The Only Person I'm Stalking Is Me
Saturday, I went to my friend Reed's place in Dupont Circle for a party. It was a party for his birthday, though not necessarily a birthday party.
I'm there for about 30 seconds, saying my hellos. As I go to drop off my jacket, I catch a glimpse of someone who looks familiar, but nah, that can't be him. Re-enter the room, and suddenly from behind, there's a pair of hands over my eyes and a voice telling me "Bet you don't know who this is."
My previous glimpse confirmed, I forego the double-arm trap/elbow smash to throat/knee strike sequence (it would have been rude to the host) and say, "Wayan, get your hands off my glasses, you're messing them up."
So that's where the DC Metblogs item ('A small DC blogging world after all') and photo stems from:
However, this does give me an excuse to dive into my draft post pile.
Interesting (If You're Me, or Stalking Me)
When I do vanity searches, I find that looking for Joe Loong finds me pretty well -- I own the first view of results, with a mix of work and personal stuff.
However, Joseph Loong does considerably worse, in that you can find me, but only in a roundabout way.
The explanation is simple: I really only use Joseph on official documents and such. Since middle school, I've pretty much always gone by Joe, which carried over to my cleverly-constructed online handles ("Hi, I'm Joelogon." "Cool, what's your name?" "Um, Joe."), Web sites, and later my blogs and online profiles.
Of course, my business cards say "Joseph" -- I will have to consider the implications of this.
It's partly because of the proximity of my personal stuff with my work stuff when you search on my name that's got me re-evaluating this whole concept of trying to keep your work stuff separate from your personal stuff online, which is a fading concept that I still cling to.
There are plenty of folks out there, the A-List bloggers and such, who've fully embraced the concept of using their names as brands for everything they do, such that there really isn't a distinction anymore between their work/non-work, or even public/private lives. It's very Hollywood-ish.
Though I've noticed that:
I'm there for about 30 seconds, saying my hellos. As I go to drop off my jacket, I catch a glimpse of someone who looks familiar, but nah, that can't be him. Re-enter the room, and suddenly from behind, there's a pair of hands over my eyes and a voice telling me "Bet you don't know who this is."
My previous glimpse confirmed, I forego the double-arm trap/elbow smash to throat/knee strike sequence (it would have been rude to the host) and say, "Wayan, get your hands off my glasses, you're messing them up."
So that's where the DC Metblogs item ('A small DC blogging world after all') and photo stems from:
Photo by Wayan. Notice the tendrils growing out of my head.
However, this does give me an excuse to dive into my draft post pile.
Interesting (If You're Me, or Stalking Me)
When I do vanity searches, I find that looking for Joe Loong finds me pretty well -- I own the first view of results, with a mix of work and personal stuff.
However, Joseph Loong does considerably worse, in that you can find me, but only in a roundabout way.
The explanation is simple: I really only use Joseph on official documents and such. Since middle school, I've pretty much always gone by Joe, which carried over to my cleverly-constructed online handles ("Hi, I'm Joelogon." "Cool, what's your name?" "Um, Joe."), Web sites, and later my blogs and online profiles.
Of course, my business cards say "Joseph" -- I will have to consider the implications of this.
It's partly because of the proximity of my personal stuff with my work stuff when you search on my name that's got me re-evaluating this whole concept of trying to keep your work stuff separate from your personal stuff online, which is a fading concept that I still cling to.
There are plenty of folks out there, the A-List bloggers and such, who've fully embraced the concept of using their names as brands for everything they do, such that there really isn't a distinction anymore between their work/non-work, or even public/private lives. It's very Hollywood-ish.
Though I've noticed that:
- Bloggers' transparency always stops at a certain point (even if that point is much further along than the rest of us might hope). It's the blogger equivalent of when a regular celebrity goes into rehab and drags out the "I hope you'll respect my and my family's privacy during this sensitive time."
- I'm also not trying to launch any companies.
Tags:
Labels: dc local, dumb things, photos
1 Comments:
So back in the day, I was the only Wayan online. And I mean the ONLY.
Now that Indonesia is coming online (Wayan is Indonesian), people forget its the Wayans, not Wayan Brothers, and Wayan ID is claimed as a city by splogs (its an empty zipcode), the Wayan field is getting more crowded.
I still hold the top Wayan spot with one of my websites, but from then on it gets crowded. Wayan Vota is still all my own.
Oh, and sorry about the glasses, I was just excited to see ya!
By wayan, At 1/29/2007 3:32 PM
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