Blogstars, Casie Stewart, Raymi the Minx, Sean Ward with Fairlie Agency

Carly Anne Fairlie of the Fairlie Agency stands in front of Sean Ward, Casie Stewart and Raymi the Minx.On Thursday March 18th 2010,  I journeyed to 156 Augusta Ave and paid cash to see three Toronto bloggers talk about themselves and their blogs.  It was worth $20 cost of admission, and trust me I’d tell you if it wasn’t. Twenty bucks was a bargain actually; for me, listening to these people is pure inspiration.

Yes they are self proclaimed blog stars, and no, it has nothing to do with their traffic or ecommerce sales, or even the quality of their information – it’s more about style and ’state of mind’, and how well these self promoters can project their own identities on their readers.  There’s an art and science = alchemy

But today I failed them. My own pictures of the Blogstars are terrible, and I’m twenty hours too late with this post. How can I be a citizen journalist about something as important as this, and not deliver original content minimum twelve hours of the event?  Fifty five minutes is prime delivery time btw.  Answer: Smojoe isn’t an event blogger, but rather I digest the experiences for myself, other humans and search bots who will forever index my account of this evening as page one search result for their names and blogs.

Casie Stewart, Sean Ward, and Raymi the Minx are now represented by Carly-Anne Fairlie and the Fairlie Agency

Carly-Anne Fairlie should be aware that some advertising people are watching her social media agency experiment, and keeping an eye on her network of local Toronto bloggers; I think most folks are wondering how it all works. And indeed I myself came to the event hoping to learn more about Carly’s business model and maybe even get a rate sheet that spells out the deliverables. How do marketing people and agencies ethically hire Toronto top bloggers? Nobody likes pay per post schemes, and everyone has trouble defining the true value of blogs. Just what are the metrics of a good conversation?  And Smojoe wonders aloud here, will it help define a new PR service to have one company represent a dozen local bloggers? I believe it will be a huge success, and its no secret that last summer Smojoe sought to unite Toronto’s top bloggers into a turnkey ‘blog marketing solution’ to build support for Lenzr photo contests.

Casie Stewart opened the evening

Casie Stewart went first and introduced herself, her twitter name @casiestewart, and the twitter hashtag #blogstars, before displaying a password protected blog post that was the codex of her discussion.

Casie Stewart at MUCH on Queen st in TorontoCasie Stewart is a pretty girl that isn’t scared of looking goofy. Her blog is built primarily for her – it’s an online journal in which she preserves her memories. Her presentation dispensed equal parts wisdom and inspiration.  She led with her own mother’s sage advice, ‘you can’t soar with the eagles if you roost with pigeons’ after which Casie segued into how blogging has changed her life. It was because of the new people that she met through her blogging and tweeting that she shed her old relationships; the new people she has met, and the opportunities to which she has been exposed have changed her life.  Now she does indeed soar with the eagles.  Because Casie was a blogger she now has a dream job at MUCH.  Smojoe would say because she harnessed her passion and created the necessary social capital to impress the ‘fifth floor’ management at MUCH music, she managed to land a dream job blogging and tweeting full time for this youthful TV station.

Raymi the Minx is still Toronto’s most popular diarist.

Raymi the Minx jumps for joy at Toronto Blogstars meetup in Kensington MarketRaymi the Minx introduced herself as Lauren White, which is her real name.  It shocked me to hear it spoken aloud and I won’t repeat it again. To me she’s Raymi the Minx because that’s the brand I follow.
True to form, Raymi was impulsive, condescending and hilarious. I filled a whole page of my notebook with her original quotes. She is so casual and shockingly honest – there is no filter.  She just talks over her handout, which was the same one she used for Deb Lewis City Events, How to be Famous on The Internet - May , 09 and she didn’t refer to it while speaking then either.  Raymi just talks to the crowd about herself and her blog, much like she would gossip with a girlfriend that had just come over to hang out (and try on clothes in front of the mirror).

Raymi opened by admitting that she wants to be famous because she wants to be rich and appreciated as a blog artist, unlike other people, who simply want to be famous for no good reason.

Raymi started blogging in the year 2000 on Blogger, before it was Blogger. It wasn’t possible to leave comments or even post pictures like today.  Her first laughs came with one liners like ‘I’m a f^%&ing dinosaur’ and, ‘we can talk about my tits in a minute.’   She takes full credit for starting the Raymi blog style; her informal posts mix pictures with text in a stream of consciousness flow much like a drunk girl at a party will sometimes snap twelve pictures in a row.  So each photo sequence is as spontaneous as the text around it and its either bunkum or brilliant, and her readers get to decide and leave their opinions.

Still innovative, Raymi demonstrated how she recently polled her readers using a multiple choice question widget that asks ‘Do you masturbate to my blog?’  Even more interesting was the revelation that over twenty percent of her readers checked ‘yes’.
But the best part was when she just scrolled down through her website and talked about the pages as she descended down through the last few weeks of her life. As the content sailed up the wall In front of everyone’s eyes she narrated what she thinks other people are thinking. It was fun. She pegged me perfectly. I did wonder if she was sleeping with the guy on the motorcycle when I read that post, last week.

People like watching other people change.

Recently Raymi ended a long term relationship with her finance. This was major media news at the time and ironically it helped rejuvenate her blog career because it refreshed her single status. And I wonder about that too… If sex appeal is an important part of your blog strategy, then is being locked up in a monogamous relationship bad for your brand?  The kill switch is the Facebook status update.

Sean Ward

Sean Ward at Toronto Blog Stars discusses visual appearances and personal brandsSean Ward is a very stylized blogger. He has to be, he’s a cartoonist.

Sean Ward writes Sean Ward’s Super Party and in the last portion of the evening Sean shared style tips related to three different aspects of personal brand building.  He discussed Persona, Visual Identity and Unique Positioning and how and why to be unique.  He talked about selling comic books at bars, bus stops and hotel lobbies instead of comic book conventions.  He quoted stats to present the current overcrowded dimensions of the blog world, and then brought home these numbers by pointed to a picture of rain forest canopy and saying, ‘right now you’re not even a tree. Right now you’re just a leaf on a tree somewhere there in the back and the only way to stand out is to define yourself.’  His ideas on Visual Identity are original. Much like Casie’s idea of going to parties with stickers, and your @twitter name on your shirt, I liked Sean’s idea of wearing something like a silver sheriff badge atop every outfit for a year.
The evening wrapping up with mingling, and networking both inside and outside the Kensington Market venue. I shared a moment with Lisa Charleyboy and Keri the Canadian Explorer. It was a great night and time well spent with a room full of local blog celebrities.

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9 Responses to “Blogstars, Casie Stewart, Raymi the Minx, Sean Ward with Fairlie Agency”

  1. Sean Says:

    Insightful commentary on the event! Thanks so much for coming!

  2. Carly Says:

    Thanks so much for coming out to our event and writing such a great review. It’s really good to hear that people are watching what I’m doing and I appreciate the comments.

  3. Lisa ~ Urban Native Girl Says:

    Totally awesome post! It was worth the $20 - and yes I paid too ;)

  4. seanward.net » #blogstars in Review Says:

    [...] Rob a.k.a. Smojoe, the organizer of last year’s Top Bloggers all-star conference, does a really great write up of the event [...]

  5. admin Says:

    Thanks Sean, Carly and Lisa. It was pleasure watching you all put on such a great and informative show and selling cold beers was a nice touch. You know I learned a lot too, esp seeing Casie’s RSS blog feed wisdom in action on Tumblr and Twitter. That’s why she said the internet is the ‘employee of the year’. Now I’m wondering if and how I could do more with Lenzr RSS feeds.

  6. Toronto Blog Stars Social Media Seminar Says:

    [...] Blogstars Casie Stewart, Raymi the Minx, Sean Ward with Fairlie Agency by Rob Campbell [...]

  7. Michelle Says:

    Great post SmoJoe…Hopefully I can make it out to the next one?

  8. David Says:

    Hi Rob, sounds like I missed a cool event. I think Fairlie is on to something.

  9. Magda Says:

    WTF?! Bloggers have agents now? Really?

    What exactly does a blogger agent do? Help bloggers try to gain fame in their insular circles that comprise of other ‘desperate for fame’ fans?

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