Every weekday, PR Daily associate editor Alan Pearcy highlights the day’s most compelling stories and amusing marginalia on the Web in this, #TheDailySpin.
And you’re getting panned, and you’re getting panned, and you’re getting panned … Wait, did she say
pans? It’s not likely on this year’s list—too practical.
In anticipation of Oprah Winfrey’s decision to reboot her usually popular “Favorite Things” special, the talk show queen preempted the show’s airing by r
eleasing the list of coveted items she is set to feature. However, with
Vanity Fair highlighting the giveaway’s obscure, unnecessary, and altogether dreary inventory—including items such as a $450 pedestal fan discovered during an interview with the Kardashians, a $275 sipping tequila, and yet another Josh Groban CD (I guess people still buy those)—has left the likes of
Gawker questioning whether the magic is gone.
Meanwhile,
Examiner.com is providing a few
affordable swaps for some of Ms. Winfrey’s overpriced items.
An unreasonable item atop my list to Santa: Starbucks’ new
Verismo brewing system. Perhaps summed up best by
The San Francisco Egotist: “As if we don't spend enough of our monthly paychecks on your product, now you have to make it so we can simply get it at home.” Err, coffee—why can’t I quit you?
And while Starbucks may already count
caffeine-addicted PR professionals’ love of its holy bean as money in the bank, the China market won’t be so easily conquered.
Reports Advertising Age, despite the chain’s insatiable growth throughout the country, it struggles to define a clear coffee culture there.
Speaking of foreign diplomacy, in the U.K., Apple
released its first mandated newspaper advert in Friday morning’s
Guardian where it yet again apologized to Samsung. This comes just 24 hours after the company was reprimanded for its snarky and “non-compliant” apology previously
issued on its website.
Issue your employees a smartphone and a laptop and they’re likely to accomplish their respective jobs from anywhere at anytime. But
what else are they doing?
Inc. warns that companies footing the bill are probably paying for more than they expect.
It’s really no wonder more businesses are implementing their own social media policies. Just look at
this infographic from LearnStuff.com detailing how all of our various online networks are destroying our productivity.
Related: 14 things that must be in your social media policy
Destruction is an all too familiar notion for much of the East Coast, which is struggling to recover in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. While that led to a muddled and
indecisive cancellation of the New York City Marathon, thousands of runners still showed up ready to give it their all, instead volunteering their time to help in relief efforts, according to
The New York Times.
Of course, there was also a seemingly motionless majesty found in the face of disaster, as this now-viral and
breathtaking cover from New York magazine and photographer Iwan Baan so dutifully illustrates.
It’s not exactly as artistic as Baan’s image—though impressive nonetheless—but a number of amateur photogs made sure to capture all of their weirdly concocted feasts throughout the superstorm. From various hurricane cakes and bacon wraps to space food and an ironically named store-bought cookie,
this gallery from
BuzzFeed reveals Sandy’s various culinary offerings.
Although many of those images were captured using Instagram, the photo-sharing platform is about to find a rival in Twitter, which is
poised to launch a series of filters that users can apply to images uploaded on the social network.
Of course, a mere smartphone and photo app do not a photojournalist make.
HBO’s new documentary series “Witness” can attest to that. The show chronicles the frequently terrifying experiences of professional photojournalists as they report on issues such as drug trafficking, gang violence, corruption, and ethnic warfare.
From the little screen to the silver,
Thought Catalog identifies its picks for the
15 best moves about journalism.
Related: 10 great films about journalism
With publications such as
Newsweek dropping print to go all-digital, it’s a safe assumption that any future movies about journalism will look vastly different. In fact,
Adweek reports that newsweeklies could be the first magazine category to die amid the print-to-digital shift.
Perhaps if print’s return on investment was better measured on social media:
Is there something you think we should include in our next edition of #TheDailySpin? Tweet me @iquotesometimes with your suggestions. Thanks in advance.
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