Getting to Robert Scoble is like trying reach something that fell behind the refrigerator; he's right there, you can see him, but people-shaped obstacles are preventing you from really being in the room with him.
Download Video: Flash | MP4 | Scobleizer, and just as I was settling in for an interview, someone else plops down on the beanbag chair next to him. Robert was reclining on the floor, using the beanbag chair as a pillow, taking a break from the hectic pace of the Podcast andGotcha! the ScobleShow, whether or not Steve Ballmer actually throws chairs, and about swimming in the lake outside Bill Gates' house.
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Well that's true, and Miss Hilton probably would be better to look at across the beanbags, but who could stand a conversation with her?
After the interview, Scoble sprang up and switched his attention to the shotgun mic and tripod our videographer was using, more interesting than me no doubt, and began asking Richard questions about where we got them. And who would blame him? We did have some of the sweetest equipment at the conference.
Editor's Note: Web 2.0 has largely been about the liberation of content producers and content consumers to interact with, promote, and build upon each other. Podcasting, as it fits into that world, is both loved and criticized for it's rough edges, it's casualness, it's disregard for the rules of conventional media. Is this, in your estimation, a good thing? Share murdok Video Blog.
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