Join 📚 Josh Beckman's Highlights
A batch of the best highlights from what Josh's read, .
So the camera's tilted at an angle. Is it because you're not looking through, you're looking at him?
> Yeah.
Because you don't want him to feel like he's behind the lens, is that why?
> more importantly, I can still hold the camera at the side of my head perfectly steady. But I need the audience to know that I'm paying attention to him, not the camera. What do they call that? A something tilt?
Yeah. Dutch.
> A Dutch tilt. It's a way of letting the audience know that I'm not paying attention to the camera.
Casey Neistat's SECRET to Filmmaking
Digital Spaghetti
The fundamental problem is that there’s a fundamental disagreement inside people’s heads — that people are inconsistent on what responsibility they believe information intermediaries should have for making society better. People generally believe that if something is against their side, that the platforms have a huge responsibility. And if something is on their side, [the platforms] should have no responsibility. It’s extremely rare to find people who are consistent in this.
Should We “Resist Trying to Make Things Better” When It Comes to Online Misinformation?
Doug Belshaw
Once you acknowledge that leadership is inherently non-deterministic you can move away from the self-defeating notion that you’re always doing a bad job. Instead I think it’s more useful and healthy to move towards an actionable, productive mindset centered around questioning your assumptions, understanding that good work is iterative and learning from your previous reps.
Lean Into Your Imposter Syndrome
Dan Na
...catch up on these, and many more highlights