Good ideas

Rage Against The (X Factor) Machine

As you’ll have seen if you’ve been near a TV, radio, Twitter or Facebook, sweary activist rock group Rage Against The Machine have pipped the X Factor’s Joe McElderry to this year’s Christmas number one.

Like many people, I’m pretty pleased about this. And I’m also a bit suprised, because had you asked me a week ago, I’d have said the Facebook campaign to get the song to the top of the charts had about as much chance of success as the Monster Raving Loonies have of winning the next general election.

Why the scepticism? Well, joining a group on Facebook only takes a couple of seconds but it’s getting people to do more that has always seemed like the tricky bit. There are thousands of well-meaning Facebook groups and online petitions that have plenty of supporters but achieved nothing else of note.

So why did this campaign succeed – and make such a big impact – where others have failed?

  • It tapped into something people feel strongly about: frustration at the X Factor’s dominance of the Christmas number one slot.
  • It went huge on Facebook and Twitter. The sheer amount of support indicated that maybe it could actually happen.
  • Mainstream media picked it up in a big way. That lent credibility to the grass roots campaign and fostered a real belief it could work.
  • It wasn’t asking for a huge commitment. Sure, downloading the track cost a few pence, but it was easy and cheap to make a difference.

I think a lot of it came down to credibility. It wasn’t until Thursday, when Rage performed live on 5 Live’s breakfast show (swear words and all), that I seriously thought there was a possibility we’d see them at number one. And it was only at that point that I was willing to purchase the single myself. (more…)

Event for writers in London tonight

It’s rather short notice I know, but WriteClub, the “casual networking meet club for writers” hits London this evening. If you’re at a loose end and fancy meeting a friendly bunch of other writers, head for the Yorkshire Grey on Langham Street. It’s just round the corner from Oxford Circus.

I’ve heard good things about WriteClub but unfortunately I’m off to see the Yeah Yeah Yeahs so can’t make it this evening. If you do manage to get along, I’d be interested to hear how it goes. Founder Leif Kendall reckons there might be another London event in the pipeline – if so, I’ll definitely be there.

Page not found. Have the testcard instead.

BBC error page

We’ve all done it: followed a link from a website, only to be met with those three words of dread: page not found. How frustrating – particularly if you clicked a really juicy-sounding link to get there.

When you get misdirected in this way, it’s doubly annoying if you hit a total dead end. No links, no search box and no navigation? All you can do is give up and retrace your steps by clicking back.

Kudos, then, to websites which turn the humble page not found message into something useful and entertaining.

Take the BBC’s effort. With a friendly message explaining what happened, a link to the main site navigation and a search box there are plenty of places to go next. Good.

They’ve really upped the ante with the visuals though, alluding to the BBC’s long history by adapting the old fashioned test card for the web.

This means a lot to those of us over a certain age. It takes us back to the days when TV used to close down overnight, so if you got up early enough there’d be nothing to watch except this slightly strange picture of a girl and a clown.

It plays on our nostalgia and makes us smile unexpectedly, turning a bad experience (not arriving at the page we expected) into a reasonably good one.

Have you spotted any other good error pages online? I’m thinking of compiling a list, so please leave a comment if so.