Blogs / Sky Gellatly

POWER.
July 6, 2011

The 48 Laws of Power
by Robert Greene and Joost Elffers

1. Never Outshine the Master
Always make those above you feel comfortably superior. In your desire to please or impress them, do not go too far in displaying your talents or you might accomplish the opposite – inspire fear and insecurity. Make your masters appear more brilliant than they are and you will attain the heights of power.

2. Never Put Too Much Trust In Friends, Learn How To Use Enemies
Be wary of friends – they will betray you more quickly, for they are easily aroused to envy. They also become spoiled and tyrannical. But hire a former enemy and he will be more loyal than a friend, because he has more to prove. In fact, you have more to fear from friends than from enemies. If you have no enemies, find a way to make them.

3. Conceal Your Intentions
Keep people off-balance and in the dark by never revealing the purpose behind your actions. If they have no clue what you are up to, they cannot prepare a defense. Guide them far enough down the wrong path, envelop them in enough smoke, and by the time they realize your intentions, it will be too late.

4. Always Say Less Than Necessary
When you are trying to impress people with words, the more you say, the more common you appear, and the less in control. Even if you are saying something banal, it will seem original if you make it vague, open-ended, and sphinxlike. Powerful people impress and intimidate by saying less. The more you say, the more likely you are to say something foolish.

5. So Much Depends On Reputation – Guard It With Your Life
Reputation is the cornerstone of power. Through reputation alone you can intimidate and win; once it slips, however, you are vulnerable, and will be attacked on all sides. Make your reputation unassailable. Always be alert to potential attacks and thwart them before they happen. Meanwhile, learn to destroy your enemies by opening holes in their own reputations. Then stand aside and let public opinion hang them.

6. Court Attention At All Costs
Everything is judged by appearance; what is unseen counts for nothing. Never let yourself get lost in the crowd, then, or buried in oblivion. Be conspicuous, at all cost. Make yourself a magnet of attention by appearing larger, more colorful, more mysterious than the bland and timid masses.

7. Get Others To Do The Work For You, But Always Take The Credit
Use wisdom, knowledge, and legwork of other people to further your own cause. Not only will such assistance save your valuable time and energy, it will give you a godlike aura of efficiency and speed. In the end your helpers will be forgotten and you will be remembered. Never do yourself what others can do for you.

8. Make Other People Come To You – Use Bait If Necessary
When you force the other person to act, you are in control. It is always better to make your opponent come to you, abandoning his own plans in the process. Lure him with fabulous gains – then attack. You hold the cards.

9. Win Through Your Actions, Never Through Argument
Any momentary triumph you think you have gained through argument is really a Pyrrhic victory. The resentment and ill you will stir up is stronger and lasts longer than any momentary change of opinion. It is much more powerful to get others to agree with you through your actions, without saying a word. Demonstrate, do not explicate.

10. Infection: Avoid the Unhappy and Unlucky
You can die from someone else’s misery – emotional states are as infectious as diseases. You may feel you are helping the drowning man but you are only precipitating your own disaster. The unfortunate sometimes draw misfortune on themselves; they will also draw it on you. Associate with the happy and fortunate instead.

11. Learn To Keep People Dependent On You
To maintain your independence you must always be needed and wanted. The more you are relied on, the more freedom you have. Make people depend on you for their happiness and prosperity and you have nothing to fear. Never teach them enough so they can do without you.

12. Use Selective Honesty And Generosity To Disarm Your Victim
One sincere and honest move will cover over dozens of dishonest ones. Open-hearted gestures of honesty and generosity bring down the guard of even the most suspicious people. Once your selective honesty opens a hole in their armor, you can deceive and manipulate them at will. A timely gift – a Trojan horse – will serve the same purpose.

13. When Asking For Help, Appeal To People’s Self-Interest, Never To Their Mercy Or Gratitude
If you need to turn to an ally for help, do not bother to remind him of your past assistance and good deeds. He will find a way to ignore you. Instead, uncover something in your request, or in your alliance with him, that will benefit him, and emphasize it out of all proportion. He will respond enthusiastically when he sees, something to be gained for himself.

14. Pose As A Friend, Work As A Spy
Knowing about your rival is critical. Use spies to gather valuable information that will keep you a step ahead. Better still: Play the spy yourself. In polite social encounters, learn to probe. Ask indirect questions to get people to reveal their weaknesses and intentions. There is no occasion that is not an opportunity for artful spying.

15. Crush Your Enemy Totally
All great leaders since Moses have known that a feared enemy must be crushed, completely. (Sometimes they have learned this the hard way). If one ember is left alright, no matter how dimly it smolders, a fire will eventually break out. More is lost through stopping halfway than through total annihilation: The enemy will recover, and will seek revenge. Crush him, not only in body but in spirit.

16. Use Absence To Increase Respect And Honor
Too much circulation makes the price go down: The more you are seen and heard from, the more common you appear. If you are already established in a group, temporary withdrawal from it will make you more talked about, even more admired. You must learn when to leave. Create value through scarcity.

17. Keep Others In Suspended Terror: Cultivate An Air Of Unpredictability
Humans are creatures of habit with an insatiable need to see familiarity in other people’s actions. Your predictability gives them a sense of control. Turn the tables: Be deliberately unpredictable. Behavior that seems to have no consistency or purpose will keep them off-balance, and they will wear themselves out trying to explain your moves. Taken to an extreme, this strategy can intimidate and terrorize.

18. Do Not Build Fortresses To Protect Yourself – Isolation Is Dangerous
The world is dangerous and enemies are everywhere – everyone has to protect themselves. A fortress seems the safest. But isolation exposes you to more dangers than it protects you from – it cuts you off from valuable information, it makes you conspicuous and an easy target. Better to circulate among people, find allies, mingle. You are shielded from your enemies by the crowd.

19. Know Who You’re Dealing With – Do Not Offend The Wrong Person
There are many different kinds of people in the world, and you can never assume that everyone will react to your strategies in the same way. Deceive or outmaneuver some people and they will spend the rest of their lives seeking revenge. They are wolves in lambs’ clothing. Choose your victims and opponents carefully, then – never offend or deceive the wrong person.

20. Do Not Commit To Anyone
It is the fool who always rushes to take sides. Do not commit to any side or cause but yourself. By maintaining your independence, you become the master of others – playing people against one another, making them pursue you.

21. Play A Sucker To Catch A Sucker – Seem Dumber Than Your Mark
No one likes feeling stupider than the next person. The trick, then, is to make your victims feel smart – and not just smart, but smarter than you are. Once convinced of this, they will never suspect that you may have ulterior motives.

22. Use The Surrender Tactic: Transform Weakness Into Power
When you are weaker, never fight for honor’s sake; choose surrender instead. Surrender gives you time to recover, time to torment and irritate your conqueror, time to wait for his power to wane. Do not give him the satisfaction of fighting and defeating you – surrender first. By turning the other cheek you infuriate and unsettle him. Make surrender a tool of power.

23. Concentrate Your Forces
Conserve your forces and energies by keeping them concentrated at their strongest point. You gain more by finding a rich mine and mining it deeper, than by flitting from one shallow mine to another – intensity defeats extensity every time. When looking for sources of power to elevate you, find the one key patron, the fat cow who will give you milk for a long time.

24. Play the Perfect Courtier
The perfect courtier thrives in a world where everything revolves around power and political dexterity. He has mastered the art of indirection; he flatters, yields to superiors, and asserts power over others in the most oblique and graceful manner. Learn and apply the laws of courtiership and there will be no limit to have far you can rise in the court.

25. Re-Create Yourself
Do not accept the roles that society foists on you. Re-create yourself by forging a new identity, one that commands attention and never bores the audience. Be the master of your own image rather than letting others define it for you. Incorporate dramatic devices into your public gestures and actions – your power will be enhanced and your character will seem larger than life.

26. Keep Your Hands Clean
You must seem a paragon of civility and efficiency: Your hands are never soiled by mistakes and nasty deeds. Maintain such a spotless appearance by using others as scapegoats and cat’s-paws to disguise your involvement.

27. Play On People’s Need To Believe To Create A Cultlike Following
People have an overwhelming desire to believe in something. Become the focal point of such desire by offering them a cause, a new faith to follow. Keep your words vague but full of promise; emphasize enthusiasm over rationality and clear thinking. Give your new disciples rituals to perform, ask them to make sacrifices on your behalf. In the absence of organized religion and grand causes, your new belief system will bring you untold power.

28. Enter Action With Boldness
If you are unsure of a course of action, do not attempt it. Your doubts and hesitations will infect your execution. Timidity is dangerous: Better to enter with boldness. Any mistakes you commit through audacity are easily corrected with more audacity. Everyone admires the bold; no one honors the timid.

29. Plan All The Way To The End
The ending is everything. Plan all the way to it, taking into account all the possible consequences, obstacles, and twists of fortune that might reverse your hard work and give the glory to others. By planning to the end you will not be overwhelmed by circumstances and you will know when to stop. Gently guide fortune and help determine the future by thinking far ahead.

30. Make Your Accomplishments Seem Effortless
Your actions must seem natural and executed with ease. All the toil and practice that go into them, and also all the clever tricks, must be concealed. When you act, act effortlessly, as if you could do much more. Avoid the temptation of revealing how hard you work – it only raises questions. Teach no one your tricks or they will be used against you.

31. Control The Options: Get Others To Play With The Cards You Deal
The best deceptions are the ones that seem to give the other person a choice: Your victims feel they are in control, but are actually your puppets. Give people options that come out in your favor whichever one they choose. Force them to make choices between the lesser of two evils, both of which serve your purpose. Put them on the horns of a dilemma: They are gored wherever they turn.

32. Play To People’s Fantasies
The truth is often avoided because it is ugly and unpleasant. Never appeal to truth and reality unless you are prepared for the anger that comes from disenchantment. Life is so harsh and distressing that people who can manufacture romance or conjure up fantasy are like oases in the desert: Everyone flocks to them. There is great power in tapping into the fantasies of the masses.

33. Discover Each Man’s Thumbscrew
Everyone has a weakness, a gap in the castle wall. That weakness is usually an insecurity, an uncontrollable emotion or need; it can also be a small secret pleasure. Either way, once found, it is a thumbscrew you can turn to your advantage.

34. Be Royal In Your Own Fashion: Act Like A King To Be Treated Like One
The way you carry yourself will often determine how you are treated: In the long-run, appearing vulgar or common will make people disrespect you. For a king respects himself and inspires the same sentiment in others. By acting regally and confident of your powers, you make yourself seem destined to wear a crown.

35. Master The Art Of Timing
Never seem to be in a hurry – hurrying betrays a lack of control over yourself, and over time. Always seem patient, as if you know that everything will come to you eventually. Become a detective of the right moment; sniff out the spirit of the times, the trends that will carry you to power. Learn to stand back when the time is not yet ripe, and to strike fiercely when it has reached fruition.

36. Disdain Things You Cannot Have: Ignore Them Is The Best Revenge
By acknowledging a petty problem you give it existence and credibility. The more attention you pay an enemy the stronger you make him; and a small mistake is often made worse and more visible when you try to fix it. It is sometimes best to leave things alone. If there is something you want but cannot have, show contempt for it. The less interest you reveal, the more superior you seem.

37. Create Compelling Spectacles
Striking imagery and grand symbolic gestures create the aura of power – everyone responds to them. Stage spectacles for those around you, then, full of arresting visuals and radiant symbols that heighten your presence. Dazzled by appearances, no one will notice what you are really doing.

38. Think As You Like But Behave Like Others
If you make a show of going against the times, flaunting your unconventional ideas and unorthodox ways, people will think that you only want attention and that you look down upon them. They will find a way to punish you for making them feel inferior. It is far safer to blend in and nurture the common touch. Share you originality only with tolerant friends and those who are sure to appreciate your uniqueness.

39. Stir Up Waters To Catch Fish
Anger and emotion are usually counterproductive. You must always stay calm and objective. But if you can make your enemies angry while staying calm yourself, you gain a decided advantage. Put your enemies off-balance: Find the chink in their vanity through which you can rattle them and you hold the strings.

40. Despise The Free Lunch
What is offered for free is dangerous – it usually involves either a trick or a hidden obligation. What has worth is worth paying for. By paying your own way you stay clear of gratitude, guilt, and deceit. It is also often wise to pay the full price – there is no cutting corners with excellence. Be lavish with your money and keep it circulating, for generosity is a sign and a magnet for power.

41. Avoid Stepping Into A Great Man’s Shoes
What happens first always appears better and more original than what comes after. If you succeed a great man or have a famous parent, you will have to accomplish double their achievements to outshine them. Do not get lost in their shadow, or stuck in a past not of your own making: Establish your own name and identity by changing course. Slay the overbearing father, disparage his legacy, and gain power by shining in your own way.

42. Strike The Shepherd And The Sheep Will Scatter
Trouble can often be traced to a single strong individual – the stirrer, the arrogant underling, the poisoner of goodwill. If you allow such people room to operate, others will succumb to their influence. Do not wait for the troubles they cause to multiply, do not try to negotiate with them – they are irredeemable. Neutralize their influence by isolating or banishing them. Strike at the source of the trouble and the sheep will scatter.

43. Work On The Hearts And Minds Of Others
Coercion creates a reaction that will eventually work against you. You must seduce others into wanting to move in your direction. A person you have seduced becomes your loyal pawn. And the way to seduce others is to operate on their individual psychologies and weaknesses. Soften up the resistant by working on their emotions, playing on what they hold dear and what they fear. Ignore the hearts and minds of others and they will grow to hate you.

44. Disarm And Infuriate With The Mirror Effect
The mirror reflects reality, but it is also the perfect tool for deception: When you mirror your enemies, doing exactly as they do, they cannot figure out your strategy. The Mirror Effect mocks and humiliates them, making them overreact. By holding up a mirror to their psyches, you seduce them with the illusion that you share their values; by holding up a mirror to their actions, you teach them a lesson. Few can resist the power of the Mirror Effect.

45. Preach The Need For Change, But Never Reform Too Much At Once
Everyone understands the need for change in the abstract, but on the day-to-day level people are creatures of habit. Too much innovation is traumatic, and will lead to revolt. If you are new to a position of power, or an outsider trying to build a power base, make a show of respecting the old way of doing things. If change is necessary, make it feel like a gentle improvement on the past.

46. Never Appear Too Perfect
Appearing better than others is always dangerous, but most dangerous of all is to appear to have no faults or weaknesses. Envy creates silent enemies. It is smart to occasionally display defects, and admit to harmless vices, in order to deflect envy and appear more human and approachable. Only gods and the dead can seem perfect with impunity.

47. Do Not Go Past The Mark You Aimed For; In Victory, Learn When To Stop
The moment of victory is often the moment of greatest peril. In the heat of victory, arrogance and overconfidence can push you past the goal you had aimed for, and by going too far, you make more enemies than you defeat. Do not allow success to go to your head. There is no substitute for strategy and careful planning. Set a goal, and when you reach it, stop.

48. Assume Formlessness
By taking a shape, by having a visible plan, you open yourself to attack. Instead of taking a form for your enemy to grasp, keep yourself adaptable and on the move. Accept the fact that nothing is certain and no law is fixed. The best way to protect yourself is to be as fluid and formless as water; never be on stability or lasting order. Everything changes.

DJ Lupe Fiasco + Me: Las Vegas Performance
May 24, 2011


DJ Lupe Fiasco and I are a duo DJ called The Soundclash. We're just two friends having a good time behind some turntables...

Several years ago, when I had no facial hair, and Lupe had incredibly spherical reading glasses, we were more concerned with eating halal pizza from the corner of 8th avenue and 36th street.

We've since changed.

Ibe rocking with The Soundclash (Sky Gellatly + Lupe Fiasco) at Brooklyn Bowl from Homeskool on Vimeo.

We are set to perform in Las Vegas Memorial Day Weekend. It will be party time, excellent.

Tao Beach (Friday Afternoon)

Lavo (Saturday Night).

Please come dance.

Frank Ocean “Acura Integurl”
May 23, 2011


Frank Ocean “Acura Integurl” from Team OnSMASH on Vimeo.

"...Officially announcing: this is warfare
'Cause, back in the day, my clouds was grey
And it seemed like my angels couldn't blow them away
But then I sold my first verse, and copped that NSX
But I was still ridin' in them thin ass jets,
But now..."

Frank Ocean – The Lonny Breaux Collection
April 13, 2011



If you like Frank Ocean as much as I do (what a talent), you'll likely want to check out demo material, AKA Previous Gems, generated under the alias Lonny Breaux.

REAL TALK: On Magazines, Digital Media, + Video
March 14, 2011


The face of digital media has shifted considerably in the last two years. Facebook is now our time-tested platform of news and voyeurisim; every cell phone has a camera, and every step in a day is now a landscape for a mobile upload, Tumblr post, or a Twitpic. Twitter and Klout.com have actualized the web influence of a celebrity, media entity, or small-town digital guru—and have made this digital com score and follower amalgam all-too-public knowledge. Traditional media, both print and TV, has been leapfrogged, as the gap between consumer and celebrity/designer/artist is now but a tweet away. As television has lost viewers to YouTube, networks, albeit far too slowly, have mirrored their higher-performing shows on Hulu, iTunes, and have produced on-demand publishes through conventional DVR, as they have through integrated cable-to-web, and then web-to-mobile, set top box solutions such as SlingBox. TV has since collided with independently-produced video, as Hulu embeds battle for the same blog space as an independently-produced Vimeo video within the news feeds of blogs, social media hubs, and weighted content aggregation sites like Digg.

Outside of the rapid acceleration of PDAs-turned-to-mobile-desktops, DSLR camera technology has afforded individual content authors the ability to produce video content with the quality of blue-chip cinema. When merged with happenstance celebrity inclusion, these indie videos have engendered the same magnetism in the blogosphere as "official" creative outputs from CAA and Willaim-Morris-represented artists—with studio or music-label-backed budgets.

At the end of the day, content is either both viral and impactful, or it isn't. Terry Richardson and Hedi Slimane, for example, don't need a glossy magazine to publish "professional images," or to wrangle Pete Doherty or Pharrell for a shoot. These photographers and designers are also, after all, “talent” in their own right. That said, they should, and have in some cases already, graced magazine covers. And they now have their own platforms to create their own spreads—albeit, for now, on a wordpress-enabled blog.

Sucked into this vortex of hyper-consumed multimedia are all of the niche blogs that spawned, exponentially, as the most-intelligent print media minds couldn’t move quickly enough to staff up their digital news bureaus, say, from 2005 to today. Blogs captured all of the traffic that sites such as GQ.com or Vogue.com "deserved" (and no, not just the "style" content). Likewise, advertising networks were quicklycreated within these amorphous independent blog communities (read: monetization came raining/reigning in). The aggregated traffic reach of these networks allow advertisers to buy media, and speak to huge niche audiences, at CPMs, often times, 1/5th the price of a CondeNet CPM.

As a result, “the independents” got very rich, very fast, and had no need to actually get a job at a magazine as they might have done eight years prior.

And of course there’s the new converged model of retail and editorial: Gilt Groupe, and of course, now, the Gilt MANual.

In most cases at these independently-owned blogs/magazines, the most senior bloggers are also the "publishers." As such, consumers are now, more than ever, accustomed to advertising and marketing co-mingling with editorial, perhaps in even all-too-grey ways because blogs will blurr the lines that perhaps magazines would not—or will not.

Ask any digital ad executive, and they will tell you that the need for "sponsorable" web video is the rage; it is the new hot medium in monetization. And whereas blogs learned how to translate their blogging, essentially into vlogging, all that our favorite magazines could produce in the last few years were: lack-luster "how to tie a tie" videos, and "behind the scenes outtakes from our cover shoot." Moreover, these videos, almost understandably so, were produced with cameras that shot horribly, and were uploaded to media players that played video at 360p; as a long-term reality, the content is, perhaps, not even of a resolution that is good enough to evolve with advances in mobile device screens, let alone an LED television powered by Apple TV.

At this point, let's discuss the new generation of consumer, Todd Selby in this example, and his rapid penetration into all verticals of the media business.

From a mere blog, then to a book, and eventually as an advertising creative director darling, Todd's evolution (read: his meteoric rise) in becoming an advertising creative service mastermind for Louis Vuitton is really not that surprising. Is it? Todd was a consumer, who evolved into an independent content creator, making exactly what he knew the world’s fashion intelligentsia wanted to consume; in this way, the success of his eventual campaigns were already written in the HTML that hinged underneath his posts (his posts, ironically, looked like the very sketchpads of traditional print media editors).

And Todd's not the only one, by any means. Videographers 13thWitness, Jake Davis, and Levi Maestro, all with three very different ways of communicating "feature articles" and "non-traditional advertising" through video, are also providing services for the likes of Nike, adidas, Timberland, Sperry, John Mayer, Drake, and Usher (as they also just do, for free, and for fun, just for the readers/viewers of their regular blog content).

Todd's genesis is the result of the realities of media and advertising in 2011: editorial content is brand messaging and advertising. GQ's, or Esquire's, or Monocle's communication in the digital space is persistent marketing for its evolution as a brand/news bureau/content network, and is the bait for a generation of new subscribers: both on the iPad and for the venerated print version.

2010, of course, saw the advent of the iPad. And now, as CES has shown, we're upon a new year with 60+ tablets in production.

And this week, we welcomed the second-generation iPad.

Print media has, of course, begun to translate its fixed linear form to a poly-directional digital version. But do these versions offer any exclusive content? Can they serve video while framed around editorial-grade photos and award-winning text? How are these “tablet editions” evolving the fixed form of print to its next full evolution? How can this new, exciting, version be more than an old dog (blog), with a few new tricks?

As for today's youth, aptly referred to as being of the "Millennial" or "Verge Culture" generation, they want to consume content with the immediacy of five minutes ago. The blogosphere, the instant gratification nature of video gaming and fast food, and the exclusivity complex of weekly tabloid culture (from Us Weekly to Bossip), has engendered an almost insatiable consumption threshold with print media's assumed next generation of subscriber.

Today, the 25 minutes that it takes to read a cover story has been trumped by a three minute video that can show, tell, and make the same cover story content far more gripping than, well, picking up a huge September issue (that's likely five-times heavier than an iPad, and that you can't read, well, when the lights are off, or also use to access Facebook and Twitter…).

Thoughts?

Regards,
Sky