onBeing: Washington Post’s video experiment

onBeingJust found out about onBeing, the Washington Post’s experiment with video vignettes from ordinary people. onBeing’s Jennifer Crandall explains the purpose on the site as follows:

onBeing is a project based on the simple notion that we should get to know one another a little better. What you’ll find here is a series of videos that takes you into the musings, passions, histories and quirks of all sorts of people. The essence of who they are, who we are.

There will be a new video every Wednesday, so check back often. In the meantime, feel free to add your thoughts to the comments section and tell us about someone you’d like to see in onBeing. Over time, we should end up with a pretty cool community. — Jenn

I’ve just clicked on a couple of videos, so it’s too early for me to form a judgment. But my overall impression is that the videos, while interesting, are too long. But at least the people at the Post are trying something, so good for them.

Other views from blogdom:

Pro: “All in all, it has a very iTunes-like feel. Totally un-newspaper-like.”

Con: “It’s like some undergrad documentary project that’s not interesting enough to make it onto the 3 a.m. slot of a third tier cable network and not edgy enough to get noticed as modern art.”

Site redesign: Wired gets wierd

Wired has a well-earned reputation for pushing the design envelope with its magazine. Now the same can be said for Wired‘s redesigned website. The redesign hasn’t gone over too well with some readers. Comments include:

I just opened up your site for the first time in a few days. Hate to say it but the new layout stinks.

To which middle school art class did you farm this out?

No. No. No. Bad Wired. Surely this is some cruel joke because you withheld pizza and caffeine from the html coders, yes?

If nothing else, Wired’s experiment should offer solace to college and university web designers who suffer through user complaints any time they redesign — or sometimes just tweak — their school sites.

Thanks to CyberJournalist for the tip.