Posted on 12/16/2006 5:07:49 PM PST by Lunatic Fringe
Edited on 12/16/2006 5:12:32 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
YOU were named TIME magazine 'Person of the Year' Saturday for the explosive growth and influence of user-generated Internet content such as 'blogs', video-file sharing site YouTube and social network MySpace... You -- YES, YOU -- beat out candidates including Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, China's President Hu Jintao, North Korean leader Kim Jong-il and Speaker-elect Nancy Pelosi... YOU, YOU, YOU....
This will look good on my resume.:)
The MSM won't tell you, but at least you can learn on YouTube how the Clintons collapsed a public company, Stan Lee Media -- http://youtube.com/watch?v=LUWlxc7h5AI
I think this choice makes perfect sense. Blogs, video sharing sites, and social networking pages have made a huge difference the past few years.
From the negative (Allen's macaca) to the positive (Zucker's Albright ad) to the silly (lonelygirl15), youtube and sites like it are going to play an important role in politics and other aspects of life for years to come.
When they sat YOU...do they mean ME or you, because I don't really want to share this award with the rest of you. I know they meant ME as opposed to the other 300 million Americans.
Wow. You nailed it. They put a piece of mylar on the cove!
cover
Time to watch Newt's special on religion in America.
Gosh...I, I....don't know what to say. So many people to thank. I wish my dad were here to see this....This is the greatest night of my life. Thank you. Thank you ALL!!
Well, it is a big surprise that I have won the TIMe magazine person of the year award! I can only say it is about darned time, lol!
Now It's Your Turn
By RICHARD STENGEL
Posted Saturday, Dec. 16, 2006
The other day I listened to a reader named Tom, age 59, make a pitch for the American Voter as TIME's Person of the Year. Tom wasn't sitting in my office but was home in Stamford, Conn., where he recorded his video and uploaded it to YouTube. In fact, Tom was answering my own video, which I'd posted on YouTube a couple of weeks earlier, asking for people to submit nominations for Person of the Year. Within a few days, it had tens of thousands of page views and dozens of video submissions and comments. The people who sent in nominations were from Australia and Paris and Duluth, and their suggestions included Sacha Baron Cohen, Donald Rumsfeld, Al Gore and many, many votes for the YouTube guys.
This response was the living example of the idea of our 2006 Person of the Year: that individuals are changing the nature of the information age, that the creators and consumers of user-generated content are transforming art and politics and commerce, that they are the engaged citizens of a new digital democracy. From user-generated images of Baghdad strife and the London Underground bombing to the macaca moment that might have altered the midterm elections to the hundreds of thousands of individual outpourings of hope and poetry and self-absorption, this new global nervous system is changing the way we perceive the world. And the consequences of it all are both hard to know and impossible to overestimate.
There are lots of people in my line of work who believe that this phenomenon is dangerous because it undermines the traditional authority of media institutions like TIME. Some have called it an "amateur hour." And it often is. But America was founded by amateurs. The framers were professional lawyers and military men and bankers, but they were amateur politicians, and that's the way they thought it should be. Thomas Paine was in effect the first blogger, and Ben Franklin was essentially loading his persona into the MySpace of the 18th century, Poor Richard's Almanack. The new media age of Web 2.0 is threatening only if you believe that an excess of democracy is the road to anarchy. I don't.
Journalists once had the exclusive province of taking people to places they'd never been. But now a mother in Baghdad with a videophone can let you see a roadside bombing, or a patron in a nightclub can show you a racist rant by a famous comedian. These blogs and videos bring events to the rest of us in ways that are often more immediate and authentic than traditional media. These new techniques, I believe, will only enhance what we do as journalists and challenge us to do it in even more innovative ways.
We chose to put a mirror on the cover because it literally reflects the idea that you, not we, are transforming the information age. The 2006 Person of the Year issuethe largest one Time has ever printedmarks the first time we've put reflective Mylar on the cover. When we found a supplier in Minnesota, we made the company sign a confidentiality agreement before placing an order for 6,965,000 pieces. That's a lot of Mylar. The elegant cover was designed by our peerless art director, Arthur Hochstein, and the incredible logistics of printing and distributing this issue were ably coordinated by our director of operations, Brooke Twyford, and director of editorial operations, Rick Prue. The Person of the Year package, as well as People Who Mattered, was masterfully overseen by deputy managing editor Steve Koepp. Designing a cover with a Mylar window does create one unanticipated challenge: How do you display it online when there's no one standing in front of it? If you go to Time.com, you'll see an animated version of the cover in which the window is stocked with a rotating display of reader-submitted photos. Maybe you'll see yourself.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1570743,00.html
There goes my privacy.
:(
Who, me?
Its not you, its me.
Thanks for pandering to me, Time, but I still think your magazine is crap.
So, looking at you is not a pretty picture?
Could you delete the repost I just did. I searched but it did not show up when I searched for it.... Sorry for that!

but my fav of the 10:
Libertarian ping! To be added or removed from my ping list freepmail me or post a message here.
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