A Detroit, Atlanta or Dallas might be a convenient and cost-efficient place to make a film or television show, but they lack the essential cultural richness that can lure creative people to stay. The Big Easy is attracting that type, plus post-production startups, and animation and videogame outfits, giving a broader foundation to the nascent local entertainment industry.

“This is different,” notes Los Angeles native and longtime Hollywood costumer Wingate Jones, who started Southern Costume Co. last year to cash in on the growth in production in the state. “It’s the combination of the food and the culture that appeals to people. It must have been a lot like what Hollywood was like in the ’20s and ’30s. It’s entrepreneurial and growing like mad.”

Critically, Jones adds, Louisiana’s unique culture comes without the fancy New York or Malibu price tag. This is a place where small roadside cafes serve up bowls of gumbo, crayfish and shrimp that would cost three to five times as much in New York, the Bay Area or Los Angeles. Excellent music — from rap to jazz to blues and gospel — can be found simply by walking into a bar and paying the price of a couple of beers. And then there are housing costs, roughly half as high, adjusted for income, than the big media centers.

This mixture of affordability and culture is attracting young people — the raw material of the creative economy — as well as industry veterans like Jones. In 2011, we examined migration patterns of the college-educated and found, to our surprise, that New Orleans was the country’s leading brain magnet. New Orleans was growing its educated base, on a per capita basis, at a far faster rate than much-ballyhooed, self-celebrated places like New York or San Francisco. In fact, its most intense competition was coming from other Southern cities such as Raleigh, Austin and Nashville, the last two of which also share a strong, and unique, regional culture.

Another sure sign of the city’s growing appeal has been a torrent of applications to Tulane University, the city’s premier institution of higher education. In 2010 the school received 44,000 applications, more than any other private university in the country. The largest group, more than even those from Louisiana, came from California, with New York and Texas not far behind.

Increasingly, the Big Easy merits comparison not only to the Hollywood of the 1920s but also Greenwich Village of the ’50s, Haight-Ashbury in the ’60s and “grunge” Seattle in the mid-’80s. These, too, were once appealing places that were less expensive, less predictable and more open to cultural outsiders. Now they’re increasingly too pricey and yuppified for creative people bereft of large trust funds.

ilovecharts:

ahhh, the Pyramids of Fashion…
A Map of the Open Country of a Woman’s Heart
- DW Kellogg c.1833-1842

Five key skills that disruptive innovator’s possess:

poptech:

  • Questioning allows innovators to challenge the status quo and consider new possibilities;
  • Observing helps innovators detect small details — in the activities of customers, suppliers and other companies — that suggest new ways of doing things;
  • Networking permits innovators to gain radically different perspectives from individuals with diverse backgrounds;
  • Experimenting prompts innovators to relentlessly try out new experiences, take things apart and test new ideas;
  • Associational thinking — drawing connections among questions, problems or ideas from unrelated fields — is triggered by questioning, observing, networking and experimenting and is the catalyst for creative ideas.


Internet Freedom Starts at Home: The United States needs to practice what it preaches online

socialuprooting:

“An electronic curtain has fallen around Iran,” U.S. President Barack Obama warned in a recent video message marking the Persian New Year. Government censorship and surveillance, he said, make it more difficult for Iranians to “access the information that they want,” denying “the rest of the world the benefit of interacting with the Iranian people.”

Implied though not explicit in Obama’s remarks was the idea that if Iran’s Internet were freer and more open, Iran’s relationship with the world generally — and the United States in particular — would be different. Cases like Iran are the main driver of Washington’s bipartisan consensus around the idea that a free and open global Internet is in the United States’ strategic interest.

Yet more than two years after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gave her first speech declaring “Internet freedom” to be a major component of U.S. foreign policy, it turns out that many of the most sophisticated tools used to suppress online free speech and dissent around the world are actually Made in the USA. American corporations are major suppliers of software and hardware used by all sorts of governments to carry out censorship and surveillance — and not just dictatorships. Inconveniently, governments around the democratic world are pushing to expand their own censorship and surveillance powers as they struggle to address genuine problems related to cybercrime, cyberwar, child protection, and intellectual property.

Even more inconveniently, the U.S. government is the biggest and most powerful customer of American-made surveillance technology, shaping the development of those technologies as well as the business practices and norms for public-private collaboration around them. As long as the U.S. government continues to support the development of a surveillance-technology industry that clearly lacks concern for the human rights and civil liberties implications of its business — even rewarding secretive and publicly unaccountable behavior by these companies — the world’s dictators will remain well supplied by a robust global industry.

American-made technology has turned up around the Middle East and North Africa over the past year — from Syria to Bahrain to Saudi Arabia, from pre-revolutionary Tunisia to Egypt — in contexts that leave no doubt that the software and hardware in question were being used to censor dissenting speech and track activists. While much of this technology is considered “dual use” because it can be used to defend computer networks against cyberattack as well as to censor and monitor political speech, some members of Congress are seeking to prevent its use for political repression. To that end, the Global Online Freedom Act (GOFA), which passed through the House of Representatives Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, and Human Rights last week, takes aim not only at U.S.-headquartered companies but also overseas companies funded by U.S. capital markets.

weareconstance:

GOOD Ideas for Cities and Neighborland are recruiting New Orleanians to prototype the future of our neighborhoods.  We’re looking for  designers, architects, planners and activists to develop real solutions to three challenges facing New Orleans. Working together, creative New Orleanians will visualize, plan and create three events or installations that:
Bring healthy and fresh foods to a neighborhood that needs more options for groceries and affordable restaurants.
Make one of our commercial streets safer for bicyclists and pedestrians.
Beautify an intersection or street corner in a way that residents will appreciate and take pride in.
Individual creatives should apply here. Once you’ve chosen to participate, you’ll be assigned to a team to work with community leaders overseeing each challenge:
Grow Dat Youth Farm and Broad Community Connections will work to bring more food options to an underserved neighborhood.
Bike Easy and Transport for NOLA will work to make a street safer for bicyclists and pedestrians.
The students and faculty of Sci Academy will work to beautify a neighborhood intersection.

weareconstance:

GOOD Ideas for Cities and Neighborland are recruiting New Orleanians to prototype the future of our neighborhoods.  We’re looking for  designers, architects, planners and activists to develop real solutions to three challenges facing New Orleans. Working together, creative New Orleanians will visualize, plan and create three events or installations that:

  1. Bring healthy and fresh foods to a neighborhood that needs more options for groceries and affordable restaurants.
  2. Make one of our commercial streets safer for bicyclists and pedestrians.
  3. Beautify an intersection or street corner in a way that residents will appreciate and take pride in.

Individual creatives should apply here. Once you’ve chosen to participate, you’ll be assigned to a team to work with community leaders overseeing each challenge:

  • Grow Dat Youth Farm and Broad Community Connections will work to bring more food options to an underserved neighborhood.
  • Bike Easy and Transport for NOLA will work to make a street safer for bicyclists and pedestrians.
  • The students and faculty of Sci Academy will work to beautify a neighborhood intersection.