Few stories write their own columns better than this one. The president of the United States was interviewed about his search habits, and he couldn't even get the search engine's name right.
Besides any political jabs, which were so easy I generally steered clear of them, it's a fascinating case study in what happens when a chief of state talks about engaging the activities of the common people. Chief executives of any sort are pretty far removed from the front lines, and this is a great example.
While the interview might be mortifying for some, it's almost cute and endearing. One other point not included here, inspired by some comments on MediaPost's blog -- the President has limitless technological resources for satellite imagery, and he's using Google Earth. Google 1, CIA 0.
WATCHING THE CLIPS OF GEORGE W. Bush's CNBC interview that were posted on YouTube, I kept trying to think about what it all meant. After all, this is our nation's president, our Commander in Chief, the so-called leader of the free world. Anything he says about the economy, international relations, and social issues can potentially impact billions of people. So what can we learn from President George W. Bush when he talked about "the Google" with CNBC's Maria Bartiromo last Monday?
Bartiromo asked the President, "I'm curious, have you ever Googled anybody? Do you use Google?"
Let's parse his response, as posted in the transcript on MSNBC, and see what this could mean for the future of search, the Internet, and the free world.
Read the rest of the column in the extended entry, or on the MediaPost blog, where you'll find a bunch of comments.
At a meeting of New York's chapter of the
Now, what if you built a house, and as you were building it, you invited all the people stopping by to vote on what color each wall is painted, or which room becomes the master bedroom, or what furniture to put in each room? This is a sort of 101 version of social media, much like "American Idol." It's interactive in terms of giving consumers a stake in the content, but it still isn't really social media.
What if you built a house where everyone could come and construct their own rooms and additions? That's another step in the right direction in terms of giving consumers control, but it's not yet social media. That model is more like Geocities or Blogger, where everyone can come and put up their own rooms, but it's still not social.