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Sites easy to self-promote on and increase your blog hits.

Clicking on WordPress’s Site Stats obsessive compulsively? Admit it, there’s something psychologically rewarding about knowing that people are clicking on your blog pages and perhaps even reading them fully. Here are some sites that I’ve pimped my own links on and have gotten results:

StumbleUpon

If you got here from SU, Thumbs Up!  The only toolbar I ever truly loved. If you’re not familiar with it, the idea behind StumbleUpon is very simple. You thumbs up or thumbs down pages and, using the patterns of what you like and don’t like, it will find similar pages for you.

I once “liked” my own page, added tags to it, and within an hour that page had 500 new hits. The view rate went down after that raging hour, and it didn’t happen to the other page I “liked” and tagged at the same time, but still… something happened there and I continue to get modest hits from StumbleUpon.

Yahoo! Answers

Find questions with a topic on which you have written, answer the question simply, and then cite yourself, noting that there’s more information on the blog page. Yahoo Answers isn’t just limited to searches from Yahoo users; a lot of these pages will come up with specific Google search terms as well.

Reddit

Given the number of contributors to the social news network reddit, you might think you’ll get overlooked. But if you have a clever, topical, or funny post title, the chances of getting hundreds of hits increases expotentionally.

Your Facebook, Twitter, Google Buzz, etc.

I wouldn’t recommend posting to your personal social network sites every time you publish, but if there’s something interesting or you’re really proud of that you think some of your friends will like, it can’t hurt. Be careful though if you’re writing something NSFW and are friends with your mom.

General advice to increase page traffic:

Post comments on other similar wordpress posts to your own. But don’t link to yourself solely as a blatant self-promotion, because that would be rude. Add more insight or a different perspective and make it clear you read that author’s post as well.

If you write specifically on a certain topic, it might be worth the effort to join a forum on that topic to find readers with an interest in your content.

Despite a common belief, adding more tags will not inherently increase page traffic. Tags will help search engines properly categorize but will not help the search engines add you to their databases. Pings, however, are a different story. Here is a great short description of pinging.

If I forgot any good sites or tips, feel free to leave a comment!

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Jon Stewart-Chris Wallace full 24 minute interview and Daily Show follow-ups


Once again, Jon Stewart, without aiming for that particular end, defends his controversial title as the most the trusted name in news.

I’ve seen his stand-up and he’s not the funniest guy. (During the writer strike, I think Colbert outshined him on comedic wit.) But Stewart’s an expert on pointing out hypocrisy, and, because I can think of no other words, so very very right.

He then goes back to The Daily Show to accuse Fox of airing a heavily edited version:
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/mon-june-20-2011/fox-news-channel—fair—balanced

And he later corrects his mistake that all of Fox News viewers are the most misinformed to most of Fox News viewers are the among the misinformed, with the exception of a couple shows. Politifact readers backlash to the “false” verdict. 

Video of Jon commenting on Politifact: http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-june-21-2011/fox-news-false-statements

(If someone can tell me how to embed these Daily Show videos without upgrading my wordpress account, that’d be great. Copy and pasting the site’s given embed code into the html box doesn’t work.)

Disappointing Things of 2011: Movies, rock music, and the GOP primary candidates

Ahoy 2011.  The second week of the 6th month of the year is already over.  Unless more interesting things start happening in the next half of the year, jibjab’s yearend video is going to be 30 seconds long and consist entirely of a certain liberal disappointment’s weiner.

1. Movies

Continuing the X-men movie franchise pattern of excellent casting and okay everything else, X-men: First Class has so far been the only decent action movie of the summer.  Correctness to comic canon and history aside, all I wanted to see was Magneto fuck some Soviets up, and it almost but didn’t quite deliver.

You already know what I think about Thor.  I didn’t see Jack Sparrow, exclusive edition, because I don’t like rum catch phrases enough to justify $12 and 2 hours of Johnny Depp.  I also didn’t see Rango, but believe that any motion picture with that that amount of short-sleeve, Hawaiian shirt requires more PCP.

2. Rock Music

Rock artists I found significant in high school that released crappy albums this year:  Foo Fighters, Incubus (anticipated), and Death Cab for Cutie.

Looking at the Billboard current rock 100 I’m depressed that I’m most impressed by Rise Against. Also, Korn apparently decided that its krumper fan base was not large enough and incorporated dubstep demon Skillrex, known for synthesizing the sick beats of a giraffe fucking a tugboat.

Linkin Park, I remember you fondly in my bad poetry-laden teenage years as the angry but catchy musical backdrops to badass mechabot warfare–a deep, complex music video metaphor for neglectful parents and broken post-pubescent hearts.  But when last year’s “Waiting for the End” was released, I could only think, how apt a song title for your career.  Really, your most recent music is the soundtrack to the most boring mid-life crisis ever.

3. Republican Presidential Contenders

We have:

Mama bear of Minnesota, Michelle Bachman.  She eats insanity and shits crazy.  Like Joan of Arc she’s a tragic figure in that she’s blatantly out of her mind, but someone gave her power anyway.  In Bachmanland, chlorofluorocarbons cure cancer, progressive taxation makes all of her 23 foster children cry, and Obama wants to stick his icky black power fingers in the assholes of Muslim dictators and then marry them.

T-Paw.  The only thing I know about him is the mononym T-Paw.

Then there’s the guy “who looks like every guy who ever fired your dad.”   Oh Mitt Romney.  You are the awkward moment when you say goodbye to someone and end up walking in the same direction.  You have the charisma of a school bus fire.  If you lose the actual Presidency in 2012, I’m quite certain you have the hairline to play the Presidency in every action film that will ever be made.

And then there are some other people who don’t matter and one who will remain unnamed that likes to pretend she still does.

Runner-ups to the largest disappointments of 2011 thus far include the unemployment rate and mid-season finale of South Park.

Retarded at Math

About a month ago I got the idea that maybe I should take the SAT again. My thoughts about it fluctuated from “You’re too old for this shit” to “Maybe improving significantly would help to offset the 10 Fs [NB: not related to math] on transfer school applications” to “Collegeboard is an exploitative monopoly and doesn’t deserve your money.”

After several weeks of procrastination and self-loathing, I caved to impulse and bought a used prep book off Half.com. My final rationale was that if I actually studied this time around and kicked ass then I could use the SAT score to IQ conversion chart to artificially inflate my self-esteem via arbitrary numerical representation of intellectual worth.

This particular book was aimed for kids already proficient at standardized testing and focused on strategies for solving the “harder to hardest” rated difficulty problems on the test. Knowing my weakness, I flipped to the Math section first. But on the first example problem, which the book so encouragingly stated I should be “embarrassed” if I got wrong, I immediately knew that I was doomed.

The was fear was confirmed: I am, and will always be, retarded at Math.

Most people who suck at Math accept it, embrace their strengths, and Math goes on to be subject they are happy to avoid outside of tax season for the rest of their adult lives. But I like Math. Math is pretty. If Math were a person, I’d give her high fives and hold her hair back when she drinks too much at a party and vomits profusely onto the toilet seat.

There’s this deep visceral frustration when I can’t “get” Math as easily as I can distinguish trochaic octameter in 19th century gothic lit and pull coherent, intellectually rich thesis topics out of my ass and identify which school of theory the thesis most closely embraces.

There’s also the fact that I’m quite taken with Math’s sister, Science.

So far, the fusion of Math in Science has been no factor. My ability to plug shit into formulas and use a calculator remains sound. But I know that for the really cool and interesting things I want to learn eventually, math is kind of very important.

At the end of the day, though, math is formulaic.  You can memorize your way through steps, even if you don’t understand why you’re doing them.  In my opinion, it’s harder to figure out how to write well from reading rather than figuring out how to solve a algebra problem by looking at an example with an explanation.

In this sense, I’m lucky.  If I get a professor that gives points for using the proper method and can forgive stupid shit like plugging in the wrong number, I’m at least passable.  “Retarded” may be a hyperbole, but the effort to outcome relationship I have with Math (It’s like that girl I’m just not that compatible with, but I keep pursuing.) maddens my nerd soul to the core.

I have tried and failed to get addicted to nicotine.

June 13, 2011 1 comment

Despite the attempts of the American public education in my youth to persuade me otherwise, I made a conscious decision in college to start smoking. It wasn’t necessarily because I wanted to make a statement about the personal decision to shit on my lungs or look like a rebel against the pious non-smoking decree on campus. Nor was it because of the media-frenzied peer pressure effect; I can’t even recall a time in my pre-smoker days when one of my smoker friends offered me a cigarette. I went to a small liberal arts school where anyone who was anybody knew everybody and I simply found that the people at the smoking table had more interesting conversations.

The first pack I ever bought was of Pall Mall menthols. Pall Mall because that’s what Vonnegut smoked. (“A classy way to commit suicide.”) And menthol because I wanted to be black. Kidding–menthol because I had the impression that’s what new smokers did. It was a terrible decision and I owe the conventional wisdom of Philip Morris an apology.

I smoked everyday consistently for my entire first semester. We had a Native American reservation,“The Rez,” nearby with reduced taxes where cigs were notoriously cheap and buying in bulk was encouraged. My go-to brand, Marlboro No. 27, was literally half the price from NYC, $5.50 as opposed to $11, and I was never short enough to bum and always generous.

Aside from being a social lubricant, I found cigarettes an effective study aid alternative to energy drinks. Improving concentration, they allowed my sleep-deprived brain to burn late on research papers without feeling high-strung and jittery. The half-life of nicotine in the body is about 2 hours compared to caffeine’s 5 hours.

Ah, notorious nicotine. It’s a cool drug, from a biochemical perspective. It has psychoactive properties of both stimulants and depressants. It can create a slew of pleasure-enhancing chemicals in the brain. And it has a lethal median dose (LD50) of about 40 mg in the human body compared to 70 mg for arsenic.

At my smoking career apex during finals, I was smoking about 10 a day or half a pack. Not terrible, but enough to haul my ass across campus several times a day to go to the table. Then exams ended. The school was too small and poor to offer an on-campus option so everyone was kicked out of the dorms for winter interim. The Rez was in the opposite direction of New Jersey, and I was too exhausted to drive there and stock up before heading home.

The first thing my body did upon realizing it was allowed to sleep again was get terribly terribly sick. I had to go to the doctor and get fancy broad-spectrum antibiotics, which, without insurance, cut deeply into my starving student budget. I didn’t smoke the first couple weeks back home and really didn’t want to. A lot of people use this recovery period as an opportunity to make a financially-sound and health-conscious decision to continue their cold turkey discontinuation. But I’m irresponsible. Which means a week after resuming puffing I ran out of cigarettes because I failed to stockpile.

What happened here was not what happens to people who identify as “addicts.”  I simply found myself too lazy to buy more nicotine.

Excuses were abundant: I hate driving in snow. It’s cold. It’s windy. I can’t find my lighter. They cost $2 more per pack here. Almost none of my friends at home smoke, and I don’t want to interrupt the social flow by going outside for a minute.

I ended up dropping out of the swanky liberal arts school for medical reasons the next semester and never resumed the smoking habit. Smoking paralyzes the cilia in the lungs, and if you stop smoking they will become unparalyzed and start making you cough. So starting and stopping smoking tends to suck. I tried to start a couple times, but my body is pretty good at telling me when I’m being an asshole to it.

Maybe I didn’t give the nicotine long enough to grip me. Maybe I don’t have the “addict gene.” Maybe I really am one of the laziest people in the world.

I’m on a medication called Wellbutrin now, which is a nicotinic agonist, so I physically can’t try smoking without vomiting. So I guess the real point of my post is: Does anyone want to buy my hookah?

Are private prisons worth it?

The most widely cited study in argument of states contracting out private prisons on the Internet seems to be: “Do Government Agencies Respond to Market Pressures? Evidence from Private Prisons” headed by James F. Blumstein of Vanderbilt Law School.

$15,000,000 savings it says. Wow. How can you argue with $15 million more in a state’s pocket?

Well, you can read the study:

http://www.cca.com/static/assets/Blumstein_Cohen_Study.pdf

…which unsurprisingly received funding by the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and by the Association for Private Correctional and Treatment Organizations (APCTO).

In using the study as evidence in favor of contracting out prisons over public prison, it’s important to note the study does not focus on the direct cost savings that accrue as a result of the lower costs of privately-provided government services, but rather the rate of growth in expenditures on publicly held prisoners.

I’m going to assume the numbers are accurate and assume the study’s own attempts to weed out extraneous variables were admirable. I can’t fact check the math largely because my math education hasn’t covered regression analysis. (Ugh, lengthy multivariable formulas are every journalist’s nightmare.) But I can argue that $15 million in savings is not terribly significant when by the study’s own numbers, “in 2004 the average Department of Corrections expenditures in states without private prisoners was approximately $493 million.”

The study also concludes that “while we believe this is an important finding and should provide policy makers with an additional reason to favor privatization of some portion of a state’s prisons, we realize that this is only a cost-analysis, and does not necessarily relate to the benefits of private versus public prisons. A benefit-cost analysis would need to account for both the cost savings as well as the benefits of public versus private incarceration.”

Cost-benefit analysis, eh?

3% estimated average savings versus the numerous qualitative arguments against private prisons such as:

  • It create incentives for both legal and illegal methods of increasing sentence terms for prisoners.  Obvious ethical quandaries ensue.
  • Corporations cut corners, most often in the areas of staff pay, training, and Research and Development. This results in facilities that are short staffed, inexperienced, and with high turnover rates.  Some studies promote that private facilities are a recipe for poor containment.
  • Some private institutions reserve the right to reject high cost inmates, sending them to public facilities, thereby artificially inflating their cost-savings figures.
  • The Israeli Supreme Court declared private prisons unconstitutional under the premise that the profit motive undermines prisoner’s rights and the incarceration thus loses legitimacy.
There are plenty of areas where capitalism trumps a single-payer system, but when you’re talking about incarceration, you dive into a litany of problems where the benefits just don’t materialize.

Fun Link Friday, I got a tumblr.

I started a tumblr a while back, but I suck at commitment so there’s not much there.  I haven’t decided whether I should move Fun Link friday, but if I start doing Webcomic Wednesday again, it’ll definitely go on the tumblr instead of here.  We’ll see:

http://clantilyscad.tumblr.com/

http://www.npr.org/2011/05/09/136054170/first-listen-cast-recording-the-book-of-mormon  Book of Mormon sounds awesome.  NPR first listen for the win.  Unfortunately, last time I checked (a couple months ago), tickets were sold out until November.

http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=brostmodernism&defid=4106500  Brostmodernism.

http://www.slate.com/id/2294072/?from=rss  Pot helps Autistic child.

http://shuttersalt.com/blog/most-amazing-time-lapse-video-milky-way-ever-made-seriously  Holy timelapse. Rarely do I have the attention span to a fully watch one, but god damn.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/23/epic-cover-letter_n_865569.html?  “Customer support and shit? Mega-check.”  How can you not hire a guy with a cover letter this good?

http://www.ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles.html  How online personalizaton causes cognitive tunnel vision.  One of the best TED talks I’ve seen in a while.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjNgNDZzH5o  Louis CK gives comments in a Q&A on his “shittiest generation” Conan bit

Saddest picture ever, first seen on reddit’s first world problems: