My friend Drena asked what sites we visit most often, so here ya go. Marketers, a gift to you.
I have about a thousand other sites I visit once a week or so, but these are the heavy hitters...
1. Gmail.
Does this even count as a proper site? It's email. I think we assume that everyone checks their email. Except my mom. She gets on the computer, does the daily crossword, and forgets to check her email. WTF?
2. Facebook.
Actually, I do this more than myspace now. I've found that more people that I never friended on myspace friend me on facebook - people from middle school, people from all over.
3. Myspace.
I can't help it. And yes, I've myspace stalked just about every guy I've ever dated or made out with. And every time I've dated a guy, I've myspace-stalked every girl on their page. Shut up, you do it too.
4. AJC.com
I haven't lived in Atlanta in five years, but Boston and Philly's big journalism comes in papers that are read by people all over the world (the Globe and the Inquirer, respectively), kinda like a mini-New York Times. Like New York, you can get the Cliffs Notes version that's written for absolutely retarded people (the "commuter paper") through the Herald or the Daily News. Both city papers are usually owned by the same media company, and share staff and a website, which caters to the "smarter" paper. As a result, the websites are very news-driven and have very little fun stuff. The AJC is - sorry y'all - written at a lower reading level and has more fun and interesting stories. I'm sorry, I don't mean to imply that Atlanta readers are dumb, but since the Journal and Constitution merged into one daily paper, it's just got a weird hybrid of what they pick to run. They don't care that food tends to be the lead picture on every website opening page or that whole proper grammar and punctuation thing. Henry Grady may be rolling over in his grave and may want to snatch back my degree from his journalism school since I've just insulted his paper, but I think he'd actually agree with me upon reflection. So yes, I read the AJC's website still for little news stuff.
5. Bloomberg.com
Leftover from Graduate School. Sometimes I pick a random stock I think will do well based on their news and follow it for a couple weeks. I'm usually right, but the same as you should never trust a skinny chef, never trust a broke-ass artist for financial advice.
6. CNN.com
Less often than I used to. When I dated a guy who got deployed I finally had to get my friend to password protect it and block it on the TV. You'll drive yourself nuts if you're worried about someone.
7. Craigslist.com - Missed Connections.
Check them for your city and you'll start doing it every day. You'll learn some interesting things...things like the fact that there's about 10 billion people who are in love with a redhead clerk at the Whole Foods near me, there's a pervert on UPenn's campus, and hipsters all swear they don't read CL, but they do. Come to think of it, you'll learn a lot if you peruse ALL of your city's Craig's List for 45 min or so. Be sure to hit "best of Craig's List".
8. What Would Tyler Durden Do?, The Superficial, Go Fug Yourself, Project Rungay, Perez Hilton, etc...
I'm trying to wean myself of these. But sometimes I love me some celebrity gossip.
9. Wet Canvas.
It's mostly a forum for artists, leans toward the hobbyist side of it. I'm getting tired of it, actually, I'm probably taking it off my tabs.
10. RSS reader
Pulls the new stuff from lots of different blogs I enjoy into one source. When I've read it, it deletes it unless I ask it to save it. It really helps to cut down on time spent surfing.
11. Finally, my friends' stuff.
Friday, May 23, 2008
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3 comments:
Maybe I should hire you to be my financial advisor :-) I used to go to a site that was similar to Wet Canvas but for photography but after a while it just gets old and the people there all seem to know each other and stopped giving true critiques but instead just saying that people they didn't know had crappy stuff and their friends had great stuff (even though some of it was complete crap). I did learn a lot when I started and it is still a good place for business advice because they have the same business I do so I can see what works or doesn't work in different markets....that has been helpful.
Yeah that's about how I feel about WC. I never posted for critique because the critiques I saw weren't helpful. 20 people going "very impressive!" just isn't what I need. I posted a question and no one helped me. Then there's the guy who thinks he knows it all and all he ends up doing is telling everyone that they suck when he's actually very mediocre.
If you're looking for the business side of things - specifically how to really make it, check out artbizblog.com. It's very helpful, but a little pessimistic and all geared toward getting you to buy this woman's book. I don't have the money for the book, maybe she'll send me a free copy to review here.
Yes, the critiques were the same here and I don't do well with marketing...it completely turns me off...I would say that is my biggest challenge in my business...advertisers will not get my attention like they will with most normal people but most of my clients are normal people so I have to learn to advertise to normal people instead of myself....wait, what? Anyway...
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