The Running Munckee is Reborn!
It’s got a direction! It’s got a home, including its own URL! It’s completely integrated into my personal website (or will be as soon as my DNS something-or-others propagate)! It’s HERE!
No, I didn’t forget about this place…
Ok, yeah, sorry. It’s been a while. I’ve been busy with BMA and work, etc, and I wasn’t really sure what I wanted runningmunckee to be. Probably should have figured that out before I started blogging. BUT, suffice it to say, runningmunckee is going to get its own home soon. And its going to be rolled into dannynathan.com. Whole revision. Whole new life. Runningmunckee 2.0 I suppose. Keep an eye out, it’ll happen soon. Very soon.
Design is spreading…finally.
I posted this at BMA a while ago and it didn’t really get much interest. But I like it. So read it again.
And by that I mean good design. Or its making a resurgence. Years ago, you’d wander through any neighborhood and find contemporary homes designed by the great architects of this century. While Frank Lloyd Wright may be best known to the masses for Falling Water, you’ll also find his homes buried in little neighborhoods like Oak Park, Illinois. Nowadays you have to check with the home-owners association before you’re allowed to paint, let alone build something that isn’t red brick and colonial.
But the times are finally starting to turn around again, and, I dare say, on an even more cutting edge basis. (Good) Design is finally starting to show at least a little bit of an impact on the general population. You don’t have to dig quite as deeply to find it. It’s on vodka bottles. It’s on bed sheets:

And the architects are coming back to the neighborhoods. Check out the work of M.J. Neal who’s been sneaking stunning architectural gems around Austin, TX:

Or perhaps the most guilty of all companies, Apple. Regardless of the constant battle between PC and Mac lovers, no one can deny that Apple has made huge leaps toward making the general public accustomed to impressively good design. I don’t recall seeing any PC’s in MOMA’s collection.
Even the Art Directors Club recently had a seminar called Designism, which unfortunately I missed. Their aim? To “join in a debate over advertising and design as instruments for social and political change. Can practitioners use their talent to shape life in these changing times?” You can listen to a podcast of the discussion here.
So what’s it all mean? Great, we’re seeing more design out there. It’s happening. Let’s sit back, relax, and watch it happen. HELL NO! We need to do MORE. We need to support it. We need to buy it. We need to tell the companies that we appreciate it.
But beyond that, we need to TAKE PART IN IT! We’re advertising and marketing professionals. We make all of that junk out there that people are training themselves to ignore. We make every bit of communication that tells people to buy something, to sell something, to do something. We have a huge amount of input on the culture of communication. It’s time that we use it and use it wisely. It’s time to bring the art back into what we do.
Think about it; forty years from now will someone be paying to hang our ads in their living room?
Photo credit for the bedspreads goes to The Cool Hunter.
Woohooo, I exist!
It’s official. The Running Munckee has finally received its first couple of links. I exist! Sort of.
Yes, a couple were a result of the now infamous Z-list. Thanks to Troy over at orbitnow! and the crazy kids over at The New Shelton Wet/Dry.
Time for something a little different.
I’m going to try something a little new here, starting now. Consider this an attempt to figure out exactly where this blog is headed.
Anyway, I wanted to share this video from the Black Heart Gang. It’s fantastically designed, tells a great story, and is just plain impressive to watch. The story is called The Tale of How.

Review: Stranger than Fiction
Go see it. Period. Don’t argue. Don’t balk at the cost of a ticket. GO.
I saw this on Saturday and was REALLY impressed. Not Oscar material, but then what good movies are these days? But good. The visual design of the opening sequences were outstanding. I guarantee that styling will pop up in a commercial or few very soon. And I find that this sequence can often be pretty telling about how much I’ll like the movie.
I’m not a huge Will Ferrell fan, but he was good. None of his over the top BS that people refer to as comedy. I guess Stranger than Fiction is to Will Ferrell as Truman Show was to Jim Carrey. I wasn’t really familiar with Maggie Gyllenhal, though now I’ll definitely keep an eye out for her.
I got a kick out of the plot from the time I saw the preview. And I wasn’t disappointed. I also didn’t feel like the preview gave too much away, which they tend to do these days. And I smiled through the whole movie.
In praise of customer service
Thank you Apple. Despite the annoyance of having to get up early to sign up for a time-slot at your Genius bar for something utterly simple, you kindly replaced my dying Mighty Mouse with no arguing.
Customer service is a constant annoyance to me. Or rather, the lack of customer service. I’ve bitched about UPS and, for the time being, will do everything I can not to use them. Bank of America continually pisses me off, though I continue to use them for various and sundry reasons. Even FedEx got under my skin the other day when I walked in and had to watch the guy eat his pretzels and banter with his colleagues for a solid two minutes before he acknowledged my existence (I was the only customer in the room).
But Apple. Apple has it almost nailed. I signed up for a time slot. Actually spoke to someone within 5 minutes of my assigned time. And I walked out with a brand new mouse for free. My only complaint? The genius bar needs an express lane for things that take under 5 minutes. But hey, I’ll live.
In honor of the Z-listers.
Mack recently added a post with a bunch of “Z-listers” to The Viral Garden. In a shameless attempt to join the party, I figured I’d add it here as well including a couple of my own.
Creative Think
Soloride
Movie Marketing Madness
Blog Till You Drop!
Get Shouty!
One Reader at a Time
Critical Fluff
The New PR
Own Your Brand!
OTOInsights
bizandbuzz
Work, in Plain English
Buzz Canuck
New Millenium PR
Pardon My French
Troy Worman’s Blog
The Instigator Blog
AENDirect
Diva Marketing
Marketing Hipster
The Marketing Minute
Funny Business
The Frager Factor
Mindblob
Open The Dialogue
Word Sell
Note to CMO:
That’s Great Marketing!
Shotgun Marketing Blog
BrandSizzle
bizsolutionsplus
Customers Rock!
Being Peter Kim
Pow! Right Between The Eyes! Andy Nulman’s Blog About Surprise
Billions With Zero Knowledge
Working at Home on the Internet
MapleLeaf 2.0
darrenbarefoot.com
Two Hat Marketing
The Engaging Brand
The Branding Blog
CrapHammer
Drew’s Marketing Minute
Golden Practices
Viaspire
Tell Ten Friends
Flooring the Consumer
Kinetic Ideas
Unconventional Thinking
Buzzoodle
Conversation Agent
The Copywriting Maven
Hee-Haw Marketing
Scott Burkett’s Pothole on the Infobahn
Multi-Cult Classics
Logic + Emotion
Branding & Marketing
Popcorn n Roses
On Influence & Automation
Bullshitobserver
Servant of Chaos
converstations
eSoup
Presentation Zen
Dmitry Linkov
aialone
John Wagner
Nick Rice
CKs Blog
Design Sojourn
Frozen Puck
The Sartorialist
Small Surfaces
Africa Unchained
Perspective
gDiapers
Marketing Nirvana
Bob Sutton
¡Hola! Oi! Hi!
Shut Up and Drink the Kool-Aid!
Women, Art, Life: Weaving It All Together
Community Guy
Social Media on the fly
Jeremy Latham’s Blog
SMogger Social Media Blog
Masey.com
The New Shelton Wet/Dry
Cartoon Brew
The Running Munckee
Post-it Pixel art.
Cool video. Although, and maybe this is wrong/mean, I kind of enjoy watching the chair in the second half more than the pixel art.
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Union Sq. demystified.
Despite a reasonable tenure in NY, including a substantial amount of time spent on or below 14th st., I still couldn’t explain the ever rolling digital numbers on the southern buildings of Union Square. Until now.
Today’s ventures online somehow pointed out that the fixture is called the Metronome Clock. I believe this includes the odd, steam puffing maroon wall to the right of the digital numbers as well (on a side note, the hand at the top of that fixture is said to be an exact replica of the statue that sits directly across from the wall of a man on a horse).
Now for the interesting part. Decoding the clock:
In addition, there are seemingly meaningless numbers which actually represent the time: if the clock reads 070437XXX235516 it means that it is 7:04 A.M and 37 seconds. (7 hours and 4 minutes since midnight) and that there are 16 hours, 55 minutes and 23 seconds remaining until midnight. The three middle digits are a blur and cannot be read.
Thank you Wikipedia.