellent at the odd joke or funny story, but presenting… I’m crap. So I just went with the flow, and hoped I was making sense.
And the feedback I’ve had has been positive and supportive. But, and quite rightly, there have also been some thoughts on really nailing what the aims are and how to get that message across better. But that’s all to the good. I didn’t want to present a fait accompli and have it rubber-stamped by the group; I wanted their help in stripping it down, examining it, and helping me put it back together better. To go humbly asking for advice and admitting that we’ve not got all the answers takes courage, and it’s also rare in broadcasting. Finally, I just want to say publicly a big thank-you to all who attended. You’ve given me much food for thought.
*Also a thanks to Sarah B for the gift of the French cheese, which formed the bulk of the cheese board.
4 comments 29 March, 2008
Open letter to food bloggers, food geeks and interesting people
- Got an interest in food and blogging?
- Know clever things about the web, quality editorial, local foods, google maps and stuff?
- Want a free tour of Channel 4’s landmark building and a free beer or two?
This is a sort of open invitation to Chris Heathcote, James Bridle, Seb, (all suggested by Russell, who’s also very welcome to attend) Silverbrow, Chris, Toby, Dan (if he wants to come down to London) and any other food geeks who’d like to to come to Channel 4 and have a look at what we’re doing for when Eating Albion is reborn on to Channel4.com.
Obviously you need an interest some of the following: food, blogging, user-generated stuff, Google API, local produce, maps, etc. Present from C4 will be me, Catherine, Andy Pipes and Hannah. The agenda is pretty loose, but I’ll start by opening the beers and explaining a bit about the history of the idea and where we’re up to now, before hopefully having a lively discussion about it. There’s not a huge number of technical things we can add or develop, so this is more about how we harness the editorial and tech together to create something interesting and worthwhile that lasts beyond the seven-month first phase of this project. We think we’ve a good idea of how that will work, but we’d like to hear what you’ve got to say.
The suggested time and date for this shindig is:
5-7pm (or should we make it 6-8pm?)
on any of the following…
Thursday 27th March
Friday 28th March
Tuesday 1st April
Wednesday 2nd April
@ Channel 4, 124 Horseferry Road
To those name-checked above, please use the comments below or mail me to let me know if you can make it so I can get the best date to suit everyone. To any other interested folk who’d like to attend, mail me a link to your blog so I know you know what you’re talking about. We can only really accommodate 15 on top of the C4 people tops.
My email address is eyedropper .at. mac .dot. com.
Afterward I’ll take you on a tour of the C4 building, including a view of the glass phallus, and then maybe a snifter in the pub for those who want to carry on.
PS: I hope this open invite on the internet doesn’t turn into this. It’d be hard explaining to Uncle Andy why 200+ food bloggers smashed up his lovely TV head offices. Arf!
8 comments 17 March, 2008
Oh, Delia, what can the matter be?
All the noise about Delia Smith’s comeback extravaganza has been like when Dylan went electric - the shock, the horror! Mainstream media highlights include an interview with Lynn Barber in this month’s Observer Food Monthly, a journalist well known for being dropped deep behind ‘party lines’, and she takes no prisoners in this either. I bet you could have cut the atmosphere in the room with a butter knife. Nigel Slater, being a more effete soul, chose to sit on the fence a bit in his leader article. Also, for reasons best known to the Guardian Art Director, the Guardian decided to Photoshop Delia’s face onto Vermeer’s The Milkmaid. Eh?
Anyway, what’s interesting is that Delia’s comments have dealt food media a sucker punch – in short, I think most of them feel betrayed. It’s a case of ‘et tu Brute?’ And this recipe is bordering on food blasphemy. As with the Rt Rvd Rowan Williams’ recent controversial speech, bits of what she said have been broken off and fashioned to fit other people’s agendas and opinions. Some people see it as a voice against the ‘food fascists’, the organic lobby, global warming - such is the modern multi-strata media space.
Delia, by her own admission, says she is ignorant of the politics of food. But oh dear, Delia sweetheart, that’s where the discourse now is! A lot has changed since the late 90s. There’s now a large part of the population that actually do care about how their food is produced and want to know about that, not just how to prepare it and how it ‘looks’. Providence is as important as preparation to swathes of today’s consumers. You can do a small test of this by looking at how many supermarket higher-end brands have a picture of the farmer who (may) have produced the product on the packaging. It may be poorly cooked, but at least it’s poorly cooked Gloucestershire old spot.
David Cameron spoke rather well on the subject of food on Farming Today last week, in a piece that the Radio 4 website soundbited as ‘hug a foodie’. Listen here (towards the end). He even name-checks his local butcher Martin Slater in Chadlington. Natch, being a Westminster man he managed to cover all bases, tickling the foodie trouts, value shoppers, local businesses and supermarkets at the same time. But at least he seemed clued up on the issues and had a genuine passion for well-produced British products and an understanding of what the consumer wants and how what we buy is a statement about our beliefs. Delia, if anything, is a throwback to a time when people were more ignorant of these issues; when it was all Abigail’s Party and the home was an impenetrable fortress unaffected by the outside world.
A foodie friend who I met for dinner last week said, “Have you tried the recipes? They’re awful. It’s not cooking, it’s just assembling your own ready meal from ready-made ingredients at twice the cost of the raw ingredients,” and the shepherd’s pie recipe above bears this out. Look, everyone cheats a bit - shortcuts, tips and tricks and such have been used in cooking since day one - but follow this to the extreme and you could say that even using recipes is cheating because someone’s telling you how to do it rather than finding out for yourself. But I just can’t shake the feeling that Delia’s cheats are somehow more… well, bordering on lazy.
I’ll end with an analogy for the young ‘uns. Most computer games come with cheat codes: infinite ammo, invulnerability, the ability to skip to any level, God mode, etc. From Commodore 64 pokes to Playstation’s secret combos, you can always cheat. The point is, if you’ve ever played a computer game with all the cheats on, it’s the most boring thing in the world. I think the same applies in cooking.
4 comments 24 February, 2008
Kit: Mobile broadband
With January almost over, and only two months left before my ‘grand tour’ kicks off, it’s time to talk kit. And the first of the areas I need your help on is technology. Most of the places I’ll be staying at have an internet connection and a PC, but what about when I’m out and about? Also, I don’t want to be writing, video editing, and Photoshopping on my Mac, then have to transfer it over to my host’s PC to upload it.
So with that in mind I’ve been looking at mobile broadband options. Things to consider are upload limits, download limits, cost and coverage. Oh, and it has to work on a Mac.
Here are my options:
Option 1. Use my current Sony Ericsson K800i as a Bluetooth modem and do it that way.
Option 2. T-Mobile mobile broadband dongle
Option 3. 3’s mobile broadband dongle
Option 4. Vodafone’s mobile dongle
Hardware-wise, my Powerbook has the old-school large PCMCIA slot. So taking one of those plug-in cards is OK.
So, I’ve rooted around the internet and found a few reviews, including this from the Guardian. If anyone has any experiences they’d like to share, please do.
Like this!
Add comment 27 January, 2008
Here’s some I made earlier…
Hello food fans. For those of you who’ve found this site first, or via Russell, or not via eyedropper.co.uk, I’ve taken the liberty of putting together a ‘greatest hits’ of some of my previous food related adventures and investigations. This’ll hopefully give you a flavour of what posts on this blog might be like.. or you’ll scream and run a mile at my eclectic punctuation and spelling. Actually, you’ll be please to hear that I’ve engaged the services or a sub-editor for this blog, once it’s up to speed.
Anyway, in no particular order.
Priory Free Range Foods
An afternoon visiting Mrs Beeton
The tale of the Manchester sausage
Power to the Prostate!
Sushi Masterclass at Billingsgate Fish Market
Food Writers Guild talk on Blogging
Ratatouille - The movie and the dish
Olives, slugs and lettuces
Hot cheese = Instant comfort
Scouse for tea
and there’s plenty more here.
ta
Add comment 6 January, 2008






