Snapshot Chronicles

Susan Getgood's personal blog

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Honey, I’m not home

09.26.2008 by Susan Getgood //

crossposted to Marketing Roadmaps

Readers of my professional blog Marketing Roadmaps may recall a series of posts I wrote about a year ago on the Sci Fi Channel’s digital press tour. Sci Fi invited members of the digital press up to Vancouver for a weekend at which the network’s current shows were featured – Battlestar Galactica, Eureka, Stargate Atlantis and the then new, now cancelled and extremely horrible Flash Gordon.

The representatives of the online sites were treated to tours of the sets of the shows, Q&As with the some of the stars and a chance to break bread with Sci Fi executives Mark Stern and Bonnie Hammer. By all accounts it was a success for both the digital media and the network.

After I completed the case study, I half jokingly told Courtney White the PR rep from New Media Strategies that she should be sure to invite me next time.

And she did. In part perhaps because I have a feature on Snapshot Chronicles that covers science fiction television, but mostly I suspect because I recently pinged her to follow up on the case study for the blogger relations book I’m working on.

So here I sit on a Southwest Airlines flight to Denver. This year, the focus is on SciFi’s unreality show GhostHunters and the premiere of the new Amanda Tapping series Sanctuary on October 3rd. Apparently there was a big GhostHunters event already planned and Sci Fi decided to combine this year’s digital press event with it.The event is being held at the Hotel Stanley in Estes Park Colorado which horror fans may recognize from Stephen King’s The Shining.

Red rum anyone?

I’ll be covering the event in three places, with three slightly different perspectives.

On Marketing Roadmaps, I will be focusing on the outreach program itself. How successful is it for the network and the online writers? Is everybody getting their full value? I noticed some repeat attendees from the first one, but the sites I spoke with for the case study will not be there. Is it a content issue – they aren’t interested in GhostHunters and Sanctuary as much as they were in the content of the previous event?

Or a cost issue? Sci Fi is reaching out to a population it refers to as digital press. Some of these are blogs, but many are online portals. The writers may even be paid and, paid or not, many consider themselves journalists. This is a very important distinction when discussing blogger relations. Not so much from the content or hospitality perspective but definitely from the expense one. Attendees pay their own travel expenses.

As a result a purist might argue that this isn’t really blogger relations. Well, I’ve never been a purist. Online engagement can take many forms. The term “blogger” in fact is already a misnomer, as we may be reaching out to customers on Twitter or through Facebook or even a branded community. As long as the blog/site in question has an element of community, where readers can comment or converse with each other in some fashion, it is social media.

On Snapshot Chronicles, I’ll be writing about the hotel and the general experience of the event, with an emphasis on photos. I saw two elk on the way into town and grabbed a quick snap from the car, and the scenery is just gorgeous. I’ll also have a review of Sanctuary after it premieres. I’ve seen the screener but those don’t always have all the effects. I’m not really a GhostHunters viewer so not entirely sure what I’ll do with that content, but I’m keeping an open mind.

I’ll also be doing a guest post over on BlogHer about the trip. Among other things, the post will cover a breakfast scheduled with actress Amanda Tapping, formerly of the Stargate franchise and now the star and an executive producer of Sanctuary.

Most importantly though I plan to have fun, and wash last weekend’s Las Vegas dust right outta my hair.

[tags] science fiction, Hotel Stanley, blogger relations [/tags]

Categories // Science Fiction, Travel, TV/Film

SciFi Snapshot: Fringe

09.15.2008 by Susan Getgood //

The way things have been going, it seems highly unlikely that I will be able to keep to my desired Sunday schedule for my sci fi post. In part because Sunday seems to have blurred into a work day around here and in part because starting this coming weekend, I will be traveling pretty much every weekend through mid-October.

The fall TV season has started, and so far it looks promising. There are quite a fews shows I might actually remember to watch or record, which is good news for my exercise regime as I generally watch taped shows while jogging on the treadmill.

Here’s what we’ll be watching

  • Bones
  • Fringe
  • Chuck
  • Ugly Betty
  • Stargate Atlantis (out of loyalty more than anything, this season is not very good.)
  • Burn Notice (has to go on the list even though last ep is this coming Thursday. Hint hint USA Network we want more)
  • Lost (maybe)
  • Boston Legal (maybe)
  • Sarah Connor Chronicles (from time to time)
  • Torchwood (maybe, depends on new cast)

And of course waiting for the final episodes of Battlestar Galactica and expected mid-season replacement The Dollhouse.

Now for my thoughts on the new show in this list, Fringe. All in all I thought it was pretty good. It started with a horrifying bang, times two, and then slowed down quite a bit with a great deal of story exposition. Very talky. I know a lot of folks don’t like quite so much explaining of things before we get down to the action, but I’m not sure how you could have done it any other way.

I absolutely loved the interaction among the principals. I’ve never seen the young leads Anna Torv or Joshua Jackson in anything prior to this. (Yes I am among the few who never saw a single episode of Dawson’s Creek. ) John Noble, who plays the mad scientist, played the equally mad Denethor in The Lord of the Rings.

Everyone was quite believable in their roles, even poor Mark Valley who spent most of the pilot on his back in one way or the other. I particularly enjoyed the relationship between the Bishops father and son. It would have been so easy to slip into a stereotypical angry young man, resentful of his father, etc. etc. but Jackson avoids that. Yes, he plays the resentment, but underneath it you can see the affection the character has for his father and perhaps his pleasure that his father (not to mention Olivia) needs him.

And big bonus – we’ve got a very promising villain, even if we don’t know much about it yet.

So, I plan to stick with it and hope it stays as good as it started.

[tags] Fringe [/tags]

Categories // Science Fiction, TV/Film

Hummingbirds and a little sci fi

08.25.2008 by Susan Getgood //

In between the rainstorms we were having most of the first two weeks of the month, I finally managed to get some good shots of the female hummingbird.

IMG_2598

SciFi Sunday is pretty much on hiatus. Mostly because there hasn’t been so much to talk about. Eventually I will get around to a review of Stargate Continuum; generally, we liked it but haven’t had time to rewatch to write a decent review.

The end of Stargate Atlantis. A non-event really. I haven’t been gotten into season 5 at all, mostly because I realized that most of season 4 was pretty boring. Really miss the Weir and Carson characters. Carter and Woolsey may share letters of the alphabet with them, but they just don’t have the chemistry with the core characters of Sheppard and McKay.

Categories // Birds, Science Fiction, TV/Film, Vermont

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