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unmediated

 

April 08, 2005

Jay Dedman just sent this one to the videoblogging mailing list I'm a part of. His friend, Ivettza, started video blogging recently and her father had a bad motorcycle accident that put him in a coma. She made a short video about it. Welcome to the long tail of video. I bet she never expected to have more than a few family and friends watching in on her personal hell. By sharing herself with all of us she's done something more gripping than any TV show I can think of. Unlike the Apprentice this is real reality TV.

You know, spending a week in a hospital makes you more emphathetic toward those who are going through a tough time. I met a Microsoft employee whos wife had a hysterectomy due to a tumor. They are waiting to find out if it's cancerous or not. I don't believe in God, but I'm praying for a good outcome for his family.

Lots of waiting in hospitals like the one I'm writing to you from. Waiting. Waiting. Then some terrifying moments shatter the silence. Mostly of doctors telling you more surgery is needed. Or worse. Thankfully I'm not hearing those bad words like cancer or, worse, "don't know." I hear Peter Jennings just found out that he has lung cancer. A friend of mine died of that in the 1980s. But others are hearing those horrible words all around me. In my room it's not cakewalk. There's constant intrusions. Blood pressure checks. Blood workups. Flowers! Bathroom walks. New IV's. Phone calls. Beeping machines. Even some running Windows! (Can't they make nicer sounding beeps?) Room-mates making weird noises. No privacy for some things that otherwise are very private.

But, at least there's wifi. It's the thing keeping me sane. That, and all my friends who keep emailing me and IM'ing me. Appreciate all of that very much.

No cause for alarm for me personally. The one I'm watching over is doing well. Hopefully that story can be told someday too.

Thanks Ivettza. Hope your dad recovers quickly. Thanks for your tale from the Long Tail.

Who said videoblogging is only going to be used for porn? Certainly not anyone who's visited the videoblogging mailing list.