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Today's Document
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sheepfilms

shark vs the universe

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Aqua Utopiaïœæ”·ăźćșă§èšæ¶ă玥ă
we're not kids anymore.

Janaina Medeiros

romaâ
Claire Keane
d e v o n

Kaledo Art
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Product Placement
Cosimo Galluzzi
NASA
Not today Justin
I'd rather be in outer space đž
DEAR READER

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@simplyuniqueinc
The outsized impact of Princeâs career extends from his music to the evolution of his personal brand and business model â he was among the first to release albums only on the Internet, and utilized crowd funding, subscription services and other creative distribution methods years before they were embraced by the industry as a whole.
âIn the early 2000s, he was away from a major record deal and very much running his career on his ownâ recalled Scott LeGere, head of the music business department at McNally Smith College of Music in St. Paul, Minnesota, who previously worked at Princeâs Paisley Park recording studio.
âNow that we pause and reflect, that model really mirrors what independents and even major artists are looking at today.â [Read More]
This week we talked about memes and the art of going viral. One common thread about the memes and viral campaigns we talked about is that they all sort of happened organically. Also, each campaign had a sense of genuineness to it.  Whether it was funny or heartfelt, they felt real and thus attracted many people to share them online.  I came across this short TedTalk in which one of the founders of reddit discusses how a to create a social media campaign that makes a splash. HE offers some simple, practical advice on how to grab the attention of the public.
My professor posted this on our class discussion board. Â Good info! (via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksTr3uPMEIc)
Four things students and new graduates should know about this field.
Black, Female, and TECHIE!!
Over the past four weeks of my Social Media class, I have had the opportunity to learn and research how other people and brands have incorporated social media into their personal and professional lives. Â As a result, I have discovered some really amazing women working in social media. Below is a list of eight women of color on Twitter who are winning in the area of social media.
Luvvie Ajayi - @iluvvit and @awesomelytechie
Luckie Daniels - @LuckieIsHappy
Jeneba Jallah Ghatt - @JenebaSpeaks
Stephanie Humphrey - @TechLifeSteph
Kris McDonald - @LittleTechGirl
Karen Rogers Robinson - @SocialMMMDiva
Marcia Wade Talbert - @thetechgyrl
Elizabeth Tarpley - @techmommi
Great info!Â
Television and Social Media
In Erik Qualmanâs text Socialnomics (2009), he outlines how ESPN and other networks utilized social media both effectively and ineffectively as a marketing tool. Â For me, television and social media, namely Twitter to hand and hand. Â Twitter has revolutionized the way we watch TV. Today it is virtually impossible to watch a television show without the network giving the viewer the preferred hashtag. Some series like Pretty Little Liars provide several hashtags throughout the show that relate to the action on the screen. It has been found that âwhen a show has hashtag integration, there is a 20 % increase in tweets per minuteâ (Cummings, 2015). Twitter allows for viewers to connect with each other from the comfort of their home. While watching a show, I always search the hashtag to see what others are saying and to add my own commentary. Â Twitter makes television a three dimensional medium that does beyond content and viewer.
Networks like ABC have created entire campaigns around their shows. Today, Twitter users know that #TGIT, the hashtag for âThank God itâs Thursdayâ refers to the trio of television shows produced by super producer Shonda Rhimes. Greyâs Anatomy, Scandal, and How to Get Away with Murder have become synonymous with the #TGIT hashtag. I think their success stems from the interaction between the viewer as well as the willingness of the cast to live-tweet the shows in real time and provide cogent commentary and meaningful interactions with the viewers.
In 2014, one billion tweets were about television (Cummings, 2015). As long as Twitter continues to gain popularity, television and Twitter will continue to go hand in hand and
Reference
Cummings, C. (2015, September 20). Infographic: How Twitter Is Reshaping the TV Landscape, Tweets Are Driving Viewership and brand engagement. Retrieved March 6, 26 from http://www.adweek.com/news/advertising-branding/infographic-how-twitter-reshaping-tv-landscape-167018
Great info!! (via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bi3DoRWngOs)Â
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgF3xh76Hcg)
Hashtag Activism
Today is Oscar Sunday!
When the 2016 Academy Awards nominations were released back in January, something familiar happened. Â For the second year in a row, there were no people of color nominated in the acting categories. Â Also, the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite, reemerged with a vengeance. Started in 2015 by April Reign (@ReignOfApril), the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite was born out of frustration but soon flourished into a full movement. Â The hashtag has sparked discussion and led many to call for a boycott the ceremony. Tonight while the Oscars are being telecast, April is hosting a Twitter live-tweet of the film THE WOOD. But more importantly, the hashtag has forced the Academy to look at itâs membership and put in place efforts to become more inclusive of women and people of color. #OscarsSoWhite is a perfect example of the power f social media and hashtag activism.
Hashtag activism is the use of Twitter hashtags as a form of internet activism to bring awareness to social and political causes. Â The term was first used in a 2011 op-ed piece in The Guardian. Back then writer Eric Augenbraun stated that:
âThe advent of "hashtag activism" has been greeted with breathless claims about the birth of a new form of technology-based social movement. While such technologies can be extremely useful tools, they do not represent alternatives to the exhausting, age-old work of meeting people where they are, hearing their concerns, reaching common ground, building trust and convincing them that it is in their interests to act politically to change their circumstances. There are no shortcuts here; or to put it another way, it's not the protests that matter, but what happens in the time in between.â Â â The Guardian
In the nearly five years since the term was coined, hashtag activism as gone beyond the hypothetical and taken shape in the actual, the in between, as a powerful and impactful outlet for political, social, and cultural change.
In a recent interview, April Reign discussed the evolution of #OscarsSoWhite and the impact of social media: âA common refrain is itâs just Twitter, but I take issue with that. Weâre on Twitter and weâre seeing change occur in stalwart organizations like the Academy. This isnât the first time. Weâve seen people gain and lose jobs because of Twitter. It changes offline behavior and I believe that will continue. It can be life-changingâ (Dukes, 2016).
While many like to dismiss social media and hashtag activism as frivolous and without significant merit, I disagree. Leveraging social media hashtags as a means of creating a social movement off line is an excellent strategy. And one that can engender major change.
 References:
Augenbraum, E. (2011, September 29). Occupy Wall Street and the limits of spontaneous street protest [Editorial]. The Guardian. Retrieved February 28, 2016, from http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/sep/29/occupy-wall-street-protest
Dukes, Stephanie (2016, February 25). #OscarsSoWhite and the Power of Digital Activism. Vannguard Communications. Retrieved February 28, 2016, from
https://www.vancomm.com/2016/02/25/oscarssowhite-and-the-power-of-digital-activism/?platform=hootsuite
Beginning Again
Happy Sunday all! Â I have not been active on this space for a while but that all changes today. For the next 6 weeks this space will be used as part of an assignment for my one of my classes as I pursue my MS in Project Management. Â The class is an Introduction to the Digital Era: The Power of Social Media. I canât wait to reconect with you all as I connect for the first time with my classmates and professor.Â
Never be afraid to sit a while and think.
Lorraine Hansberry (via infamoussayings)
NinaÂ