Kathy E Gill

I'm a writer, educator and motorcyclist who spends far too much time exploring digital tools and spaces. Here are a few. (Hint: I'm kegill almost everywhere.)

Profile

Digital Evangelist
Online Media | Greater Seattle Area, US

Summary

I've been online since the early 1990s, having discovered CompuServe before Marc Andreessen launched Mosaic at the University of Illinois in 1993. I ran one of the first political candidate websites in Washington State in 1995, when Jim Waldo made an unsuccessful bid for governor. I then rode the dot-com boom as a communication consultant who could speak web, until the crash. In 2001, I began my third career, as a full-time academic, first teaching techies about communications and now teaching communicators about technology. Since 2000, I have also taught newbies how to ride motorcycles!

I am now teaching at UW part-time, writing a lot, and working on my first major web project in a decade: the website for King County Elections. I'm also getting ready for my bi-annual Digital Democracy class and factcheckwa.org, the supporting site.

Educator with passion for new media; contractor/consulting experience with most Puget Sound major firms; college-level teaching since the late 90s, including prior teaching for Dale Carnegie. Technical skills (HTML5, XHTML, CSS, XML) plus soft skills (project management, leadership, communication). Award winning writer; two stints as a writer for About.com.
Specialties: Subjects: social media, digital journalism (citizen and professional), website usability, public policy. Skills: online writing, editing, training; usability; user experience design; web site design and development; traditional and digital media public affairs/public relations

Experience

  • Nov 2011 - Present
    Webmaster / King County Elections
    Oversee day-to-day operations of the state's largest local elections site and manage a site redesign. Part-time.
  • Mar 2009 - Present
    Technology Analyst / The Moderate Voice
    Political and technical analyst for group blog.
  • 2008 - Present
    Political Analyst / NWCN
    Provide political commentary during election cycle
  • Sept 2003 - Present
    Faculty / University of Washington, Digital Media
    Develop and teach core classes in content creation, online writing and presentation, evolution of new media technologies, theories and practices of interactive media. Always interested in guest lecturers and guest lecturing! Current research interest is blogs, social media and politics; personal blog at http://www.wiredpen.com/ September 2003 - June 2011 : Senior Lecturer June 2011 - present : Adjunct Faculty
  • 2000 - Present
    Instructor / Motorcycle Safety Foundation
    Instructor/Rider Coach for Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF) courses in greater Seattle area.
  • Jul 2004 - Present
    Writer / About.com
  • 2000 - Present
    Consultant / Best Consulting
  • Jan 1999 - Present
    Consultant / AT&T Wireless
  • Dec 1996 - Present
    Consultant / The Boeing Company
  • Nov 1990 - Present
    Public Affairs Director / Northwest Pulp and Paper Association
  • 1986 - Present
    Executive Director / PA Association of Farmer Cooperatives
  • 1984 - Present
    Assistant Press Secretary / Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture
  • 1980 - Present
    Communications Manager / Inter-State Milk Producers' Cooperative

Education

  • 1977 - 1979
    Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
    MS in Agricultural Economics
    Activities: Alpha Gamma Rho; paper from thesis selected at Ag Econ Society annual meeting
  • 1975 - 1977
    The University of Georgia
    ABJ in Journalism, Agricultural Economics
    Activities: Sigma Delta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa, Mortarboard
  • 1973 - 1975
    Abraham Baldwin
    AA in Journalism

Additional Information

Interests:
digital media, diffusion of innovation, blogosphere, politics, social software, podcasting, educational technology, usability, user-centered design, motorcycles, mysteries, sciFi

Posts

Redesigning success with an artist identity

cunningham-emily:

About three months ago, I was transformed by a talk Sharon Ann Lee gave on redesigning success. Lee is a cultural trend analyst and author who runs “a think tank/studio on trends, culture and creativity.” Her talk has been buzzing around in my mind since watching it.  Lee recommends: 1) know your numbers 2) live in the power zone 3) create a poetic vision of your life.  Because a poetic vision serves as your North Star, keeping your heart/dream/life-purpose mission at the forefront of your mind and guiding decisions about what projects to take on, I’ve wanted to start drafting mine.  Well, today I did! I filled out the worksheet she emailed me and created my very first draft. Your poetic vision is a project that is in perpetual beta, constantly being tested and redefined, so although I need to work on it, I’m pleased that I now have a good first draft. [Note: I began drafting this post on January 9, 2012, which is the day I drafted my poetic vision.] 

Lee’s talk was also important to me in a long journey I’ve been on to reclaim myself as an artist. Identity, and how you think about yourself is so powerful. Though I liked drawing when I was younger and creating visual art, I didn’t particularly have more of an affinity for it than most children (though I think children are amazingly creative and artistic!).  I wasn’t labeled an “artist” by my family or education institutions nor did I think of myself as one.  The way I thought of myself as a “creative” person ebbed and flowed.  But more and more, bit by bit, I started thinking of myself as belonging in the Creative Camp.  Though I didn’t think of myself as a (capital A) Artist, I knew creativity was important to me and I just felt like I belonged with poets, artists, dancers, and other creative people.  Several birthdays in a row in my late twenties, I modeled my birthday parties after those a 5 year old might have, with coned party hats, and lots and lots of paper, magazines, scissors, crazyons, markers, tape, and glue spread out on a long table. The idea was to create an environment for people to create, engage, and connect with one another through art with no judgements attached - after all it was modeled and branded as a birthday party a 5 year old might have! There was no way to have “bad art.” The point was to have fun and connect and explore art-making.

In July 2010, I went (hesitantly) to a night for artists to work on something deemed artist liberation. The basic idea behind the evening was to work on the idea that art is important, that what we each were striving to do with art was important, and that while oppression against artists was damaging and hurtful — and real —  we could keep going forward with what we believed in.

I knew this group was very open and non-judgemental about who qualified as an artist, so though I decided to self-identify enough to go, I didn’t feel like a “real” Artist, and  wondered if maybe I shouldn’t be there at all.  It was amazing, and I had probably the first major breakthrough in beginning to think of myself as an artist.  Afterwards, I tweeted (lightly edited for clarity):

Inspired by artists and thinkers I met with tonight. Some thoughts I had: 1) Ideas are (one of) my medium. 2) The Internet is a giant playground 3) The open, social web *is* art & creativity, realized (and other stuff). 4) designing play & interaction is art making. 5) I love humanity.

I didn’t have to think of myself as a visual artist to be an artist.  Being an artist was a way of looking at the world, of being in the world, and interacting and influencing the world.  I could look at problems, I could look at situations, I could look at the wonder of the universe with an artist’s mind.  Lee’s talk took this idea that had already been percolating in my mind, and made it more real by describing the way she came to think of herself as an artist.

Read More

mathewi: RT @wilw LAPD decides which media outlets get to cover the eviction of #occupyla? And the press is going along with this? Shame on them all.

ChristerEricson: How they hire programmers for the Facebook mobile app: “Do you want to work here?” “Um, well, sure.” OK, you’re hired!”

KAsPower: KAP’s founder, @SarahSchacht will be a judge on the panel for the 2011 GovFresh Awards! http://t.co/cIDqvfzr #gf2011 ^DS

jmproffitt: Gotta get me some pepper spray. Especially now that it’s legal to spray college kids. You know, for sitting in public. Scallywags!

Pregnant woman pepper sprayed at Occupy Seattle - CBS News

Via Scoop.it - Occupy The Northwest

AP - 16 Nov 2011 -An 84-year-old activist is among those sprayed as cops arrest six to disperse anti-Wall Street protesters.
Via cbsnews.com

Capitol Hill businesses demand 'immediate results' in camp clean-up -- UPDATE

Via Scoop.it - Occupy The Northwest

18 Nov 2011 - A group representing more than 150 Capitol Hill businesses want the Seattle Community College camp to be cleaned “immediately”. Will Seattle use “public safety” to close the camp? Source: CapitolHillSeattle.com
Via capitolhillseattle.com

heidimiller: #TEDxRainier My favorite session were the early afternoon ones - @kegill did a great Storify summary of content + Tweets -…

RLSeattle: I’m live streaming #TEDxRainier11 this year cuz I can’t be there in person. The caliber has increased exponentially since last year. Awesome

Digidave: Today is 11-11-11. Just wanted to note the last binary day for a millennium and also a rare palindromic day. Last of our lives.

Occupy Seattle wants to disrupt visit of JP Morgan's Jamie Dimon | KPLU News for Seattle and the Northwest

Via Scoop.it - Occupy The Northwest

Oct 31, 2011. Occupy Seattle protestors have set their sights on the highest paid banker on Wall Street, who will be visiting Seattle on Wednesday.
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While some US cities crack down, many others willing to let Wall Street demonstrations go on

Via Scoop.it - Occupy The Northwest

Oct 28, WaPost — Philadelphia, New York, Minneapolis and Portland OR,  are content to letting the Wall Street protests (#OWS) go on for now. U.S. cities breaking up the protests include San Diego and Oakland CA, Atlanta GA,  and Nashville, TN.
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New CBS 60 Minutes Website In Safari

1. New CBS 60 Minutes Website In Safari

According to TechCrunch, CBS has created a Chrome-specific website [“Chrome App”] for 60 Minutes that “delivers high-quality video of “60…

digiphile: @alexismadrigal @carr2n “We are the 99%” went viral. My point is that is that the “whole world” isn’t watching. It’s not AJE from Tahrir SQ.

ethanklapper: If polling org. is member of Nat’l Council on Public Polls … and not following their guidelines, raise a red flag. -@RacheLSB #SMPolitics

Occupy Seattle, get free pizza | KPLU News

Via Scoop.it - Occupy The Northwest

Small business owners say they are part of the 99%. “Main Street Alliance, a national network of small business coalitions, [is] showing their support for the protesters.”
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