- Crewe news: New data from this U.S. election campaign, via Pew, looks at political campaigns as a direct source of news.
- Voodoo queen: If women rule social media, why don't we make content for them?
- Pin, pointed: Smart read for reputation managers and development teams: What happens when corporate philanthropy makes the recipient look bad.
- Jazz hands: Where's my *finally* button? Twitter may soon be omitting GIFs, photos, and quotes from your 140-character limit. And direct messages will have receipts that indicate to the sender whether you've read them or not.
- Instead of curses: Download and pass around Grammar Girl's editing checklist.
- Carnival mask: Don't like some of the words in your Instagram comments? Now you can filter them out.
- Hot fives and sevens: The New York Times shared a short take on how to set up your own podcasting studio.
- The book of voodoo: At MIT, they've made a camera that can read books without opening them, just like your homework-avoiding kid claims to do.
- Surprise them: For random choices on Netflix, add a button to the site with this Chrome extension.
- Week in review: This week, my Moderating Panels blog shared If voters were moderators: 4 ways to know what your audience expects. On this blog, a reader shared success with converting Facebook page likes to invites to follow, calling it a "one-two punch."
- Stick a pin in it: Buy my ebook, The Eloquent Woman's Guide to Moderating Panels; tell your colleagues to put this blog in their feeds; sign up for my free monthly newsletter, or let me know how we can work together in 2016 or 2017 with an email to eloquentwoman at gmail.com.
(Creative Commons licensed photo by alkruse24)
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