Conversation with a shoe-shiner, sounds from the Empire State Building and much more from my second time in a jazzy New York City. Audio-video report.
Eurogeneration in America
Columbia University debate on the changing media landscape
I am just back from New York City and I must tell you about this wonderful experience I had at the Hearst Media Dialogues.
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Post-America syndrome
Here I am, back in Paris: still paying the consequnces of the jet-lag, with loads of ideas running through my mind, happy about being able to hug my wife and go back to cafebabel.com. But still...
Still I have to admit that this stars-and-stripes experience was so omni-comprehensive as to leave a mark. For the people around me it must be so wearying. Yesterday my collegue from EUrotik (now available in English as well) told me (in French): "Enough with these USA, Adrià".
Well, I have to say that, dear babelians that followed me faithfully during my "On the road 2.0", I feel like many of you after Erasmus. I guess I should be psychoanalysed by doctor Allanic, whom Prune talked about, o maybe by Fiorella. Joking...meanwhile, here is the latest version of my journey map with the New York stop that I didn't tell you much about...
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You can read here about the illuminating meeting with Jay Rosen, "crowd-sourcing journalism" guru, in the Big Apple.
USA: I like, I dislike
A rich, explosive and extremely varied country, USA is, at the same time, a nation proud of its DNA, forged with blood and with an hard-and-fast Constitution. But also contradictory, sometimes cruel, always bearer of challenges, adventures and uncertainties, loads of uncertainties. These were the USA that I saw. Joking and being serious at the same time, here is a gallery of what I liked and what I didn’t.
I like

Washington subway: elegant
Animals throughout the city: funny 

Multietnicity when it means harmony
The flag: it rocks 

Offline ads for online web sites: modern
I dislike

New York subway: narrow, dirty, “well, what...?”
Regular coffee in Starbucks: are we sure that the roast is Italian???

Rats in the streets: still a problem in big cities like New York

The count down to cross the road: really unendurable (without having to talk about the omnipresent automatic drive that nullifies the breaks’ slow effect and makes your stomach jump).
Ounce, gallon, mile... grrrr. In the picture the graduates Giusy uses for cooking.
So what do you think? Am I too provincial? What are your impressions on America guys?
Inside Wikipedia and more from Florida
I am going to leave the Tampa Bay, Florida after a lot of incredibly good meetings mostly in St. Petersburg.
Wikipedia, an amazing noprofit organization. On Friday, I met with Sandy Ordoñez, Director of communications of the Wikimedia Foundation. I learned a lot from her about this amazing noprofit organization that runs the famous wikipedia website. Think about that: they only have 12 employees and they raise every year around 1.5 million dollars thanks to 25$ average donations from a lot of individuals. How can they do that? Because they have a very universal idea (knowledge must be free and available to all) and they involve volounteers in every step they do. "Every single press release we do", explains Sandy, "we have to share it with a 50-people community of invited and trusted members of Wikipedia". A lot of ideas for cafebabel.com! "But it is not easy. You have to find the right balance between building consensus and making decisions".
The entry of Wikimedia Foundation 100 sq-meters office with a map showing all the images of wikipedia. The Foundation will move up to San Francisco in January 2008. In the Bay Area is also located Wikia, the for profit company wikipedia's founder, Jimmy Wales, has founded.

Left: fundraising strategy. Wikipedia has just launched its new campaign. Right: postcards from fans all around the world.
St. Petersburg Times, when good journalism goes local. I met with Bill Duryea (in the photo, left with a cafebabelsugar in the hand), a national editor who spent a lot of time explaining me everything about one of America's most celebrated local newspaper (see a story from the NYT). Their business model is more and more diversified. They launched a free press tabloid for young people plus a magazine targeted on healthy women and their contents are just so good because they provide a freshly local perspective to both Floridian, national but also international news.
Poynter Institute, wanna-be journalists, go there! The Poynter is very prestigious and well-known institute providing trainings for journalists but also many intriguing researches (see this study about readers' eye). I met with Bill Mitchell, editor of the Poynter on-line and Howard Finberg, editor of newu.org. The first website provides interesting conversations and analysis about journalism but also job offers in media world. The latter provides incredible on-line trainings to be a good journalist today. It's free and very very useful.

A bad news? Tomorrow morning I'll wake up at 5.
The good news? I have two. Tonight I've been invited to Giusy's house. She hosted me (as a true Sicilian who has lived in Naples) with her American boyfriend, Chris, offering me after the dinner hot chocolate milk + the cult "abbracci" biscuits (see the picture by Chris). The other good news? Tomorrow I fly to New York City for the last stop of my US trip. I am very tired but so happy to live this amazing adventure and also to share it with you all. Wish me good luck and if you have good tips for NYC... go for it!
Are you an anti-american? Have a look: you might change your mind!
Let's try to demolish some prejudices about America

1. USA don’t do anything for the environment.
Yesterday, coming from Berkeley, we were travelling on this fast lane, marked by the rhomb, because we were two people in the same car.

2. There’s a poor political debate.
Raise your hand if you live in a country where there are as many political and international affairs publications at the newsagent’s.

3. Americans are not interested in what happens in the external world.
Have a look at Global Voices, where you can find the best of the world blogosphere in different languages.Here I am with David Sasaki, one of their most efficient editors.
And the pizza maker from Oakland asked: “Does Italy still exist?”

Oracle Arena, Oakland, California. It is 7:29 pm of the 6th of November. The NBA match between Golden State Warriors and Cleveland Cavaliers is about to start off. As hungry as I am… I feel bald enough to queue up to buy a… ”pizza”. Soon my turn arrives, I order and ask to pay by traveller’s cheque. The woman (eighty years old) at the checkout point calls for the owner who asks for my passport. He grabs it and says:
- Italy? Is it still a country?
- Yes, of course. Why?
- Well, with the Euro you guys are like a single state now, right?
- Well, you are not completely wrong. In fact if you read carefully on the passport you will see that up on the first line it goes: “European Union”
- All right…so now you are like the USA, right? It was just about time
- Kind of… yes. Kind of...
Maybe European unity is still a long way to come. But if even a pizza maker in Oakland is aware that Europe is getting closer, that means something down there is starting to stir. Which is encouraging.
Afterwards my moral dropped because the team I was supporting, the Warriors has lost the fourth match in a row since the beginning of the Championship…proving to be one of the saddest teams in the NBA. That must be because Marco Belinelli, from Italy, sorry, from the EU with “furore”, has not come out to play…
Business, Transgression and Vibrations: the secret of the Silicon Valley

It does not have anything to do with Europe. Where the sense of partnership University-Enterprise is reduced to (fake) open days of orientation, internships not or underpaid and in any case without any future prospect, nepotism and so forth. But here in California it is not about altruism: the enterprises invest in thoughts, ideas, new visions. And often taking the risk of subsidizing projects without a clear economic interest. This is the case of Google, which did not have any business model at the very beginning. And this is also the case of a project that is kept top secret, (I will be talking about it shortly) a team led by an Italian researcher is working on. You can feel here the leak of brains. The temptations are strong to many French, Russians, and Italians I met here.

Now I am back in San Francisco, the metropolis with which Stanford, like Palo Alto or Mountain View (siege of Google). Lively city: the energy comes out the earth often in rapid motion and rushes into the cathodes of this icon of the hippy and alternative culture: this explains a big deal…why it is here and not anywhere else that the economy of the future is thought and implemented.
Pictures: before a breathtaking landscape I pose with my guide, a former diplomat that accompanies me all along this trip, Harley Davidson in the Latin borough Mission, in San Francisco too.
Traduzione di Alessandro Moncuso.
An hesitating Hillary reminds Ségolène Royal and Walter Veltroni
On the road 2.0 - my trip so far in a Google Map
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A discussion on cafebabel.com in an American University class
Last week the very program began. Appointment at the American University with Professor Shalini Venturelli (whose origins go back to Lucca, Italy), who runs the International Communication Department there. After an informal chat in her office Mrs. Venturelli says to me: “Let’s go to give a class now”. “How come?” I ask her, “Yes, no worries”.

This way I end up in a classroom, with some thirty students from all over the world, to speak about European media, to show cafebabel.com (homepage but Eurotik as well and the slideshow of Comikazen that made me proud) and to deliver answers to a captivated audience: Americans of course, but also many Asians, Europeans…and many more.

And afterwards the lesson given by Professor Venturelly about: how the approach with cultural policies changes in Usa, France, Germany and United Kingdom. The allusion to the US is enlightening if compared to the state of the EU nowadays. The issue the School of Chicago used to tackle was “how to create a sense of community in a multicultural country?” The answer : by the mass media. Does it recall you something?

Something that struck me: the merchandising. I could not help buying the t-shirt of the University in which cafebabel has been discussed for the first time in the US.
P.S. The student I speak with is a Spanish who is going to write an article about cafebabel.com in a student publication.
Translated by Alessandro Mancosu.
Washington and Brussels. (Un)veiled
570,000 inhabitants, medium size, quiet and yet cosmopolitan city: Washington has greeted me warm and sunny – it resembles Brussels, “capital” of those wanna-be United States of Europe that, as USA, have chosen a city lacking of a strong personality to pile up their institutions.

But, since my arrival at the airport, I understood I am not in Europe any more, either for the long time queuing up (ah Schengen!) and for this amazing poster for the immigrants to see, with a big WELCOME in capital letters. The question arises spontaneously: can you picture the same image in Paris (where wearing the Islamic veil is forbidden to women in schools), or in Berlin or Rome?
The impression, my guide confirmed, is that whoever gets to US nowadays is welcomed better compared to our immigrants.
Pictures by Greg Gorman. Translated by Alessandro Mancosu. More pics on Facebook.
Going to America
- Washington
- San Francisco
- Tampa, Florida
- New York City
P.S. If you have any tips and suggestions about landmarks to be seen, friends worth bringing a chocolate box...let me know, I am waiting for comments or email... Translated by Alessandro Mancosu
