And we just talked, and talked, and talked about the theme, asked questions, pushed each other to tell us more. It was revealing, honest, and funny. You learn a lot about people, even remotely, when they are being vulnerable and sharing out loud. You also learn that representation of people of color and diversity of every kind are severly lacking in the spaces where we looked for photos (I would search for photos at the chat’s request and they would also send links to pics). There were hardly any large people or people with disability. There were also rare photos of people of color. It was interesting to search for ‘woman working’ and have few results that were at the top level of Black women. Why is that? /s
I learned, as a streamer, that building something with a community takes work, and it takes being someone that provides value (interest, space, engagement). And sometimes I might have only two people chatting away but that’s good enough for me. When you start to worry about numbers, it loses something. The organic-ness of what I try to do on stream is important to me more than numbers. You’ll notice when you see the art (link below) that we started out as hand lettering, but we moved on to try to create art together. I felt insecure about my artistic ability and thought we could try something new. The first night we tried freemix.com and well, it borked in the middle of the stream, and wow is that awkward. It’s all good though. I don’t mind failing in front of folks, if anything it was nice to be real and not panic. We found another solution that we wound up using for the remainder of the challenge (Adobe Spark).
I would like to do another month-long challenge, but not sure where I want to go with that right now. I did learn a lot this go around, and it does have me excited to do the work. Maybe I’ll see you?
Check out the art we created here.