Casting a Wide Net
There was a time when sharing information was much slower. If I made a documentary, I had to author DVDs, burn copies, print labels, package them, and hope they found their way into the hands of interested viewers. If I published a book, promotion meant press releases, newspaper announcements, flyers, and word of mouth.
Then came the internet.
As websites, blogs, and social media platforms multiplied, so did the opportunities to share information. Each new platform promised access to a different audience. Facebook connected friends and communities. YouTube made video distribution nearly instantaneous. LinkedIn catered to professional networks. Instagram emphasized images. X, Threads, Bluesky, and a growing list of other platforms each offered their own version of the digital town square.
Like many people navigating this rapidly changing landscape, I created accounts and pages wherever the next audience seemed to be gathering. At the time, it felt necessary. Looking back, I probably didn’t need quite so many.
The same thing happened with websites. Over the years, I launched projects, organizations, publications, documentaries, books, and business ventures. Each seemed to deserve its own online presence. Some thrived. Others quietly faded into internet history. Yet I rarely deleted them. Instead, they accumulated like a digital attic filled with memories, experiments, and creative pursuits.
Today, information flows at a pace that would have been difficult to imagine when I was authoring DVDs. A documentary can be uploaded and viewed worldwide in a matter of minutes. A blog post can reach readers across multiple continents before I’ve finished my morning coffee. A photograph, article, or video can be shared, reposted, and discussed by people I’ve never met.
This page serves as a catalog of my social media accounts and online destinations. Some are active, some are occasionally updated, and a few are simply remnants of earlier chapters in my digital journey. Together, they tell the story of how dramatically communication has evolved during my lifetime—from physical media and printed newsletters to an interconnected web of platforms where information moves at the speed of a click.
Whether you follow one account or many, thank you for joining me somewhere along the way.
- Boulder Community Media facebook
- Wyoming Community Media facebook
- Wyoming Art and Culture Matters facebook
- Best Chance Media facebook
- Cordially, Georgia O’Keeffe facebook
- On the Trail: Jack Kerouac Digital Scroll facebook
- Your Neighbor’s Child facebook
- Alan O’Hashi – Author and Filmmaker
- Alan O’Hashi facebook
- Mahjong and the West facebook
- Dutch Hop facebook
- West End Neighborhood facebook
- Historic Hynds Building facebook
- Cohousing US facebook
- Rocky Mountain Region Cohousing facebook
- Great Lakes Region Cohousing facebook
- Next Gen Cohousing facebook
- Affordable Cohousing Communities facebook
- Silver Sage Village facebook
- Alan O’Hashi instagram
- Alan D. O’Hashi instagram
- Boulder Community Media Instagram
- Alan O’Hashi linkedin
- Alan O’Hashi threads
- Alan O’Hashi Bluesky