I understand what thongs are. Both kinds.
Great research Prof. Here are a few more numbers; my estimates were off.. it was two in the morning...
Registered users: 436
People who registered and have never posted once: 178
People who registered and posted 1 or fewer times: 267
People who registered and posted 2 or fewer times: 308
Posts in Blah Blah Blah: 1510 (that's just currently... 6 months ago I pruned off hundreds of old, unread posts)
Posts in all other forums combined: 2000
Yes, there have been some great posts in the past year, and I know I need to get them into the Library. It's on my list of things to do right after I upgrade the forum system, update the rest of the site, do the gigs I'm booked for, update my personal site, work on my act, pay off my house... I'm busy; sorry. I'll personally refund everyone's membership fees if the site isn't updated in the next 5 minutes.
My point is this: A lot of times, the atmosphere in these forums is less than inviting to the new visitor. I know I'd be intimidated to post here if I thought I'd be attacked or made fun of. I'm not saying we shouldn't kid around and have fun, but the flames, and antagonism and needling has to stop. Also, it doesn't look good for any of us when a new visitor comes in and the only active topics for a week are "Out yourself here" and jokes about Stan the sheep f***ing cowboy.
There is no censorship here. Yes, there is moderation, but I have never, ever silenced anyone's voice. Everyone has the ability to post whatever they want. But I will discourage people from flaming, 'last word' wars and personal attacks. I encourage these people to continue their arguments offline. It's amazing how fast flames die out when the involved parties are asked to email their messages directly to each other. The fact that the posts are public adds and egoistic element and people will continue to agure for the sake of agruing. Even if no one else cares about what's being argued. [Hey, Imagine is being played on the radio right now!]
I try to do my best to keep the discussion on these forums in the general categories of "Performing stuff" and "Stuff performers talk about." After all, that's what this site is supposed to be about.
Rememeber that there are far more people lurking here than posting or even registering. The people visiting performers.net include hundreds and perhaps thousands of potential clients. Despite all the useful information and POSITIVE dialogue, one joke about a sheep-f***ing cowboy can turn a lot of people off and that affects us all. ("Why would I want to hire someone like that?" "Are they going to act that way at my event?" "Street performers sure are unprofessional, have you seen their web site?") How do you want to be perceived to the general public? Would you tell a joke like that to an audience on the street? Would you get into a heated discussion with another performer and attack their intelligence in front of an crowd? How professional are you? Does it come across in your posts? I know it's easy to get carried away, but that's when the moderator is supposed to step in. I do my best and I think I'm VERY fair and reasonable.
Here's what I wrote for people to read on their way into the forums: "So good luck and have fun and please respect the work and maintenence that goes into this site. Use your judgement, don't FLAME, and by all means... be nice to each other."
I still mean it.
Jim
Great research Prof. Here are a few more numbers; my estimates were off.. it was two in the morning...
Registered users: 436
People who registered and have never posted once: 178
People who registered and posted 1 or fewer times: 267
People who registered and posted 2 or fewer times: 308
Posts in Blah Blah Blah: 1510 (that's just currently... 6 months ago I pruned off hundreds of old, unread posts)
Posts in all other forums combined: 2000
Yes, there have been some great posts in the past year, and I know I need to get them into the Library. It's on my list of things to do right after I upgrade the forum system, update the rest of the site, do the gigs I'm booked for, update my personal site, work on my act, pay off my house... I'm busy; sorry. I'll personally refund everyone's membership fees if the site isn't updated in the next 5 minutes.
My point is this: A lot of times, the atmosphere in these forums is less than inviting to the new visitor. I know I'd be intimidated to post here if I thought I'd be attacked or made fun of. I'm not saying we shouldn't kid around and have fun, but the flames, and antagonism and needling has to stop. Also, it doesn't look good for any of us when a new visitor comes in and the only active topics for a week are "Out yourself here" and jokes about Stan the sheep f***ing cowboy.
There is no censorship here. Yes, there is moderation, but I have never, ever silenced anyone's voice. Everyone has the ability to post whatever they want. But I will discourage people from flaming, 'last word' wars and personal attacks. I encourage these people to continue their arguments offline. It's amazing how fast flames die out when the involved parties are asked to email their messages directly to each other. The fact that the posts are public adds and egoistic element and people will continue to agure for the sake of agruing. Even if no one else cares about what's being argued. [Hey, Imagine is being played on the radio right now!]
I try to do my best to keep the discussion on these forums in the general categories of "Performing stuff" and "Stuff performers talk about." After all, that's what this site is supposed to be about.
Rememeber that there are far more people lurking here than posting or even registering. The people visiting performers.net include hundreds and perhaps thousands of potential clients. Despite all the useful information and POSITIVE dialogue, one joke about a sheep-f***ing cowboy can turn a lot of people off and that affects us all. ("Why would I want to hire someone like that?" "Are they going to act that way at my event?" "Street performers sure are unprofessional, have you seen their web site?") How do you want to be perceived to the general public? Would you tell a joke like that to an audience on the street? Would you get into a heated discussion with another performer and attack their intelligence in front of an crowd? How professional are you? Does it come across in your posts? I know it's easy to get carried away, but that's when the moderator is supposed to step in. I do my best and I think I'm VERY fair and reasonable.
Here's what I wrote for people to read on their way into the forums: "So good luck and have fun and please respect the work and maintenence that goes into this site. Use your judgement, don't FLAME, and by all means... be nice to each other."
I still mean it.
Jim


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