Monday, December 16, 2013

I'm on an American Idol (not so) Secret Mission

So I got this tweet from American Idol:


I was suspicious as I could see that they sent the same message to several other individuals. I was pretty sure it was a hoax, but I couldn't resist responding. I sent them my email address and a few minutes later, this harsh warning, "You better not spam me." Then I deleted both messages.

A few days later I got an email from American Idol with a personal invitation from Ryan Seacrest for a unique first-look experience with a dozen other handpicked fan/bloggers. They were flying us in! Great, thought the girl who lives 10 miles away. Still, I was intrigued so I RSVP'd. A few days later, a hotel confirmation shows up from an AI show coordinator. Wow, this is really happening!

Less than one week later, after a flurry of tweets and Facebook posts identifying our group, the #IdolTweetHearts are ready to get into action. Do you know how hard it is to get an emergency hair appointment in December?

Let's have some fun with this!
Follow me @pinkypulse Follow us @idoltweethearts and #idoltweethearts
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Friday, November 29, 2013

What It Takes to Keep a Pinky on the Pulse

I'm one click away from breaking a webinar/seminar/TedTalk/cat video viewing record. In my quest for knowledge I said yes to everything that came my way the past 8 weeks. 

These included:


•Social Media Success Summit 2013(SMSS13): 33 one-hour sessions spread out over 11 days featuring many of my favorite Social Media experts. I hung in there for every word of the first 20 or so hours, tweeting with my fellow remote attendees, before becoming overwhelmed and downloading the rest for future (AKA: never) reference. 
•Rutgers mini-MBA in Digital Marketing, a new 3 hour x 10-week course to supplement the mini-MBA in Social Media Marketing that I completed in September (do two mini-MBAs equal a whole one?). Loved the lively presentation style of Christina "CK" Kerley on Mobile Marketing, who subsequently through our conversation on Twitter convinced me that it will not hurt when I get a mobile device implanted into my body in the near future. 




•The brilliant Malcolm Gladwell, in person, talking about his new book "David & Goliath" through LiveTalks LA. 
I love the twist he puts on sociology and technology. He makes you think of what is right in front of you in a totally different way.

•SMSS13 led me to sign up for Andrea Vahl and Phyllis Khare's 6-week Social Media Manager SchooI. Super helpful and practical tips as a new business owner. The private Facebook group sent me into a tizzy though with all of the questions and answers I need to follow up on.



•Mari Smith's Facebook Marketing webinar.
Free advice although I spent most of the time too fascinated by her Scottish/ Canadian/ San Diego accent to take notes.



•A Groupon for 4 private and 10 video guitar lessons, the nudge I needed to re-string and pick up my vintage Silvertone after years of abandonment. My instructor is very patient as I relearn how to play. Most of the time he says "Don't strum! Just put your fingers in place." Poor guy.




•A free 10-week course "Society, Science, Survival: Lessons from AMC's The Walking Dead, which I'm a little behind on, but now that they're giving badges upon completion I will have to hustle to catch up. Don't tell me what happens!







•I attended the Swiss American Chamber of Commerce of Los Angeles to hear noted Oncologist Dr. Lawrence Piro speak about Longevity. He may be on to something as this extraordinarily accomplished doctor looks like he is 24. He told us to watch what we eat, drink red wine and exercise. We all ate candy provided by Nestle afterward.







•Always a big fan of their events, I went to thinkLA's Movie Marketing Breakfast to hear Brian Robbins, Ryan Duffy and Jason Blum. Robbins, creator of Awesomeness TV enticed me to watch his new YouTube series "Side Effects." After he described it as Party of Five meets Glee, how could I not? Read my guest blog recap for Primary Color here http://bit.ly/IwBgdB 


•Another cool thinkLA event I impulsively clicked on and attended was "How to Make Almost Anything" led by 
Per Hakansson where I helped create a time management App in one hour. It was an interesting group experience, limited to only 24 attendees. Check out the POPapp for iPhones to see how we worked.

•I spent the day in an auto museum for Rhythm Interactive's Integrated Marketing Forum where I learned about content marketing and "secret sauce" recipes from Joe Pulizzi, Dr. Pamela Rutledge, 
Mark Fidelman and others. Check out www.PrimaryColor.com for my recap coming soon and learn what The Three Little Pigs and The Rolling Stones have in common.




•Others may dream of their Oscar speech, but I dream of the TEDTalk I will give someday. 
I checked out Rutgers "Gamification" instructor Gabe Zichermann give his own spirited talk. Here's a guy with every kid's dream job! http://www.ted.com/talks/gabe_zichermann_how_games_make_kids_smarter.html 

Oh, and I couldn't stop watching "Cats Stealing Dog Beds" about 20 times. Makes me laugh every time!  http://bit.ly/1bvC6V4

I learned my lesson by not watching the MTV Video Music Awards in real time and missing the whole Miley debacle. Actually, it was engineered in such a way that no one could possibly have missed it (well played, MC). So I made it a point to watch her on the AMAs. Which led to this perfect parody on Jimmy Fallon. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRy0ONLBFfc

Hope you all had a great Thanksgiving!

#SocialMedia #CKSays #MalcolmGladwell #AndreaVahl #PhyllisKhare #MariSmith #JoePulizzi #GabeZichermann #thinkLA #PrimaryColor #DrLawrencePiro

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Sunday Fun Day Tassimo Taste Test

A few years ago I went to Paris with my fellow birthday twin Kathleen Ryan to visit my friend Paige Yoder Celestin. It was the first trip to Paris for both of us and we fell in love with everything and anything about our visit.

Kathleen and Paige outside of Place de la Concorde
Paige and Lynne at Le Grand Colbert

Paige has always been the most fashionable person I know, since our early days in New York City when she lived at the Webster Apartments for Women and worked as an Executive Assistant for Louis Feraud to her current location in Aix en Provence. We were fortunate to visit when she lived just outside of Paris in Montreuil.

One of the things I fell in love with was Paige's coffeemaker. You dropped a pod in and out came a wonderful cup of Joe. She also had a separate steamed milk maker that sealed the deal for me. I think the brand she had was similar the the Nescafe Dolce Gusto, a Ferrari version of what was available in the U.S.

So my first splurge when I recovered from my trip was to purchase a similar coffee maker. A few years ago there were two main contenders on the market: Tassimo and Keurig. I went with the Tassimo since it had the ability to make cappuccino with those freaky irradiated milk cartridges. As someone who has diligently checked the milk carton expiration date all my life, I don't understand how those "milk" cartridges last so long, but it was the selling factor for me. I don't really like flavored coffee very much, which is what Keurig seemed to favor.

The Tassimo was all the rage in my household for about four months. I bought every possible variation of coffee, cappuccino, latte and hot chocolate. In case you don't know, each beverage comes in a pod with a barcode on it. The machine reads the barcode and adjusts how much water it heats up and passes through the pod. Then you toss the non-recyclable, environmentally unfriendly little case in the trash, but there are no coffee grounds to measure or clean up.

Since my purchase I go through phases where I will alternate between the Tassimo and my Braun, in between trips to Starbucks. Shopping for the Tassimo has become increasingly limited as Keurig clearly won the market. Only Bed, Bath & Beyond has a decent selection of Tassimo pods now, and I predict my coffeemaker will end up in the electronic waste section of my garage.

Today I decided to do a taste test with three of the versions of coffee pods I've acquired: Maxwell House Morning Blend Coffee that makes a 12 oz. serving (it only takes a couple of overflowing mugs to remember this), Gevalia 15% Kona Coffee Blend, and a newer pod maker King Joe Dark Roast Coffee. I measured one tablespoon of 1% milk in each cup. Aren't my vintage Metlox California Poppy Trail cups nifty?

The Morning Blend tasted like coffee water, now I know why I am not perky even though I'm drinking a larger serving per pod. Gevalia was okay, but had some floral overtones. King Joe was the clear winner of the three. To make it fair I should have included a cup from my Braun and tested without knowing which was which. Clearly I had nothing better to do this morning but share this with you. The good news is after drinking three cups of coffee I am wide awake! 

What do you drink in the morning?


Thursday, October 24, 2013

Margie Dana Has Seen the Future of Print Buying

Margie Dana has seen the future of print buying and it still looks bright


Margie Dana, noted Print Industry advocate and founder of Print Buyers International, visited the Advertising Production Association of Orange County (APAOC) on October 22 via teleconference to share some insights about the research study she conducted along with industry consultant and researcher John Zarwan of 315 Print Buyers. Their results and analysis have been compiled into a 40-page report “The New Print Buyers: Who They Are, What They Want and What You Should Do.”

Dana started on a positive note stating, The good news is there is good news.” Dana used Survey Monkey to maintain anonymity to the respondents of the 40 question survey conducted in July 2013 and she got them to spill the beans about many aspects of their jobs and how they feel about the future of their profession.

Most buyers reported that their budgets were steady or expected to increase, definitely good news for the printers in the room. Half had budgets of over $1million.

If you were to picture the typical Print Buyer, she (63% were female) would look a lot like, well, me! She is over 45, has 16+ years experience, works in a corporate environment in a marketing or creative department, makes a decent salary and appreciates the tactile process of printing. She understands the art of printing and enjoys collaborating with the graphic designer and printer in choosing the right paper and equipment for the job.

Dana and Zarwan's report goes on to illuminate several shifts in our industry, from the actual print buyer's role, to the next generation and what we want from our print vendors. "Print Buyers want new print concepts and innovations from their printer," Dana said. Partly because the role of the buyer has expanded to include a broader marketing role. She predicts that there will be fewer sole Print Buyers, as they expand their tool kits and learn more digital skills.


At one moment during the teleconference we lost contact with Dana visually. We could still hear her but lost her presentation and physical inset. After about 30 seconds of confusion, a person in the audience quietly walked to the front of the room and jiggled the mouse to refresh the screen. Ah, back to our presentation.


And that brings us to the next generation and their desire to work more online. We have already seen a successful shift of proofing from traditional hard proofs to online soft proofs. Buyers are looking for faster and cheaper ways to communicate with their clients. Working online doesn't just mean purchasing products. 

APAOC President Julie Esler, Production Manager at DGWB Advertising, brought up a good point as one of the younger people in our profession. Esler said she expects her vendors to have a good online presence to show they are "with it and know how to communicate."  She said she is much more likely to want to work with someone who knows to text her info rather than send a fax. 

The future of print is still bright and the light is coming from your desktop, tablet and phone. All you need is the love of print and your finger to keep up (or someone to jiggle the mouse).

Dana and Zarwan’s report may be purchased at http://margiedana.com/store/reports/

#Print   #MargieDana   #JohnZarwan   #TheAPAOC

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Is a 5th grader more likely to get an MBA than me?

I may be addicted to education. I have taken 22 courses at UCLA Extension over the years, 15 in the last few years. My path to pursue a back-up career in personal financial planning led to a dead end when I realized it was just not my thing. Yet one tiny Saturday class in Social Media Marketing struck a nerve and opened up a whole new career path.

That one Saturday led to a 12-week course and then another and another. Can a baby boomer really succeed in a field with "digital natives?" The answer is yes, but maybe not in the way you would think. I want to know everything there is to know and do everything there is to do in Social Media. My realization that I never will is how I came up with my business name "PinkyonthePulse.com." I recognize that there will always be someone who knows more than me. Some of them are 5th graders.

I decided to pursue more education and thought about taking an MBA program in Social Media Marketing through the University of Florida. I was ready to sign on board, rack up major student loan debt and take an 18 month course. That would certainly give me the credentials over most digital natives who are already up to their eyeballs in student loan debt and not likely to go to this new level.

There was one little hurdle I had to jump over—the GRE. Seriously, someone with 30 years of business experience has to pass the GRE to take a virtual MBA program? Don't you really just want my credit card? The answers are yes and yes. To make it into the fall program I had two weeks to study for the GRE before my deadline. I tried, I really did. I was fairly confident in the Analytical Writing and Verbal Reasoning portions, but Quantitative Reasoning, really? The last time I had to solve for x and y people still looked like the guy on this GRE Prep Guide.



By the grace of Social Media itself I had a true Twitter epiphany. I tweeted to @markwschaefer, author of "The Tao of Twitter," that I had enjoyed his seminars. I noticed on his site that he taught at Rutgers University Center for Management Development. I said this program looked interesting and he answered back in impressive social media response time and offered me a discount. Rutgers offers a program in several topics brilliantly called a "mini-MBA." Their Social Media Marketing mini-MBA was the perfect fit for me. Ten intensive weeks of everything I needed to know. The price was considerably less than a full MBA and no GRE was required, just the credit card part.

The best part was that it was all done virtually through a new iPad that Rutgers sent me. I love my iPhone and use it for everything, but I felt like I got new glasses when I started using the iPad. Finally,
I can see the appeal of Pinterest. Who knew there were so many things to do with Pillsbury Crescent Rolls!

My Rutgers CMD course consisted of 9 Modules, each taught by a Social Media professional including Mark W. Schaefer, Neal Schaffer, Robert Petersen, Mark Burgess, Mike Moran, Greg Jarboe, Glen Gilmore, David Berkowitz and Mark Mueller-Eberstien. These guys know their stuff. (Note to Rutgers CMD: There are a lot of notable female instructors out there too!) I spent hours listening to the best in the business. I created a SMM plan for a local yoga studio, LiveYoga Wellness (@liveyogawellnes fb.com/liveyogawellness  ) and got an A on my final exam and project. For those who followed my Financial Planning days, you know that was not the case!

Sometime during my 10 week course I downloaded the App "Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?" Well, it turns out as I suspected that I am not. Some days I am not even as smart as a 1st grader (tell me an example of a word that is a diphthong.) So I will keep learning and taking classes and webinars so I can be one of the best in my field...or at least as smart as a 5th grader.

#Education #RutgersCMD #SocialMediaMarketing


Monday, June 17, 2013

Penn State Proud

I'm going to guess that I was one of about 20,000 who graduated with my class from The Pennsylvania State University many years ago. I would be surprised if I graduated in the top 25% of that group and while I have made regular small donations over the years, I'm hardly a sustaining donor. Yet, the Penn State community has always treated me like I was Joe Paterno's daughter. They have continued to reach out to me, meet with me and invite me to events in Los Angeles and treated me very well when I have returned to University Park.

When Mike Poorman, Senior Lecturer and Director of Alumni Relations for the College of Communications at Penn State, asked me to participate on a panel "From Happy Valley to Digital Hollywood" I said thanks, but I'm probably not the best choice. I just started my Social Media Marketing business. I'm glad he convinced me otherwise.

First, I was included in a group of real Social Media pros: Chris Krewson, editor, THR.com at The Hollywood Reporter; Dan Reynolds, Director, Social Media Strategy at The Walt Disney Company; and Ryan Ritchie, Director of Operations, Open Bar, the Interactive Division of Hamagami/Carroll, Inc. Chris served as both moderator and experienced panelist. Second, the event was held at the Aidikoff Screening Room on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, possibly the only time in my life I will sit in a director's chair on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills.

To prepare for the sitting in a director's chair and being on a panel, I attended an event the night before for the cast of Downton Abbey at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Most in attendance were there to see and hear the talented cast and creators speak. I was also there to observe how the women sat in director's chairs wearing a dress. I knew I could never pull off their elegance, but I managed to appear ladylike in public and was especially pleased that neither shoe fell off.

Chris Krewson, Dan Reynolds, Ryan Ritchie, Lynne Gullo 
Michelle Dockery, Gareth Neame, Elizabeth McGovern, Julian Fellowes
Among the questions Chris asked us were how we got from Happy Valley to Hollywood and what skills we learned at Penn State that we still count on today. I realized that my journey from Penn State to where I am now has brought me full circle. My original career goal with my B.A. in Advertising was to be a copywriter. My first career was in New York City in publishing for HBJ and William Morrow, specifically in Children's Book Marketing. I moved to Los Angeles and had a rewarding second career in entertainment and printing, most notably as Print Production Director at NBC Universal and Fox Home Entertainment. Now I've started on my third career in Social Media Marketing, which in essence is copywriting!

Today I came across Conan O'Brien's 2011 Dartmouth College Commencement Address which came after his disastrous departure from NBC. He is both hilarious and incredibly moving. O'Brien says, "Your path at 22 will not necessarily be your path at 32 or 42. One's dream is constantly evolving, rising and falling, changing course...The person you are now is someone you could never have conjured."

Thank you to Penn State for the opportunities that have paved my path to where I am now. "We Are Penn State!"



Thursday, May 23, 2013

Trying to Catch Up

Can we ever catch up to all the tasks we want to accomplish? I would love to know your secrets if your answer is yes!

I agreed to speak on a panel for the Penn State College of Communications Alumni on the topic "From Happy Valley to Digital Hollywood." I'm listed as Lynne Gullo, Owner of PinkyonthePulse.com. As cool as that is, I had a moment of panic realizing that people will click on my website, which is not finished. It's like knowing people are coming to your house and you haven't cleaned yet!

There are so many design aspects I need to accomplish: logo, website design, list of services. Since jumping on board as a business owner I have been trying to plug the leaks. I realized I had my original domain name website up which was extremely out of date and had to redirect that one. I spent a couple of months trying to connect my Go Daddy domain to my Google blog address, gave up and started the Wordpress blog site. I changed my pictures, backgrounds, color schemes, and copy about 100 times each. But I am moving forward.

Last month, with some encouragement by my personal trainer Holly, I decided to enter a 5K. I have yet to be able to run a 3/4 mile loop in our class after four years and often have painful knees, but why not? I downloaded the Couch to 5K App and started to "train." I was amazed and energized when I finished my first workout. I even posted it on Twitter! I could barely run for 60 seconds without thinking I would die in 61 seconds, but I did it.

In theory, the Couch to 5K App is fantastic. After 3 workouts a week for 8 weeks I would be ready for my 5k. I completed 2.5 workouts before race day. My options were to quit or run anyway so I decided to participate and use that as a benchmark. I knew I could walk it without any problem. I pushed myself harder than ever before and finished the race. I was 37th out of 80 in my age group, but I finished! I had a great sense of accomplishment and know that next time will be better, maybe even top 25!

When people tell me they want to start a blog or Twitter account but they can't until a series of internet events happen, I say just start! There will always be a million things to tweak and change, so it's important to just hit "publish."

So welcome to my house. There may still be dishes in the sink, but I hope you enjoy visiting and come back again soon.




Monday, April 8, 2013

Looking for Print Buyers? They're Hiding in Plain Sight.

We used to have a special professional group call the Advertising Production Association of Los Angeles (APALA) where print buyers and print vendors would network and learn new things. Membership peaked at around 750 before falling victim to the 2008 economic crisis, high meeting location costs, changing priorities and dwindling membership.

Some vendors are gone, some print buyers changed careers completely, and no doubt, the economy and internet have forever changed the print industry. But print buyers are still out there, everywhere.

I was reminded of this just last week when I posted a job notice I heard about on the APALA LinkedIn Group page (now called APALA Alumni). There are currently over 475 members of this group, far more than were paid members of the actual APALA in its final years. I was immediately contacted by five people I never knew. There are over 23,000 Print Production professionals in the LA area alone!

Do you think you know who all the potential print buyers are? Do you know where they work?

I'm excited about a new business venture I have started since being a print buyer at Fox and NBC. I am using social media to help salespeople, particularly print salespeople, connect with their clients.

Your clients are here. You need to be here too. Please contact me at lynne@pinkyonthepulse.com so I can show you how to use social media effectively to your advantage.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Listen and Learn

I attended the thinkLA.org Mobile Breakfast this week in my continuing quest to keep on top of what 25 year-olds already know. 800 people attended, at least half of whom were under 30 and had excellent jobs at companies I never heard of.

The speakers were all brilliant, blazing through 100+ ppt slides in a flash. Mobile is huge! If you can develop a cheap smartphone for China, you'll be a gazillionaire (Apple will not be there). Speaking of gazillionaires, Activision can thank their 18-34 obsessed male demo for using mobile, social media and even print to make Call of Duty: Black OPS 2 sell $1billion in 5 days.

We're all using multiple devices throughout the day. Each has their own sweet spot and needs their own content. What Marshall McLuhan said in 1964 still rings true, "The Medium is the Message."

Beyond the ppt slides were two separate mentions of Amber Case, the "Cyborg Anthropologist." I looked up her TED talk and loved what she said. I've often heard of Social Media as "drinking from a firehose." Case made an analogy from I Love Lucy, and the famous chocolate conveyer belt scene. We just can never keep up with the flow! Her TED talk is worth the listen http://www.ted.com/talks/amber_case_we_are_all_cyborgs_now.html Her talk was more than two years ago, but I feel more "in the know" for having watched it.

Another reference was about Mary Meeker, the real Queen of "In the Know." Here's the link from speaker Henry Blodget's own Business Insider about her December 2012 presentation. http://www.businessinsider.com/mary-meeker-2012-internet-trends-year-end-update-2012-12?op=1

After the event, I checked on the live tweets. I admire those who can key in on a point and tweet without missing the next five key points. To my delight, I was busted by the guy sitting next to me who made the perfect observation for this event: http://instagram.com/p/XFgX4PLHge/ So much for trying to blend in! In my defense, I was taking notes for a guest blog I was writing.

So much to learn. Are you listening?

#thinkMobile  #Trends

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Get Smart Phone?

I was just looking for an old image from the brilliant 1960s TV show "Get Smart" of Don Adams using his shoe phone. I Googled "Get Smart phone" images and these came up.

Don Adams as Maxwell Smart with his shoe phone
"Smart" phones















Could this mid-sixites television comedy featuring futuristic, high-tech spy gadgetry have planted the seed for our generation of "Smart" phones?

What other devices on "Get Smart" are part of our everyday lives now? I'll be attending the  thinkLA.org "Mobile Breakfast" on March 20 to find out what other trends are on the rise. Or maybe I should just watch a marathon of "Get Smart!"

#Smartphones #thinkLAMobile  #Trends

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Fairest of Them All


Let's hear it for the what is arguably the most successful print campaign of all time, Sports Illustrated's Swimsuit Issue! 

As Dina Spector reports in Business Insider, this issue has spawned a $1Billion empire, will go to 3 million subscribers and will sell more than 1 million copies on the newsstand. On The Today Show Matt Lauer said this issue will be viewed by over 62 million.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/sports-illustrated-swimsuit-issue-1-161000843.html

Last year SI offered the issue on four digital platforms including a tablet edition and iPhone app.
What a great opportunity for Time, Inc. and Sports Illustrated to evaluate the impact of print vs. digital with this property. Is there a spike in digital subscriptions as well? How does the viewer experience differ between print and digital?

All I know is I won't be seeing the digital version at my dentist's office. How do you measure the value of pass along readership to your advertisers in a digital format?

As for cover model Kate Upton, congrats on your second cover. It was worth the frostbite you suffered shooting in Antarctica!


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Pop Culture and Social Media Success!


Two brilliant examples of pop culture and social media marketing happened this week which makes for a particularly happy PinkyonthePulse!

The Super Bowl is not only the biggest football game and advertising venue of the year, it's also the biggest social media event. We all get to be commentators via Facebook and Twitter. How many of you watched the game on a big screen and had your laptop and smartphone at hand? And a jumbo bag of potato chips? Maybe that was just me.

I admit, after the Calvin Klein Concept ad everything that followed was a blur until Beyoncé snapped me back to attention. She truly matched the mega-wattage exploding around her. The Twitter feed was equally dazzling.

Advertisers had instant feedback on how their dollars were spent. And then the power went out and one little tweet became the star. FOR FREE!


ChicagoBusiness.com reported:
"Power out?" Oreo posted to Twitter. "No problem. You can still dunk in the dark." The tweet was retweeted 10,000 times within one hour, according to AdAge, which noted that the Oreo graphic was "designed, captioned and approved within minutes."

Read more: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20130206/BLOGS08/130209861/why-oreos-super-bowl-ad-went-viral#ixzz2KASrJIVC


Hasbro scored a Social Media success story by announcing their new Monopoly token "A Cat," which will eventually replace the retiring "Iron." Hasbro sparked huge votes on Monopoly's Facebook page which boasts more than 10 million likes. Counter campaigns to save other tokens were also launched. The cost for this huge buzz $0. Read more from CBS News here: http://cbsn.ws/XNGeVp

Lastly, you probably never knew his name, but you surely knew and loved his product:
André Cassagnes, Etch A Sketch Inventor, is Dead at 86.

How many of you spent hours like me, dialing in intricate patterns only to have a sibling "accidentally" jiggle it and erase your masterpiece?  http://nyti.ms/12nCH5P


Share your pop culture memories with us!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

#LastPrintIssue



I'm trying not to take it personally. NEWSWEEK ended their 79 year run as the number two news magazine with their December 31, 2012 issue. Just because a magazine that has been around since 1933 has decided to go digital doesn't affect me, does it? Let me just take a moment to remove the dagger from my heart. 
Most of my career has been spent sending ad materials to magazines and newspapers. For many years we would ship huge packages with 20 sets of film (NRREU & PRRED) plugs progs and tops (a progressive proof run on a press to simulate what it would look like in the magazine before the ad ran.) That process took hours and several people to physically process the materials. All replaced by the touch of a button and a digital transmission in seconds to multiple printing plants.  
I spent most of the weekend watching back to back episodes of Downton Abbey. I had heard raves about it from several friends and finally jumped on the bandwagon. The BBC series depicts the cushy lifestyle of one British family in 1912 and the staff that serves them. It's all about the juxtaposition between rich and poor, old and older, tradition and change. Do I identify more with the Dowager Lady Crawley (fabulous Maggie Smith) who laments about any deviation from her youth or Lord Crawley (stoic Hugh Bonneville) desperately trying to keep up with the times while preserving the past. 
Change is inevitable no matter how hard we try to avoid it. "Change is good," we say. We really don't have much choice in the matter, do we? TIME marches on ; )