Smart phone etiquette at concerts

Look, I’m not an expert, but judging from the number of ‘incidents’ I witness with people using their smart phones at a concert I was at recently, neither are your parents. So do them a favour and let them know these simple rules when taking mobile devices to music concerts.

Photograph by Kenneth Lu (via Flickr, used under Creative Commons)

5 ways to use your smart-phone (at a concert) so as to not piss off THE JAMJAR!

  1. Set your ringtone to silent - okay I'll accept 'vibrate' but please turn that ringtone OFF for the concert.
  2. Dim screen brightness - while you're in your settings turning that ringtone to vibrate, also change the brightness of your screen to the dimmest setting. A cellphone in the dark is like a laser-beam and very very distracting to those of us sitting behind or (even worse) higher up the tier seating.
  3. Turn off the camera’s flash - apart from being very distracting for both the audience and those on stage, the flash will give you terrible photographs of those on stage and fantastically over-exposed photos of the backs of the people in front of you. Also, with some phones, when you have the flash setting on and you video in low light, the flashlight will enable itself. The people in the five rows in front of you will NOT be happy they're backlit by bright, white light.
  4. Don't use your flash's light as a lighter - back in the olden days, before smart phones and when you were expected to smoke cigarettes at a concert, sometimes holding a lighter flame above your head was great during slow, sad songs. The flash light function of your phone is a zillions times brighter than a lighter and does not create the ambiance of days gone by. Only ever do it if the band asks you to and really, you only need to hold up an activated screen to be part of the crowd.
  5. Take ONE photo or short video - taking a photo of the performer every time they sing a song you love doesn't really make any sense when you think about it. Videoing the entire concert is also a waste of time for many reasons, least of which your video will be crap and the microphone'll pick up your fellow audience-members singing along. Taking one photo or one video of part of a song for Instagram, Facebook or your blog is all you need to do. Spend the rest of your time with your silent phone in your pocket and just enjoy the concert you paid to see.
  6. BONUS TIP: leave your iPad at home. You look like a bloody idiot!

Example of why you need to turn your flash off on your camera phone. Granted, it all worked out okay for April O'Neil, but you might be so lucky.

Zen and the art of Secret Santa

This year I was involved in three organised Secret Santa gift-giving groups. Over the years I've been in many more and listened to a ton of people complain about their gifts.  So here is my sage advice based on my experience with giving and receiving Secret Santa gifts; being a Good Santa; realising I have been a Bad Santa; being thanked; and with being ignored.

In case you’re not sure what Secret Santa is - it’s a game or ritual held at Christmas-time where a name is drawn from a group of people and a gift is given by that person anonymously to one person in that group. This type of gift-giving is popular in larger family groups and with people who work together.

Here’s a round up of what I’ve learned over years of playing Secret Santa to help you and your team-mates have a safe and happy one next time you play.

Giving Secret Santa gifts

The most important part of any Secret Santa is meeting any and all deadlines.

If you miss the cut-off point for posting your gift or putting it under the corporate Christmas tree, you are automatically branded a Bad Santa. Not only will you feel bad, your recipient will be disappointed and colleagues or family members will never forget that you were the Bad Santa that year.

Pro-tip: Be thoughtful with gift wrapping - include a card and message - throw in some chocolate too because nearly everyone loves chocolate. If the gift is fragile, make sure it travels safely: bubble-wrap is your friend.

IMG_0002.JPG

Being a good Santa

The key to being a good Secret Santa is threefold:

  1. do some research
  2. stick to the agreed budget
  3. being genuine and thoughtful

If you have drawn someone you know, think back over conversations or instances from the recent past and tie the gift in with something you know about your recipient. For instance, for my work Secret Santa, I remembered a very small comment she had made a month or so before where she critiqued a donut. Such a small thing, but it meant I remembered that she had high standards for donuts. With that in mind, I made her a book to record her donut critiques as well as a list of places to visit and find Auckland’s best donuts.

In the case of online Secret Santa projects, it’s very unlikely that you will know your recipient, so a bit of Googling and Face-stalking will be in order. If your Secret Santa has locked accounts, as mine did this year, then you’ll need to try a little harder.

After looking at my recipients Twitter profile picture and her follower count (both visible even on protected accounts), I figured she was either very new to Twitter and still in High School. I bought her a book about being an explorer in her every-day world, a card, and some chocolate. I thought the book would be something she could do in her school holidays and maybe give her stuff to tweet about. Also included a list of age-appropriate Twitter accounts she could follow to grow her confidence on the network.

Being a bad Santa

This is to be avoided at all costs because people remember dud Secret Santa experiences their entire lives; plus, you will feel bad well past the Christmas period. There are really only a couple of ways you can be a Bad Santa, but the legend of that fateful mistake will live on much longer:

  1. If you miss the deadline to getting your Secret Santa in the post, or under the tree, your recipient is going to miss out on a present and then both of you will feel bad.
  2. If you do not put enough thought into the present. If you just grab a bar of LUX soap (my Secret Santa present from a work colleague in 1980; oh yes, I do still remember) or spend well below the agreed budget (a $5 gift card when the limit was $15; a story from last year’s NZ Secret Santa) then you are a Bad Santa and you should never have signed up to play.

If you can't meet the budget or the deadlines: don't play.

In saying that, you do need to be prepared for the possibility that you end up being a Bad Santa. For instance, maybe you did put a lot of effort into researching your recipient’s likes and life; maybe you worked very hard to match the budget and get the gift into the post in time. You might still end up being the accidental Bad Santa when you see how bang-on the gift was that you received and maybe yours was off the mark.

I experienced that this year when I saw how well my Blog Secret Santa crafted guest posts for thejamjar.com. I had worked hard on my guest posts as a Blog Secret Santa but had not been as selfless with the articles I had sent to my recipients. I can attest that it's a horrible feeling to have not done as thoughtful as I could have and one which I intend to not repeat next year.

Receiving gifts

Give thanks for your gift. It’s easy if you really do love your gift and it will take an amount grace and diplomacy if you don’t. If it’s the later, say thank you and find something nice to say about the thoughtfulness of the experience.

Online Santa like to hear a Tweet or two of thanks. Hug thanks if you can reach your Secret Santa.

To play this game is to be kind, remain nice, be gracious and say thanks. Secret Santa about giving - sometimes we forget that in the anticipation of our gift. One of the big lessons consider is that you can’t expect to sign up to a Secret Santa and get a guarantee of a great gift. Not all Bad Santa mean to be bad and the tables can turn pretty fast if you decide to be a ungrateful.

Pro-tip: playing with or using your gift immediately will make your Secret Santa happy. This year I received a Knit Your Own Bunny from a work colleague and was very happy to cast on and start knitting at our Christmas lunch. Also - Tweet photos of your gift or video the unwrapping - online Santa love that kinda thing.

Being ignored

If your recipient didn’t let you know that they liked their gift let it slide. Just be quiet about being ignored. After following the #nzsecretsanta Twitter feed I can tell you that bleating on social media about how your recipient didn't let you know how great you were for sending them a gift doesn't make you look good. 

You played - you gave - you were gracious. That’s all that was required of you to be a Good Secret Santa.

Users' Guide: Living in Auckland - Commuting

auckland city - evening ferry home Traveling in Auckland can be a bit daunting. No matter if you are using a car, a bike, public transport or Shanks' Pony, these few tips will help you "fit in" and look like you were born in the City of Sails:
  • One person per car
  • Stop and wait for a gap-in-the-traffic when using a Motorway "on" ramp
  • Go Faster when faced with an amber light - speed up the longer it's illuminated, floor it when the light turns red
  • Follow too close when it rains (though it never rains in Auckland)
  • Never indicate
  • Eat cheese and onion toasted sandwiches before boarding a crowded bus/train/ferry
  • Eat dry noodles and spray them all over your seat - leave for the next passenger to deal with
  • Don't keep to the left while walking
  • If you are from another, populous country, walk at least half the speed of anyone else
  • Do not walk in a straight line
  • Walk perpendicular to the foot traffic - don't worry, they'll get out of your way for fear of falling over
  • If you are from another, populous country, and you need to exit a public toilet after you and your friends have occupied all the cubicles for an incredulous amount of time, yelling to each other from inside said cubicles, stop just outside the main door upon exiting and talk to your friends some more - take your time and note that everyone waiting half in and half out the door trying to leave the public restrooms are either invisible to you or of no consequence whatsoever
  • If you are from another, populous country, stand in the middle of the pavement looking vaguely into space in peak time pedestrian traffic - don't do this alone, you will require between 8 and 12 of your friends to help make a solid obsticle. (NOTE: Make sure you all stare vaguely in different directions so as not to cause English people to think you're a queue and "join in")
  • If you are a young woman, wear 30-50% less clothes than the weather suggests
  • If you are a young man, wear clothes 30-50% larger than required
  • If you are a young woman, walk slower than the rest of the traffic but not as slowly as people from another, populous, country - it helps to txt while you are walking to obtain the correct pace
  • Wear black, grey, brown - esp. at night while trying to cross a poorly lit road
  • On no account EVER wear a raincoat - ESPECIALLY in the rain (though it never rains in Auckland)
  • One person per car!!
  • Tour d'France lycra (with matching helmet and Olympic-grade bicycle shoes) to be worn when riding a bicycle
  • When crossing at a "barn dance" crossing (ie: + intersection when all pedestrians cross the street at the same time, including diagonally) change your mind half way across and stop. This will cause people to rear-end each other (and not in a good way) and twist their ankles at the sudden change of pace/direction. See "follow too closely in the rain" (above) NOTE: this is a difficult manuovre and shouldn't be attempted by anyone who has been in Auckland more than half a day
  • Never make eye contact with *anyone*
  • Never say hello
  • Never make eye contact or say hello to anyone *talking to themselves*
  • ONE PERSON PER CAR!
auckland city - evening ferry home
Read More