We have nothing against love, but frankly it’s making some people stupid.
From being credited as a platform for the Egyptian revolution to confusing brand owners, Facebook made quite a few headlines this week. For your convenience, we present a few of the most interesting in one handy recap.
The start of Fashion Month is officially here with yesterday’s kickoff of Mercedes Benz Fashion Week in New York. Hopefully you’ve taken note of lessons learned from the first season at Lincoln Center. If you have room for one more tool to stay on top of the New York fashion week schedule, shopping search engine ShopStyle has updated their mobile offerings (apps and mobile website) to include show schedules, designer profiles, runway photos, event coverage, and industry news.
Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Foursquare Oh My!
Our technology-infused culture has become over-saturated and overwhelming, don’t you think? It’s not easy sifting through the messages, texts, emails and tweets that bombard us every minute of every day.
Lindsay Lohan and courtroom controversy is nothing new, but her latest appearance proves someone out there is still inspired by the troubled entertainer – or so someone would have you believe.
Apparently most cars on the road are naked. At least, Carstache thinks so. What is Carstache, you ask? It’s a mustache for your car.
It’s been a full season now since Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week wound down from its new digs. The ice-breaker most often heard for the inaugural Lincoln Center fashion week was “How did you like the new venue?â€
I attended the very first fashion week ever held at Bryant Park as a design student at Parsons School of Design. It had just been cleaned out of its drug dealers. A few XXX peep-show theaters still lined 42nd street.
So with a new venue officially christened, and a new season around the corner, how did it stack up to Bryant Park and what did I learn from the first time at Lincoln Center?
This week, Lady Gaga leaked a photo of her upcoming Vogue cover to her followers on Twitter, and E! is reporting that Vogue reps are trying desperately to get the pictures taken off the Internet, since the issue has not yet been released to newsstands.
AOL’s on quite the blog acquiring spree lately. Following the reported $25-40 million acquisition of the TechCrunch network, AOL’s next acquisition is of the extremely popular site the Huffington Post.