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The art of asking

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    (Breathes in, breathes out)
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    So I didn't always make my living from music.
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    For about the five years after graduating
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    from an upstanding liberal arts university,
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    this was my day job.
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    I was a self-employed living statue called the 8-Foot Bride,
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    and I love telling people l did this for a job,
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    because everybody always wants to know,
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    who are these freaks in real life?
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    Hello.
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    I painted myself white one day, stood on a box,
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    put a hat or a can at my feet,
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    and when someone came by and dropped in money,
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    I handed them a flower and some intense eye contact.
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    And if they didn't take the flower,
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    I threw in a gesture of sadness and longing
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    as they walked away.
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    (Laughter)
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    So I had the most profound encounters with people,
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    especially lonely people who looked
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    like they hadn't talked to anyone in weeks,
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    and we would get this beautiful moment
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    of prolonged eye contact being allowed in a city street,
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    and we would sort of fall in love a little bit.
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    And my eyes would say, "Thank you. I see you."
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    And their eyes would say,
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    "Nobody ever sees me. Thank you."
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    And I would get harassed sometimes.
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    People would yell at me from their passing cars.
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    "Get a job!"
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    And I'd be, like, "This is my job."
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    But it hurt, because it made me fear
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    that I was somehow doing something un-joblike
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    and unfair, shameful.
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    I had no idea how perfect a real education I was getting
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    for the music business on this box.
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    And for the economists out there,
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    you may be interested to know I actually made a pretty predictable income,
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    which was shocking to me
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    given I had no regular customers,
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    but pretty much 60 bucks on a Tuesday, 90 bucks on a Friday.
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    It was consistent.
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    And meanwhile, I was touring locally
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    and playing in nightclubs with my band, the Dresden Dolls.
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    This was me on piano, a genius drummer.
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    I wrote the songs, and eventually
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    we started making enough money that I could quit being a statue,
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    and as we started touring,
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    I really didn't want to lose this sense
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    of direct connection with people, because I loved it.
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    So after all of our shows, we would sign autographs
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    and hug fans and hang out and talk to people,
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    and we made an art out of asking people to help us
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    and join us, and I would track down local musicians
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    and artists and they would set up outside of our shows,
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    and they would pass the hat,
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    and then they would come in and join us onstage,
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    so we had this rotating smorgasbord of weird, random circus guests.
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    And then Twitter came along,
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    and made things even more magic, because I could ask
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    instantly for anything anywhere.
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    So I would need a piano to practice on,
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    and an hour later I would be at a fan's house. This is in London.
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    People would bring home-cooked food to us
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    all over the world backstage and feed us and eat with us. This is in Seattle.
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    Fans who worked in museums and stores
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    and any kind of public space would wave their hands
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    if I would decide to do a last-minute, spontaneous, free gig.
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    This is a library in Auckland.
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    On Saturday I tweeted for this crate and hat,
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    because I did not want to schlep them from the East Coast,
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    and they showed up care of this dude, Chris
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    from Newport Beach, who says hello.
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    I once tweeted, where in Melbourne can I buy a neti pot?
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    And a nurse from a hospital drove one
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    right at that moment to the cafe I was in,
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    and I bought her a smoothie
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    and we sat there talking about nursing and death.
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    And I love this kind of random closeness,
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    which is lucky, because I do a lot of couchsurfing.
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    In mansions where everyone in my crew gets their own room
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    but there's no wireless, and in punk squats,
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    everyone on the floor in one room with no toilets
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    but with wireless, clearly making it the better option.
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    (Laughter)
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    My crew once pulled our van
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    up to a really poor Miami neighborhood
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    and we found out that our couchsurfing host for the night
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    was an 18-year-old girl, still living at home,
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    and her family were all undocumented immigrants from Honduras.
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    And that night, her whole family
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    took the couches and she slept together with her mom
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    so that we could take their beds.
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    And I lay there thinking,
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    these people have so little.
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    Is this fair?
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    And in the morning, her mom taught us how
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    to try to make tortillas and wanted to give me a Bible,
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    and she took me aside and she said to me in her broken English,
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    "Your music has helped my daughter so much.
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    Thank you for staying here. We're all so grateful."
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    And I thought, this is fair.
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    This is this.
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    A couple months later, I was in Manhattan,
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    and I tweeted for a crash pad, and at midnight,
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    I'm ringing a doorbell on the Lower East Side,
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    and it occurs to me I've never actually done this alone.
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    I've always been with my band or my crew.
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    Is this what stupid people do? (Laughter)
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    Is this how stupid people die?
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    And before I can change my mind, the door busts open.
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    She's an artist. He's a financial blogger for Reuters,
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    and they're pouring me a glass of red wine
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    and offering me a bath,
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    and I have had thousands of nights like that and like that.
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    So I couchsurf a lot. I also crowdsurf a lot.
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    I maintain couchsurfing and crowdsurfing
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    are basically the same thing.
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    You're falling into the audience
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    and you're trusting each other.
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    I once asked an opening band of mine
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    if they wanted to go out into the crowd and pass the hat
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    to get themselves some extra money, something that I did a lot.
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    And as usual, the band was psyched,
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    but there was this one guy in the band
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    who told me he just couldn't bring himself to go out there.
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    It felt too much like begging to stand there with the hat.
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    And I recognized his fear of "Is this fair?" and "Get a job."
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    And meanwhile, my band is becoming bigger and bigger.
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    We signed with a major label.
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    And our music is a cross between punk and cabaret.
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    It's not for everybody.
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    Well, maybe it's for you.
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    We sign, and there's all this hype leading up to our next record.
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    And it comes out and it sells about 25,000 copies in the first few weeks,
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    and the label considers this a failure.
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    And I was like, "25,000, isn't that a lot?"
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    They were like, "No, the sales are going down. It's a failure."
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    And they walk off.
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    Right at this same time, I'm signing and hugging after a gig,
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    and a guy comes up to me
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    and hands me a $10 bill,
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    and he says,
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    "I'm sorry, I burned your CD from a friend."
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    (Laughter)
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    "But I read your blog, I know you hate your label.
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    I just want you to have this money."
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    And this starts happening all the time.
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    I become the hat after my own gigs,
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    but I have to physically stand there and take the help from people,
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    and unlike the guy in the opening band,
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    I've actually had a lot of practice standing there.
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    Thank you.
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    And this is the moment I decide
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    I'm just going to give away my music for free
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    online whenever possible,
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    so it's like Metallica over here, Napster, bad;
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    Amanda Palmer over here, and I'm going to encourage
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    torrenting, downloading, sharing, but I'm going to ask for help,
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    because I saw it work on the street.
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    So I fought my way off my label and for my next project
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    with my new band, the Grand Theft Orchestra,
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    I turned to crowdfunding,
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    and I fell into those thousands of connections that I'd made,
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    and I asked my crowd to catch me.
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    And the goal was 100,000 dollars.
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    My fans backed me at nearly 1.2 million,
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    which was the biggest music crowdfunding project to date.
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    (Applause)
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    And you can see how many people it is.
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    It's about 25,000 people.
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    And the media asked, "Amanda,
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    the music business is tanking and you encourage piracy.
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    How did you make all these people pay for music?"
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    And the real answer is, I didn't make them. I asked them.
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    And through the very act of asking people,
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    I'd connected with them,
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    and when you connect with them, people want to help you.
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    It's kind of counterintuitive for a lot of artists.
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    They don't want to ask for things.
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    But it's not easy. It's not easy to ask.
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    And a lot of artists have a problem with this.
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    Asking makes you vulnerable.
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    And I got a lot of criticism online
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    after my Kickstarter went big
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    for continuing my crazy crowdsourcing practices,
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    specifically for asking musicians
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    who are fans if they wanted to join us on stage
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    for a few songs in exchange for love and tickets
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    and beer, and this was a doctored image
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    that went up of me on a website.
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    And this hurt in a really familiar way.
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    And people saying, "You're not allowed anymore
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    to ask for that kind of help,"
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    really reminded me of the people in their cars yelling, "Get a job."
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    Because they weren't with us on the sidewalk,
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    and they couldn't see the exchange
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    that was happening between me and my crowd,
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    an exchange that was very fair to us but alien to them.
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    So this is slightly not safe for work.
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    This is my Kickstarter backer party in Berlin.
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    At the end of the night, I stripped and let everyone draw on me.
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    Now let me tell you, if you want to experience
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    the visceral feeling of trusting strangers,
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    I recommend this,
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    especially if those strangers are drunk German people.
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    This was a ninja master-level fan connection,
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    because what I was really saying here was,
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    I trust you this much.
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    Should I? Show me.
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    For most of human history,
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    musicians, artists, they've been part of the community,
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    connectors and openers, not untouchable stars.
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    Celebrity is about a lot of people loving you from a distance,
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    but the Internet and the content
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    that we're freely able to share on it
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    are taking us back.
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    It's about a few people loving you up close
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    and about those people being enough.
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    So a lot of people are confused by the idea
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    of no hard sticker price.
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    They see it as an unpredictable risk, but the things I've done,
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    the Kickstarter, the street, the doorbell,
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    I don't see these things as risk.
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    I see them as trust.
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    Now, the online tools to make the exchange
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    as easy and as instinctive as the street,
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    they're getting there.
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    But the perfect tools aren't going to help us
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    if we can't face each other
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    and give and receive fearlessly,
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    but, more important,
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    to ask without shame.
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    My music career has been spent
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    trying to encounter people on the Internet
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    the way I could on the box,
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    so blogging and tweeting not just about my tour dates
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    and my new video but about our work and our art
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    and our fears and our hangovers, our mistakes,
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    and we see each other.
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    And I think when we really see each other,
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    we want to help each other.
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    I think people have been obsessed with the wrong question,
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    which is, "How do we make people pay for music?"
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    What if we started asking,
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    "How do we let people pay for music?"
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The art of asking
Speaker:
Amanda Palmer
Description:

Don't make people pay for music, says Amanda Palmer: Let them. In a passionate talk that begins in her days as a street performer (drop a dollar in the hat for the Eight-Foot Bride!), she examines the new relationship between artist and fan.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:47
Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for The art of asking
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Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for The art of asking
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