Author Archive

Monday, August 15th, 2022

RefPack047: A Peek At The Featured Downloads

People who aren’t members of Animation Resources don’t understand how comprehensive our Reference Packs are. Over the next couple of weeks, we will be posting what each section of our current RefPack looks like, starting today with the Featured section. If you are a member of Animation Resources, click on this post to go to the Members Only page. If you aren’t a member yet, today is the perfect time to join! Our current Reference Pack is one of our best yet, and General and Student Members get access to a special Bonus Archive with even more material from past Reference Packs.

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Reference Pack

Every other month, Animation Resources shares a new Reference Pack with its members. They consist of an e-book packed with high resolution scans and video downloads set up for still frame study. Make sure you download the Reference Pack before it’s updated. When it’s gone, it’s gone!

REFPACK047: August / September 2022

PDF E-BOOK
Bruce Bainsfather Fragments From France

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Bruce Bainsfather
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Fragments From France Volume One
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Bruce Bairnsfather was born in Pakistan to a British military family. As a boy, he returned to England intending to study at a military school, but he failed the entrance exam. Instead, he joined the Cheshire Regiment but soon found army life boring. In 1907 at the age of 20, he left the military to pursue a career in commercial illustration and enrolled at the John Hassall School of Art. He wasn’t successful and had to take work as an electrical engineer. It seemed like he was never going to find his place in life.

Bruce Bainsfather Fragments From France

With the outbreak of the Great War, Bairnsfather was recalled to his regiment, and quickly rose in rank to second lieutenant with the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. He was deployed to France as the leader of a machine gun unit. He described life in the Western Front as “an extraordinary sensation. It was a long and weary night, that first one of mine in the trenches. Everything was strange and wet and horrid. First of all I had had to go and fix up my machine guns at various points, and find places for the gunners to sleep in. This was no easy matter, as many of the dug-outs had fallen in and floated off down stream.” He refused to take leave with the rest of his unit, because he thought it would be too difficult to return to the trenches after returning home.

Bairnsfather was nearly court martialed after joining German soldiers in a Christmas truce in December of 1914. He later reflected upon the experience of Christmas Day in the trenches by saying, “It all felt most curious: here were these sausage-eating wretches, who had elected to start this infernal European fracas, and in so doing had brought us all into the same muddy pickle as themselves… There was not an atom of hate on either side that day; and yet, on our side, not for a moment was the will to war and the will to beat them relaxed.”

Bruce Bainsfather Fragments From France

At the Western Front, Bairnsfather began drawing cartoons based on the life of soldiers in France. He sent some to The Bystander magazine and the editors began to publish them under the title “Fragments From France”. The casual tone of these cartoons and the tendency towards gallows humor initially drew criticism from government leaders. They thought that Bairnsfather’s work was vulgar and demeaned the British army, but the soldiers themselves embraced the series, recognizing its honesty and humor.

In 1915 during a chlorine gas attack in the 2nd Battle of Ypres, Bairnsfather was badly wounded by an explosion and was hospitalized with shellshock and hearing damage. The editor of The Bystander took advantage of his convalescence to commission Bairnsfather to create a weekly cartoon for the magazine. Upon his recovery, he was not shipped back to France. Instead, he served in a training unit on the Isle of Wight and was given a promotion. Here he began in earnest to produce cartoons, which were published in The Bystander and collected into a series of eight booklets published between 1915 and 1918.

Bruce Bainsfather Fragments From France

Bairnsfather’s cartoons were responsible for boosting morale among the British troops. In his book, Daily Sketches: A Cartoon History of 20th Century Britain, Martin Walker wrote, “The cartoons were by a man who had fought in the trenches and who knew what that kind of wholly new warfare was like. Veterans of the Western Front have paid almost universal testimony to Bairnsfather as a historian of the conditions in which they fought and the sense of humour which the soldiers brought to bear against the life, or more precisely, against the death.” The British government recognized the propaganda potential of “Fragments From France” and shipped Bairnsfather off on missions to document the experiences of U.S. and Italian forces as well.

Later in life, Bairnsfather lamented the fact that he had become typecast as a war cartoonist, and his 1959 obituary in the London Times noted that he was “fortunate in possessing a talent… which suited almost to the point of genius one particular moment and one particular set of circumstances; and he was unfortunate in that he was never able to adapt, at all happily, his talent to new times and new circumstances.”

Due to Wartime restrictions, the printing quality of these magazines was quite low. Animation Resources has taken great care in digitizing and digitally restoring the images to make them look even better than they did when they were first published. The three issues of “Fragments From France” in this e-book were digitized for Animation Resources by David Eisman, and they were restored and laid out by Stephen Worth. We hope you find these landmark cartoons useful in your self study.

REFPACK047: Fragments From France Vol. 2
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Adobe PDF File / 132 Pages / 266 MB Download

SD VIDEO:
Commercial Reels

Two Commercial Reels
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Storyboard: A Smattering of Spots / Misc New York Commercials

Television commercials are so ubiquitous, we rarely give them a second thought. But a great deal of strategy goes into their creation. A commercial is designed to do three things… First, it must create a desire in the public’s mind for a particular product or service. Beautifully photographed scenes of steaming hot coffee being poured into cups; syrup dripping down the sides of buttered stacks of pancakes, pizzas being pulled out of ovens… all this is designed to get us salivating for the product. Secondly, an advertisement should build brand awareness and convince the audience that the sponsor’s product is better than that of the competitors. We are told that a product is “new and improved”, or it’s the brand doctors recommend, or studies show it’s 25% more effective against arthritis pain. Lastly, and this is often overlooked, a commercial is expected to engage and entertain the audience. Animated television commercials can inspire desire and build brand awareness as well as live action can, but it’s particularly effective at achieving that last goal.

Commercial Reel

One of the biggest obstacles in television advertising is to keep the viewers engaged. The audience has the remote control in their hand, and they are one click away from channel surfing when the commercial break comes up. You might click away from a live action spot, but who would change channels on Tony the Tiger or the Trix Rabbit? When we look at a live action commercial from the 1950s or the 1970s, we see dress and hair styles that make the spots look dated. But animation is timeless. An audience may not connect with a particular live-action spokesperson, but they instantly identify with animated characters. The best animated commercials can be seen dozens of times and be just as entertaining on the twentieth viewing as the first. All of these attributes make animation uniquely suited for advertising.

Commercial Reel

Animation Resources has shared many commercial reels with its members in the past, but these two are among the best. The first one includes spots from New York studios, including UPA New York, and it features animation by Grim Natwick and Tissa David. It isn’t easy to make egg noodles or laundry starch fun, but the artists who designed these spots succeeded. Pay attention to how musical jingles and catch phrases are used. They act as hooks to plant the sponsor’s message in the viewer’s mind. I’ll bet all of us still remember every word of songs from commercials we haven’t seen in decades. Music implants a message on a deeper level than words alone.

Commercial Reel

The second reel is a particularly good one. It’s from John Hubley’s studio, Storyboard Productions. The credits at the beginning are a virtual who’s who of animation… Art Babbitt, Emery Hawkins, Bill Littlejohn and Rod Scribner. And like many of Hubley’s other productions, it includes top name artists from the world of jazz… Duke Ellington, Benny Carter, Tal Farlow, Shelly Manne, Red Norvo, and Shorty Rogers. With the ephemeral nature of commercial production, it’s hard to identify the artists behind all of the spots, but Scribner is instantly recognizable as the animator of the Bank of America spots, and Art Babbitt’s full, analytical animation style is clearly behind the “John and Marsha” commercial for Snowdrift. If you can identify any others, please let me know.

Cartoon commercials may just be the most delightful form of animation. They are compact, entertaining, and every one allows for a completely new approach. Grim Natwick said that he had the most fun working on commercials in the 1950s and 60s because he was free to experiment with design and timing. He learned from every one. I hope you learn from them too.

REFPACK047: New York Reel
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MP4 Video File / SD / 13:40 / 127 MB Download

REFPACK047: A Smattering Of Spots
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MP4 Video File / SD / 12:01 / 85 MB Download

Many thanks to Steve Stanchfield from Thunderbean Animation for sharing these rare reels with us. If you find these useful, you should order his blu-ray, Cartoon Commercials Vol. 2 at Amazon.


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Live Streaming Project

Animation Resources is asking our membership to consider donating to help us establish a video podcasting studio to be able to present seminars, interviews and informal updates live streamed on YouTube and Facebook. Our goal is for 25 of our members and supporters to donate $100. If you donate $100, we will provide you with a coupon code for a free membership to give as a gift to a friend or peer, or we can credit your donation to sponsor two students for a one year student membership.

By helping others, you help yourself.

25 x 100

Please consider donating using the PayPal Donate Button below. For more information on our Video Podcasting Fundraiser, see the article Animation Resources Needs Your Help.

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After you have donated, drop us an email at sworth@animationresources.org and let us know if you would like a discount code for a free membership, or if you would like us to sponsor students with your donation.

Raising the bar with our live streaming initiative will make things better for the whole art form. Don’t stay on the sidelines. Be a part of Animation Resources and join our team to build the foundation for the future of animation.

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Monday, August 1st, 2022

REFPACK046: Animation From Around The World, Early Cartooning and MORE!

LAST CALL! A new RefPack will be posted this weekend and RefPack046 will be removed from the server. If you want to save any of this to refer to, NOW IS THE TIME!

Reference Pack

Every other month, Animation Resources shares a new Reference Pack with its members. They consist of e-books packed with high resolution scans video downloads of rare animated films set up for still frame study, as well as podcasts and documentaries— all designed to help you become a better artist. Make sure you download this Reference Pack before it’s updated. When it’s gone, it’s gone!


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The latest Animation Resources Reference Pack has been uploaded to the server. Here’s a quick overview of what you’ll find when you log in to the members only page…

Puck Magazine

Puck was a seminal magazine in the field of American satire. Designed along the lines of European caricature journals, it was one of the first publications to take advantage of the development of four-color stone lithography and zinc plate printing. In RefPack046, we share a run of issues leading up to "The Tattooed Man", a political cartoon that changed the direction of a presidential election!

Starevich

Next up is a pair of short films by the pioneering puppet animator, Ladislas Starevich. Starevich created the first puppet animation film in 1912 and continued to work in the medium for half a century. You’ll be amazed at the way he achieved fluid motion and imbued his characters with personality and emotion.


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Winnie The Pooh

In our International section, we share the second in a series of three posts featuring Fyodor Khitruk’s adaptation of Winnie The Pooh. This series was produced at roughly the same time as the Disney films, but they couldn’t be more different. On a trip to California, Khitruk paid a visit to the Disney Studios where he met Woolie Reitherman, the director who had won an Oscar for Disney’s version of “Winnie The Pooh”. Reitherman admitted to Khitruk that he liked Khitruk’s films better than his own.

An Unusual Match

In the years immediately following the end of WWII, Russian animation progressed rapidly. By the mid 1950s, the quality level had caught up with the peak standards in the West. One of the most popular films produced by Soyuzmultfilm during this period was "An Unusual Match". In the past two Reference Packs we shared "Goal! Goal" and "A Match Revenge" which dealt with ice hockey. This film involves toys coming to life and competing in a soccer match.

A Brave Hare

During the 1950s, Soyuzmultfilm produced dozens of films based on Russian fables and folk tales featuring forest animals. Designed to teach morals to children, they began to define a sense of cultural uniqueness for Russian animation. Even though the style of the films resembled American cartoons, the content was distinctly Russian. This film, "A Brave Hare" is one of the best.

The Horse

A couple of years ago, we shared a film called "A Little Western" by Witold Giersz. It’s time to share another film by this one-of-a-kind Polish animator. Giersz admired impressionist painters, and Vincent Van Gogh in particular. He animated by applying oil paint on glass with a palette knife. This allowed him to build up impasto and scrape off paint to make an image move. You won’t believe your eyes when you watch this film!

Koziolek Matolek

Studio Miniatur Filmowych in Krakow, Poland was established in 1958, and since then it has produced nearly 1,500 animated films. This series, titled The Strange Adventures of Koziolek Matolek was produced between 1969 and 1971 and 26 episodes were made. The current episode is titled "Rally". We will be sharing more of these in upcoming Reference Packs.


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Wonder 3

Animation Resources’ Board Member, JoJo Baptista shares two episodes from a seminal Japanese TV series from the 1960s. Wonder 3 was unique among early Anime TV programs. Although it did appear serially as Manga, it was conceived and designed from the first as a television show. Created by Osamu Tezuka, it was the first show produced by his studio, Mushi Productions. Tezuka’s designs are brimming with appeal. The Wonder 3 in particular are a trio of wonderful contrasting shapes. Lots of entertainment value with so few drawings!

YoYo

We often think of slapstick and pantomime comedy to be something from the era of silent films. But there are modern examples as well. Today we are sharing one of the most beautiful and unique films of the 1960s, Pierre Etaix’s Yo-Yo. Etaix was multi-talented. He was a cartoonist, a film director, an actor and a renowned circus clown. All of these interests came together in Yo-Yo. It’s a loving tribute to Etaix’s cinematic hero, Buster Keaton. No words are spoken in the first half hour of the film, and sprinkled throughout are visual gags that wouldn’t be out of place in an animated cartoon. There are more brilliant ideas in a single minute of this film than in a dozen ordinary ones.

Wave Principle

Animation Resources Board Member, David Eisman analyzes another batch of breakdown clips, this time focusing on The Wave Principle. It’s a system of curves that describes the path of motion for a wave. Specifically, the wave principle demonstrates how an initial S-curve or C-curve is transformed into a curve of the opposite direction. A thorough understanding of the wave principle is imperative for the animator’s toolbox as it is required for multitudes of different actions that require fluidity and momentum.

Die Muskete

The Annual Member Bonus Archive continues to feature RefPack017 with an e-book on the Viennese caricature journal, Die Muskete; a fantastic documentary on classic slapstick comedy; and a pair of silent Felix The Cat shorts. Only General and Student members have access to this. If you are a quarterly member, you will want to consider upgrading to an annual membership to get access. The page will be updated next month with a new RefPack, so make sure to download this one while you still can.

Animated Discussions Podcast

The Podcasts section has a new entry, an interview with animator Craig Bartlett. Craig is the creator and producer of the TV shows Hey Arnold!, Dinosaur Train, and Ready Jet Go! Throughout his 40 year tenure in the animation industry, Craig has worked in nearly every style from stop-motion to hand-drawn to CG. He’s successfully adapted to many technological changes in the industry and his career shows no signs of stopping. Find out what inspires Craig and his secrets to career longevity in this episode of Animated Discussions.

Our Podcasts section always contains the five most recent entries in our Animated Discussions series hosted by Davey Jarrell, with the balance of the episodes archived on the Annual Member Bonus Archive page.


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Whew! That is an amazing collection of treasures! At Animation Resources, our Advisory Board includes great artists and animators like Ralph Bakshi, Will Finn, J.J. Sedelmaier and Sherm Cohen. They’ve let us know the things that they use in their own self study so we can share them with you. That’s experience you just can’t find anywhere else. The most important information isn’t what you already know… It’s the information you should know about, but don’t know yet. We bring that to you every other month.

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Check out this SAMPLE REFERENCE PACK! It will give you a taste of what Animation Resources members get to download every other month!

Sample RefPack

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Animation Resources is a 501(c)(3) non-profit arts organization dedicated to providing self study material to the worldwide animation community. If you are a creative person working in animation, cartooning or illustration, you owe it to yourself to be a member of Animation Resources.


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Live Streaming Project

Animation Resources is asking our membership to consider donating to help us establish a video podcasting studio to be able to present seminars, interviews and informal updates live streamed on YouTube and Facebook. Our goal is for 25 of our members and supporters to donate $100. If you donate $100, we will provide you with a coupon code for a free membership to give as a gift to a friend or peer, or we can credit your donation to sponsor two students for a one year student membership.

By helping others, you help yourself.

25 x 100

Please consider donating using the PayPal Donate Button below. For more information on our Video Podcasting Fundraiser, see the article Animation Resources Needs Your Help.

PayPalAnimationAnimation Resources depends on your contributions to support its projects. Even if you can’t afford to donate $100 or join our group right now, please click the button below to donate whatever you can afford using PayPal. Every little bit helps.

Donate Today

Or you can donate on Facebook, here…
FACEBOOK LIVESTREAM FUNDRAISER

After you have donated, drop us an email at sworth@animationresources.org and let us know if you would like a discount code for a free membership, or if you would like us to sponsor students with your donation.

Raising the bar with our live streaming initiative will make things better for the whole art form. Don’t stay on the sidelines. Be a part of Animation Resources and join our team to build the foundation for the future of animation.

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Friday, July 22nd, 2022

Creators and Anti-Social Media

creators social

People love to complain about social media and how it’s dumbing down society and creating artificial relationships between people. We are all faced with timeline feeds full of inane memes, whining, political axe grinding and cut and paste platitudes. Social media is surely a force for evil out to destroy us!

But social media isn’t to blame. We now live in a society where mass media and television have become a part of all of our everyday lives, and it’s been that way for as long as we can remember. When radio was still new, Orson Welles suckered the world with “War of the Worlds”… a program that presented “fake news” about aliens from outer space attacking New Jersey. In the early days of television, commercials lied to us, touting “the brand of cigarettes that doctors recommend”. They tried to make us feel insecure by convincing us that without Pepsodent toothpaste our yellow teeth would destroy our sex appeal. Rumors about the illuminati, UFOs in Roswell, New Mexico and the Red Scare spread like wildfire in the 50s. Junk ideas filled movies, television, newspapers and magazines. Social media didn’t invent this stuff. We did.

We now realize that movies, recorded music, radio, and television are all just as capable of spreading lies as they are enlightening, educating and contributing positively to our culture. Great creators like Edward R. Murrow and The Beatles and Alfred Hitchcock proved that fact and justified the existence of the mediums. Social media has yet to really prove itself.

creators social

IS THERE SOME ASPECT OF SOCIAL MEDIA THAT ENCOURAGES MEDIOCRITY AND DECEPTION? HOW IS SOCIAL MEDIA DIFFERENT THAN “OLD MEDIA”?

The major difference between media of the past and modern internet media is interactivity. In the past, a creator would make something and present it to the world as a program or record album or image in a magazine or on a billboard. The audience was a passive spectator. That isn’t true of social media. We are now both creators AND spectators. That is a huge difference because it blurs the lines between creators and their audience.

Before the internet, creators needed the cooperation of a television network, record label or publisher to get their works seen. Today all we need is an internet connection. Why isn’t this spawning a renaissance in creativity and a blossoming of interaction between artists on the internet?

creators social

THE TRUTH IS WE’RE DOING IT WRONG.

We look to our social media accounts to passively entertain us the way “old media” did, and we abuse it to validate our own ideas. We don’t employ the power of the internet to entertain others and to open our minds to new ideas. We “share” other people’s memes as placeholders for our own point of view on the world. We blindly trust what we see that validates our own biases, and we block any opinion that doesn’t agree with our own. That isn’t the right way to create the sort of meaningful two way communication that social media demands.

One would think that creators would be smarter about how they use social media, knowing the power they have to communicate to thousands of people with a single click of a return key. But too often, creators use their channel of communication to complain about personal issues, repost other people’s ideas, and worst of all insult their audience. There’s absolutely nothing to be gained from creators getting into pointless arguments with people over things that aren’t even relevant to what they are trying to create. Every time you go off on an online enemy, your insults and griping are also being seen by the thousands of people you want to recruit to be a part of your audience. Can you imagine a stand up comic that walks out on stage and proceeds to get into a screaming match with a waiter or bartender before they even start their act? They would lose their audience in a flash! It’s no different on social media.

Another big mistake creators make is to generate large quantities of sales pitch rather than large quantities of content. They spend more time and effort spamming commercials for their Kickstarter campaign than they do actually producing and sharing their project. In the internet age, entertainment is all about two way communication. Cut and paste ads don’t cut it. You have to convince people to support you, you can’t just tell them to support you and expect them to do as you say. There are a million Kickstarters and GoFundMe projects out there. The ones that get supported are the ones that people already know. Introducing yourself to your audience with a Kickstarter is putting the cart before the horse.

creators social

SO WHAT IS THE SOLUTION TO USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO ITS FULL POTENTIAL?

First of all, do what you are here to do… create content. You have a free distribution network. No need to enlist TV executives or publishers to get your work to an audience… you can cut out the middle man. Create bite sized content on a regular basis and give it away for free. Yes, free. To build an audience that will support you, you need to give them entertainment that they enjoy and want more of. Once you have a few thousand followers, you can start thinking about how you can convert them into customers. The general rule of thumb is that for every thousand followers who click “like”, ten of them will subscribe to your channel or feed, and one of them will become a customer who actually buys something from you. That means that you need a big pool of eyeballs before you can start asking people to pull out their credit card. Create the kind of entertainment you want to create and break it up into daily or weekly bits and share it for free. If you build it, they will come.

Secondly, present yourself as a real human being, but realize that your audience isn’t there just to serve as your cheerleading squad. Share things about your personality and life. That is how they connect to you as a person and learn to like you. But don’t demand that they validate everything you say or do. Allow other people to be different. That doesn’t mean that you should create a phony online persona. Obviously, you have to be yourself, but it isn’t a good idea to go out of your way to alienate the audience with your beliefs and opinions. Griping and complaining is the best way to alienate people. Instead, try focusing on the good aspects of your life. Share what you do. Don’t just post a photo of your dinner, post a recipe and instructions on how you made it so other people can try it too. If you post a photo of an event or vacation, talk about what you saw and did. Engage your audience and encourage them to participate. Even the small things in daily life can be interesting to people and a positive attitude is infectious.

creators social

Thirdly, it’s vital to understand that the world isn’t all about you. Your social media feed should reflect that. People who only talk about themselves run the risk of getting tuned out. Share things that other people are doing that you think are cool. Post information about art or music that inspires you and articulate why you like it. Talk about books and music and movies and people that are important to you. That will increase the audience for your own work tenfold, because people will understand where you’re coming from and identify with it.

Most importantly, strive be a part of the online community. You are one branch of a larger tree. Try to be a strong and important branch, but take feedback and criticism graciously. On Facebook, I often see people announcing, “You aren’t allowed to post on MY timeline.” But your timeline is their feed! Other people throw down the gauntlet saying. “If you disagree with me, don’t comment on my posts.” Or worse yet, “If you don’t believe what I believe, unfriend me now.” That is a great way to turn people away and isolate yourself. Obviously there are people in this world who are negative and impossible to deal with. If you spot someone like that, just block them without any comment. Social media is a garden and you are just one flower in it. You need to weed the flower bed occasionally to give the flowers room to grow. There’s nothing wrong with that. Just don’t make a big deal about it.

creators social

How well are you doing? Next time you log in to Facebook or Tumblr or Instagram, go to the feed of someone you follow, admire and support. Check out their posts for the past few weeks and think about how their posts represent them, their ideas and their work. Then go to your own timeline and categorize your posts. See how well you’re representing yourself. You might find a way to improve your presence.

When you post on social media, you are presenting yourself and your work to the world. Show your best face. Understand that you are just one part of a lot of people’s online lives. By “friending” you, they are allowing you into their consciousness. Don’t abuse that privilege. Most of all, understand that social media isn’t inherently good or bad. It is what we all make it. Do your part and create and share. Try your best to entertain and inspire. If you succeed, other people will see what you’re doing and do that themselves. That’s what makes for a valuable community and that’s what makes for a strong culture.

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