A Blogopticon of the Wide World of Blogs

Vanity Fair’s Blogopticon

(Click Image Above for the Blogopticon with Clickable Links)

Vanity Fair has put together this very handy grid of some of the world’s major blogs, which are arranged by news reporting (the Y-axis) and opinion (and juicy gossip) (the X-axis). The chart has extremely useful clickable icons, which link directly to the featured sites.

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Secrets Even Forbes Don’t Know: Turn Your Site into a Pot of Gold!!

We Can Turn Your Website into a Huge Glittering Pot of Gold!!

Many ordinary people today operate their own websites, and growing numbers of even very humble folks like you and us is trying to use the world-wide popularity of the internet as a trail to finally hitting the big cash bonanza, like hitting an oil gusher or a prospector striking gold in the olden days of yore. But this means knowing how to make a website that can sell your products or services.

Now, one thing is for sure, and yes indeedy we do mean absolutely, your success will depend on how many “hits” or much traffic your website manages to haul in. Yup, it’s something like goin’ fishing, but we’re not trawling in our little back-country pond no more. Nope, today it’s turned itself into a great big huge ocean! So nowadays, there’s just no point to having a website no-one ever visits. The big question is how can you grab lots of that traffic away from the millions of other bigger and “slicker” sites out there, just circling us around like a school of barracudas?

Well, one of the best “grabbers” is get some movies or videos on your little website. Videos have made a goodly increase in popularity, and using videos on your own website will for sure get more people to look at it, even to admire it. But for goodness sakes, don’t try to promote your website by using videos that have been produced by them city-slicker professionals that force the “hard sell” or try to shove your product into buyers’ faces. The real trick is to be a lot less obvious. And we mean a lot, lot less. Downright “homey,” is what we say. Take a gander here at what a goodly piece of work we’ve done put together. Now we sure enough can make a slam-bang, “homey” movie or video for your website too! For you, the “homiest” videos such as that nobody’s ever seen before! And then Boom!! The big payoff, that huge pot of glittering gold at the end of the yon rainbow, it just might well be right around the next bend in the old country road!!

Yer Friends, Sharon and Fred

Sharon and Fred Make Movies and Videos

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La Symphonie Noir: A Minimalist Neo-Noir Composition

La Symphonie Noir in Five Movements

Music Audio: Phillip Glass/A Gentleman’s Honor

La Symphonie Noir: A Minimalist Neo-Noir Composition

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The American Snapshot, 1888–1978

These snapshots chronicle the evolution of snapshot photography from 1888, when George Eastman first introduced the Kodak camera and roll film, through the 1970s. During this time it became possible for anyone to be a photographer, and snapshots not only had a profound impact on American life and memory, but they also influenced fine art photography. Organized chronologically, the photographs presented here focus upon the changes in culture and technology that enabled and determined the look of snapshots. They show the influence of popular imagery, as well as the use of recurring poses, viewpoints, framing, camera tricks, and subject matter, noting how they shift over time. The snapshot photography is presented chronologically, rather than concentrating on a particular thematic subject matter. Some say that this particular procedure marks a new approach to the genre. The exhibition is drawn from the collection of Robert E. Jackson and from recent gifts Mr. Jackson made to The National Gallery of Art.

The Art of the American Snapshot, 1888-1978

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