Author Archives: geoffreylong

Geoffrey Long is a media analyst, scholar, and storyteller exploring transmedia experiences, emerging entertainment platforms and the future of entertainment as the Lead Narrative Producer for the Narrative Design Team at Microsoft Studios. He is an alum of the MIT Comparative Media Studies program, a FoE Fellow with the Futures of Entertainment community, and a co-editor of the Playful Thinking book series from the MIT Press. His personal site can be found at geoffreylong.com.

Well, that’s heartening.

It’s oddly reassuring when you read about someone you admire admiring someone else you admire, as in this bit from Mr. Gaiman: I had an utter fanboy moment when a faintly familiar-looking person came over at the end and introduced himself as Philip Pullman, and I just started gushing foolishly, and he was kind enough […]

The future of television.

Oh. Oh, wow. I have seen the way television should work, and the choice of programs is spectacular. PBS has posted the entire NOVA: The Elegant Universe in streaming QuickTime and RealVideo chunks. All three hours, split into something like 24 chapters. Wow. This is so cool. (Hat tip to the illustrious Mr. Brown.)

Whoa. Big tribe.

I need to redo the titles in the Biographies section, so I just did a quick nose count to see the scope of the project. Imagine my surprise to see that we’ve had a hundred and nine contributors since we’ve gone online. Wow. Thanks, folks.

On Urban Tribes.

So, after reading the book and talking with Ethan for a while, it’s really made me think about my current situation. There have been waypoints for my friends getting married – a couple got hitched after graduating from high school, a bunch more got married after graduating from college, and now… Well, I’m waiting for […]

Virtual Book Tour: Urban Tribes.

As a part of the Virtual Book Tour, I’d like to present an excerpt from Urban Tribes, now available in Features. Check it out!

Announcing the Autumn edition of Inkblots.

I’m pleased to announce that the Autumn Inkblots is coming online as we speak. So far, Voice, Fiction and Poetry, Portfolio, Critiques and Biographies have all been updated. Features will be coming on-line very soon (including today’s involvement in the Virtual Book Tour). A few other things may be added as the day progresses as […]

Tomorrow’s issue is going to rock.

There’s so much cool stuff coming together for the next issue, it’s incredible. Two people whom I’ve wanted to include forever finally have pieces appearing here, one for the first time ever and another for the first time in our online incarnation. So cool. Check back tomorrow around noon EST! (And I’m planning on noon […]

Something I should remember when feeling burnt out.

Sometimes I stress out about Inkblots. When you’ve been doing something for almost ten years, it becomes all too easy to start worrying about its perpetual economic unfeasibility, or its fluctuations in punctuality, and how you’re ever going to keep its quality on the rise, especially after you’ve had so many wonderful contributors in the […]

What a glorious feeling.

My friend Bill writes the best classic movie critiques ever. This Friday we’ll be publishing his take on “Singin’ in the Rain,” and he’s done a bang-up job. Stay tuned!

With a boom boom and a vroom vroom.

This morning has been odd. Last night I stayed up later than I’d intended, due to my picking up my new copy of Flash to the Core by Joshua Davis for a little reading before bedtime. The book is awesome – in much the same way as Jeffrey Zeldman deftly handled introducing web design to […]