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GardenComm
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Medium
Thinking about something in endless circles — is exhausting.
While everyone overthinks a few things once in a while, chronic over-thinkers spend most of their waking time ruminating, which puts pressure on themselves. They then mistake that pressure to be stress.
"There are people who have levels of overthinking that are just pathological," says clinical psychologist Catherine Pittman.
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Writer's Digest
After 20 years as an editor of the Writer's Market Books, I feel very confident in telling writers they should always be willing negotiate better terms — even on your first assignment for an editor. Many writers may feel like they're overstepping their bounds or trying to run before they walk with such a strategy, but editors often expect negotiation. In fact, it's surprising that more writers don't try to negotiate better terms.
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Nieman Lab
Audiences paying for print and digital news worldwide grew very slightly in 2019, according to WAN-IFRA's recently released 2019 World Press Trends report, with — no surprise here — that growth coming almost entirely from digital. Nonetheless, print in newspapers still dominates, accounting for 85 percent of their revenue worldwide (down from 89 percent last year).
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Poynter
Until recently, journalists were focused on the major platforms — newspapers, TV channels, radio stations and websites. The thinking was that if we built a great product, audiences would swarm to us, and we could sell ads against their attention.
Times changed. We were forced to learn how to reach audiences where they are. That's probably for the better for our audiences but for the worst for our business models.
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The Public Media Merger Project
We are entering a new era of journalism in which responsive, civically minded local newsrooms engage with their communities to provide news and information that matters.
The business practices that support this new role will not be what we've seen in the past in local news, particularly as local newspapers collapse. But there is evidence that these practices work — and can be sustainable in ways that bring newsrooms closer to the communities they serve.
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Make your garden come to life with Sunfinity® Sunflowers that thrive and bloom continuously all season long.
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With the widest selection of full-blooming varieties, Optimara continues to advance the industry with new plant varieties and innovative growing techniques, constantly refined over years of research and development. We create new, exciting plants and care products which are trend-setting and truly functional. Our effort is to continue offering customers a unique selection of flowers in a beautiful product line.
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Ad Age
If history teaches us anything about monopolies, duopolies or any other defined industry hierarchy, it's this: Nothing lasts forever. Just ask AOL. Or Napster. Or MySpace.
For Facebook and Google, that means their place in the digital advertising marketplace, however dominant, is far from inevitable. This year, the two increased their market share to about 60 percent combined.
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Social Media Today
Predicting the future of social media is always fun. The sector is changing almost daily, with new tools and utilities being rolled out, adding more ways to connect, track and maximize your online marketing performance.
I always like to make my own predictions for the upcoming year, then look back at them monthly throughout the year to see if I was spot on or way off.
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Axios
While content companies are pushing to diversify their businesses with subscriptions and licensing, and big tech companies draw on income from hardware sales and software sales and subscriptions, Facebook is sticking with advertising at scale for the foreseeable future.
Facebook created its massive business by handing out a free social network and monetizing it through ads.
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Milwaukee Magazine
Andre Lee Ellis' We Got This — an expanding community gardening program in Milwaukee for central city African-American boys — got started with a lie.
In 2011, when Ellis and his wife, Angela, moved to 9th and Ring on Milwaukee's north side, they immediately immersed themselves in the neighborhood by cleaning up an abandoned garden and hosting community events there.
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The New York Times
Staring out over the banister from the rooftop terrace of an eighth-floor penthouse on the Marais's Rue Vieille du Temple, it's immediately clear you're in Paris: Across the park below, past the mansard roofs of the low Haussmannian buildings that have fronted these streets since the late 19th century, the Eiffel Tower and the Place de la Bastille's column pierce the gray clouds in the middle distance and, looking west, the cyan blue and cherry-red tubes of the Centre Pompidou dominate the skyline, their chromatic hues clashing against the beige city.
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The Financial Times
What does it cost to make and run a garden? Roderick Floud, formerly head of Gresham College in London, thinks this is the great unasked question, up there with our reticence about how much we are each paid. We have social histories of the English garden, art histories of the big ones and plant histories of what went where. We seldom have a financial history. Floud has set out to write one, applying his head for statistics to this under-cultivated field.
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