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Russian Sam Meets “World Traveler” Casey Cornett

If anyone knows what it’s like to be a visitor in a foreign land, it’s Casey Cornett, who has engaged in “couch surfing” to see much of Europe. Dave Morris visited with both Ilia and Casey.


Downtown Oklahoma City 2010

Ah yes, it’s November, 2010 and isn’t it great to see The Centennial going up in Lower Bricktown? It will feature condominiums, restaurants and maybe even some retail. The skyline shot, featuring Bank One tower and the Devon logo we’ve seen since the mid-1990s, is looking great, even if the Skirvin is still dark and lifeless (we’re all hoping renovations will start soon!). And see all that surface parking between the Sonic building and Bass Pro Shops? There’s a possibility a six-story Residence Inn will be built there.

Wait a minute. You’re saying these photos are terribly out of date? Forgive me – I’m just portraying our downtown as its shown one Thunder home game broadcast after another on Fox Sports Southwest.  Can we do better?

UPDATE: It looks like the Thunder and Chamber share our pride in downtown and are going to make sure the footage we see during future games will reflect downtown as we know it in 2010!


Russian Sam Gets Interviewed by Russian Newspaper

"Russian Sam" is interviewed by a visiting Russian newspaper at the Creativity World Conference.


It Started with Paper

“The new electronic interdependence recreates the world in the image of a global village.”
- Marshall Mcluhan, circa 1969

Russian Sam, real name Ilia Shvetcov, talks with local media via a translater at the Creativity World Forum.

Let’s talk about the power of creativity. I’ve had some folks accuse me of going overboard with my coverage of “Russian Sam.” True, some of these voices tend to be consistently negative personalities. But let’s delve into why this is such an extraordinary story.

First, let’s start with a bit of bias on my behalf. Sometimes, as a reporter, you spend so much time covering serious and/or controversial issues that you crave a “good news” story. And this is a good news story. This is a chance to step back and appreciate the wonders all around you.

Ilia is a reminder of Marshall Mcluhan’s “global village.” We’re all one community now. And all too often, I fear, that causes us to spend all of our time worrying, fearing and arguing our differences. When I was a kid, we were told the Russians were our mortal enemy. For those of you who are in your 20s, please realize, we grew up fearing the Russians as many are growing up now fearing folks in the Middle East.

Think about this. Sure, there are differences politically between Russia and the United States. But I don’t think we see them as our mortal enemy anymore.

So this is one thing that is on my mind. Ilia, to be blunt, is a cool guy. He’s quite brilliant. And I know he’s holding back on us when he’s gives us the impression he doesn’t understand what we’re saying (he’s got no excuse when an interpreter is with him!). Nope, Ilia is enjoying the moment, and would rather just soak it in and enjoy the opportunity to be the obvious fly on the wall.

And that’s cool.

It started with paper. Sure, the Internet is what brought us all together. But it started with paper. It started with Ilia picking downtown Oklahoma City as his first urban model. And as he began to assemble buildings from his sketches, print-outs from his work with Microsoft Paint (yes, Paint!), he ventured out into the big world online to make connections, get help putting it all together.

And when the connection at OKC Talk occurred, it was magical. Friendships emerged. And maybe, just maybe, we began to realize, that whether we like it or not, we’re a part of this global village and it doesn’t have to be so scary.


Quotes from Today’s Creativity World Forum

“If we believe that creativity matters, how do we foster that? We know how to motivate people:  if you reward something, you get more of a behavior. If you punish something, you get less of that behavior…. that’s often how it works. But that’s not always how it works. There’s a science in motivation…. what really motivates people? For simple tasks, the classic set of motivators – do this, get that – for simple tasks, that works really well. For more complicated and complex tasks, tasks that require creativity – the classic motivators – do this, get that – don’t work very well….

“We see carrot and stick motivators fail in schools before our very eyes. But our response is ‘Those carrot and stick motivators failed again, let’s try again.’ Our response is ‘let’s get more carrots, let’s sharpen those sticks.’ It’s wrong.”

“At work, if you don’t pay people enough, if you don’t treat people well, you won’t get creativity. You must pay people enough. I would argue you must pay people more than enough. You must take money off the table as an issue.”

“Management is a fundamentally outdated technology designed to get people to comply. But to get people to be creative is when they are not managed, but when they operate on their own steam.”

- Author Daniel Pink at the Creativity World Forum today. I saw at least a half dozen people who I know don’t get what he was saying, and I doubt they will tomorrow.


Russian Sam is Coming to Downtown Tulsa

After Ilia finished his downtown OKC model, he started work on one based on downtown Tulsa. On Friday he is traveling with Dennis Wells to see the real thing. Folks associated with OKC Talk can feel free to post this on the board’s Tulsa section (I’ve stopped doing updates on OKC Talk after getting the impression from longtime forum members like Steve Newlon that such posts are not welcome).  OKC Talk, by the way, is a wonderful site that served as a critical beginning of conversations between Ilia and locals.


Today is the Day to See Russian Sam and his Model

Reminder! You can see Ilia and his model this afternoon, approximately 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., in the showcase exhibit hall at the Creativity World Forum at the Cox Convention Center without registering for the conference or paying admission.


Russian Sam in His Own Words

"Russian Sam" enjoyed his first burger today. Guess where.

(this was written by Ilia Shvetcov to his host Dennis Wells upon news of his Visa being granted)

I am 25 years old. I was born and live near St. Petersburg (30 miles). Not married. No children. I parted with a girl 2 years ago.

I graduated 9 years of school, 3 years of high school (specializing in “automechanic” and “driver”), 3 years of college (specialty “optical and opto-electronic devices and systems”). After college, tried to go to university, but unfortunately did not happen. 3 years worked in the specialty. Now I work in a hypermarket in the sales department.

I live with my parents (mom works in guard service, dad builder). I have the younger sister (she is married, they have a child, my nephew, David, they live in St. Petersburg), my favorite cat and one-eyed a dog named Porthos.

Now about my English. I have 5 years to learn French in school, 2 years of English in college. I think we can understand each other, communicating simple sentences.

Something like this:

- I want the great American hamburger.

- You can eat 30 pieces?

- Of course, within a week

I love animals very much, so never go zoos (I’m sad to see them in cages).

I like the architecture of American cities. It has no analogues in the world (Canada only). Especially the art deco style and postmodernism.

My dream – to visit every city in the U.S., even in the smallest and take a photo and video reports about them.

I have no eating habits, I eat everything except olives, beets (allergy) and milk.

I like motor racing – Formula-1. No, I do not participate, watching events on television. From music I like rock the 80′s and 90′s – Billy Idol, Michael Stanley Band, Jimmy Barnes, Dire Straits, Eddie Money, also Shania Twain.

On my trip to the U.S. my friends found out only today – they have “fallen” jaw on the floor when they is heard. Among my friends and nobody has ever traveled to the United States.


Russian Sam’s First Day in Oklahoma City


I can’t write much right now – busy writing daily stories for the paper. But I just want to share a bit about “Russian Sam” aka Ilia (Elijah in English) Shvetcov. He arrived last night, worn out from a 24-hour flight from St. Petersburg, Russia.
Ilia is staying at the MidTown home of architect Dennis Wells in what is becoming the city’s best neighborhood of modern design houses. Ilia got up at dawn and this was his first photo taken of the skyline:
Russian Sam - Ilia Shvetsov, gets his first photo of the downtown skyline.
I joined Ilia and Dennis this morning; we are without an interpreter today, though we will have one throughout the week. We managed, thanks to some rudimentary English spoken by Ilia and fumbling attempts by Dennis and I to sign and motion. It worked. Not everything needs to be spoken anyway – not, at least, Ilia’s amazement seeing the downtown skyline he could only view online, and then recast as an incredible model so far, far away.
When Dennis picked up Ilia last night at the airport, his first comments were “the model is more spectacular than I could have imagined. It would be great if the mayor could see it.” I agree. It’s far smaller, far more detailed than the photos indicate.
Ilia also brought his sketches and other prep work to show how he assembled the model. It’s truly amazing.
We spent out day visiting various sites around downtown, including the rooftop of the Oklahoma City Museum of Art (many, many thanks go to Leslie Spears for arranging special access at the last minute on a Sunday afternoon!).

Some people might ask, what is this all about? Good question. And the answer, I think, is quite simple. Sometimes the best way to see your city, to see its creativity and imagination of its people, is through the eyes of a stranger. And what better stranger to help us step back and see ourselves than this one person who fell in love with it so many, many miles away, armed only with a computer, his own artistic talent, and a translation program that gained him an assortment of friends here in OKC that he has yet to meet?
Go back and read the start of this coverage (hit the Russian Sam link at the bottom of this post) and you can catch up on how this journey began, how a man who used the online nickname “Russian Sam” traveled to Oklahoma City with a vision made of paper.
Welcome to Oklahoma City Russian Sam. I hope you enjoyed today’s tour, including the Chicken Fried Steak at lunch!
Your friend, Steve Lackmeyer


Touring OKC With Russian Sam


I am having a blast touring downtown with Russian Sam aka Elijah aka Ilia, with Dennis Wells and my son. I’m taking lots of photos, and I hope to have a full post later today (I’m doing a mobile post right now). His model is far more incredible than I could have imagined. This afternoon we are introducing Ilia to chicken fried steak, which Dennis is telling him is a gourmet Oklahoma meal. This is a cool, cool way to show off Oklahoma City’s creativity community, which we will be doing all week as part of the World Creativity Forum.