'The South Park Ninjas' (coming to XBox Tuesday night) (Joystiq)
- Also in gaming: Wii's winning ways (an interview with Nintendo's Reggie Fils-Aime about "the hows and whys of Wii’s winning ways." Plus the L.A. Times, reg. required, on the Wii workout) (TheHub)
- And...a new study says violent video games ("do not make killer kids") (USA Today - new and improved!)
- MyYearbook profiled (Ypulse advertiser written up in the Philadelphia Inquirer after receiving $4.1 million from two venture-capital firms)
- Beacon Street Girls deals with cyberbullying in print (I mentioned this from my meeting with them at Magic, here's the page promoting the book Just Kidding, which was written in collaboration with internet safety experts - thanks Bobbie!)
- Speaking of tweens (looks like there is about to be another British Invasion -- BrandWeek reports "Ragdoll is staging a British Invasion for the 10th U.S. anniversary of the Teletubbies as it repositions the property to tweens with a NYC tour, pop-up store and hip merch.")
- Moving up to teens... (This report finds they are not safe "on the job.") (Reuters)
- How to be Goth (just in case you need instructions - thanks DK!)
- College students more narcissistic? (I have a hard time with these types of studies -- so are adults. Narcissism is a natural part of growing up, the web just amplifies this) (Common Sense Media)
- Chegg (a new player in the used textbook space...looks like college kids can sell other stuff there, too - thanks Lynda!)
- And now that Nielsen is on campus... (TV networks are beginning to market there, too) (Lost Remote)
- Dating at work... (no big deal to today's twentysomethings. Thanks Shia!) (Crain's Chicago Business)
P.S. Check out this post on Invading Teens Mobile Or IM Space over at Totally Wired.
Posted by anastasia
Book Publishing | Campus Marketing | Gaming | TV | Tweens | Web







Comments
The article in Crain's doesn't offer any proof that today's twenty-somethings are more likely to date someone at work than the twenty-somethings of a previous decade.
Posted by: Eric Jaffa | March 5, 2007 12:51 PM