SXSW: Trying Too Hard To Be Hip

By Joe Doherty, ITworld |  Internet, Adobe Flash, SXSW 7 comments

The Austin, Texas-based South By Southwest Conference (SXSW) began in 1987 as a Woodstock-styled music festival. Musical acts from around the country and abroad would play a set in what is considered by many to be the "Live Musical Capital of The World". Don't believe me? Just look at Austin's official slogan.

Nearly 10 years later, the SXSW Committee added two more conferences: Film and Interactive. Now, SXSW is one of the largest Conferences/Festivals in the country. People from all over the world attend to get a glimpse of the latest flicks, the newest technology and rock out to some live tunes all the while.

Very cool. Right? Well, "cool" is a relative term. Just ask anyone at San Diego Comic Con. The tricky thing about "coolness" is that when you are trying to appeal to those who are, it usually means you are not.

Case in point: the SXSW Interactive Conference.

There are several sessions that could be fairly interesting. "The Essential Guide to Open Source Flash Development" is one. And being an ActionScript developer, I find myself fighting the urge to camp out to get a good seat. But then further down the list, there is the oh-so-cleverly titled: "Core Conversation: Reduce MySpace Between Waist & Thighs So Wiki Live Longer."

I don't know about you, but reading that description irks me. I have visions of a stressed out, overly caffeinated marketing team sitting around a table shuffling buzzwords. How else would they come up with this utterly inane title... which I'm sure had them all patting themselves on the back over being so very hip, cool and trendy. Side note to those marketers: the people who should go to that session will not simply because of that description. We computer fatties are a cynical and judgmental lot. We suggest the marketing team go to the "Core Conversation: Why Gen Y Won't Friend Your Brand" seminar with all due haste.

What's next on the agenda? Well, how about "Core Conversation: Bloggers: How Not To Get F___ed", or "Core Conversation: F@ck Stats, Make Art"? No, we'll be avoiding those. Why? Because we're too annoyed by your pathetic attempts to attract our attention with profanity. Not because we object to obscenities. Not at all. We just object to inappropriate use of obscenities. Like your mom trying to sound dope. Just doesn't work.

The real crime in all this is these seminars sound like they could be a wealth of great information. Could it be that it's simply an irrational fear on my part that these are complete non-tech luddite types who are championing Interactive Technology with no real understanding of what it all is? Is this just a way to make more money through sponsorships without regard for their audience? I mean, will there be a Financial and Real Estate Conference added on next year, too? Will they bump Ra Ra Riot for Jimmy Buffett? Perhaps we should just make the SXSW Conference a place to see some cool new movie previews, listen to some good music, and maybe catch a glimpse at the new Google OS and Playstation 4.

What do you think? Is SXSW being run by corporate, non-hip, soulless entities?

7 comments

    Anonymous 2 years ago
    Conferences, in general, are all corporate to some degree. The degree to which they're corporate usually depends on the conference's subject matter. Something like Comic-Con has a very low corporate quotient while something like the IBM Developer Conference is going to have a very high corporate quotient.Now, not knowing much about SXSW, I'm going to guess that it started as a very non-corporate affair. However, whenever you see that there are going to be presentations at a conference, the corporate quotient jumps. When the presentations have titles that begin with MBA buzzwords like "Core Conversation", you know damn well that this is a corporate event.And when you see that the people that put the whole thing together are trying to make jokes in the titles of presentations that start with MBA buzzwords, you realize that the independently minded spirit that started the whole thing is, in fact, deader than a doorknob and won't be coming back because the folks who got it off the ground to begin with have sold out to the corporate lackeys and are off vacationing on their own private island somewhere in the tropics.
    Anonymous 2 years ago
    Formely "an event", SXSW has evolved into a tradeshow. Have you considered writing an article about the potential for the SS SXSW to sideswipe an iceberg (aka down economy)? Could SXSW be this decade's Comdex? Looking fwd to your next article.
    Anonymous 2 years ago
    Great Article--couldn't agree more! This new brand of "ubercool" marketing is popping up all the time in all new venues. Don't get me wrong, I love a clever marketing campaign, I am just so with you about not loving those "over-caffeinated marketing types." What's wrong with having the product (or seminar) sell itself--really?...do we need to have cheerleaders telling us how hip and cool things really are before we purchase or attend?! Nope. I see this a lot with College Course Descriptions too. When I attended college, there was nothing "hip" about the descriptions, you took the courses that were in your Major. Plain and simple. But when I got the job to teach College Courses (many years later) we were told that Course Descriptions (as well as the class content) had to be jazzed-up to keep the MTV generation of kids interested. Why do we suddenly need all the smoke and mirrors to make someone attend a class, conference or to buy something. If it's cool, trust me, the cool kids spread the news--not the Wizards behind the Curtains. Finally, I think you hit it right that people actually are being detered from attending otherwise interesting programs simply because the Programs are being promoted--not by the credentialed few; but rather, by Geeks with Egos. And that, I am afraid, is just not cool. Great Article! Looking forward to your next one!
    horroru
    horroru 2 years ago
    I think the quote at the top of their homepage says it all:"In its 22 years, SXSW has grown from a tiny music festival in the Texas capital into a massive, unavoidable media beast..."When "Corporate" gets involved in anything artistic/creative, some amount of integrity is lost. Now I'm not naive or a purist-- I understand some corporate involvement is needed, especially if you want your music/film/technology marketed and distributed. But witness what they have on their Sponsors page:"Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company is the Exclusive Cigarette and Roll-Your-Own Tobacco Sponsor of SXSW 2009 Conferences and Festivals."Wow -- thank got they were able to fill that vaunted Tobacco Sponsor spot....
    Anonymous 2 years ago
    I'd have to agree with you. When a big event like the multi tiered SXSW gets as big as it is, the folks running the show tend to be out of touch with reality. What once was an organic festival is now this huge corporate happening, run by non-hip, disconnected people. It might make it better if they added more bling and made it more like the MTV awards or something...everybody likes a gift bag. "The tricky thing about "coolness" is that when you are trying to appeal to those who are, it usually means you are not." Love it!
    Anonymous 2 years ago
    Unfortunately as soon as anything - person, event, or work - establishes enough credibility, it becomes a "brand" and is assigned a certain value. When the value reaches the level of "aided awareness" - "sure, I've read/heard about SXSW…" - it becomes ripe for abuse. Gone are the early days of "screw the record companies, let's have our own festival" and enter the major sponsors like FUZE, LITE, and Mountain Dew who, because they MUST BE so damn cool for being sponsors, hope that coolness translates to brand-loyalty from attendees.Cha-ching $$$$$. Equally tragic are the sessions that are so obviously nothing more than efforts at self-aggrandizement "buy my book/product, subscribe to my twitter feed, invest in my company, just tell your fiends how cool I am".As soon as Marketeers see an opportunity at "brand leveraging" - using what was originally a cool, down to earth, celebration of stuff you SHOULD know about - and send Fonzie flying over the tank of sharks to ally their brand with this cool thing, well, when that happens it's fucked. (and for the love of any-deity-you-choose, when a session's title rightly contains the word "fucked", just write the damn word. Kids can easily find labial photos of every celebutard imaginable, so quit being afraid of words George Carlin loved.)

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