Susan Older

Jakee Zaccor is creating her amazing new food blog on our antique chopping block. She makes cool stuff and, after it’s photographed to perfection, we eat it!

New York Pizza Project captures the flavor of featured pizzerias throughout the five boroughs — the distinctive people and places behind New York’s quintessential food. The creators: Nick Johnson, Corey Mintz, Gabe Zimmer, Ian Manheimer and Tim Reitzes. On the internets now. Want the book? Wait for it.

This ain’t LinkedIn, and around here your personal brand is only as sticky as the cool/funny stuff you find on the Internet and then put into the stream. But remember: the early bird gets the meme reblogs, so if you want to drive lots of likes, you’d better be jacking buzz by 6am EST. — Bajillion Hits (on Tumblr)
8 Tips For A Real Tight Tumblr Strat

bajillionhits:

If your attention span is too short to blog, but you’re turned off by Twitter’s boring lack of pictures, Tumblr has emerged as the Internet’s most important self-publishing platform for self-important people. 

Just yesterday the NY Times did a real buzzy piece on just how important Tumblr actually is (John Mayer is on here now - important). It was a pretty nice stratnalysis, except for the part where they called SoupSoup the ‘King of Tumblr’. He’s a cool bro, but I think we can all agree that I am Tumblr’s one true king (correct it, NY Times).

Anyway, if you haven’t already gotten the hint: You need to get Tumblring. So here are 10 tips to help you put together a real tight Tumblr strat. 

1. On Tumblr people are not judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their content. This ain’t LinkedIn, and around here your personal brand is only as sticky as the cool/funny stuff you find on the Internet and then put into the stream. But remember: the early bird gets the meme reblogs, so if you want to drive lots of likes, you’d better be jacking buzz by 6am EST.

2. So what kind of content works on Tumblr? People love to like: Viral Vimeos with Zach Galifianakis, things/stuff hipsters love/hate, random photographs or screenshots of things we forgot about from the ’80s or ’90s, pop culture-related infographics, animal pictures, pithy little passive-aggressive rants about anonymous people who pissed you off, artsy shit, CollegeHumors, songs everybody obviously likes, design/font porn and the phrase “Fuck Yeah” placed before everything.

3. Giving credit is for losers. If you’re sitting on a hot piece of viral gold-meme, don’t even bother checking to see if it’s already been posted on BuzzFeed/Videogum/The Daily What/Urlesque/FFFFound!/Gawker/Vulture/EPIC Ponyz/et al. Just go ahead and post it like you made it yourself. Maybe no one else will notice and you’ll get a bajillion reblogs.

4. Post Gratuitous Pictures of Yourself. Finally, a place for you to put every single grainy iPhone photo of yourself taken at some AMAZING media event or karaoke night or just sitting in your bedroom illuminated by the lonely glow of your laptop screen. Posting cool/flattering photos of yourself is super-important, because it visually reinforces the personal brand you’re trying to cultivate with your content. Tumblr has even created GPOYW (Gratuitous Picture of Yourself Wednesday), an entire day every week in which everyone is encouraged to post pics of themselves without the shame of seeming narcissistic (thanks to the ingenious move of ironically acknowledging its gratuitousness). 

Read More

blagabe:

-Fivo’s Pizza, Washington Heights, Manhattan, one of the New York Pizza Project’s featured pizzerias throughout the five boroughs. NYPizzaProject, online and, in the future, in book form, is designed to capture the distinctive people and places behind New York’s quintessential food. The creators: Nick Johnson, Susan Older’s son, and colleagues Corey Mintz, Gabe Zimmer, Ian Manheimer and Tim Reitzes.

blagabe:

-Fivo’s Pizza, Washington Heights, Manhattan, one of the New York Pizza Project’s featured pizzerias throughout the five boroughs. NYPizzaProject, online and, in the future, in book form, is designed to capture the distinctive people and places behind New York’s quintessential food. The creators: Nick Johnson, Susan Older’s son, and colleagues Corey Mintz, Gabe Zimmer, Ian Manheimer and Tim Reitzes.

Berkeley Acupuncture Project shot by Susan Older, founder of DisplacedJournalists, and fellowship colleagues, Daniel Axelrod, Elizabeth Aguilera, Tom Paulson and Cindy Shultz at The Knight Digital Media Center, UC-Berkeley, in May 2010. The short documentary was edited by Susan Older and Daniel Axelrod in Final Cut Pro.

Susan Older
Speaking at the Poynter Institute’s Bottom Line News workshop for journalism entrepreneurs, July 2010

Susan Older

Speaking at the Poynter Institute’s Bottom Line News workshop for journalism entrepreneurs, July 2010