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May 11 2012
How Live Tweeted Brain Surgery Reached 14.5 Million People
A live tweeted brain surgery this week reached an online audience of more than 14 million people, according to the hospital that used social media to broadcast the operation.
Dr. Kim Dong of Houston’s Memorial Hermann hospital system performed a brain tumor resection surgery on a 21-year-old patient Wednesday morning. But the routine operation came with a catch — outside the surgery room, his every move was relayed on Twitter by hospital staff, and graphic photos and video were posted to Pinterest, YouTube and other platforms. A brain tumor specialist on hand helped answer questions.
“We wanted to spread the educational experience as far as possible,” Natalie Camarata, Memorial Hermann’s digital marketing manager, told Mashable on Thursday.
Mission accomplished, if the early numbers are any indication. The audience of 14.5 million people came through the hospital’s website, broadcast partners ABC.com and The Houston Chronicle, Storify, other social media platforms and viral word-of-tweet chatter. Camarata says 230,000 viewers on CoveritLive followed the action for an average of 29 minutes each.
During the operation, Dr. Kim and his team opened an approximately two-inch by two-inch “window” in the patient’s skull. The window gave Dr. Kim access to her brain, which was exposed for more than an hour. Guided by a fiber optic camera, he then located the woman’s tumor beneath the surface of her brain and cut it out.
SEE ALSO: Brain Surgery Tweeted Live [PICS]
One major part of making the operation’s social media broadcast a success was fine tuning SEO by translating doctor jargon into more familiar language.
“What we find is that the way physicians and medical professionals speak is very different than the way regular people speak and use the Internet,” says Kelly McCormick, the hospital’s online advertising and SEO specialist. “The more common words are also the more searched.”
When Dr. Kim removed the window into his patient’s skull, for example, he and his team referred to it as a “bone flap.” But, McCormick says, most viewers were referring to it as a “piece of the skull,” so that was the language the hospital used for much of its content. The rule applied to more common topics, too, such as using “doctor” instead of “physician.” The most catchy term among casual viewers? “Drilling into the brain,” McCormick says.
But the live tweeted brain surgery wasn’t McCormick, Camarata and company’s first rodeo. In February, the hospital performed the world’s first ever live tweeted open heart surgery, documentation of which reached more than 125 million people over the course of about a month, Camarata told Mashable. McCormick says that helped her prepare for optimizing search terms this go-round.
Image courtesy Memorial Hermann Healthcare System
More About: pinterest, Twitter, YouTube
May 10 2012
Twitter Hires Hint at Email Expansion
Twitter has hired the team behind personalized email marketing provider RestEngine.
The startup runs re-activation, merchandising, cross-promotion and viral acquisition email campaigns that it personalizes using social graph data.
Here is the statement RestEngine posted on its website:
We’re very excited to announce that the RestEngine team is joining the Twitter flock! Just over two and half years ago we founded RestEngine to help social app publishers send targeted one-to-one emails based on a subscriber’s social graph. It’s been an incredible journey where we had the opportunity to work with some of the leading social app publishers.
With our customers, we’ve iterated on our social marketing automation platform while defining a new set of best practices for this brand new world of outbound social marketing. We’re thrilled to now focus our email skills and marketing automation know-how on a much larger scale at Twitter.
Three of four employees at the company will join Twitter, according to TechCrunch.
Twitter recently acquired Summify, a startup that set users daily emails with five stories they should read based on what their friends were talking about on social networks.
Though a Twitter spokesperson declined to comment on why the company bought RestEngine’s personalized email marketing team, some have speculated that it could be working on an email digest of “great tweets you missed.”
More About: RestEngine, Twitter
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Twitter Users React to Controversial ‘Time’ Cover
Time unveiled a very revealing cover for its latest issue, and Twitter has had plenty to say about it.
The cover features Jamie Lynne Grumet, a 26-year-old California mom, shown breast-feeding her son Aram, who turns four next month. In the issue — titled, “Are You Mom Enough?” — Grumet is interviewed about her parenting decisions and the modern relationship between mother and baby.
Internet users responded quickly to the cover — it has already been Photoshopped, criticized and applauded.
Due to the provocative nature of the image and its widespread popularity, some feel that the cover is hurting the boy’s reputation in the future. Some feel that it’s exploiting mothers. Others have found humor in the cover, manipulating the image and the topic by referencing other bits of pop culture.
Here’s a round-up of what Twitter users have to say about the controversial topic. Do you agree with anyone in the gallery? Let us know in the comments.
1. @MsJamieLynne

Grumet herself has already tweeted about the magazine's release, followed by several retweets from Time and Twitter users promoting the interview.
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More About: cover photos, features, magazine, parenting, time magazine, Twitter
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3 Ways Companies Can Leverage Social Reviews
Ann Smarty is a search marketer and full-time web entrepreneur. Ann blogs on search and social media tools. Her newest project, My Blog Guest, is a free platform for guest bloggers and blog owners. Follow Ann on Twitter at @seosmarty and on Google+.
Testimonials can be powerful marketing tools. But in the digital age customers have reason to doubt if every good review is a reflection of a good product or a made up comment meant to boost a company’s reputation. Social media testimonials, on the other hand, are harder to fake because there’s generally a person with a record of activity behind each one.
In fact, collecting and re-posting positive social media reviews not only shines a credible light on a company but may actually help search results for the brand and promote the company’s biggest supporters. Here are three ways to do this.
1. Twitter Favorites
Someone is always tweeting about your business and you want to be there to listen and respond to what people are saying. That’s why collecting the most favorable mentions is something you need to embrace. Twitter Favorites is a great tool to instantly save anyone’s Twitter testimonials for promotion. Below are three great ways to search Twitter for these items.
- Determine all possible ways your brand name may be used. This will include: [brand name], [brandname], [brandname.com]. Twitter search allows you to combine all of them in one search like this: ["brand name" OR brandname OR brandname.com]
- Filter out your own tweets with “minus” operator: ["brand name" OR brandname OR brandname.com -from:@brandname]
- Filter out re-tweets of your own tweets by searching: ["brand name" OR brandname OR brandname.com -from:@brandname -RT]
Here’s an example.
If you are using Tweetdeck, Hootsuite or Cyfe, consider adding the following search commands as well. You can see an example in the image below.
- Filter out links with -infilter:links command to find unlinked mentions
- Search for “unsatisfied” and/or “happy customers” by adding :) or :( to a search query
Here’s an example.
By re-tweeting Twitter testimonials and adding them to your favorites list, you give them a chance to rank better in Twitter “top” search results, which is a default tab for Twitter search. You can also use these reviews in the following places.
- Add your favorites to your signature with Wisestamp
- Import your favorites to your Facebook page
- Create a widget of your favorites using Twitter’s official tool to share the testimonials on your site which would certainly add to your brand credibility
- Create an RSS feed. Twitter has removed the link to your Favorites RSS feed, but it’s still working and can be found here: https://twitter.com/favorites/TWITTERUSERNAMEHERE.rss.
2. Pinterest
Pinterest may have plenty of possible applications — one of which is to let people better understand your business. So creating a separate board to feature your social media testimonials, like those you pulled from Twitter, can be a good idea. This will allow your followers to opt out if they don’t want to see your testimonials in their timelines without unfollowing you. This will also serve as a page that can rank on Google.
To take items like tweets and put them on your Pinterest board, consider using Pin a Quote. (See the example below.) Another way to share your text testimonials on Pinterest is with Screen to Pin or Url2Pin.it. Both of these can instantly create a screenshot of a page and share it on Pinterest. Finally, consider pinning videos, which make for great exposure on this site.
3. Content Curating Sites
Most content curation sites support Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and other key content sources you need to curate for your brand mentions. (To better understand what content curation is, I highly recommend this article by Gianluca Fiorelli.) Here are three curation tools I use and recommend.
- Storify: Summarizes Twitter search results, especially around your official hashtag.
- Themeefy: Creates tablet-friendly magazines you can easily download.
- ScoopIt: Aggregates sources into one RSS feed.
Are you collecting and re-packaging your social media testimonials to promote them? Please let us know your tactics!
More About: brands, content curation, contributor, features, Marketing, pinterest, Twitter
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Want Your Startup Name in the Dictionary? Choose Wisely
The English language is constantly evolving. Experts at Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English Dictionary perennially add words that have been invented and accepted in our daily lexicons. The practice can be controversial, however, since it sometimes involves removing other, older words entirely.
For instance, the term “cassette tape” was recently extracted after it was deemed unnecessary and redundant. Both “cassette” and “tape” were in the dictionary already, and the words naturally refer to each other.
Lit majors and writers may get emotional when certain words disappear, but the practice nonetheless reveals where our language is heading. When examining recently added words, it comes as no surprise that many of these words are tech-related.
In particular, for a brand to gain entry into one of the world’s foremost dictionaries it must be deemed a universal, generic term. Take “Xerox” for example. The brand name is so common that it has since become a verb, as well: “Sheila, xerox that memo for me, would you?”
SEE ALSO: 10 Sassy Brands on Social MediaYou’ve probably noticed that many startup names, especially those in the tech industry, appear rather strange at first. What did you think when you first heard about a little website called Twitter? Admittedly, using a word potentially associated with caffeinated agitation was a little risky.
Startups intending to make a splash walk a thin line during the naming process. If successful, brand name chatter can help drive awareness and fuel much-needed buzz. So, how should a startup go about creating an orignal, memorable name that will perhaps earn a place in the pantheon of iconic brands?
David Placek, president and founder of Lexicon Branding, knows a thing or two about brand names that stick. He and his team have created several extremely well-known brand names, such as BlackBerry, PowerBook, Pentium and Swiffer, to name a few.

Placek shared three things to keep in mind when creating a new brand name. First, be distinctive. Coining a new word will help set a brand apart, and may even help a business move more quickly through the marketplace. “Think of Java or BlackBerry,” says Placek. “Both are food-related, but when applied to technology brands, they suddenly take on new meaning.”
Second, the word should be catchy and interesting. “Twitter invented a new routine of communication, and so they necessarily invented a name that signals innovation,” says Placek.
Finally, Placek believes the name should sound positive. “The name Twitter is light and easy, and has a nice blend of letters,” he says.
So, how do other tech brand names fare? The Name Inspector blog has compiled and organized a list of companies by their linguistic tendencies. Site creator Christopher Johnson divides well-known websites into groups, like “Real Names,” “Blends” and “Affixed Words.”
One particular naming convention caught our eye. Many startups have chosen to use the “-ster” suffix, as in Flixster, Friendster, Napster, Dogster, Feedster, et al. Placek maintains this convention is an easy way to “indicate action.” The original usage can be traced back to 1936, to a word you may not realize also doubles a brand name: Dumpster. The Dempster brothers played on their last name, and the term became the industry term for a “standardized metal waste container.”
To better understand how brand names are entered into dictionaries, we touched base with Peter Sokolowski, editor-at-large for Merriam-Webster, Inc. We wanted to know if brands like Google are close to gaining entry.
“Before a brand name can be entered in the dictionary, we usually look for evidence of generic use: Kleenex, Dumpster, Q-Tip, Jeep,” says Sokolowski. “As a verb, ’xerox’ means ‘to make a photocopy,’ not ‘to use a Xerox-brand machine.’ Google is a bit different, since it usually does mean ’to use the Google search engine.’”

Brands like Google aren’t quite at the Xerox level yet, although we reckon they are close. Yahoo and Bing, as well as some other niche search engines, still have enough market share that the verb “to google” isn’t yet ubiquitous. That is, the verb refers to the process of using the Google search engine, not to searching in general.
The same goes for “facebooking,” “tweeting” or “youtubing,” says Sokolowski. “Obviously ‘facebook’ as a verb is specific to that one site. The same could be said for ‘youtube.’ The model for these words is ‘google’ (as a verb) and not ‘xerox.’”
If Google still has a ways to go, then your startup has even further. But Placek has some advice for startups, citing two quotes that guide his own work. First, from Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes: “A man’s mind once stretched, never goes back to where it was.” And second, from author George Orwell’s essay Why I Write: “Good prose is like a windowpane.” Both speak to the power language has to enhance our perception, and both suggest that time spent envisioning a great product name is not spent in vain. In fact, Placek believes we should be dedicating more time to this part of the process.
“Fundamentally, a name can do a lot for you,” Placek continues. “It can add several dimensions. It’s the beginning of your story…It can make a great product move in the marketplace more efficiently, and then it can become a stronger brand, in the end.”
As prevalent as brands like Facebook, Google, Twitter and YouTube are in our daily lives, they’ve not yet reached the pinnacle of brand success: becoming verbs unto themselves. But we predict a few of them just might make the jump in the coming decades.
Which tech brand names do you think will eventually become so commonplace that they reach contemporary dictionaries? Let us know in the comments below.
Image courtesy of Flickr, missha, Xavier Encinas, Kalexanderson
More About: branding, features, Google, language, Literature, Startups, trending, Twitter
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Bing Reinvents Social Search and Discovery
The New Bing

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Bing has been reinvented, offering enhanced search results that tap into the power of social media. Microsoft has done this by pulling people out of search results and putting them in their place: A right-hand social column that will eventually include Facebook, Twitter, Google+ Quora and LinkedIn integration, as well as people who may know something about your most recent Bing query. It even offers a way to ask questions on your favorite social network, directly through Bing.
It’s something of an about-face for the Number 2 search engine, which up until earlier this year has been slowly but surely integrating Facebook information (like “Likes”) directly into Bing Search results. This update is actually Phase 2 of a major overhaul. Bing quietly rolled out the first part last week. It stripped away the right column of results information (leaving a large white well) and moved a more concise “Related Searches” to a small middle column. Facebook Likes results integration remained, but appeared as a more subtle, gray thumbs-up next to the result, and there was a lot of white space on the right.
Starting today, some of Bing’s reported network of 100 million users will see a new column filling that space: The “What Your Friends May Know” social sidebar. For now, the sidebar only works with Facebook, but even with just that one network, the level of integration is quite intense. To see the new pane at work, you have to sign into Facebook and install the Bing App in Facebook. With that done, your social pane will be filled with recent Bing activity that’s also been shared on Facebook. When you enter a search query in the Bing interface on the left, the pane will also display a list of Facebook friends, and topic experts who might be able to assist with your query.
Bing Exec Derrick Connell told me the goal of the new Bing is to “surface people, not web pages.”
In the social pane, there’s also an “Ask friends…” with a small Facebook icon next to it. Here, you type a question possibly related to your search. When you click within the field, a link icon appears next to your search results on the left; click any of them to add them to your Facebook posts. You can also ask those experts and friends to assist in your search. A tiny person-plus icon appears next to each of them. Click one (or more) and they will get a notification about your query.
How does Bing build these “Friends Who Might Know” lists? Microsoft execs explained they’re leveraging as much publicly available data as possible from Facebook (for now) and soon Twitter and other networks. Inclusion in the list is not necessarily based on something you posted about the topic. The sidebar includes people you know through your social networks that have, say, posted a photo about the topic, liked a certain relevant topic or searched for a similar topic in Bing, and people you don’t know, who are, for example, known Topic Experts and Enthusiasts (identified by Bing). All of them could be considered helpful in your quest for knowledge. Conversations revolving around a query topic are viewable through the social pane — you just hover over the activity and a small box will slide out to the left with the original post. You can add comments in any conversation in the activity pane or see the conversation in the slideout.
Not all public posts on these social networks can be scrapped in, so Microsoft turned, first, to its close friend Facebook. Thanks to that close relationship, Microsoft gets “a set of public data that’s part of the fire hose deal with Facebook,” Microsoft’s Connell told me. In fact, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was, according to Microsoft, shown the project and liked it. He was even happy to see the other social networks in the mix.
Eventually the Social Sidebar will add Twitter data. Microsoft says it has access to at least 6 months of publicly-available posts.
Google+ content should make an appearance, too, though it will only be what Microsoft can scrap in. It’s unlikely Google will ever agree to share its private network data with Microsoft. Google is heavily invested in deep integration between Google+ and its own search engine, having launched Search plus Your World earlier this year.
Despite all the new guidance from friends and experts, Bing still wants to help search users with more-targeted results. So it’s taking that somewhat sparse second column and introducing “What Bing Knows” or snapshot (Get it? The first column is “What the Web Knows,” The second column is “What Bing Knows” and the third is “What Your Friends Know”). This well won’t fill up for every search — instead, Microsoft identified four key areas of where it can help: Restaurants, Hotels, Movies and Events and People. The results in this area will include action items like restaurant and hotel reservations. In People, Bing will search across multiple social networks help you find the right person. These features were not available to test at press time.
Microsoft’s goal with all these changes? One, to clean up Bing. The company admits the page was getting too cluttered — it had assumed Web pages would be getting taller and thinner, when in fact, everything is getting shorter and wider. However, one of the key reasons for the change was to “stop corrupting the [search] experience with people,” said a Bing exec. That might also be a subtle dig at Google and its people-populated Search plus Your World. Bing execs also repeatedly said they think users want people — not Web pages — to help them.
There was also some direct criticism of Google. Microsoft execs said the difference between Bing and Google is Microsoft’s product is open while Google’s is closed. When Google’s “Search Plus Your World” Launched, Google faced some criticism for not surfacing Twitter and Facebook results. Bolstered by Bing’s 300 million entities in its database, Microsoft execs contend that its approach is more valuable than Google’s “pure semantic-based model” because it offers pure search information, letting users get info from topic experts. Additionally, Microsoft includes structured data around core topics that are of interest to the broadest set of people.
But Does It Work
I’ve been running the new Bing for a few days now and can report that it more or less works as advertised. First of all, the search results interface is the cleanest I’ve seen it in years. Yes, it looks almost Google-like. I tried a bunch of searches like “Barcelona,” “Tesla,” and “Broadway.” In each case, my “Friends Who Might Know” field in the Social pane filled up with people who had, for instance, posted photos of Nicola Tesla, or “Liked” the “Broadway League.” I was able to blend links and questions in the open field above and then post directly to my Facebook page, along with notifications to my individual friends and experts. No one has answered yet, but those seeing these queries were part of a fairly small beta group.
I noticed, by the way, that when I put in multi-word queries, I got few, if any, “Friends Who Might Know” results.
In Facebook, I did have to install the Bing App. It defaults to sharing your posts with Everyone. If you do a lot of searching, you may want to dial that down a bit.
If you’re usually logged into Facebook and often turn to friends for, say, travel or buying advice, this could be a useful tool for you. Microsoft contends that this is a natural way to find answers. They do not want to reinvent the web, Bing execs explained, “We don’t have to own it to surface it. The beauty of the Internet is you don’t have to be a social network to surface people, you don’t have to be a hotel to surface reservations.”
You may not see the What Your Friends Know or Social Sidebar in Bing for a while — Microsoft said it’ll be rolling this out slowly — but starting today you can visit http://www.bing.com/new to sign up for availability notification.
With this update, the competing search philosophies are clearer than ever. Google sees the world as a deep blend of data, people and activities, all of which can be mined simultaneously for a rich and useful experience. Bing sees a more structured world, where social interactions, while extremely helpful, are kept a safe distance from the core results you desire. Which approach is right? Let us know what you think in the comments.
For more details, check out the video where Microsoft explains the Bing update.
Video: Bing Originals: Search goes social
More About: bing, Facebook, Google, microsoft, Search, Twitter
May 09 2012
Brain Surgery Tweeted Live [PICS]
Dr. Kim Dong of Houston’s Memorial Hermann hospital performed a brain tumor resection surgery on a young adult patient Wednesday morning. The operation was a routine one for him, but this time it came with a catch: His every move was live tweeted by hospital staff, with graphic photos and video posted to Twitter and other platforms along the way.
“What will come out of this is a detailed, real-time sequence of what happens in a brain surgery through all the stages from preparation, to shaving the hair, to making the incision, to draping,” Dr. Kim told Mashable on Monday. “People are very anxious and want to know what goes on in a brain surgery like this.”
Here’s how the operation happened: Dr. Kim and his team opened an approximately two-inch by two-inch “window” in a 21-year-old woman’s skull. The window gave Dr. Kim access to the woman’s brain, which was exposed for more than an hour. Guided by a fiber optic camera, he then located the woman’s tumor beneath the surface of her brain and cut it out.
While Dr. Kim worked in the operating room, a team outside the room documented everything on social media. The posted videos to YouTube and photos to Pinterest, with a feed from Dr. Kim’s fiber optic camera providing an unprecedented view from inside the patient’s skull. A brain tumor specialist answered questions from the Twitter audience during the operation, and Storify presentations recapped all the action.
SEE ALSO: Behind the Scenes of the World’s First Live-Tweeted Open-Heart Surgery
This was not Memorial Hermann‘s first major operation to be documented in a major way on social media. In February, the hospital performed the world’s first-ever live-tweeted open heart surgery. That operation delivered more than 125 million views through Twitter, Storify and media coverage, according to Natalie Camarata, the hospital system’s digital marketing manager.
“The idea is always just to pull back a curtain and show in detail how something that happens every day in our hospitals actually works,” Camarata told Mashable earlier this week.
Check out the Storify below to see how Memorial Hermann used social media to document and recap Dr. Kim’s brain surgery. Be warned, though — some of the photos and video are graphic.
Do you think this was a cool use of social media for public education? Let us know in the comments.
[View the story "Brain Surgery Live on Twitter" on Storify]
President Obama Wants Campaign Song Requests for Spotify Playlist
President Obama will now take your song requests.
President Obama’s team has set up a page on BarackObama.com for voters to submit potential campaign songs that could be added to his Obama 2012 Supporter Picks playlist on Spotify.
“As we head into rally season, what music gets you fired up?” the page asks. “Submit your favorite tracks below, and you could see them on the Obama 2012 Supporter Picks playlist on Spotify.”
Spotify is a music streaming site that gives users free access to millions of tracks on their computers and mobile devices. It also allows users to create playlists, see what their friends are listening to and to download third-party apps to discover everything from song lyrics to recommendations.
SEE ALSO: Obama Supports Gay Marriage, ABC Breaks News OnlineObama’s team is no stranger to using Spotify to get the word out about his campaign and connecting with supporters. In February, they introduced their first playlist which featured songs from a variety of artists, from Bruce Springsteen and Earth Wind & Fire to No Doubt, Florence + The Machine and Sugarland. It also featured “Let’s Stay Together” by Al Green, which Obama sang a few weeks earlier at the Apollo Theater in New York.
In other presidential news, Obama also declared his support for same-sex marriage in an interview with ABC News Wednesday.
Which songs do you think are good for political campaigns? Let us know in the comments.
More About: Facebook, Mobile, Music, president obama, spotify, Twitter, U.S. presidential election
May 07 2012
Rob Delaney: First Comedian to Win ‘Funniest Person on Twitter’
Rob Delaney is a comedian, actor, father — and can now add “Funniest Person on Twitter” to the list. (Talk about a #humblebrag.)
The comedian was awarded the title Sunday night during the airing of the Comedy Awards on Comedy Central.
Delaney is known in the comedy world for becoming a household name on Twitter, which led to other endeavors like a television deal on Comedy Central. Today, the comedian has nearly 400,000 people following him on Twitter.
SEE ALSO: Social Media Is No Joke at This Year’s Comedy AwardsThe award was viewers’ choice, and Delaney was on the list among humorous heavyweights like Steve Martin, Aziz Ansari and Stephen Colbert, to name a few. Voters were able to select their favorite up to the airing of the show.
This is one of many digital categories included in the Comedy Awards this year. Other categories included “Best Remix, Mash-Up or Supercut,” “Best Comedy App,” “Best Comedy Podcast” and “Best Viral Original.”
Social media has become an important tool for comedians, whether it’s for marketing or experimenting with content — or just to have fun. Twitter was a big topic of discussion at the taping of the Comedy Awards.
But when advising how to crush it on Twitter, Delaney says you can’t spend too much time thinking about it.
“Don’t work too hard on a tweet,” says Delaney. “When you see people trying to, for example, synthesize two current news stories into one ‘clever’ tweet, it can get pretty clunky and their labor is obvious, rendering their tweet unfunny.”
In honor of Delaney’s achievement, we’ve gathered 10 of the comedian’s funniest tweets. What do you think of comedians getting recognized for their acts on Twitter? Sound off in the comments.
10 Tweets From the 'Funniest Person on Twitter'

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More About: comedy, comedy awards, Comedy Central, humor, trending, Twitter
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May 06 2012
Twitter Users Employ WWII Hashtag to Skirt French Election Law [VIDEO]
Socialist challenger François Hollande unseated Nicolas Sarkozy in the French presidential election Sunday, making Sarkozy the first French president in 30 years to lose reelection.
Twitter users circumvented an election results embargo — as they did April 22 during the first round of voting — by using code names for the two candidates. A 1977 French law prohibits the release of results before 8 p.m. on election night and fines violators up to $99,000.
Discussions used the same hashtag, #radiolondres, as they did during the first round of voting. Radio Londres was a World War II BBC broadcast, which would use code words to communicate with the French resistance fighters during the Nazi occupation of France.
Among different code names, Sarkozy was referred to as Hungarian Tokaji wine, because of his Hungarian father, and Rolex, because of his extravagant lifestyle. Hollande was referred to as Gouda cheese and Flanby, a limp pudding, which his opponents say reflect his ability to be president. During the first round of voting, Left Party candidate Jean-Luc Melechon’s pseudonym was tomato, a reference to the former Soviet Union. Front National Party candidate Marine Le Pen was called by the names of various dictators.
Swiss, Belgian and French Canadian Twitter users — including Jean-J. Stréliski, below, a professor in Montreal — participated in the talks of results. They contended their discussions could not be restricted by the French law.
53% de remise sur le gouda et 47% sur les Rolex #radiolondres
— Jean-J. Stréliski (@jjstreliski) May 6, 2012
Though we don’t yet have data on the volume of Sunday’s #radiolondres tweets, the hashtag received some 64,575 mentions on April 22, according to Vanksen.
Should France punish Twitter users who broke the election result discussion embargo using code? Sound off in the comments.
Image courtesy of the Government of France
More About: election, france, Twitter
May 05 2012
Top 10 Twitter Pics of the Week
1. Pac-tivity
The Tupac hologram keeps turning up in our top 10. It is already famous on social media, but what about a movie career? This week’s number one is this Tupac #hologram parody, posted to Twitter by @RatchetPictures (950+ followers).
Click here to view this gallery.
The upper echelon of popular Twitter pics this week dealt with cuteness, beauty and even some truth. And in between, there were reminders that all was not as it appeared.
As the new month began, protest pictures found their way to Twitter, and as the week progressed, comedy took over.
We certainly had no shortage of pictures from which to choose, sifting through 42 million to select this week’s top 10.
Check out the full analysis for this week’s pics from our partners at Skylines, who created a custom algorithm to allow us to find these needles in a haystack the size of this planet. Gracing us with her insight is Skylines’ writer and analyst Julie Donders (@IkbenJulie), who makes sense of these sometimes chaotic selections with her spot-on captions.
SEE MORE: Top 10 Twitter Pics of the Week
Don’t miss this eclectic mix of comedy, chaos, creativity and courage as we bring to you this week’s Top 10 Twitter Pics.
In case you missed them, here are last week’s Top 10 Twitter Pics.
More About: Top 10 Twitter Pics, trending, Twitter
May 03 2012
How News of Junior Seau’s Death Spread on Twitter
NFL legend Junior Seau was found dead at his Southern California home on Wednesday. He was 43 years old and mortally wounded by a gunshot to the chest when his girlfriend discovered him unconscious, according to reports.
Seau’s death is being investigated as a possible suicide. He was a six-time All Pro and made 12 straight Pro Bowls. He led his hometown San Diego Chargers to a Super Bowl appearance in 1995, and starred at the University of Southern California.
Seau’s on-field excellence, coupled with his reputation as a kind, friendly and compassionate man, led to an outpouring of grief, anger and remembrance on Twitter before his death had even been widely reported by news media.
Fans offered condolences, current players marked his greatness and former players shared memories. Reporters posted photos, videos and news accounts.
Social analytics firm Topsy tracked how the Twittersphere followed the Seau story. The first mention of his possible death, Topsy says, came from user @ceceliajonas15, who posted this message at 10:13 a.m., PST:
I hope its not true that Junior Seau committed suicide. RIP
— Cecelia noel (@ceceliajonas15) May 2, 2012
Over the next 40 minutes or so, a few more Seau-related tweets trickled out. The first one to spread widely, however, came from @HarveyLevinTMZ, who at 10:52 a.m. posted this message:
There are cops at Junior Seau’s home… we are told something really bad happened.More to come…
— Harvey Levin(@HarveyLevinTMZ) May 2, 2012
The Topsy chart below shows how frequently Twitter users mentioned topics related to Seau’s death immediately before and during the hours following that first tweet:

In the 24 hours following the reports of Seau’s death Wednesday, more than than 421,000 tweets mentioned the news, according to Topsy. As rumors spread that Seau may have committed suicide, then reports surfaced he died of a gunshot wound, then police confirmed they were investigating his death as a potential suicide, Twitter mentions per minute about the topics surged.
This chart shows how Twitter users discussed the reported causes of Seau’s death. Note how TMZ’s Harvey Levin sent a tweet which opened the floodgates:
How did you learn about Junior Seau? Did you follow the story on Twitter as it developed? Let us know in the comments.
GALLERY: Twitter Mourns Junior Seau, Questions Pro Football
1. @DeionSanders

NFL legend Deion Sanders expressed disbelief when he first heard the news.
Click here to view this gallery.
Thumbnail image courtesy San Diego Chargers.
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