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And he also attributes to foreign companies what he considers an error in perception. I believe there are clear signs of desperation similar to that in traditional media. Read Letter to a young media – By Nizan Guanaes . Below I list the main points. “For you, young media operating from São Paulo or another large Brazilian metropolis, it may seem that everything is digital. It is not. The Brazil universe, like the India universe, the France universe, the Russia universe and other universes, has a different logic than the metrics and rules that the Americans and English competently want to sell to us at the Cannes Festival. If it is true that everything has gone digital, we will transfer the election schedule that comes only to social media, . I doubt the candidates will accept it.” It’s the “take it from me, I’m experienced and
successful, you’re young and naive” bargain. Bolsonaro denied this, as Wuhan Mobile Number List he didn't have television time, the mainstream media ignored his campaign, it was entirely internet-based. And look where he got to… In fact, today, Bolsonaro has perhaps become the biggest factor of despair in traditional media. Oh, and no one outside advertising and traditional media cares about the Cannes Film Festival. Depression The depressing attempts by magazines, newspapers and TV channels to discredit blogs and other online endeavors border on the ridiculous. Bloggers are ridiculed like characters in soap operas, while the press punishes blogs by disparaging them. Like this “report” from Veja,
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which talks about errors in Portuguese, advertorials and other problems faced by bloggers. Read The boom in fashion blogging is over, says Blogger Shame . I list parts of the text. “Defender of transparency in the fashion blogosphere; Priscilla Rezende created a page to expose the “blunders” of fashion bloggers. According to her, readers are tired of veiled advertising on the internet. In more than , posts, she reports, with the help of readers, all the “missteps” of fashion bloggers; from spelling and grammar errors. It even talks about veiled advertising, when bloggers praise a product in exchange for some remuneration or “gift”, without making this fact explicit to the reader.
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