MySpace


SceneDiego



Last Updated: 2/25/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 28
Sign: Leo

City: SAN DIEGO
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/3/2008

Blog Archive
[Older      Newer]
 /  / 
Tuesday, August 26, 2008 
Artists and others are using the online resource for more than just home videos
By Kinsee Morlan - Published in CityBeat 8.20.08

The biggest video-sharing website isn't just for lame home videos or amateur soft-core porn anymore: Local artists are using it as a new medium for what they're calling "X-stream Dadaism." Local businesses and nonprofits are using it as a mass marketing tool, and other local YouTubers are documenting some pretty interesting things. Our time online looking through video after video has us convinced that there's a bit of a YouTube evolution going on in Internet land.

Artists aren't the only ones finding creative new ways to use YouTube. A YouTube spokesperson says people are watching hundreds of millions of videos a day and uploading an average of 13 hours of video every minute. The spokesperson said that, as of early spring 2008, YouTube had the sixth largest audience on the Internet in the U.S., with 200 million unique users visiting the site every month. And those numbers aren't lost on businesses and corporations looking to target a younger, more Internet-savvy crowd.

A quick search through San Diego's YouTube community leads to just a few evolved users contributing worthwhile original content.

[A] local group making potentially mind-blowing videos is SceneDiego, an improv group that does performances and pranks in public places. They film all their stunts in order to keep a record of their work and to reach a much larger audience.

"We put a lot of work into planning these things and the people's reactions," says Agent Neil, aka Andy, group founder. "We get a sense of happiness and laughter during the mission, but by sharing them [on YouTube], it gives them an entire second life, and people who weren't there get to experience it."

Andy uploads more content than the average YouTube user, and, as he reticently admits, he probably consumes more than the average amount of YouTube, too.

"This is kind of embarrassing," he says. "I just bought an Apple TV. Do you know what that is? It's kind of like an Internet cable box that you use with your TV, so I actually cancelled my cable, and with this thing you can watch any YouTube video and you can download any television show you want to watch through the iTunes store. So, a couple nights I've got home from work and just got sucked into YouTube, because you sit on your couch, and you're watching YouTube with the remote and the big TV, you know, and it's a much different experience than watching them on your computer screen. I do watch a good amount of YouTube, I guess."

[This is not the full article, if you wish to read that, you can do that here: http://www.sdcitybeat.com/cms/story/detail/youtube_evolution/7214/]
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 
In February 2008, I started SceneDiego with only a few close friends. Only six months later, we have over 1,000 "Agents", have successfully pulled off 10 missions, and had a lot of publicity on TV, magazines, and online news sites. This wouldn't have been possible if it wasn't for so many fun, energetic, and creative people like yourselves.

At the end of August, I will be relocating to the Miami area to take a new job. It is a great opportunity for me, and will involve a lot of international traveling. I will be leaving SceneDiego in the hands of Agent Poohead, and Agent Ginger Starr. I am confident that they will keep the SceneDiego spirit going, and I know they have many new and exciting missions already in the works. I will still be involved as much as I can behind the scenes, and will be sure to plan some chaos when I am in town visiting.

Last night, I posted the video from our latest mission, the Pillow Fight. Please be sure to check it out on our website: http://scenediego.org

Again, I would like to thank all of you for helping to make SceneDiego what it has become today.

Agent Neil
Monday, June 23, 2008 
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=16479532593
Wednesday, June 11, 2008 

Category: Blogging
Improv Everywhere just started a new blog, Urban Pranks, to document the many public stunts the group has inspired. The New York group famous for showing up at Best Buy in blue polos and freezing Grand Central has offshoots across the country that are doing things like a protest against protesting, a dinner party at Ikea, and a button in a park that says "Do Not Push" (when it was pushed, planted agents dance to "Everybody Dance Now" &mash; clip below). The blog does a great job quickly explaining each prank and then showing the money shot. And it's a sign of a much-needed rise in public silliness, which is just what young media types need.

Do Not Push


Remember when Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters tore up the country? And how they were part of a long line of coconspirators that connected writers from the Beat Generation up to Hunter S. Thompson? I don't! I'm 24. But reading the literature that came out of that lineage, I'm prone to think there was a much cooler prank-minded crowd than today.

There are exceptions — Chuck Palahniuk attended the Santa Rampage with Portland's Cacophony Society. But there's no literary school of silliness. McSweeney's doesn't count, because the Dave Eggers crew can get shrill and twee and having a bookshop themed like a pirate supply store isn't quite as fresh as riding with the Hell's Angels. They're just too serious in their very organized fun-making.

But the Improv Everywhere crowd is just fooling around, not making any overt point about society except that everyone should have fun and feel more connected to each other. And isn't that the heart of the Beats and the Merry Pranksters? After all, Kesey's work revealed his faith that people were basically good, smart — deserving of pranks that invited the world to join in the fun.

Literature is drifting away from relevance while kids watch College Humor and Spike TV. Lit needs that sense of fun with the relaxed introspection that only finds room in books, not blog entries. So could some young authors put down the Believer and come start a strip-off with Naked Cowboy Guy?


Original Link: http://gawker.com/tag/improv-everywhere/?i=395853&t=america-needs-pranks
Wednesday, May 07, 2008 
Making a scene
Local improv group makes San Diego its playground

By Athena Davis

If you happened to be at the Fashion Valley Mall on March 1 at around 1 p.m., you might have witnessed a series of unusual events. Around 70 people, most of whom had never met before, coordinated a massive takeover. They were not protestors or food-court crusaders or supporters of a particular political party. No, this mass of San Diegans had gathered together to test out the latest in digital, edible technology: the banana phone.

That's right. More than five dozen people walked around the mall talking on bananas. Professional looking 30-somethings conducted business calls over banana. One young performer argued vehemently into his banana with the girlfriend who had just dumped him. A few players pitched the banana phone to fellow shoppers. When asked what they were doing, participants replied, "Testing out the new phone from Banana Wireless."

After a Banana Wireless representative—dressed in a banana suit—was escorted out by mall security for "soliciting bananas," the gig was up. Most participants sat down, ate their bananas and went on their way. But everyone else was left wondering, as one witness put it, "What the fuck?"

It was actually a local group called Scene Diego, not Banana Wireless, behind this and a number of other stunts that have taken place around San Diego during the past few months. The group's goal? To provide a little comic relief and lots of confusion. Scene Diego was created in February by a few kids—or at least kids at heart—looking to have a good time. The group's founder is a 26-year-old web designer known to fellow Scene Diegans as "Agent Neil" and to his friends as Andy. Other members of the planning committee include Agent Carabina, Agent 2904 and Agent Poohead.

Scene Diego was inspired by the wildly popular, New York City-based comedy group Improv Everywhere. When Agent Neil saw a video of Improv Everwhere's infamous Freeze Mission, in which more than 200 "agents" froze in place in the middle of Grand Central Station, he was hooked.

"We saw the video and I just sat there, and I was, like, 'Oh my god.' I am a prankster at heart. I get in trouble for pulling pranks on people sometimes and this just was totally right up my alley."

In early 2008, Improv Everywhere launched a website to encourage similar acts of randomness. Agent Neil and Agent Carabina, independent of one another, started their San Diego groups on the Improv Everywhere site; neither was aware of the other until they started getting messages from confused San Diegans who couldn't decide which group to join.

"We ended up joining the groups," Agent Neil says. "We merged because this type of thing—it works as a group. Everyone needs to work together to really make it happen."

Scene Diego's first mission took place Downtown on Feb. 19. Titled "Sleeping in Starbucks," it involved a mere seven agents. As a group, they trickled into various Starbucks throughout the evening, pretending to be customers who didn't know each other. The agents proceeded to fall asleep for a total of five minutes at each Starbucks, while Agent Neil used a hidden camera to videotape people's reactions.

"The Starbucks one was OK," he says. "It was a Tuesday night, so there weren't really many people out. But it was our first mission and it got us a lot of attention. A lot of people joined because of it."

Banana Wireless, Agent Neil says, is his favorite of seven missions to date. The best, he says, is when regular citizens jump in to participate, as happened when a group of teenage tourists joined an impromptu dance party for the "Do Not Push" mission. (Scene Diego placed a box in a walkway at Seaport Village with a button on it that said "Do Not Push." Of course, it was pushed, and each time, it activated an iPod and prompted agents to either dance around the people who pushed it or clap loudly for them.)

Scene Diego is a member of the Improv Everywhere Global website, but its home site, www.scenediego.org, is the group's headquarters. Photos and videos from past missions are accessible to anyone who visits the site, as are updates on upcoming missions. Currently, scenediego.org has more than 400 agents and is working on launching a Facebook page.

"Every time I log in to look, and every time I send a new e-mail I'm, like, 'Wow—where are these people coming from?'" Agent Neil says. "It's only been a few months…. It's kind of hard for me to fathom. We don't really promote ourselves; we don't advertise anywhere. It's all word-of-mouth. People come out with us and they have a good time and they want to tell other people. That's where we're getting all of our friends."

For as much attention as it's getting, Scene Diego prefers to remain under the radar. New members—dogs, cats and children included—are always welcome, but minimal media exposure keeps the missions a surprise and the public's reaction authentic.

With its grassroots approach to organizing and an ever-increasing mass of bodies appearing in public spaces, Scene Diego shares obvious similarities with political groups and organized protests. While there does seem to be a movement afoot, Agent Neil insists that Scene Diego is not interested in politics. If the group is protesting anything, it's American culture's tendency to focus on the negative.

"We notice all these bad things going on around us, and there's not a whole lot that people really smile about anymore," he says. Scene Diego "gives you a chance to just let loose and have a good time and not worry about what people think because they don't know what to think."

If you're interested in joining Scene Diego on a mission or becoming part of the planning committee, visit the website to create your own agent name. And remember, no mission is intended to cause any harm.

"A lot of confusion, that's what we aim for," says Agent Neil.

Original Article: http://www.sdcitybeat.com/cms/story/detail/making_a_scene/6896/

Tuesday, March 11, 2008 
So our views on our youtube video's have sky-rocketed in the past week. (I posted a bulletin about this last night)

Before going to bed, I checked my email and to my surprise there was an email from Agent Todd, the originator of Improv Everywhere. Not only is he featuring one of our videos on his home page... he has TWO on there! Check it out: http://improveverywhere.com/

Also, a few days ago he gave SceneDiego props in an IE Global forum. He mentioned us as setting a great example for the rest of the groups starting up. He likes our originality and independence.

Again, I am so happy we have such an amazing group of people in this new group! Keep the idea's flowing and let's keep on pulling off awesome missions!

Agent Neil
Monday, March 10, 2008 
I just want to say... you guys rule!

In the TWO weeks that SceneDiego has had a YouTube account, we have had a total of 26,451 plays on our four videos. And by the time we hit midnight, that will be greatly increased.

Yesterday when I checked, Banana Phone had around 6,000 views. That means in the last two days... we have had over 4,000 views!

Also... in the last week, we have had over 100 new Agents sign up on Scenediego. org.

This group is growing fast, and I can't wait to see you all out at our next mission. Nice work everybody!!!!

Agent Neil
Friday, March 07, 2008 
I have been getting a ton of emails from people asking when the next mission will be. We are planning it out and will most likely be the last weekend in March. I will send an email as soon as everything is set!



SceneDiego is now available on iTunes. What does this mean? You can download our videos to KEEP! They are formatted for iTunes and video iPod. Just go to our website and click "iTunes" on the menu on the right side. If you don't have iTunes, its a free download from apple.com



One more thing: I have gotten numerous requests for SceneDiego business cards to give to our friends when we tell them about our missions. They are actually being printed today! I should have them by the end of the week, and will be giving them out to anyone who wants them at the next mission.



The (die-in) event that was mentioned in the last email is NOT an official SceneDiego mission. For those interested, it is still going on March 22, and there is a link on our main page to their website to get more info. Again... this is NOT a SceneDiego mission.



Next Mission's details coming soon!

Agent Neil