BuzzFeed

Find Your New Favorite Thing


Posts Tagged

julia allison

  • Video: The Web’s Top Chick Show, With Dudes

    Gawker videographer Richard Blakeley and two other grown men in dresses parody Julia Allison’s web show, “NonSociety.”

  • NonSociety Backlash

    Tech Buzz Julia Allison’s NonSociety project has inspired a wide variety of satire. The launch of the project — timed perfectly with Allison’s appearance on the cover of Wired — has stirred up the inevitable backlash from bloggers, who’re already tired of Allison’s particularly noxious strain of ubiquity (of course, they could always just not look).

  • Nonsociety

    Tech Buzz Julia Allison’s latest venture is Nonsociety, a website where she and her two best blogger friends, Mary Rambin and Meghan Asha, will post video blog entries. The three plan to expand Nonsociety by adding more contributors in the coming months.

  • Fake Farewells

    Tech Buzz Jakob Lodwick, Vimeo founder and self-proclaimed Fameball, has said good-bye to Tumblr and “the Social Web.” Will it last? It’s the latest in a long line of “final posts” — Dave Winer, Julia Allison come to mind — that really mean “I’m really upset and I’m taking a break”. We don’t think it will stick, but goodbyes are always fun to read, even if they’re fake.

  • Microfame

    Tech Buzz Rex Sorgatz of Fimoculous gives us the 8 easy steps to becoming a small-scale Internet celebrity in the new issue of New York. It’s funny. Unless you only hang out with other bloggers, you come to realize that most people really have no idea who any of these people are.

  • Charles Forman

    Tech Buzz The founder of pseudo-dating site iminlikewithyou has been dating Julia Allison for the last few months. The newest addition to Julia’s tech-harem might actually not be a douche. Sometimes nice guys do get the girl! (Haha, who are we kidding?)

  • Julia Allison

    Celebrity Buzz Considered by many to represent the “real” Carrie Bradshaw, Allison is a media staple whose entrepreneurial methods of self-made online publicity have garnered her continued attention (and will continue to do so as the Sex And The City movie inches closer to its premiere date). Even Gawker, the foremost authority on How To Publicly Belittle Media Figures, can’t help but obsess over her every move, pose, or post (and they arguably made her career in the first place). Love her or hate her, a profile in The New York Times (not to mention the Guardian)can never hurt someone whose livelihood depends on coverage.