Video: "Don't Cry for Me, Cupertino"
And now, for a musical interlude: David Pogue — Emmy-winning tech columnist, "Missing Manual" millionaire and Broadway composer manqué — belting out an Evita parody at the Boston Book Festival Saturday, with Apple's (AAPL) Steve Jobs cast in the role of the Argentinian temptress.
Thanks to Mashable's Pete Cashmore for the pointer.
[Follow Philip Elmer-DeWitt on Twitter @philiped]
Did Steve Jobs spin the NY Times?

Jobs. Photo: Apple Inc.
When David Pogue, the New York Times' chief technology columnist, sat down with Steve Jobs after his "It's only rock and roll" keynote Wednesday, Pogue's first question was the one, as he put it, the "blogosphere’s been buzzing about": Why did Apple (AAPL) put a video camera on the iPod nano but not — as widely expected — on the iPod touch?
Jobs reiterated what Phil Schiller, his marketing vice president, had said earlier on stage: that Apple was pitching the iPod touch as a game machine — the "funnest iPod ever." Adding a camera would have made that game machine less affordable.
In Jobs' words:
“Originally, we weren’t exactly sure how to market the Touch. Was it an iPhone without the phone? Was it a pocket computer? What happened was, what customers told us was, they started to see it as a game machine. We started to market it that way, and it just took off. And now what we really see is it’s the lowest-cost way to the App Store, and that’s the big draw. So what we were focused on is just reducing the price to $199. We don’t need to add new stuff. We need to get the price down where everyone can afford it.” (link)
But according to AppleInsider's Kasper Jade, citing unnamed sources familiar with Apple's decision making process, that's simple not true. "While AppleInsider appreciates the company co-founder's play at damage control," writes Jade, "it's a tough sell." More
Pogue rocks Macworld with "Where is Steve?"
David Pogue, New York Times tech columnist, creator of the Missing Manual series, and frustrated Broadway producer, led his Macworld Live! feature presentation in San Francisco Wednesday with a musical riff on Steve Jobs' non-attendance.
Playing the electric piano and accompanied by former Cirque de Soleil bassist J.F. Brisette, he sang, to the tune of Oliver's "Where is Love?"
"Where is Steve? Give us something to believe! Should we trust Apple's press release — or are we all naive?"
The performance drew knowing laughter and applause from an audience of several thousand in the basement of Moscone Center's North Hall. But the hit of 90-minute presentation were his three guests:
- Matt Harding, whose YouTube videos dancing at exotic locations around the world have been downloaded 17 million times. See, for example, Where the Hell is Matt?
- Matt Bledsoe and Tyler Hitch, creators of the You Suck at Photoshop series, downloaded 20 million times.
- Ge Wang, the creator of Ocarina, our favorite iPhone app, which not only turns the device into a 4-key musical instrument (downloaded nearly 500,000 times at 99-cents each) but lets you hear — in near real time — the music other Ocarina players are making all over the world.
Pogue, joined by Brissette on bass and Wang on iPhone Ocarina, closed the show with two more musical parodies:
A song about iTunes to the tune of Billy Joel's "Piano Man" ("We might prefer more compatibility but Steve likes to run the whole show!")- And a "Switcher's Anthem" to the tune of Boz Scaggs' "We're All Alone." ("Ditch your Windows, get a clue, a new cult waits for you.")
Interviewed after the performance, Pogue said that he did not intend to make light of Jobs' health problems. He believes that the real reason Apple's CEO skipped the keynote was that Jobs reviewed Apple's (AAPL) product line-up for Macworld — upgrades of iWork and iLife and a 17" laptop — and decided it wasn't worth his time. That, says Pogue, not failing health, is why Jobs had senior vice president Phil Schiller give the keynote in his stead.
The spoonerism of Phil Schiller, Pogue points out, is shill filler.


