And Then Theres This, Bill Wasik
And Then Theres This, Bill Wasik
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And Then There's This
How Stories Live and Die in Viral Culture

Author: Bill Wasik

Narrator: Bill Wasik

Unabridged: 11 hr 3 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 06/11/2009


Synopsis

Unabridged • 6 hours

An entertaining and eye-opening look into the new frontier of idea making.

About The Author

Bill Wasik is a deputy editor of the New York Times Magazine. Before that, he was a senior editor of Wired and was previously a senior editor at Harper's Magazine. He is the editor of the anthology Submersion Journalism and has also written for The Oxford American, Slate, Salon, and McSweeney’s.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Kara on August 27, 2014

The first viral marketing campaign, and the most successful to come to mind, that I remember is the Old Spice video response campaign from 2010. I first heard about it on Twitter, and in no time at all I was enthralled by the hilarious, personalized videos the Old Spice team was producing in respons......more

Goodreads review by Kater on September 12, 2009

This book is along the lines of Malcolm Gladwell's _Tipping Point_, Clay Shirkey's _Here Comes Everybody_ and just about everything done by Seth Godin on viral marketing. Wasik writes for Wired, and has done real, physical research in internet marketing, which gives me more confidence in him as an a......more

Goodreads review by Todd on September 08, 2017

Review title: Nano nano: Maybe Mork was right The gentle and gently addled alien played by Robin Williams in his first TV exposure for most Americans may have been foretelling our future all those years ago: Life and culture was going to increasingly move by in nanoseconds in nano-sized bits of data.......more

Goodreads review by Ihancock on July 31, 2010

As I read this book I often had moments of reflection, interest, confusion, skepticism; in fact, I felt pulled in many different directions. This is, I guess, to be expected when the book describes itself as part memoir, part field report, part manifesto, and part deconstruction of a decade. I found......more

Goodreads review by Elizabeth on May 22, 2017

This was an oddly fascinating read. Almost ten years in the rear view mirror, Wasik talks about internet culture and social network motivations in a conversation style with 1st person experimentation. Viral in this sense discusses more flash mobs and some early website traffic, classic meme stuff. No......more


Quotes

"This is an exceptionally smart, witty, subtle, enlightening book about our daffy, discombobulating cultural moment. Bill Wasik plunges headlong into the twenty-first century media funhouse, yet manages to keep his moral compass in good working order. Bravo."
- Kurt Andersen, author of Heyday and host of NPR's Studio 360

"Bill Wasik is a guerrilla mischief-maker, a mad scientist of the meme. Irreverence is not a bad starting point for making sense of the web, and Wasik takes full advantage, pushing buttons and pulling puppet strings. The combination of his restless mind and the explosive new medium yields insights that are provocative and, often, hilarious."
-Ted Conover, author of Newjack

"I was the guy who got Bill Wasik's first flash-mob e-mail but was too lazy to put on pants and go. It was a mistake. Bill understands not just how viral culture spreads ideas and scams and energy- drink-purchasing opportunities; it's also a completely new way to tell-and experience- stories."
-John Hodgman, author of The Areas of My Expertise

"This book will last far longer than its allocated fifteen minutes of fame. It's well researched, funny, irreverent, and addictive. Useful, too. One of those rare books that dissects a cultural phenomenon in a way that resonates."
-Seth Godin, author of Tribes

"What if the revolution was what Bill Wasik calls a 'nanostory'? It would begin with a flash mob disrupting business as usual and then die the following day, at a Ford Motor Company 'flash concert' echoing through Boston's New Brutalist downtown. And Then There's This is deeply troubling, but it's also the wittiest book I've read in years-an ingenious and, in the end, hopeful response to the sound and the fury of our twittering times."
-Jeff Sharlet, author of The Family and co-author of Killing the Buddha

"As to the engenderings of the new and newest media-when to YouTube and how to viral, where the microtrend begins and why the nanostory ends-I know of no more reliably informed source than Bill Wasik's And Then There's This. An epistemological wonder to behold."
-Lewis H. Lapham