Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts

Saturday, April 19, 2008

THESE (21) WEEKS IN CHATTER - NBA Playoffs/UFC 83 Preview Edition (4/19/08)

(THIS WEEK IN CHATTER, or TWiCh, is FanChatter's sorta-weekly letter to its registered users. Sign up here to receive via email and Call 'Em Like You See 'Em.)

Yes, FanChatter is alive and TWiChing.
Thanks to all of you for sticking with us as we continue to develop the first mobile sports chat utility on our own time and our own dime. As always, your critical feedback is welcome. Please reply to any TWiCh email anytime with thoughts on how we can improve our site or mobile tools or usability or anything. We're building this thing for fans like you and your opinion counts.


Here's a glimpse of what we've been up to lately. That's me (above right) with Minnesota Twins pitching great and color commentator Bert (be home... in the Hall of Fame) Blyleven in the Twins press box. It was Mr. Blyleven's birthday and I was there to monitor our new FanChatter Stadium Scoreboard Photo Sharing feature, so I submitted this pic in his honor and it made it on the board (video proof). Props to the Twins for becoming our first official team partner (we're on the lookout for more), Qwest for making it happen, and all the fans who have sent in photos so far, though you may remember that we first tested this idea during three University of Minnesota Golden Gopher football games last fall. So sincere thanks to all who helped us turn this promotional idea into a full-fledged mobile in-game interactivity business.

A FEW ANNOUNCEMENTS

· Mixed Martial Arts is taking FanChatter by storm now that Muay Thai champion Kaitlin Young (FanChatter username: Kaitlin) has started chattering in the Tough Stuff group about her May 31 Elite XC bout vs. Gina Carano, which we can all watch on CBS...

...and newcomer cageplay, who runs his own very cool Fantasy MMA Betting and Predictions website cageplay.com, is chattering live from UFC 83 TONIGHT (Saturday 4/19) in the Cageplay.com UFC 83 Journey group.

· The playoffs start today in the NBA group and Cleveland's finest kyleroth has resurfaced to hype the Cavs.

· I'm sorry to report that our mobile alerts machine is down for the weekend, which sucks. I was looking forward to getting cageplay's chatter on my phone tonight but now that won't be happening. The good news is you can still post chatter from your phone via text message or email, so all of cageplay's live event coverage will be available online.

And now, a little chatter...

THESE 21 WEEKS IN CHATTER

It's been a full 21 WEEKS since our last TWiCh email (my bad) and I can't possibly honor all the great chatter and photos that have been posted since then, but I'll do my best:

We had a busy winter and spring in the Go Twins group...

KPK: No matter who the twins get, its tough to say that they add up to Johan Santana. But an outfield of Cabrera, Cuddyer and Young is sorta tits

Amill50: Gomez they say is faster than Reyes. Prob the best player in the deal. Future 5 tool player.

Nemo: Every single equals a double for Gomez...I'm already a fan! Torii who? (I know that's premature, but its opening day and I'm excited)!

statman: Mercury on third.

sarah: Neshek went vegan during the offseason-so maybe that boy needs some beef

Brett Favre's retirement in the National Football League group...

JJDacotah: I wonder if people are staying home from work watching reruns of their super bowl win with #4 and crying in their cheese curds

dastro: how will Wisconsin's economic engine deal with this blow?

March Madness in the College Hoops group...

Bistro24: Gophs win. the Hoff hits the big shot and Champps Richfield goes crazy. there were people hugging each other at the bar. strangers too!

todd: My stone cold lead pipe lock tip for all coaches playing Memphis: Foul them, a lot.

The run for the ping pong balls in the Twolves group...

JJDacotah: sweet! didn't realize they played tonight. Off topic, my wife gave birth to our second girl yesterday! Another baby wolf fan!

Marty: CONGRATS JJ! But you should warn your daughter that the pups don't win EVERY night!

Don: Good news: Timbers who tied with Memphis won the tiebreaker & have the third most chances in the lottery.

Bistro24: down w/ David Stern and his dictatorship. only way i will not scream "conspiracy" during the lotto is if the Pups get D Rose w/ the #1 pick

The Sonics and Isaiah Thomas leaving town in the NBA group...

Marty: i'm a pour one mocha grande latte for ma sonic homies: the glove, the rainman, X, big smooth, and that hairy mascot thing. norm green sucks.

mmerrill: There IS a God... Isaiah Thomas has been fired... about a year overdue, Donnie Walsh. My grandmother could have made that decision.

A Wild run in the NHL playoffs in the Wildin' group...

TheStitch: It is the playoffs and it is ON.

philbin5: Let's see the Wild come back

(yeah, we could use a little more Wild chatter)

And all the way back to the end of New England's perfect season in the National Football League group...

rickspicksworld: N.E. will gut the Giants.

robsanders: keep the pressure on Brady and you have a shot at the game

Marty: The Wild Card trumps the Perfect Hand. Cheaters never win.

That's all for now. Spring football is starting the Bowl Championship Series group, it's second season time for the NBA and NHL, the NFL Draft is next weekend, and baseball has only just begun. Thanks again and look for yourself in next week's TWiCh email!

Marty and the team from FanChatter.com

Monday, March 24, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Here's the big press release announcing our deal with the Minnesota Twins, including a video of our Scoreboard Photo Sharing test last fall at the University of Minnesota football team's home loss to North Dakota State.

(Note that I went with Vimeo not YouTube for my video player. I needed the best picture possible to demonstrate the clarity of the mobile photos on the jumbotron and Vimeo was the, um, clear choice.)


FanChatter Stadium Scoreboard Photo Sharing Test from FanChatter on Vimeo.

Minnesota Twins partner with FanChatter to offer Scoreboard Photo Sharing

FanChatter’s Stadium technology will enable fans at the Metrodome to send photos from their phone for display on the scoreboard video screens during Twins games.

Minneapolis, MN — March 24, 2008 — The Minnesota Twins have partnered with mobile sports chat utility FanChatter.com to provide Scoreboard Photo Sharing at all 81 Twins home games in 2008, beginning with the season opener at the Metrodome on Monday, March 31.

FanChatter, which allows users to post and receive sports chat via text and photo messaging, recently launched their new FanChatter Stadium division to offer teams and event sponsors a full range of in-arena mobile interactivity features. The Twins are FanChatter’s first official team partner.

“We’re excited to give Twins fans the chance to take their own pictures and see them on the big screen,” said FanChatter co-founder Marty Wetherall. “FanChatter takes the old roving Fan Cam and puts it the fans’ hands, and you won’t believe the clarity of the photos. They look as good on the scoreboard as they do your phone.”

At each home game, fans will be invited to take mobile photos and send them to a custom email address at FanChatter, where they will be reviewed and selected by Twins personnel for inclusion in one of two fan photo slideshows to be shown during designated inning breaks.

Every fan that sends a photo receives an instant reply message on their phone thanking them for their submission and inviting them to visit an online gallery to see and share their photos after the game. The reply message and gallery are presented by the feature’s sponsor, Qwest Communications.

FanChatter successfully tested their Scoreboard Photo Sharing technology during three University of Minnesota football games at the Metrodome last fall. Now the Stadium concept has been expanded to include text message voting, trivia contests, and other mobile interactions, all of which provide teams and sponsors with a “triple-play” of brand communication platforms – in-arena (video board and public address), mobile, and online.

"FanChatter gives fans new ways to interact with games and events,” said Wetherall. "The technology on your phone has moved well beyond simple voice transmission, and it’s easy to use. Scoreboard photo sharing is just the beginning of what’s possible.

Wetherall continued, “It’s also really cool to have our favorite team as our client.”

Fueled by their deal with the Twins, FanChatter plans to market their services to other teams and sponsors throughout the country while continuing to innovate in the area of mobile sports fan connectivity. They are currently enhancing their Stadium offering to enable more in-game interactions between fans, teams, and sponsors.

About FanChatter:

A Minnesota company, FanChatter is the joint creation of Fanacious, Inc. of Minneapolis and Slantwise Design of Hopkins.

Wetherall, 34, is founder and creative director of Fanacious, Inc., a sports social networking company, and is also senior producer at top creative advertising agency Fallon. His credits include the EDS Super Bowl campaign (“Cat Herders”, “Airplane”, and “Running With The Squirrels”) and independent marketing work for the Minnesota Twins, Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Vikings. In 2003, he created THE SHOW TO BE NAMED LATER..., a "Sports Fan Reality Show" that aired first on community access television and later on Twin Cities NBC-affiliate KARE 11 in 2005. He is a graduate of the USC School of Cinematic Arts.

Slantwise Design is a web design and software development studio founded in 2003 by Jonathan Dahl and Todd Emmel. The company creates usable designs and robust web applications using rapid, agile development methods. Clients range from startups to the enterprise. Most recently, Slantwise has been focused on mobile/web integration and video transcoding systems as well as Facebook and iPhone applications. Slantwise built FanChatter and FanChatter Stadium using the Ruby on Rails framework.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Photo=Real

Some quickies...



My buddy from work is going to the Cubs playoff Game 3 at Wrigley tonight and he's activated his mobile phone -- a Blackberry Pearl -- at FanChatter. Blackberry Pearls have cameras built-in, so he's going to try and post some pics from my favorite place on earth... DURING THE PLAYOFFS, NO LESS!

If only my Cubbies weren't already facing elimination down 0-2. I hope he's not preoccupied while chattering and somehow interferes with a ball in play. We don't need another Stevie.



All I can really hope is that he doesn't drop his phone in his beer early and call it a day. So check out the MLB group tonight (the game starts at 6pm Eastern, 5pm Central) to (hopefully) see what he sees.

The site is really humming now, with the photo uploading and the improvements in our mobile tools. "Call 'Em Like You See 'Em" finally means everything it's supposed to mean.

It doesn't hurt that the baseball playoffs are getting good, and we've had some great live chatters during games that feel a lot like great game-viewing parties (but without the smell of the dude sitting next to you).



Lastly, something big is brewing for us over at the U (of Minnesota). We'll know more after their big rematch against NDSU October 20th -- both about the Gophers' football integrity and our own ability to prove our worth.

Stay tuned...

Thursday, October 4, 2007

THIS WEEK IN CHATTER (10/4/07)

(FanChatter's sorta-weekly letter to its registered users. Sign up here to receive via email and Call 'Em Like You See 'Em.)

Here it is sports fans, your second-ever, sorta-weekly...

THIS WEEK IN CHATTER

I'll start with one of the greatest nights in FanChatter's brief history (second only to Home Run Derby Monday). Four of us -- myself, Tommy_Trojan, Damon, and JoeyD -- all chattered live in the Fight On Trojans group while watching USC beat up on Nebraska. It was like we were all in the same room, even though we watched from Minneapolis, Eagan (MN), San Francisco, and LA, respectively. I even had to pick up my mother-in-law from the airport during the second quarter, but I was able to follow along on my phone with mobile chatter alerts and chatter myself from a couple of red lights.

Speaking of college football, Nemo was talking Bison in the NDSU Football group, and look wondered in the U of Mn Football group if the Gophers should be dropped to Division III, just like Michigan was after losing to Appalachian State (or so said the link he posted from The Onion Sports).

But Bistro24 offered chatter so big he made like Ernie Banks and played two:

"Attn Gopher football players: there's a new rule on campus. no walking around thinking you're all that. also, no using football to get girls...

...until you are no longer an embarassment, i don't want to see any of you chucks at the bar or anywhere besides practice or the weightroom."

With more on his mind, and possibly in anticipation of the Philadelphia Eagles' god-awful canary yellow and robin's egg blue throwbacks, Bistro24 later created the Logos and Jerseys group and touched off a string of posts about everybody's all-time favorites and least favorites. Whalers vs. North Stars... Discuss.

Of course, one of the most chattered-about stories was Marc Ecko putting the fate of the Bonds 756 ball to a public vote. Many weighed in at the Bonds & Selig group, including gaulstone who praised Ecko's marketing brilliance; while cyclones cautioned that the Hall of Fame "is for telling the story of baseball. Good and Evil. None of Big Mac's items have * by it."

cyclones also chattered up some Johan Santana trade rumors in the Go Twins group, prompting jon to wonder if the Luis Castillo trade would end up cursing the Twins for years to come (or maybe he cursed the Mets). And sarah spoke for many Twins fans in saying that management would be "nuts" not to re-sign Torii Hunter.

JJDacotah tried to explain the Trenton Hassell-for-Greg Buckner trade in the Twolves group.

Then, out of nowhere, Dastro chattered in a language I could barely understand about something called the Carling Cup in the English Premier League group.

Maybe he was inspired by RamDon's equally confusing analysis of the US Women's World Cup team's choice of wardrobe. Soccer, was it?

Back to football, KPK inquired in the Purple Pride group about the "Kelly Holcomb era so far". Interesting, but not as interesting as the tailgate photos of Viking superfan Syd Davy, a.k.a. "Cheese-Free", that I posted there on behalf of cell phone photographer dond107.

Funny how quiet the Packer Fans group has become, with only sschroed confidently (and correctly) predicting a Packer victory in Minnesota and their resulting 4-0 start.

And we end this list as we began, with a memorable game viewing experience made possible by FanChatter, and this time chronicled in the MLB group. It started with statman accusing the TBS broadcast team of "(sucking) the soul out of the game I love" and ended with me chattering late into the night as Matt Holliday scored (or didn't) in the bottom of the 13th inning to win that thrilling one-game playoff for the Rockies. But I wondered...

WHERE'S EVERYBODY ELSE?

There's no way all of you are watching all of these great playoff games will all of your buddies at some big endless party. Well that's exactly what FanChatter offers, only the party is on your computer and you can access it using your phone.

The same goes for college football Saturday and NFL (or should I say Fantasy Football ) Sunday-Monday. And where's thewagontrain ? Doesn't the NHL season start tonight?

Also, if anyone is actually going to any of these games -- especially the baseball playoff games and ESPECIALLY at Wrigley (hint hint) -- be sure to activate your camera phone and post lots of photos and other chatter. That way, we can all feel like we're there, too.

So thank you for growing with us, please recruit more friends, enable your mobile alerts (so you don't miss anything good), and always Call 'Em Like You See 'Em... from anywhere, anytime.

Marty

Learn more about building a mobile sports fan chat utility at THE BLOG TO BE NAMED LATER...

...and yes, that was way more than a week.

EASIER PHOTO TOOLS AND NOW PHOTO UPLOADS

(This was an email sent to FanChatter users -- all 100 of us! -- on 10/4/07. Sign up here to be included on future emails and Call 'Em Like You See 'Em.)

Get ready Sports Fans,

Not only is football heating up and the MLB playoffs are here, but Dane Cook has been fired... we wish. No, but FanChatter did just get a whole lot better. Here's how...

MOBILE INSTRUCTIONS

First, many of you were confused by our mobile instructions, so we made them easier. Basically, FanChatter uses email addresses instead of numeric short codes for posting chatter via text message or email. You may not have known you can send text messages to an email address, but you can (unless you have a "smart phone" that only allows texting to numeric addresses, in which case you should mobile chatter via your email account on that so-called "smart phone" of yours).

Why do we do it this way? Because it allows us to assign each group its own mobile address. For example, to enter mobile chatter in the Broadcast Sports group, text or email from your activated phone or email address to "media@fanchatter.com". Every group page displays its own mobile address, and you create the mobile address when you create a group.

Using FanChatter without using FanChatter's mobile tools is like man using only 10% of his brain. Let me tell you a story...

Late last Saturday night I was torn over who to start in my fantasy football leagues. I chattered in the Fantasy Football group about my choices and asked for help, but it was late and I didn't expect to get any feedback until morning (if I was lucky), so I shut down my computer and went to bed.

Suddenly my phone buzzed. I had a text message. Turns out it was a chatter alert from the Fantasy Football group (which I'm subscribed to). JJDacotah had seen my chatter and posted his advice. Chances are he wasn't on the FanChatter site at the moment I posted, so he must have received a chatter alert on his phone or email and answered me right away, also probably from his phone or email. I chattered back from my phone thanking him, and his advice turned out to be right on, including starting Marshawn Lynch over Lamont "You Big Dummy" Jordan.

Just remember to manage who you're subscribed to. Like me, for instance. I chatter A LOT, especially during the big games, so remove me from your Lineup if your phone starts buzzing too much. Subscribing to groups (instead of- or in addition to other fans) is another good way to go if you're only interested in receiving chatter alerts about certain sports or topics.

So mobile instructions getting easier is the first thing, which makes the second thing really cool...

PHOTOS! YES PHOTOS!

You can now post photos to FanChatter from your phone or email. Take a picture from the game or the bar using your camera phone and send it in to your page or to a group for everyone to see. Show us what your face looks like when your team wins or loses, or when Brad Childress fails to use Adrian Peterson in the second half, except on frickin' kick-off returns. Yeah, I'd like to see that picture.

Easier mobile instructions. Photo chatter (with- or without captions -- here's one of my dog the USC fan). Enjoy.

Marty

Learn more about building a mobile sports fan chat utility at THE BLOG TO BE NAMED LATER...

PS - This letter was getting long, so I'm breaking out our latest This Week in Chatter -- or "TWiCh" -- highlights into a second email. Thanks to everyone for using the site, and chatter back soon...

Monday, October 1, 2007

We talking about practice, man. What are we talking about? Practice?

Any excuse I get...



Well, tonight I practiced over at Slantwise for my big FanChatter presentation at MinneDemo.



MinneDemo is where Minnesota's most interesting tech minds get together to share what's new and cool. I'm lucky enough to occupy one of the six demo slots and I'm determined to make the most of it. (You can check out the rest of my fellow demo-ers, as well as the long wait list to demo, here.)

It's all going down on Thursday, October 11 at O'Garas Bar & Grill in St. Paul. Drinks at 6:30pm. Demos start at 7:30pm. My turn starts at 7:45pm and lasts only 15 minutes.

That's the tough part. I really need to get my script down because I was winging it tonight and it was messy.

(You should know that MinneDemo is made possible by Luke at Slantwise, and it was at MinneBar in April where I first met Jon from Slantwise, and it's because of him and his team that FanChatter exists, so I can't thank them all enough. But more on MinneDemo later...)

Here's tonight's big news:



You can now upload photos to FanChatter from your camera phone!

Yes, this is HUGE! And no, that's not a picture of me.


I've uploaded two so far -- one of a painted-up Vikings fan from Winnepeg named Syd Davy taken at last Sunday's tailgate party and one of my dog Lula Mae wearing her USC windbreaker.

Much, much more to come on this, too. I really need to practice now. See you at MinneDemo.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Nothing Lasts Forever



A week ago my favorite player was traded away from my favorite team.

The next day a bridge I had crossed many times fell into the Mississippi River, killing at least five people including a guy I had played baseball against named Patrick Holmes.



I'm lucky I wasn't on that bridge. I'm lucky I get to feel sad about KG leaving for Boston and I'm lucky (if not crazy) to feel hopeful about the future of my Timberpups.

Two years ago, when I was still doing my sports fan TV show THE SHOW TO BE NAMED LATER..., we had an idea to have an 11-year-old Wolves fan interview Wally Szczerbiak after the final game of the season. Rumors were rampant that Wally would be traded that off-season, so we figured this might be her last chance to interview her all time favorite player.

So we got permission from the team, (show host) Jonny Voss came along to help out, I operated the camera, and here's what happened...



We learned later that KG left without talking to the media that night, but he went out of his way to talk to us.

As Jonny expressed in our lead out to commercial, we really did believe that the Big Ticket would be a Timberwolf for the rest of his career, just like those people on that bridge believed they would make it home safely last Wednesday.

Nothing lasts forever. Not home run records (Bonds hit #756 tonight). Not TV shows (no matter how much your local superstar athlete loves the one you created). And certainly not KG in Minnesota.

But we'll always have our memories (and thanks to DeROK, we have this heartfelt video tribute)...



And there's always hope. I snuck into the Wolves press conference today where they introduced the five players they received in the KG trade.


I chattered about everything I saw in the Go Wolves group at FanChatter.com, and my fellow Wolves fans followed along, responding to my chatter and challenging me to speak up and ask a question. I didn't.

But the back and forth on the site was great, and the new guys looked good (except for Gerald Green who looked tired/bored/sedated), and mobile sports fan chat once again proved to be pretty cool.

Even with no guarantees, life is good, isn't it?

Monday, July 30, 2007

Rock and Rollover



Wanna know what happens when you don't post for a while? Sooner or later, all hell breaks loose.

Today the dam gave way when it was announced that Kevin Garnett would be traded to the Celtics. Then the water rose higher when the Luis Castillo trade to the Mets was made official, all of which led me to chatter my afternoon away.

But more on that later. Let's go forward by going back, starting with July 19th (my birthday)...

On the day I turned 34, with my mom and dad and wife and daughter Audrey all there to see it (the first and only time that group has ever been assembled), I knocked in my baseball team's winning run (I play on a town ball team in the Park National League called the Minneapolis Lakers) with my first ever walk off hit. It was certainly a birthday to remember, especially since I was able to chatter about it from the parking lot while the crack of the bat was still ringing in my ears.

A couple days later, on our way back from a weekend away in Galena, Illinois, I stopped at the Field of Dreams in Dyersville, Iowa.

All around me were fans that had brought their own bats and balls and gloves to please the gods of baseball with games of catch and rounds of batting practice.



As I walked with my dog Lula Mae out from the corn and into left center field, all I could ask was "Is this heaven?", because it sure did feel like it.

Then I held Audrey as we ran the bases. Reaching third, we waited for the batter to step aside before we headed for home. It was Audrey who scored as I set her bare feet on the plate. What a wonderful place it is, that field where dreams come true.

My Mother in Law Daphne and I discussed FanChatter in the car later that day, driving through Iowa, and her questions helped lead me to another important revelation about the site...

"Mobile Sports Fan Chat" isn't just about posting from your mobile phone via SMS, because someday all phones will have browsers and all chat sites will be accessible by phone.

When we say "Mobile", we also mean "Updates". No other sports fan chat site notifies you by SMS or email when your friend has posted an entry. That means no other sports fan chat site can compare to FanChatter when it comes to breaking news or even just breaking commentary.

Thanks to my Mother in Law, I figured that out somewhere in southeastern Iowa.

Intermission:



Those were the days, weren't they?

So about those updates. Today I received a email from FanChatter (I've opted to use my Gmail account as my mobile "updater" for now because I can access it from my Blackberry and I prefer to chatter with a full QWERTY keyboard) that read...

(JJDacotah) KG to Celts? For a package of Ratliff, Jefferson, Telfair, Green and a pick? It better be for the one the Wolves gave Boston!

What was this? The Celtics deal was back on the table? Even though it hit me out of the blue, it made sense because Boston had picked up Ray Allen on draft day, meaning now KG could consider teaming with both Allen and Paul Pierce on a squad that would most certainly contend in the NBA's Eastern Conference.

The thing is, I found out about it because JJDacotah chattered and I received the update. Thanks JJ, whoever you are.




So history was made twice today, once by a couple of old teammates (McHale and Ainge, above) and once by a crazed Timberwolves superfan learning about the imminent trade of his favorite player... not on TV, not from a guy on the street, not even from a visit to ESPN.com... but from a new sports fan chat site offering mobile updates.

(Oh, and all the Twins got for Castillo were two minor league scrubs who can't hit their weight.)

Now that's a day to remember AND forget.

So why did I call this post "Rock and Rollover"? Well, I intended to mention that Audrey, who turned 4 months old today, completed her first full rollover this morning (followed immediately by her second, and third, and almost fourth before I stopped her from rolling off the bed). Then I was going to liken that (somehow) to FanChatter's 1-month anniversary (July 28, 2007) and how it was time for us to take it to the next level, just like my daughter. Time to rock, if you will, like Kiss on their Rock and Rollover album.

But this post was getting too long, and I'm only making it longer, so props to Audrey for learning to roll, and congrats to us for one month of chatter beginning with the NBA Draft and ending with my all time favorite baller being shipped to Boston.



Who said sports are boring in the summer?

Monday, July 16, 2007

Explaining What We're Doing (in Six Easy Steps)


Yesterday I was interviewed live on the air by KFAN's Henry Lake during "The Lake Show", his weekly Sunday solo gig. The interview lasted about twelve minutes but it felt like two. I did, however, succeed in repeating the name "FanChatter.com" at least a half dozen times.

I'm not sure how well I did beyond simple name repetition, but I'm hoping to get a copy of the segment soon. Others gave me good reviews, although my wife said I talked "pretty fast"...

...but here's what hit me this morning:

The more I talk to people about FanChatter, the more I learn what elements of my pitch are resonating. Interestingly enough, by observing the reactions of others I get a much better idea of where we should be aiming.

Or maybe it's by using the site in its current form that I discover more of what we have to offer. For example, FanChatter is currently populated by myself and several people that I know, and we've been talking sports for a few days now using only the site. I get mobile alerts when the people and groups I'm subscribed to post new chatter, and I presume others have figured out how to receive alerts when I chatter.

All of this led me to compose a new Google Ad Words-style ad this morning in the shower:

Mobile Sports Fan Chat
Talk sports with your friends from
anywhere, anytime, all at once!
FanChatter.com

Sitting around talking with your friends about sports... Isn't that exactly how many of us would rather spend our days, like we were in the 6th grade again? If only we could hang out with our friends all the time -- like we did in the 6th grade -- so each of us could hear all at once what all of us think about each passing sports headline.

Well, now we can, thanks to FanChatter.com.

Here's how I would suggest the average sports fan use the site, in SIX EASY STEPS:

1. Sign up and quickly fill our your sports fan profile (this takes about 2 minutes)

2. Recruit your friends to sign up, too, and ask them to tell you their usernames so you can easily find them on the site.

3. Once they sign up, add your friends to your Lineup (kinda like YouTube's "Subscriptions") and make sure they join your Crowd ("Subscribers").

4. Next, enable your mobile phone to send and receive chatter from your Lineup. Once enabled, you can start and stop mobile chatter notifications anytime by texting #start or #stop to the address "m@fanchatter.com" from your phone.

NOTE: After completing steps 1-4, you and your friends will be able to talk sports ALL DAY LONG from wherever you are, DISCREETLY via your computer, email, or text messaging, and all of you will see what everyone else is saying, and none of you will need to enter and re-enter everyone's email addresses or phone numbers over and over again (unless you don't use FanChatter). Now, on to the equally simple steps 5 and 6...

5. If you decide to explore a little bit and/or search by tags, you may find and subscribe to other users you don't know personally but who share your sports fan views.

6. Another way to find like-minded fans, or to keep track of a particular sports subject, is to follow and participate in a group that interests you. You can even start and stop group chatter notifications to your phone by texting #start or #stop followed by the groupname. You can also post to a group from your phone by texting @ followed by your chatter.

I hope that sounded easy, because it is. I also hope is sounded useful, because it is.



And as I was typing this I just got a huge bit of news (Thanks Kev). 10,000Takes.com, a Minnesota Sports Blog I highly respect, just mentioned us in their daily "Morning Hangover" entry. Maybe it was the radio appearance. Maybe it's because I added them to the blogroll (at right). Whatever it was, thanks guys.

And thanks again to Henry for having us on. This is getting good. Go Twins.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

After and Before

It's been a few days since the Home Run Derby and I'm haunted by my missed opportunity.

After watching the broadcast on my DVR, I noticed that there were in fact several random shots of the boats in McCovey Cove, some from rather close up, but they were impossible to predict.

Next time I'll have a hands free earpiece (preferably Bluetooth) connecting me to an accomplice watching TV and providing cues. That way, when Kenny Mayne chickens out and fails to rub elbows with the fans, I can still be ready for the cutaways, i.e., the "this is where Kenny wishes he was but he's too afraid to face his public for fear that they'll tell him how tired his shtick is" shots.

But I keep thinking, if that blast by Morneau would have cleared the media platform and landed near us, not only would our outstretched FanChatter.com banner have appeared live on ESPN, but the highlight would have been re-aired on every local sportscast across the country (not to mention Morneau's native Canada) as the only splash landing mustered by a disappointing field. Imagine the number of brand impressions just one water bomb would have produced. Okay, that's the last time I'll mention it.

In happier news...

The Derby and my paddling inspired our heaviest day of chatter traffic yet. Reading along from the kayak via my mobile alerts, it was gratifying to see fans who had never met in person congregating around a single event and sharing their views on everything from how annoying Chris Berman has become to how incredible Vlad's 503 ft. shot off the big glove was. Not that this is unusual on existing chat boards, but it was big for us and I was participating from McCovey Cove via SMS and other fans were trying to give me tips on getting on TV, and THAT is new and cool and only available at FanChatter.com.

Elsewhere on the network, users created more new groups, but the most activity continues to go on in the Go Twins group where fans of the team chatter together before, during, and after their games.

And TOMORROW, I get my first chance to promote the site to a radio audience. Henry Lake of KFAN had us on back in the day to promote THE SHOW TO BE NAMED LATER... and now he's nice enough to bring me back to discuss...

- What's happened since THE SHOW... went off the air.

- How FanChatter.com continues my efforts in support of the creative and connective potential of sports fans.

- Mobile and how it will revolutionize sports chat as we know it.

- My trips to McCovey Cove and the NBA Draft, as well as trading seats with Wolves first round pick Corey Brewer, all as demonstrations of ideal/once-in-a-million mobile chatter opportunities.

- And how we've only just scratched the surface of the network's potential...

My dad, a veteran of PR and promotional interviews, reminds me to (1) map out my talking points, and (2) hit them no matter what the questions are. We'll see how I do.

I'm hoping for a big boost in traffic. I'm also excited to unveil our new homepage (soon) and new features (as soon as we fine tune where we are).



And before I forget, HUGE thanks to a good friend and talented filmmaker Kevin Myers for pimping my Brewer story and FanChatter to all his boys and even a rival message board. For a good time and a lot of laughs, check out his rec league hoops mockumentary series Intramural Glory (and see if you can pick me out in the pilot episode).

After the launch, before the boom, can't wait for tomorrow.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Getting Gone

What’s that they say about the best-laid plans?

Yesterday, as planned, my buddy Damon and I rented a kayak and paddled into San Francisco’s McCovey Cove to join the flotilla of fans assembled for Major League Baseball’s Home Run Derby.



Our mission: to clearly display the FanChatter.com logo banner from our boat every time ESPN’s cameras followed a home run ball out of AT&T Park and into the bay below.

With a little luck, viewers of what ESPN considers its highest-rated broadcast event each summer would see our logo multiple times, generating literally millions of valuable impressions.

Well, we had no luck, but I never had more fun being that unlucky in my life.

We had wondered if our plan would upset some of the paying sponsors of the event (Chevy and MasterCard both scattered giant inflatable baseballs with their logos throughout the Cove). We thought ESPN might try to avoid showing our sign (although the genius of the scheme was that they had to follow any ball out of the park no matter where it landed, kinda like the John 3:16 guy positioning himself behind the goalposts at football games). We imagined being arrested by the Coast Guard for smuggling in illegal advertising.



But despite concealing our rolled-up banner in a foldable chair bag (who would bring a chair along on a kayak trip?) and, when we explained that we had a sign in there, receiving a warning from Ted at City Kayak that we’d be kicked out if we “displayed any commercial logos or anything that would make ESPN upset”, we were allowed to shove off in our blue kayak packed tightly with food, gear, and ambition.



Note: We didn't end up taking the orange kayak pictured because it was determined that we needed a deeper boat to house our stuff (you can see the blue boat we eventually took at left). Also, steering a single-person kayak is MUCH easier than steering a two-seater, just so you know.

Zigzagging closer to the Coast Guard checkpoint I couldn’t help but notice the giant machine gun bolted to its bow and I wondered if our sign would make a suitable target.



The inspecting officer glanced at our cargo and opened our cooler bag, remarking “Hmm, bunch of snacks and stuff.” Looking at the long bag at my feet he said, “Got a chair in there. Okay.” (Again, why would anyone pack a chair on a kayak trip? That cracked us up). And that was it. No guns fired. No prisoners taken. We were on our way.

On our way in, I stopped “steering” long enough to grab this shot of the ballpark.



Pac Bell, er, SBC, er, AT&T Park is up there with Wrigley Field as my co-favorite of all the parks I’ve been to (I attended a Giants-A’s spring exhibition game there in 2001, the year Barry went on to hit 73), mainly because of the great city it calls home and the romantic allure of a long enough home run to right landing in the ocean. THE OCEAN!

Speaking of the ocean, we were on it all day, from the time we floated in amongst the early birds around 1:30pm until we zigzagged away after Vlad Guerrero hit his third and decisive final round home run (to left, all to left) a little past 8:00pm to take the title.

Worth noting…



-When we first arrived, fans standing along the railing behind the park were throwing tennis balls, allowing the boaters to practice (A) catching with their fishing nets, or (B) ducking to get out of the way, whichever floated your, um, kayak. From the water you could try to throw the ball back all the way up to the bleachers level above (my throw landed just short), but before long the Wave Runner Cop killed the game of group catch, I guess because too many fans passing by on foot were getting hit. Thankfully, that didn’t stop the MLB promo people from tossing hundreds of fun-size Baby Ruth bars our way, and taking one off the water I soon remembered how good the occasional Baby Ruth bar tastes, especially seasoned lightly with the saltwater on my fingertips.



-We met a lot of great people, from Hawaii Rob on his surfboard (with his PBR sign) to the two dudes in the huge green party tube (that let us buy some of their beer and hang on against the tide) to the bearded Navy vet guy, the girls from San Diego, Batman and Superman, and everyone else. It was simply one of those great parties you’ll always remember.



-The only home run balls that made it out of the park and in the water were hit during the All Star batting practice sessions from 2:30-4:30pm, although there was no live TV coverage at that time so we chose to wait on our sign until the Derby (per the warning from Ted the Kayak guy, if we were going to get kicked out, we wanted to get kicked out after being seen on live TV). Overall I’ll bet about a dozen balls made it out, with the bats of Junior Griffey, Big Papi, and Bonds being the most notable launch points.



-The guy in the boat immediately to our left – and I mean we were rubbing elbows – had a ball lodge right next to his left hip when he wasn’t looking. Normally the fans on the top rail would point and yell when a ball was on its way out, but this ball came after a foul that nearly found water, so no one was watching. I happened to see it as it cleared the wall and once I realized what was happening it was in my neighbor’s boat. It didn’t hit him, and it didn’t even bounce. It couldn’t have landed in a more perfect place. That’s as close as I got to getting a ball all day.



-Both Damon and I were chattering from the boat (demonstrating FanChatter’s unique mobile sports fan chat features) but we soon realized the importance of keeping our heads up and our cargo secure. Not long before the aforementioned ball nearly landed in my boat, a kayak was capsized by the melee sparked by another splash landing. Not wanting to drown my phone, my camera, or especially my sign, when I chattered I chattered quickly.

-In case you’re wondering, yes, I did have to pee, and no, there were no floating restrooms. Aquafina water bottles have a larger mouth than most. Enough said.

-Once the Derby started we readied our banner for action. It suddenly became much harder to stay in one place, and breaking away from the pack meant drifting with the tide into (and under) the stadium. The Wave Runner Cops were literally pushing the flotilla back away from the building, but that only caused more movement. Holding what you felt was a good spot at a good angle was difficult-to-impossible as no one was anchored and everyone was jockeying for position. I would not be chattering or taking photos during the Derby itself for it became all I could do to stay in place and raise our sign.

-When the sign was up, it was glorious. The plan of sewing two banners together back to back leaving the bottom edge open for ends of paddles to be inserted into each corner worked to perfection. When raised and pulled tight the 8 foot long banner must have been about 7 or 8 feet in the air (the length of the paddles). It actually acted like a sail at times, moving not just us but all the boats around us, too. But moving wasn’t a good thing. We knew where the ESPN cameras were positioned (the main one sitting high above on a platform beyond the foul pole in right) so we fought to keep our sign at a good angle, but doing so meant taking the sign down and regaining our position. Up and down, over and over, lessening our chances of being seen on TV.

-Regardless of positioning, however, we made sure to fly the sign when the three lefties were up. But Morneau, Howard, and Fielder all failed to advance beyond the first round, and NONE OF THEM GOT ANY BALLS FAIR AND WET (though I saw in the highlights that Morneau came the closest). So with only righties left in the competition the boats started to clear out early, leaving us even more prone to drifting away. I called my dad to ask his advice (he was watching on our behalf to coach us on positioning for TV) and he said there were occasional cutaways to the Cove in- and out of commercial breaks so there was still a chance of being seen. Inbetween paddle strokes I tried to read the latest Chatter on the site to see if anyone else had advice for where we might be spotted. We learned that the floating putting green was being featured only after they began to take it down. But we stuck it out, flying the sign as high and as often as we could and praying for opposite field power.

Alas, no Home Run Derby balls were destined for the sea that day. The papers called it a disappointment. I agree.



Our day ended as it began, this time waving goodbye to the Coast Guard officer and his machine gun. As it turned out, no one cared that we were displaying our FanChatter sign. Some floaters-by tried to rip Corporate America for planting brand names in the water until I explained that I was the small businessman spending his own sweat equity to promote my own passion project, and for that I got props. But the thought of kicking us out never seemed cross anyone’s mind.



Additional Props…

-Slantwise, for jamming to fine tune the site in time for a long day of failsafe Chatter. Great work guys. Now on to more feature improvements, changes, and additions….

-Nobl (the girl who helped pick me up from the airport) and Meaghan (the girl who rescued us shivering on the side of the Embarcadero after we found land again). Both of you were much nicer to look at across a dinner table than…

-Damon, without whom, this trip wouldn’t have happened. Thanks for letting me stay at your place, for rides to- and from the airport, and for hoisting that sign when you would have rather talked to girls. We argued about navigation and whether a sign can be seen when there are no TV cameras are around to see it, but in the end we had a time worthy of hanging on your wall of memories. I hate UCLA, but I’m reminded of Coach John Wooden saying “make each day your masterpiece.” That’s what we did (even though Bonds vs. Griffey in the Derby Final would have made the day a whole lot more interesting).

To read how we chattered about the day as it was happening, visit our FanChatter pages here and here.

---

On the ride to the airport this morning Damon reminded me that marketing is repetition. A lot of people saw our sign (in person) yesterday, and while few if any may have gone home and typed “FanChatter.com” into their browsers right away, most will likely remember the crazy guys in the boat when they see our name again. Maybe then they’ll pay us a visit. The same thing goes for the NBA fans I met in New York at the draft.

My job now is to make sure they do see us again… and again… and again.

SPECIAL REQUEST: We’ve already seen ourselves in a bunch of McCovey Cove photos from the Derby posted at Flickr today (here, here, here, and here), and to see all of my photos visit the Home Run Derby Photo Set on our FanChatter Flickr Page, but if anyone reading this happened to take a picture with our sign in it, please let me know by entering a reply below. You can understand why I didn’t get any of my own, and I’d really love to show everyone what it looked like from afar… myself included.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Changing the Game

Something great is happening. Wait, hold on a second...

Wow, Torii is fuming. His weapon of choice: The F-bomb
Marty said less than a minute ago in Go Twins from StLP

I'm watching the Twins-Yankees game and Torii Hunter just got tossed by the plate umpire. What you see above is how I recorded the event as it happened in the Go Twins group at FanChatter.com.

But I'm not the only one doing it. Watching the game and chattering about it, I mean. That's what's happening, and that's what's great.

Last night I did the same thing, but I was all by myself. Another fan offered some postgame chatter, but TONIGHT not one but TWO FANS other than me are corresponding about a ballgame in REAL TIME using the network we've created.

That's what it's all about. Time was you went over to your buddy's house to watch a game because you liked talking (and yelling, and screaming) with him about the action as it was happening. Maybe his TV sucked and his carpet smelled, but he was funny and he cared as much as you did about the outcome.

Misery loves company. Every sports fan understands that.

I guess you could've called him up to watch over the phone but who wants to hold the line for three hours? Then came chat rooms and message boards on the internet, but you had to be... hang on...

That Scankees pitcher looks funny
Marty said less than a minute ago in Go Twins from StLP

...you had to be sitting at both your TV and your computer to participate in the discussion, and if you actually went to the game then you might as well forget it.

But striking out the side... that's not so funny (game over; Twins lose 8-0)
Marty said less than a minute ago in Go Twins from StLP


Enter FanChatter.com -- the world's first fully mobile sports fan chat network. Now fans can watch the game (or the tournament, or the race, or the fight, or whatever they want)... from wherever they are... with whomever they choose...

...and I think that's pretty cool.

So tonight saw the first virtual -- 110% spontaneous -- game watching party hosted at FanChatter. Hopefully we'll see many more, unless the Twins keep losing.

751
Marty said less than a minute ago in Bonds 756 from StLP

Sunday, July 1, 2007

Ready for takeoff...


First post. Big weekend.

Quick history: I used to have a sports TV show in the Twin Cities called THE SHOW TO BE NAMED LATER... and it was all about sports fans doing sports fan stuff. None of us were journalists or pros or anything and our viewers liked that. Sadly, not enough sponsors shared their opinion.

TV is a tough business (and, I might add, a declining one), so when my show went off the air I decided to turn my entrepreneurial sports fan ambitions to the Web -- the only thing more democratic than cable access.

That's how I came up with the idea that opened the door that led to the revised idea that was probably way too ambitious that showed me the reality that inspired the supporting idea that attracted the interest that resulted in the defining idea for FanChatter.

Web development is fun, isn’t it? And if you haven’t read Getting Real, you should.

So thanks my alliance with the Ruby on Rails virtuosos over at Slantwise Design (plus more thank you’s to more people than I can possibly mention now… although I promise I’ll get to each of you in time), last Thursday, June 28, 2007 at about 3:30 pm CDT…

FanChatter.com
launched.

We’re billing it as the first fully mobile sports fan chat network. Tired of reading in blogs like Mashable! about all the MySpace-for-sports’s circling, I decided to aim beyond mere Web 2.0 toward the undisputed next big thing (that all of us have in our pockets).

FanChatter aims to “mobilize” the long and powerful legacy of sports fan chat rooms and message boards online. That’s why we allow fans to create their own groups by topic (just like your father’s sports chat site). But there’s a whole lot more than that on the way once we get the launch site working properly.

Yes, we stumbled slightly out of the gate. People couldn’t sign up because they didn’t receive the necessary confirmation link email. I struggled with posting from my Blackberry browser. And I’m not sure how well our mobile tools are working just yet.

But we’re up, we’re (mostly) functional, and we made our deadline.

The goal was to launch by the NBA Draft (June 28, 2007) and it just so happened that I would be in New York City (for work – I’m in advertising) on that date. My good friends at the Timberwolves (my favorite team for whom I did some of my favorite work) set me up with tickets, and there I was last Thursday night at Madison Square Garden watching David Stern read off the names and hearing the Knicks fans chant “Fire Isiah” (until they cheered him for getting Zach Randolph and dumping Steve Francis in a trade with Portland).

And all the while I was Chattering live and sharing the site with every fan I met. Only about two-thirds of my entries ended up getting through, however, but I met some great fans including a Florida cheerleader named Brittany who provided glowing background on both of the Wolves’ picks: back-to-back championship teammates Corey Brewer and Chris Richard (7th and 41st overall, respectively).

It wasn’t until the next morning, boarding the Sun Country flight back to Minnesota, that the true value of mobile sports fan chat became clear. Sitting in first class (it was the only seat left when I purchased my ticket and it wasn’t that expensive), I boarded first and found my (p)leather aisle seat near the front. The flight attendant offered me a St. Paul Pioneer Press newspaper. I found the sports page and saw Corey Brewer’s face. I looked up and saw… Corey Brewer’s face!

The Wolves’ first round pick was on my flight. I shook his hand, welcomed him to the team and told him I was happy he was ours.

Then, to my surprise, he walked right past me and took a seat back in coach! Brewer is 6’ 8”! He’s the reigning Final Four Most Outstanding Player! I never took (Wolves owner) Glen Taylor for such a cheapskate!

(To be fair, the flight was full, and the ticket was obviously booked within the previous 12 hours so there probably wasn’t much to choose from. Plus, he couldn’t fly Northwest because they were canceling flights left and right and he was due in Minneapolis for his press conference.)

I grabbed my Blackberry and fired off some Chatter explaining what I had just seen. I wondered whether I, standing at a lean 5’ 6”, should consider trading seats with the much taller draft pick. Then the doors closed and my device was shut off.

Well, I did trade seats with Brewer (in exchange for an autograph on my sports page and the photo below).


I also handed him a FanChatter card and wished him well with the team. Hopefully he checks out the site sometime. He really is a great kid. Very humble. Rumor has it he called me a “cool dude”.

As soon as we landed I chattered some more about my good deed, again from my Blackberry. I envisioned my friends reading about this unusual happening as it was happening.

Unfortunately, the site and my handheld weren’t on the same page. Nothing showed up. The great mobile sports fan chat happening would not be recorded on the new mobile sports fan chat network… at least, not on that day.

We ended up back-dating some posts that closely resembled what I wrote from the plane. I also posted the photo to Flickr and linked to it on my Chatter page. You can see it all here and here.

I’m hoping to use the story to get some publicity for the site -- a good deed with a coincidental/ironic twist.

I’m also taking our shaky start in stride. Again, Web development is fun, isn’t it?

This blog will chronicle the growth of FanChatter.com. I’ll provide the non-technical storytelling while I hope the Slantwise guys will offer their perspective on the stuff I don’t understand.

You know, I’m not sure what I want more – a hit site or an NBA title for Brewer and the Timberwolves.

In the immortal words of Yogi Berra, “Good pitching always beats good hitting... and vice versa.”