Sentences with phrase «doing magazine work»

Not exact matches

«When [Michel and I] decided to get married, we understood: We're not promising to love each other forever, because you can't do that, but we are promising to work on whatever problems come up,» she explained to Glamour magazine in 2014.
I work with a small business magazine that did an interview with Mark Cuban.
looking and observing how the big business magazine websites do their work gives a big impact on how you can do your job better.
I started going door to door in 1995 to sell subscriptions to a magazine and call - in service, in which people would submit reviews of the work someone had done for them.
Our strategy at Socialnet had been to partner with magazines and newspapers, and that didn't work at all.
The new smart magazine feature builds on the idea of custom magazines, McCue said, but instead of users having to do all the work, Flipboard does it for them by automatically creating personalized collections on topics that interest them.
«Toronto has work to do to keep its position as Canada's leading city,» the magazine said in December.
As Rebecca Rosen noted in The Atlantic today, the magazine's pages are «dominated by advertising execs, its text peppered with McKinsey - speak («we kept iterating»), and a feature story highlighting the good work Googlers are doing around the world.»
You can go work with a company like Fairchild, and Fairchild thinks they have an idea of how to do a magazine like Wallpaper.
Their work didn't get a whole lot of publicity, at least not until recently, when it was mentioned in an Atlantic magazine cover article, «The Secret Shame of Middle - Class Americans,» about relatively affluent families living paycheck to paycheck.
The growing tendency for niche printed content, like a magazine specifically aimed at content marketers, is a direct result of why content works: when it's done right, every single page should be relevant to the audience it's trying to reach.
I guess doing the topic first, date second comes from working in the magazine industry for so long and learning that dates change, but once you've paid for content, you're going to use it!
Eric and I had been working together for a few years on MENTOR, a Catholic education magazine that lasted for seven years and did some important raising of awareness in our Catholic schools.
In a novel's case, it's different — you're just cutting the fat: plots that don't need to be there, excessive descriptions, etc. (I work as a magazine editor so I've learned how to cut, cut, cut, without losing the point of the narrative.
Above all, churches should ask for justice from religious institutions that continue to ignore Hispanics» existence: monocultural denominational and ecumenical agencies; theological institutions that refuse to hire Hispanic professors (and even discourage Spanish - speaking students from working toward doctorates); religious journals and magazines that fail to publish materials dealing with the life and faith of Hispanic churches; and mainline churches that do not make an all - out commitment to ministry among Hispanics.
Religious publishers work hard at developing books for laypeople, and they sometimes have breakthrough successes, but they face the same marketing problems as the CHRISTIAN CENTURY - a limited budget makes it impossible to run ads in major «secular» magazines or to do a really big direct mail campaign.
While we are on Africa, I read and linked to some interesting and critical magazine on the work done there and how it should be improved.
A cool fact I didn't realise until talking to someone the other day is that Ina Garten actually used to work at the White House before building her own majorly successful food company (including a food emporium, cookbooks, TV shows and magazine columns)-- such an inspiration.
So many times I have made a recipe from a magazine and it did not work out.
«Do you work for a cooking magazine or the Food Network, why are you taking pictures of your food?»
Let's start by saying you don't have to plan for the Master Cleanse by calling into work sick, stacking magazines by the toilet, or cancelling the night out on the town.
I am super happy to be doing what I am passionate about while also working with a Canadian magazine that focuses on health & wellness!
Donna holds a bachelor's degree in magazine journalism from Syracuse University and has done graduate work at New York University.
What I do at Bon Appétit: I work in the Test Kitchen, cooking (and eating) many of the recipes in the magazine every month to make sure they work for our readers at home.
Since I work at Bon Appétit magazine, I know that this is called a «panade,» and it will keep the meatballs juicy; since you probably do not, you do not need to know that, but if someone says something about how juicy the meatballs are later, especially someone you want to impress about food stuff, you can say, «It's allllllll about the panade.»
She works for a few celebrity magazines in NYC and we were given the opportunity to do interviews on the red carpet of the 2014 Indianapolis 500.
so if for example i work for a company or say magazine and then you like it and subscribe it, so yes hands down the company works cause they have customers but do nt be arrogant to subscribe it / fan for it is your choice and for the company the opinion of the customer is indeed important, but no fan / customer could really argue that they are ones keeping the club going..
Pardis: Soon after I became a mother, to my own surprise I realized multi-tasking was not something I could do well, so I left Body + Soul magazine, although I loved my job and was able to work from home with flexible hours.
This was a turning point in my life, and although a difficult decision, I left my work again, to risk, and to start a magazine that filled the need of mothers like me, who love crafting, but could not easily find sources for natural materials and patterns that fit a natural lifestyle and conscious parenting, for mothers who not just enjoyed doing crafts with their children, but wanted to sit down at the end of a hard day's work and read, and create, within a community they belong to.
You can either create an actual mood board using words, images, sketches, colour swatches, cut - up bits of magazines — whatever suits the way you work and think — or you could create one online using Pinterest (you can keep it private if you don't want to share it with the world).
Whether through the work we do on the magazine together, or blogs of each others that we read, or comments left over the years, or just plan likeminded connection.
I believe this is much different from popular press magazines advising us as what you're both doing is explaining human development and evolved caregiving practices (which in people who understand healthy relationship dynamics is intuitive and based on common sense, but is not the majority of our population) to people struggling to figure out how to make their primary love relationships work so they don't end in divorce, split families, or unattached / needy people.
Corp Magazine for Michigan Business: Highlighted for social media and marketing consulting work that Sommer Poquette does for a long time client, ecostore USA in conjunction with 3 Green Angels — her new social media, marketing and so much more venture!
You've read the books and magazines — a few of the ideas on how to potty train look like they might work, but how do you really know?
Lauren Warner, Founder and Editor [See all «From the Editor» posts] Beth Berry, Revolution from Home [«The Perfection Trap»] Amber Dusick, Crappy Pictures [«Making Time for Free Time»] Heather Flett, Rookie Moms [«Choose the One Thing»] Elke Govertsen, Mamalode magazine [«We Need Each Other»] Meagan Francis, The Happiest Mom [«Write Your Own Story»] Nici Holt Cline, Dig this Chick [«Dead Ends Don't Exist»] Devon Corneal, The Huffington Post [«You Are Stronger than You Think»] Melanie Blodgett, You are My Fave [«The Truth About Making Friends»] Allison Slater Tate, AllisonSlaterTate.com [«Enjoy the Ride»] Katie Stratton, Katie's Pencil Box [«We Are What We Eat»] Lisa - Jo Baker, Tales From a Gypsy Mama [«Mom Sets the Mood»] Shannan Martin, Flower Patch Farm Girl [«Find Your Delicious»] Tracy Morrison, Sellabit Mum [«Real Life Goes On Here»] Amy Lupold Bair, Resourceful Mommy [«Choose Happy»] KJ Dell» Antonia, New York Times Motherlode [«Do What You're Doing»] Anna Luther, My Life and Kids [«Fake Farts Make All the Difference»] Bridget Hunt, It's a Hunt Life [«Our Own Worst Enemies»] Judy Gruen, Mirth and Meaning [«Don't Forget Your Vitamin L»] Shannon Schreiber, The Scribble Pad [«When Mom is Afraid»] Rivka Caroline, Frazzled to Focused [«From Frazzled to Focused»] Pilar Guzman, Editor - in - Chief of Martha Stewart Living [«The Hard Work of Being Good»] Molly Balint, Mommy Coddle [«I Want to Be a «Yes»»] Melanie Shankle, The Big Mama Blog [«Not Enough Time (Or Toilet Paper)»] Lindsay Boever, My Child I Love You [«They Will Love What You Love»] Mary Ostyn, Owlhaven [«A Family That Plays Together»] Lindsey Mead, A Design So Vast [«Feeling Hurt?
Marjorie Ingall wrote an article in Tablet Magazine called Bottled Guilt, where she argues that Jewish women are set up to feel guilty when breastfeeding doesn't work out.
New York City - based online wellness magazine, Well + Good recently launched their Boston Healthy City Guide, which features 100 of the best places to eat, work out, and get your nails done — plus favorite places to shop beauty, like Follain (I also happen to do their social marketing).
For example, we did a whole issue about class of our quarterly magazine, and its been a central theme of our work on child poverty, inequality, taxation, solidarity.
C&E may be done as a magazine, but it's running strong as a website, and the next Tech Bytes will be online - only (I'm already working on some juicy stories).
Remember, the New Yorker editor does not work for the Obama campaign, he works for the magazine's publisher and its readers.
Momodu, a Nigerian resident in Ghana has since explained that he only went out there to do a professional work and wondered why he was being branded partisan especially when the magazine had featured ex-presidents John Kufuor and Jerry Rawlings in the past.
President Mahama expressed appreciation for the works done by the Nigerian businessman and publisher of the magazine, Chief Dele Momodu to publicize his «transformation agenda.»
His work has been recognized with awards from the Ford Foundation, Fannie Mae Foundation, Do Something, American Planning Association, Streetsblog, Lambda Independent Democrats, the Prospect Park YMCA, and New York Magazine.
A quick reminder: Art of Political Campaigning two - day training event is coming up next week Put on by our friends at Campaigns & Elections magazine, it's an in - depth exploration of practical political topics, with sessions delivered by people who do this work every day.
Put on by our friends at Campaigns & Elections magazine, it's an in - depth exploration of practical political topics, with sessions delivered by people who do this work every day.
As she argues in a wide - ranging interview with Glamour magazine, «the fact of the matter is, our working class doesn't look like the working class of 1955.
In their quest to increase the immediacy, timeliness and authority of the magazine, they insisted that the majority of the articles be written by the people who actually did the work described - a unique distinction among consumer magazines that still applies.
Steve: That's Danny Hillis, co-founder of the Long Now Foundation and author of The Pattern on the Stone: The Simple Ideas That Make Computers Work and Bill is Bill Joy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems and author of the well - known Wired magazine essay, Why the Future Doesn't Need Us.
R. Cody Buchmann, an M.S. - level biochemist now working with a major midwestern pharmaceutical company, explains his frustration this way: «Many companies don't bother interviewing people from outside their region, but yet they'll advertise in national magazines and solicit your resume.
In a story overseen by an editor named Whittaker Chambers, the magazine noted with its typical prose from the period: «[T] here will be dimly discernible, to those who are interested in cause & effect in history, the features of a shy, almost saintly, childlike little man with the soft brown eyes, the drooping facial lines of a world - weary hound, and hair like an aurora borealis... Albert Einstein did not work directly on the atom bomb.
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