Category: Advice

  • Richard Marsland and me

    On the morning of Sunday 7 December 2008, I was sitting in my bedroom playing ‘Heroes of Might and Magic 2’ when Mum appeared at the door.

    She had just read some bad news in the paper. “Richard Marslands has died,” she said.

    Obviously, she must be mistaken. It’s ‘Marsland’ not ‘Marslands’ and besides, he’s only 32.

    So I wandered upstairs where the Sunday Mail lay open on my parents’ bed.

    Next to a large black and white photo of actress Kat Stewart with her AFI award was a smaller photo of a grinning, bearded Richard Marsland and the words “Leading radio star dies”.

    This was clearly a prank. Wow, how’d he pull that off? It looked just like a real article.

    That’s actually what I thought for a moment. Obviously that was denial – first of the five stages of grief. I was completely shocked and didn’t want to even consider the possibility it could be true. But of course, it was.

    Richard Marsland had taken his own life.

    Richard was an acquaintance. I’d like to say friend, but our friendship had barely begun. I’d never had a friend die before.

    I’d known of him for a couple of years. In April 2006, Tony Martin and Ed Kavalee began what many believe to be the funniest and therefore greatest Australian radio show of all time, ‘Get This’ on the Triple M Network. Richard joined the show a few weeks later as the panel operator after it became apparent Ed had overstated his technical skills.

    At the time I was 18 and had just joined up to Flinders University Student Radio, which broadcast Wednesday nights on community station Radio Adelaide. The consistently hilarious Get This was a huge influence in my early days mucking around on air.

    In Australian radio comedy, basically there’s Tony Martin and then there’s everyone else.

    But Get This was something else entirely. Tony, Ed and Rich with producer Nikki Hamilton-Cornwall and production wizard Matt Dower “on the pots and pans” gelled together in a way that made the show far more than the sum of its parts.

    There was a spike in the ratings every time it aired anywhere and it had probably the most devout fan base of any radio show before or since. People loved them like their best mates.

    When Richard started “on the buttons”, he rarely turned on his own mic to say anything. But a very gradual transformation took place over the weeks and months and eventually he elevated himself from silent operator to third host. Richard’s “white-anting” became a running gag.

    I did a bit of white-anting myself and figured out having a community radio show was a great excuse to talk to my comedy heroes. I interviewed Tony Martin over the phone in September 2006 and when he dropped a reference to the Get This panel operator, I had to ask him to remind me what his name was.

    It wasn’t until October 2007 shortly before Get This finished that Richard’s name was added to the show’s opening sweeper.

    By the end of the show’s two years, he had appeared in or been the subject of countless brilliant and hilarious sketches. There was the mash-up of World’s Wildest Police Videos where Richard took a stolen ‘Black Thunder’ for a joy ride.

    The many replays of his ad-lib rendition of the Vengaboys hit ‘We Like to Party’ with a few of the words from their other hit ‘We’re Going to Ibiza’.

    And Tony’s parody of Bad Company’s ‘Feel Like Makin’ Love’ but with lyrics all about the white-anting Richard.

    As I gradually discovered, there was a lot more to Marslando Calrissian.

    He grew up in Adelaide’s northern suburbs and began working at SAFM in the mid 90s as a panel operator and Black Thunder driver.

    It’s quite likely he handed me more than one icy cold can of coke back in the day. I listened to SAFM religiously and would often get the baby-sitter to drive me and my siblings all over town chasing free Kool Mints and movie tickets.

    In the early 2000s, Richard joined Adelaide TV royalty Anne Wills as co-host of ‘AM Adelaide’ on Channel 7.

    He was also a comedy writer and after moving to Melbourne, he wrote for some of the biggest shows of the era, including Rove Live, The Glass House and eventually for Shaun Micallef’s SBS comedy Newstopia.

    Like many Get This fans, I was genuinely angry when the show was axed in November 2007. It was a particularly barren time for comedy on Australian radio and television – there were fewer online options back then – and this brilliant show that was also highly rating was getting the arse. It didn’t make sense.

    By then I had finished studying and was keen on making the transition from community radio to the kind where they pay you. The late Adelaide radio legend David “Daisy” Day was helping me put a demo together.

    We were talking in his office on South Terrace one afternoon and after listening to some of my sketches, he said I reminded him of Richard. They knew each other from the SAFM days. I was instantly intrigued and once again, used the community show as an excuse to contact him.

    I still had Nikki’s number from interviewing Tony the previous year so I called her and she put me in touch with Richard. He was going to be in Adelaide for Christmas and was happy to come into the studio for an interview.

    The interview was set for 29 December 2007. On the day however, Richard called to apologise, which was how most conversations with him would start.

    He couldn’t make it to the studio and it’d have to be over the phone. I was disappointed I wasn’t going to get to meet him but it was better than nothing.

    Back then, Radio Adelaide was at 228 North Terrace. The studios were built in the late 80s and by community radio standards, they were excellent. The phone system however was much older and to this day, it’s the only time I’ve ever seen a wood panelled telephone.

    We chatted for about an hour about all sorts of things. How he got started in the biz, comedy idols, working on Get This, stories from the panel, writing for TV. It was great. Rich was a lovely guy.

    [display_podcast]

    In January 2008, Richard moved to Triple M Melbourne breakfast as the panel operator for Peter Helliar and Myf Warhurst’s new show.

    The same month I had a meeting with SAFM program director Craig Bruce. He gave me my first paid radio job as a casual panel operator. Just like Richard a decade earlier.

    I panelled the evening shows that were networked from Sydney and Melbourne, mainly The Hot 30. Occasionally Hamish & Andy.

    Even though those shows were made interstate, Adelaide still needed someone at the panel to record local traffic updates and be ready with some music just in case the feed dropped out.

    Often I’d be the only person in the old Austereo building on Greenhill Road. It was a big two storey building made of dark brown bricks, clearly designed for a much larger staff. A lot of it was empty now. It smelt like a holiday house.

    I liked wandering around and looking at all the weird pop culture memorabilia they’d accumulated since launching in 1980 as Adelaide’s first FM station.

    The walls were covered with framed CDs commemorating a sales milestone of some significance and the odd photo of a celebrity. The most prominent item on display was an autographed pair of Mick Molloy’s underpants.

    Down one of the corridors, stacked on the floor against a wall were several plaques that honoured past employees of the month circa 1998. Richard Marsland’s name was on three of them. Awesome.

    In July 2008 I went to Melbourne for a few days with my then girlfriend Jemima. I emailed Richard and asked if he wanted to get lunch while I was in town. He said sure and we met in front of Myer in Bourke Street Mall.

    The first thing he did after we shook hands was apologise for not shaving.

    We found a café down a side street, grabbed a table and talked non-stop for more than 2 hours in minute detail about radio, TV, comedy, writing, panelling and Get This. Jemima understandably got bored about half way through and left us nerds to continue on our own.

    Richard told me how he made his famous Warwick Capper soundboard prank calls in 2001 using actual tape cartridges. Hearing those re-aired on Get This inspired me to make some myself using clips of Dutch-American MMA fighter Bas Rutten. I did it with software though. Much easier.

    I gave him a white T-shirt with iron-on text that read: “David M. Green gave me this shirt.”

    He was extremely generous with his time. He even read a couple of scripts I brought along and gave me some pointers. He paid for lunch too. And he left a nice tip.

    Boy I really wish I recorded that conversation. I’ve forgotten most of it now. But a couple of bits of advice stuck with me.

    He said if you’ve got an idea but you’re having trouble pitching it to the powers at be, sometimes it’s easier to just make it yourself anyway and show them the finished product so they don’t have to use their imagination. That’s easier to do with a radio sketch than a feature film, but still good advice.

    And with regard to following in his footsteps and forging a career as a panel operator and comedian, he said “just enjoy it”.

    We walked back out onto Bourke Street and parted ways near the statues of three thin people. We shook hands three times while exchanging drawn out goodbyes. I had a flight to catch. Richard had to get home and write a sketch about Guitar Hero.

    That was the one and only time I saw him in person.

    A couple of weeks later, I lost my job at SAFM. They replaced the evening panel operators with automation. This was during the period after they’d scrapped the Black Thunders but before they brought them back so there weren’t any other entry level positions for me.

    At the time I was also making sketches for ABC Radio, but thanks to a falling out with a friend, that quickly fell through as well and I was back to square one. I really felt like the rug had been pulled from under me. It was one of the lowest points of my life. In retrospect, I think of it as my quarter life crisis.

    I emailed Richard and told him all about it. He sent a really nice reply.

    “I’m of the opinion that you haven’t really had a career in the Australian media if you haven’t been sacked due to no fault of your own,” he wrote.

    “Look at the long list of talents who have been told to hit the bricks – from Tony to Shaun to Judith to Mick: it’s insane and it makes no sense BUT it does happen and the best thing to do is take it on the chin and keep coming at them.”

    “It’s a funny industry full of revolving doors, so eventually one will open for you, I guarantee it. You just have to keep positive, and stay persistent. Luck is hard work meeting opportunity.”

    “So – don’t let it get you down too much, okay? I won’t lie – I know it sucks, but everything will be DMG before you know it. You just have to get ready.”

    “Speak soon, give me a call anytime! Richard.”

    Soon after that I decided I was going to move to Melbourne.

    Three and a half months later, Richard was gone. Even some of the people closest to him had no idea he suffered from depression.

    His funeral was held at St Ignatius Church in Norwood. It was the first time I’d been to a funeral for someone under the age of about 70 and it was packed.

    A station wagon was parked outside with two people in T-shirts reading “Generic Radio Station” giving out pretty warm icy cold cans of coke and Farmer’s Union Iced Coffee.

    For the previous two weeks I felt shock more than anything. I felt like crying but I didn’t. Then they played ‘The Rainbow Connection’ from The Muppet Movie and I saw Richard’s coffin being carried into the church with Tony as one of the pallbearers. That did it.

    There was laughter too of course. Hearing Richard’s youthful escapades with friends and the pranks he used to pull on his sisters, I couldn’t help but smile.

    Tony Martin delivered a warm tribute. He leaned into the mic and opened with the words: “Normally this is where Richard would be checking the levels”.

    “Richard was on the verge of moving into an area where few people in comedy can move; a kind of comedy where he presented a version of himself which was very vulnerable and very real,” he said.

    “He was a man who was really serious about his work; we have lost that someone on radio, a beautiful person that everyone loved.”

    During the eulogy, I also learned Richard’s first job was a pizza delivery driver. The following week, I saw Brighton Pizza Haven was looking for drivers, so I applied and became one myself.

    I received several emails from Richard’s friends, family, former co-workers and fans – some now living on the other side of the world – who had discovered the phone interview. All of them had their own stories about Richard’s warmth and generosity.

    About six months later, my Radio Adelaide friends and I entered a competition called Semi-Pro Radio. We made the final selection and got to make a one off show on the Triple M network.

    We pre-recorded it at Triple M Adelaide – which was downstairs from SAFM – and managed to sneak upstairs to check out the ‘Richard Marsland Room’ they’d built up there.

    It was more of a nook, but there was a large mural on the wall with a stream of consciousness in scrawling text with references to iced coffee and the word ‘sorry’ about five times in a row. Unmistakably Richard.

    Nothing came of that contest, but I made the move to Melbourne and kept doing community radio and community television too.

    In 2011, I got my second job in radio as a panel operator at Melbourne’s new AM talk station MTR.

    I signed the lease on my first apartment on 29 February 2012 so I could live closer to the studios. Two days later the station went into administration and everyone was sacked.

    Again, Richard’s words of encouragement in that final email helped me through the tough time. As he said, it happens.

    Just a few months later I got another radio job at Crocmedia and in a weird call back to Get This, ended up spending five years panelling AFL broadcasts with Rex Hunt. “How good is this?”

    In 2014 I landed my dream job as a comedy writer for ‘Shaun Micallef’s Mad as Hell’ on ABC TV. I’ve now been there for seven seasons. Coincidentally, Nikki Hamilton-Cornwall is the locations and casting producer. Everyone I’ve met who worked with Richard remembers him fondly.

    I think about Richard a lot. Especially around this time of year.

    There have been many times over the last decade where I would have loved to get his take on some of the more advanced aspects of panelling or writing as I’ve encountered them.

    And I wonder what he would be doing now. All the gags he didn’t get to write and the laughs he never heard. I don’t think he ever really knew how much people loved him.

    Radio comedy combines the most intimate genre on the most intimate medium.

    When I’m back in Adelaide driving around, random bits of Get This pop into my head. It happens subconsciously when I just happen to be where I was when I heard them the first time and I remember how much I laughed.

    Richard’s legacy lives on. ‘Capril’ started as a joke on Get This. It now takes places every April with people wearing capes during everyday activities to promote awareness of mental health and raise money for beyondblue.

    The hashtag #ImRichard routinely trends on Twitter with fans tweeting various obscure Get This references. It’s like the show never ended.

    In fact, you can find all the episodes online with the music and ads cut out. If I had to choose only one radio show to listen to for the rest of my life, that’d be the one.

    Others knew him much better than I did. But for me, Richard was a mentor and inspiration.

    He made me laugh. He showed me someone from Adelaide can achieve great things in the entertainment industry. He helped lift me out of one of the lowest points in my life.

    Even 10 years on, he’s still with me and everyone he touched because in true Richard Marsland style, he’s white-anted into our lives.

    – DMG

  • Why you should always have a pen

    I’ve had the same Parker Pen since 2003. I’ve also had the same hand since 1987.

    With that pen I completed all my exams for Year 12 and University. It’s also been used by Shaun Micallef, Andrew O’Keefe, Steve Vizard, Sam Mac and The Late Richard Marsland. Derryn Hinch has held it. But he didn’t write with it.

    I won’t get into the things my hand has held.

    My ability to be a somewhat competent comedian rests mainly on two factors:

    1. My ability to generate good ideas, and
    2. My ability not to forget them.

    Ever since I started doing radio in 2006, I’ve carried a pen and a pocket-sized notebook around with me, jotting down thoughts, jokes and other ideas as they come to me.

    People generally seem amused that I carry a pen and paper around with me: “Why don’t you just type a note into your iPhone?”

    Call me old fashioned. I like to write.

    For the first time last Christmas, I finally went through my collection of used notebooks  and put all my unused ideas into a word document. The resultant 450ish ideas ended up 33 pages long and consisted of more than 12,000 words!

    That’s 6 years of always having a pen:

    But my pen rewarded me in a new way this week, when I found myself locked out of my apartment.

    Since I moved into my own place in Hawthorn in March, I’ve found myself pondering how long after slipping on the wet bathroom tile and cracking my head open would my body lie there decomposing before someone bothered to come looking for me?

    Probably at least couple of days.

    My other fear is being locked out. With my family in another state and no one nearby with a spare key, it would be incredibly inconvenient.

    However, that’s exactly what happened on Wednesday when I went out to purchase a baguette and a wedge of brie for a dinner party I was attending that evening.

    I arrived home to find the screen door was locked. This was bizarre for two reasons. Firstly, I don’t ever lock the screen door. And secondly, it’s impossible to lock the screen door without the key.

    The screen door is probably as old as the apartment – circa 1968 – and features a key that looks like something out of Sherlock Holmes:

    And considering the screen door is full of holes and merely provides a lovely view of the doors to neighbouring apartments, I decided I wasn’t going to use it.

    I’ve got enough pens and notebooks in my pockets already. I’m sure as hell not carrying the key to “The Secret Garden” with me everywhere I go.

    But what the hell? How come I can’t open the screen door?

    After jiggling it around for a bit, I did the same with the door – to no avail.

    So I called the real estate agent. After being on hold for 10 minutes, they told me they didn’t have a spare key and suggested I call the landlord. The landlord was 4 hours away near Lakes Entrance and although had a key, was unable to deliver it to me. He suggested jimmying it open or, sigh… calling a locksmith.

    Upon closer inspection, I realised it wasn’t actually the locking mechanism which had “locked” the door. It was the metal latch that should simply retract when the handle is turned.

    For some reason, something inside the door had malfunctioned and the latch had popped out, effectively locking the door. It was no longer responding when the handle was turned. You can see it extended here:

    I wonder what could have caused this? Perhaps the 5.2 magnitude earthquake the night before? Who knows. It’s an old freaking door.

    I tried wedging it open using my Boost Juice membership card, which was the least important thin piece of plastic on my person. But it wasn’t strong enough. Even after doubling it up with my Australian Blood Donor’s card, the plastic just kept bending.

    The other keys I had with me were all too thick and short to be effective. The only other thing I had on me was my beloved pen.

    Incredibly, I was actually able to use the pen’s metal ink refill as a “ramp” for the door. But I really had to force the door open, which left the pen insert crippled:

    And can you believe it… it still writes!

    So I got back in my apartment and avoided keeping another locksmith in business. Thank God.

    Of course, I then managed to lock myself INSIDE the apartment; an even more frightening prospect. Especially if there’s a fire (I live on the third floor and it’s the only way in or out).

    That really was the final “curtain” for that screen door. It now resides off its hinges.

    So what did I learn?

    1. Always have a pen. And
    2. The “M” stands for MacGyver.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Are you writing this down?

  • Tips for Citizen Journalists… with Chelsea.

    This is a radio sketch I made for SYN a couple of years ago, using clips from ACTUAL news bulletins broadcast on Adelaide’s Fresh 92.7FM circa December 2008 – January 2009.

    At the insistence of my good friend Van Badham, I knocked up this visual version using stock footage from some American educational film about the 1956 Interstate Highways Act.

    If you know anything about news or journalism, you should enjoy this.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Chelsea, you’ve done it again!

  • Gift giving

    In case you missed it in mX last Friday, here’s my two cents on gifts…

    It’s supposed to be all about generosity, love, happiness and all that junk. But personally, I find giving and receiving gifts a nightmare.

    And Christmas is the worst.

    When you’re a kid, you think it’s simple enough. I want this! I want that!

    But then you get older and you discover a whole bunch of bizarre “gifting rules”. And everyone seems to have their own interpretation.

    Take my Dad (Please). He hates gifts. This is no secret. When someone gives him a present, any present, his reaction is consistent: “I didn’t ask for this. I don’t need it. I don’t want it.”

    My Mum on the other hand, will tell me every Christmas, “It’s okay, you don’t need to get me a present this year.” And then when I go ahead and get her nothing, I find out what she really meant was: “I don’t need any presents this year, but I would actually like a small present.”

    WHY DON’T YOU JUST SAY THAT!?!

    Why the labyrinth of interpretation?

    Because nobody wants to admit “I want presents”.

    My family has never been big on gift-giving. When I tell people this, often they find it incomprehensible. It even makes some people upset! They call me David M. Grinch.

    When I experienced the first Christmas with my first girlfriend, I was under the impression I would give her a present and she would give me one. And this was true.

    But what I wasn’t expecting when I turned up at her house on Christmas Day, was a present from her parents, presents from her three brothers, one from her brother’s girlfriend, one from her grandparents and another from her aunt.

    Might I point out, I’d hadn’t even met half these people before.

    And you know what I got for them? Nothing!

    I know they were trying to make me feel included, but it just made me feel awful. Was I supposed to get presents for all of them too? I didn’t have a job at the time. I’d have to declare bankruptcy! I’m ruined!

    So what makes a good gift?

    I believe the best present is money – cold hard cash – because you can do whatever you want with it.

    But people say, “No! You can’t give money! Where’s the thought in that?” They tell me I have to at least get them a gift voucher.

    A gift voucher is less thoughtful than money. A gift voucher can only be used at one place under certain conditions and if you don’t redeem it by a certain date it’s worthless.

    But money has no expiration date! It can be used anywhere! For anything! Just a thought…

    And it’s the thought that counts.

    There was about ten Christmases in a row there where several relatives thought I’d enjoy a nice desk ornament. Every year, more and more desk ornaments. How many desks do you think I have? I need a second one now just for the ornaments.

    If you must give a gift, give something that’s useful. We’ve all heard the clichés about socks and jocks, but I think they’re great. Assuming they don’t have an awkwardly placed tag or itchy stitching.

    And if you want to give ME a present this year… please… make a donation to a worthy charity. Okay? You feel good. The gift goes to someone who really needs it. Everybody’s happy.

    Either that or Lego.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Putting that journalism degree to good use, obviously.

  • Get Noticed? Okie Dokie!

    This is hilarious.

    A few weeks ago I received this email out of the blue:

    Date: Tue, 18 Oct 2011 15:15:47 +0100
    From: Marcus Taylor

    Hey David,

    Hope you’re having a great start to the week 🙂

    I just wanted to get in touch as I came across your Youtube channel and really enjoyed your review of How to Win Friends & Influence People – great book!

    I’m currently looking for some awesome video bloggers like yourself to review a book coming out this Thursday called Get Noticed, which is described as being ‘a how to guide to being in the right place at the right time, all the time’ and has been dubbed as a ‘must-read’ by New York Times best selling author Debra Fine.

    You would be one of the first people to review this book, so there’s a great exposure opportunity in place. As a little added benefit we’d also be offering you:

    • £4.20 (roughly $7.50) commission for any sales you refer from your video review.
    • Exposure on the Get Noticed website
    • Promotion of your video from the author’s Twitter & Facebook accounts
    • A free e-copy of the book to read
    • Invitation to an exclusive UStream interview with the authors (you also have the opportunity to interview the authors with any questions you have)

    Hopefully together we can promote your video and channel to get some benefit from the buzz around the book launch.

    If it sounds of interest I can send through a copy of the book and we can go from there!

     
    Thanks,
    Marcus

    Now, I get spam like this all the time. So naturally, I did a little research. This guy seemed legit. He’s some author from the UK who’s written what I could only assume was some kind of self-help book.

    But what the hell was he contacting me for?

    When did I ever review “How to win friends and influence people”?

    Oh wait… surely he doesn’t mean THIS…

    Ah yes, last year my good friend Lachlan Cowlishaw and I, for a bit of fun, set up a couple of cameras and chairs in Lachlan’s garage and goofed around for a few hours.

    We just used things lying around his garage as props. One of them happened to be a copy of the original 1936 self-help book “How to win friends and influence people” by Dale Carnegie. And in the midst of ab-libbing, we made a few references to it.

    Okay, so this Marcus guy is familiar with my sarcastic brand of comic japery. And the temptation of a quick buck is a boon for the spam email industry… so I figured I had nothing to lose by asking a few more questions:

    Date: Wed, 19 Oct 2011 17:06:34 +1100
    From: David M. Green

    Hi Marcus,

    Thanks for your email. Sounds interesting.

    What kind of deadline are you wanting?

    DMG


    Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2011 18:17:22 +0100
    From: Marcus Taylor

    Hi David,

    Thanks for getting in touch, there’s no deadline per se but the sooner the better as there will be a lot of buzz about the book during the launch this week. I’ve attached a copy for you to have a look at and base your review on. If there’s anything extra that would help you just let me know and i’ll see what I can do 🙂

    Cheers,
    Marcus

    So I took a look at the book. My first reaction was “100 pages!?! This is like an entire book! I don’t have time to read this!”

    For the first time in my life, I’m working full time (6 day weeks for a while there) and really don’t have time to do anything.

    At the same time I welcomed the opportunity to make another funny video; I don’t seem to make enough of them these days…

    I figured this Marcus guy was a savvy character. He’s written a book. He wants to promote it. Surely, he’s sent out dozens of these emails to YouTube people, right?

    So I did a browse, but couldn’t find anyone else who had uploaded a review.

    I did find one though from the authors themselves:

    I also saw THIS, which is just too good to be true…

    Note the upload date and number of views for his video “How to Get Noticed on YouTube”:

    Okay. So a guy who ironically has a video on YouTube about how to get views on YouTube, that’s had 6 views in 4 months, wants to give me a $7.50 commission for every book I sell for him.

    Now, I’m no whiz with these money-making schemes. I sure as hell don’t make any money from this website. How exactly would this work?

    I inquired.

    Date: Sat, 22 Oct 2011 23:12:13 +1100
    From: David M. Green

    Cheers Marcus,

    I’ll take a look at that.

    Just out of interest, how will you track the number of sales I attract?

    DMG


    Date: Sat, 22 Oct 2011 13:20:48 +0100
    From: Marcus Taylor

    No problem, the sales are tracked with an affiliate tracking code that’s unique to you. So we’ll give you a unique link to the site, which if sales are referred from we’ll know that you referred the sale.

    Marcus


    Date: Sun, 23 Oct 2011 00:48:38 +1100
    From: David M. Green

    Ok sounds good. And you’d just want me to upload the video to my own YouTube account?

    DMG


    Date: Sat, 22 Oct 2011 17:11:36 +0100
    From: Marcus Taylor

    yep! 🙂

    So long story short, my good friend Anthony McCormack came round and helped me make THIS:

    Hold on to your hats folks, because what I’m about to say may shock you…

    I don’t think Marcus likes it.

    You may have noticed (but you probably didn’t, no offense), there’s no link anywhere in the video or its description for you to go and purchase a copy of “Get Noticed”.

    The saga continues…

    Date: Sat, 29 Oct 2011 18:38:36 +1100
    From: David M. Green

    Hi Marcus,

    I’ve “reviewed” your book.

    If you’d be so kind as to send over that unique tracking code link, I’ll put it in the video description.

    Kind regards,
    TV’s David M. Green


    Date: Sun, 30 Oct 2011 14:31:55 +0000
    From: Marcus Taylor

    Hi David,

    I appreciate you taking the time to do this, however I’d like to raise a few points.

    The video I was referencing in my e-mail was this one:

    [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SElyyg4C8ig[/youtube]

    which although not a ‘review’ per se, I found quite funny.

    Also, Get Noticed is not a ‘self help’ book as such, it’s aimed towards creative people & entrepreneurs and is about getting noticed to become more successful at what you do. I did show the video to a few friends who have read the book and they were very confused by the claims you were making.

    No hard feelings, but i’d like to ask you kindly if you can remove the video if you wouldn’t mind. I don’t feel it positively serves what either of us are trying to do and I was under the impression from your emails that you were genuinely interested in reading it – I’ve always felt that making personal attacks & uninformed negative reviews publicly is not productive and after all, what goes around tends to come around.

    With that in mind, i’d appreciate it if you could remove the video, but if you feel strongly about leaving it live we can discuss further, as I really don’t want to create negativity online about each other’s work as i’m sure we’ve both got much better things to get on with.

    Many thanks,

    Marcus Taylor
    Co-author of Get Noticed

    “Uninformed negative reviews”?

    Now personally, the idea that there’s a group of people on the other side of the world “very confused” by my video, I find hilarious.

    What I found confusing was how he could set “The All New Garage Show” as the benchmark for a good, wholesome and funny book review (I could just end that sentence there, but there’s more), AND THEN be surprised at the video I produced for HIS book?

    Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 16:54:15 +1100
    From: David M. Green

    Hi Marcus,

    So, you are aware that I’m a comedian. What exactly were you expecting?

    DMG

    Hehehe… this just gets better and better…

    Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 13:46:16 +0000
    From: Marcus Taylor

    Hi David,

    Honestly, I was expecting a genuine review of the book with a touch of humour but in a way that you’d be able to maybe share some of the tips from the book, opposed to humouring the book & myself directly. I wasn’t entirely sure how you’d go about it, but I figured you’d do it in a way slightly differently to most video bloggers, which is kind of what i’m after.

    I am going to be living in Melbourne for six months next year, which I notice is where you’re based, so I’ll try and come along to a show if you’ve got anything lined up then as I do enjoy your comedy (obviously excluding the review…) and we’re also looking to do some cool stuff promoting the talents of creative & artistic individuals so i’d be keen to see you do some stand-up.

    Is there any possibility that you could remove the video?

    Thanks,

    Marcus

    Hmmm… puts me in a predicament doesn’t it?

    Do I take it down in exchange for some “promotion” or do I leave it up and get the “promotion” I was originally promised, like they gave to Mattias Gronborg from Stockholm, who I can only assume “passed” the Get Noticed review challenge:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW2A1xBdijk

    I never seem to learn my own lesson: DON’T WRITE REVIEWS!

    The last review I wrote got me kicked off a TV show.

    But you know what? This time I’m standing up for free speech.

    Date: Tue, 01 Nov 2011 22:02:43 +1100
    From: David M. Green

    Hi Marcus,

    Thank you for the compliments.

    I must say though, I find this whole thing fascinating.

    You have actually watched that video, yes?

    You do realise that in that “review”, Lachlan (Kevin) reveals he hadn’t actually read “How to win friends and influence people”? (This is stated multiple times throughout the video)

    So I have not at all misrepresented myself. I have not tricked you into thinking I do serious book reviews. My review of “Get Noticed” was in a similar style.

    You say you figured I’d do my review “in a way slightly different to most video bloggers”. I believe I’ve done exactly that.

    When you asked me to review your book, you didn’t set any guidelines. You did not say “don’t call it a self-help book”. I apologise if I’ve misrepresented your “it’s aimed towards creative people & entrepreneurs and is about getting noticed to become more successful at what you do” book by calling it a “self-help book”.

    In an editorial, I can actually express any opinion I want, so long as it’s not defamatory, which of course it wasn’t. In fact, I think I’ve given you a fairly positive review. The whole video is essentially me saying how great your book is and how everyone should buy it, albeit in a tongue-in-cheek way.

    You can’t commission a review and then kick up a fuss when the reviewer doesn’t give you the exact review you want. If you made a film and I gave it 3 stars and you think it’s worth 5, well then bad luck. That’s the risk you take when you put your product out there.

    Are you going to hold up your end of the bargain by giving me my affiliate tracking code link?

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green

    And strangely enough I have yet to receive a reply.

    I’m guessing I’m not going to see any money from this…

    So if you enjoyed my video review of “Get Noticed”, please share the link. Post this to your Facebook or Twitter accounts.

    Hey, why not even mention it to @MarcusATaylor or his social media agency @SEOptimise, which I do believe yesterday won “Best Blog” at the 2011 UK Search Awards. Good on ’em.

    If you’d actually like to buy a copy of “Get Noticed”, you can do so here. But keep in mind, as I don’t have an affiliate link, I’m not receiving any commission. So if you would be so kind as to use the “donate” button on the left hand side of my website to shoot me over $7.50, I would be very confused.

    Also, I have not read this book.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Hey, made a good blog entry at least.