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The Ballad of @Horse_ebooks
Of the accounts that follow me on Twitter, half are spambots. About 15% are companies or organizations whose social media interns found me on a list somewhere, and another 15% are something in between: not definitely bots, but not exactly humans. Whatever they are, they're not "listening" in any meaningful sense. Among the remaining group are some people I like, some people I like a lot, some people I don't know, and a bunch of technology PR professionals who don't really have a choice.
My "Follow" list, in contrast, is cultivated with great care — it’s almost exclusively people I think are funny. But the funniest account I follow doesn’t belong to a comedian. It isn’t a parody account and it doesn’t tell jokes. It’s a spam bot that sells shitty ebooks about horses, and it might be the best Twitter account that has ever existed. READ MORE
Can Branded Content Be Funny?
When Chuck did it, we laughed at them, not with them. When 30 Rock does it, or pretty much every other capital-G Good show on TV right now for that matter, we laugh at them, but with them, too. We've learned to take the licks, and writers have learned to give them: Product placement on TV is as knowing and wily as it is ubiquitous, and it seems to work fine. But what about the Internet?
You could make the argument that indirectly sponsored jokes deserve to be judged on their merit, not their medium. A good argument, actually! But you could make a better one — an easily demonstrable one — that this just isn't how people act.
Among other things, it comes down to momentum. Let's say that I don't particularly enjoy being advertised to (I don't), but also that I've also long accepted my queasy role in the exchange of Funny Things on television for my cruelly overestimated spending power (I have). I wouldn't change the TV channel if a new show were openly Presented By Clearasil. But that same night, the video badged with "Presented by Clearasil!" would be the last one a page to get my click, if it ever did. Bam: disconnect. READ MORE
Where (On the Internet) To Watch Every Comedy This Season
Maybe you don't have a TV. Maybe you don't want to pay for cable, or rent a satellite dish. Maybe you don't like accommodating the odd and conflicting schedules of competing armies of shows, or maybe you just slip out of sync every once in a while. Sometimes you can't watch what you want to watch, and it would be nice to just be able to catch up online, preferably for free. Here's how to do that. READ MORE
It's easy to understand why people are ambivalent, or even hostile, toward ratings. The thinking goes something like this: 




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