Posts Tagged Liskula Cohen
power of the picture
Posted by Adam Ainbinder in Random on January 9, 2009
i just checked my blog stats…turns out my Liskula Cohen post had 46 views…significantly more than my next highest post. Now the writing there wasn’t too original…what I think made that one stand out was the picture of 5 BEAUTIFUL women that I inserted in the post and used to post to facebook. people see beautiful women, they click on it…both guys AND girls.
so does sex still sell? is that how to attract people to read content…good looking people in pictures? well, here’s another test run. part of an adalytics experiment
UPDATE: per Timothy’s comment below, i think that he’s right. bigger audience may not be the desired audience! i guess the question is, does my targeted audience click through more when there is a picture of a good looking person rather than a nice winter day?
i also want to say, thank you photo loader (flickr creative commons plug in) that allows me to pull pictures about anything. it makes for very quick posts, and I think posting a picture in a blog is helpful for breaking up text!
Liskula Cohen – is this lawsuit worth it?
Posted by Adam Ainbinder in Life on January 7, 2009
the book groundswell starts out with a story about Barbara Streisand complaining about a photo project that covered the entire California coast. she wanted pictures of her house taken down. of course, this spread throughout the internet, and there was a lot of publicity (mostly negative) about her. was the complaint worth it?
today, a model demanded that google take down remarks about her that were written on someone’s blog (hosted on google – nothing to do with search) – article here. now, when you search her name, the first 10 to 15 links on google are all articles about her lawsuit. the main article, “Skanks in New York”, was #2 on LA’s Buzz List for January 7th. No image links. She is a model, right?
this may be good publicity for her. i never heard of her, and i’ve just blogged about her. but is all publicity good? will this be good for her career? think about, one person wrote something nasty about her (maybe true, maybe not), probably 30-50 people read it. She takes offense, sues, and now millions of people read it.
it just goes to show, you can’t control what’s said on the internet. if you try to correct something, depending on how you do it, you’ll most likely end up exacerbating the problem. be careful with what you say! also be careful with how you react! don’t forget Liskula Cohen!














