Author Archives: Joe Spake

Do celebrity visitors ever get to see the real Memphis?

Beale Street Sign- MemphisI started writing this post  a few weeks ago about what celebrity visitors to Memphis get to experience  about our city other than the Peabody Hotel, the Rendezvous for ribs, and maybe a visit to Beale Street.

I trashed what I had written when I saw this post on Social Media guru – Chris Brogan’s blog.  Brogan, who spoke in Memphis last week, herded ducks as the honorary Duck Master at the Peabody, ate at the Rendezvous, and hung out on Beale (all well-documented by many on Twitter, Facebook, blogs, etc.), but, in the post, Brogan brings some of the real Memphis home, documenting meeting and giving a homeless man on Beale some help and a chance to do a short video for InvisiblePeople.tv.  This  meeting could not have been orchestrated in Brogan’s agenda.  He had to seek out that interaction.

How many of our other visitors, who have 24 hours or so in Memphis get even a taste of what Memphis is all about?  How many make the trip to so-called “sketchy” neighborhoods for Real Memphis Bar-B-Q or soul food instead of tourist fare?  How many get to hear the Real Blues as opposed to the Blues as defined by the Beale St. commercial strip?   How many get to have a look at some of the wonderful small, struggling non-profits that make Memphis a better place?  How many get to have a conversation with a middle class person who doesn’t frequent the chic Downtown scene?

What would you show a visitor or celebrity who asked you to show her the Real Memphis?

WordCamp is for WordPress lovers

WordPress
Image via Wikipedia

I find myself thanking my friend Brian Copeland in back-to-back posts for being the brains behind not one, but 2 stellar events in Nashville this week. I just posted about Tennessee’s first REBar Camp on Wednesday, 4/28. That was followed on Thursday by a WordCamp – a day devoted to the very popular blogging/website platform – WordPress.   If you are a blogger or if you have a website you should consider WordPress for a number of reasons, which I won’t go into in this post. (I still refer to my copy of  WordPress for Dummies )

The “camp” featured speakers ranging from geeky WordPress design, plugins, etc., to blogging legal issues, to internet and site security, analytics, and other topics revolving around this primo platform.  Like REBarCamp the day before, there was a lot of excellent and useful information as well as an incredible level of sharing.

Thanks to everyone who helped pull this WordCamp together.

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