Director

I don’t usually write about work, it’s one of the few things I generally consider off-limits to avoid any potential conflicts that could arise. I think I’m probably a bit more cautious than I need to be about it, especially considering that they’re pretty liberal about personal expression and social media. (Are blogs still considered social media at this point? Does having an inactive comments section still make a site “social”?) But exceptions can be made. Oh, and I’m writing this on my iPhone! yay wordpress.

Yesterday we had our Christmas party at work. Every year we have a huge (mandatory) party at House of Blues in one of the upstairs rooms. Mark Mayer gets up to give a speach about how great of a year we had (second record year in a row!), how much we’ve grown (up to 140 people), and for the last few years, how awesome Interactive has been in producing work and recruiting good talent. Then all of the dept heads get up and announce promotions within their groups. So this year it was announced that I’ve been promoted from Senior Interactive Developer to Director of Interactive Development. It’s basically the same position that I was offered to move back to Milwaukee (a bit less money, being on the nola payscale, but less stress as well). It’s been a goal of mine, though, to reach a position that is equivalent to the one that I turned down. It’s nice to have done so quickly!

The one caveat in this aspiration was that there was another developer with seniority over me in terms of tenure. She’s awesome, someone that I’ve always thought of as an ally, not competition, and I’ve been quite content to share the title of Senior Developer with her. I didn’t think that our model of splitting clients was the right choice, as our skill sets are quite different. But we complimented each others skills well. However, when she made the choice to move to project management, I saw that there was a big shift coming in our group. I’m not a person who chases power or even cares about such things. But there are two things about myself that I believe: I have a valid, experienced opinion that I am willing to assert, and when I see an opportunity in front of me I step up to it. My philosophy is that if there is something that you want to do, you just start doing it. If there is a role you want to play, insert yourself and play the part. Do a good job and the recognition will come.

I’ve tried to use my blog (though I STILL hate the word “blog”) to cronicle my time in New Orleans. I know that I talked about it a lot before I moved back, about how much I missed being home. When I got the chance to return, which I never could have done without first finding a good job, I intended to record my experience coming home and whatever successes and failures came. So far I think I’ve had nothing but good come to me and it’s exciting to me how easily I’ve been able to take what I learned elsewhere and apply it to life in New Orleans. Living uptown is a reward in itself. I am grateful to Peter A Mayer Advertising and the awesome group that I work with for enabling me to do great things.

One more note: Rob, the Director of Interactive, also mentioned all of the new hires in Interactive this year and how diverse we are, coming from all over the country (and even a developer originally from England). We are a vibrant city, a city of constant movement (and entertainment). You should come and see for yourself. There is no more fun place to succeed.

jvanpelt - December 19th, 2009

thinking of houses in new orleans

I stayed up till 3am last night reading Zeitoun, almost finishing it 3 days into reading it. The first thing I did this morning was to read the last few pages. Kim also happened to get a Katrina-related documentary that we watched tonight, about a 24 y/o girl’s experience during and after the storm in the 9th ward. It’s got me a bit burnt on reality. We’ve been thinking of buying a house and this really puts some perspective on decision making.

So Zeitoun is a book by Dave Eggers about a Syrian-American man’s expience staying in the city for Katrina – and the hell he and his family went through after. It’s entirely a work of non-fiction. Kim and I went to see Dave Eggers speak at NOCCA recently and were surprised to see the Zeitouns were there with him. After speaking for a bit about Where the Wild Things Are (the book and movie…) he invited Zeitoun and Kathy, his wife, out onto the stage to talk about their experience and the process of writing the book. It was odd for me, though, to “meet” them first and read about them second. I’m glad, though, that I had faces to put with their names, knowing that this was the real story of these real people that I was reading.

The book was definitely riveting. Dave Egger’s writing… I’m a big fan of his and this level of involvement in the community and across the country. But sometimes his writing gets a bit too…  simple. He tends to create these little gimmicks that he relies on throughout his books: in What is the What, the way Achak continues telling his story as if he’s speaking directly to a passing character in the novel, needing that character to understand; in You Shall Know Our Velocity Will has conversations with others inside of his head, using their words to counter his logic; and in Zietoun he tends to repeat things a lot. It feels sometimes like he’s really trying to make a point obvious – overly so. But the great thing about his writing is the way that he really captures how you would react to a situation. Even in the title Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, which when you first hear it you think it’s being zealous, pompous, or just too clever for its own good. But you learn that what he’s really talking about is the ideas you have when you’re young of doing great things, creating astonishing creative works. It’s something you strive for, even though you think you’re going to come up short, but they’re all ideas that you can relate to. They’re big ideas and you feel like you’ve had big ideas like that too.

All of this Katrina stuff though, is  a lot for my brain to handle. I’ve been looking at real estate online a lot lately. We haven’t gotten as far as talking to a mortgage broker yet, but we’re considering options, etc. But it’s hard not to question making a large scale decision like that HERE. One thing that I do know about myself, as much as I like to take my time making decisions, I can be persuaded by my own stupid sentimentality or wishful thinking into doing things that I want because I want to believe it’s the right decision. We all find ways to justify the things that we want. At the same time, though, I don’t want to be overly cautious all the time either. The one thing that I DO want, if I’m going to live in Louisiana, is to LIVE here. I want to enjoy it.

But I also don’t want to be afraid of it.

admin - November 28th, 2009

coffee coincidence

the correlation
between coffee and bad moods
can’t be coincidence

jvanpelt - September 5th, 2009

Piano Playa Hata

I haven’t heard this album in yeeeaaars. This wasn’t the best track, but there aren’t many online. I’ll have to dig out the CD and rip it.

jvanpelt - March 25th, 2009

Pete and the Pirates

Tap Tap and Pete and the Pirates both seemed to slip by mostly undetected, but somehow I managed to catch them both on PitchFork and have been recommending the Pete and the Pirates album lately. It took me a little while to realize that perhaps it’s not just one of those quirky things that only I like. I think a track came on in the car over Mardi Gras while my ipod was on shuffle, both of my friends in the car asked about it and I guess I realized that perhaps it has a bit broader of an appeal that just inside of my own head.

Tap Tap is a little more on the obscure side, I think. I believe Lanzafame was a side project of the singer of Pete and the Pirates, though it sounds more like a 4-track demo than anything. But it’s got this quality that I really picked up on when I got heavily into Grandaddy a few years back… It’s very sincere and without pretension, something that goes a long way with me.

If you haven’t heard either of these projects yet, check them out:

Pete and the Pirates – Lost In the Woods

Tap Tap – 100,000 Thoughts

jvanpelt - March 14th, 2009

Mardi Gras 2009

Dang bruh, I can’t believe it was just mardi gras. Even as I was going to parades, and we went to a LOT of parades, I felt like I was still waiting for it to hit me. We had house guests and many friends in town, but it seemed like it was always still a few weeks away. Not that there was any shortage of king cake up in my house and at the office. I’ve been a total glutton for king cake since like the day after christmas or whenever they start selling. My diet only got worse as people arrived in town and every meal became fried shrimp.

The crowds this year seemed bigger than last year and everything felt a bit more hectic. We live about a mile from the parade route and wound up walking to quite a few parades from here when it was just too crowded to try to park any closer. I’ve got a friend who lives 2 blocks off of the Uptown route, too, so we saw a few from his house, but he lives in “the box” — the area of the city that gets blocked in once the parade starts going — and we couldn’t always get there.

One thing i noticed this year was a general lack of mardi gras music all around. I couldn’t find it on the radio — not even WWOZ — and I neglected to put it on my ipod and control my own MG music destiny. And now the time has passed.

I did, however, have a costume! Here are some pics:

jvanpelt - February 27th, 2009

obama haiku

Black man, president.
Mom says “what’s gone happen now?”
Don’t listen to her.

jvanpelt - January 28th, 2009

I hate Flash

This is my least favorite thing:

jvanpelt - January 22nd, 2009

Live Oak Haiku

I am certain that these bore everyone but me…

A haiku:

Boughs arched over streets,
Roots push sidewalks to and fro.
Oak trees rule the day.

jvanpelt - January 2nd, 2009

SNOLA!


Uploaded – 12\118-6
Originally uploaded by jvanpelt

One more finger down, counting the number of times I’ve seen snow in New Orleans. This was for real, soft fluffy snow too, not the sleet that’s passed for snow in years past. I think it was about 34 degrees.

My mom was convinced I wouldn’t have work today. “You don’t understand dawlin, when it snows in New Orleans EVERYTHING shuts down.” Not Peter Mayer.

jvanpelt - December 11th, 2008