Monday, October 01, 2007

Death to Powerpoint or Pecha-Kucha



[With thanks to CDN in San Francisco for the tip: for those of us frequently caught in mind-numbing PowerPoint presentations, the practice described in the video above and text below—reprinted in full from the YouTube description—may provide some rays of hope. In any event, it's an interesting phenomenon reflecting how people are grappling with communications.]

"Let us now bullet-point our praise for Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein, two Tokyo-based architects who have turned PowerPoint, that fixture of cubicle life, into both art form and competitive sport. Their innovation, dubbed pecha-kucha (Japanese for "chatter"), applies a simple set of rules to presentations: exactly 20 slides displayed for 20 seconds each. That's it. Say what you need to say in six minutes and 40 seconds of exquisitely matched words and images and then sit the hell down. The result, in the hands of masters of the form, combines business meeting and poetry slam to transform corporate clich into surprisingly compelling beat-the-clock performance art.

The duo — Dytham is British, Klein Italian — invented pecha-kucha four years ago to help revive a struggling performance space they owned. The first presentations were such a hit that they began hosting monthly pecha-kucha events, boozy affairs at which Tokyo architects and designers showcased their streamlined offerings to crowds of hundreds. Now there are pecha-nights in 80 cities, from Amsterdam and Atlanta to San Francisco and Shanghai. Why? Dytham believes that the rules have a liberating effect. "Suddenly," he says, "there's no preciousness in people's presentations." Just poetry.

By Dan Pink | Wired Magazine Issue 15.09"

3 comments:

Jon said...

With thanks again to CDN in what San Franciscans immodestly call "The City," here's a follow up link.

And yes, The Data Stream is most definitely geeking out on this one!

Brian K. Lynch said...

Nice geek out, TDS. Should be required viewing for all academics and presenters of all ilks.

Jon said...

CDN sent a terrific follow-up link