Editorial Policy
Community Dynamics and Standards
Over the past year and a half, Liza's little blog empire has been growing remarkably. Daily Gotham really took off thanks to several highly contentious Brooklyn issues (development issues, arson issues, race issues, and some particularly divisive primaries). For me it was a pretty dizzying rise that included quite a few heated exchanges between the DG editors/writers and other bloggers, political organizations and partisans of particular campaigns. At the end of it, we were credited with (perhaps given TOO much credit) defeating a Congressional candidate who raised $1.8 million and had assumed he would win as the only white candidate in a majority black district where the black vote was split among several black candidates. At the end of it we also had earned the respect of many who at first hated us. The president of one local club we took on who coined the phrase "I'd rather be flogged than blogged" after we took her club to task for disenfranchising a large group of new members recently welcomed me onto the board of the same club. Gatemouth, a local NYC blogger who really slammed us at first, wound up having us as his defenders when he was attacked. One State Senator we have slammed claims to be a loyal reader.
So, somehow, and I really am somewhat clueless how we did it, we became noticed on DG in a very short period of time. Put another way, we were successful.
During that whole time I spent far more time on DG than Culture Kitchen. But Liza asked me to be a managing editor for CK. Since then, through the efforts of Liza and the editors, CK has been growing as well. And has been noticed.
banning | community | Metadiary | Editorial Policy | rules
culturekitchen's Editorial Cookbook

Slowly but surely I am updating the editorial and style guidelines. This section on style is still in progress, but please take a look at it.
When you write a comment, start a forum topic or submit an article at culturekitchen, you are not just contributing your writing. You are also taking part in the publishing process.
In this book you will find the dos and donts of prettifying your work.
Administrivia | Collaboration | Community | Editorial Policy | FAQs
Some changes at culturekitchen
I had to shut off a few features on the site, especially after we got slammed with traffic during the Brangelina saga. Now that things have calmed down and I have figured out what was crashing the server, I can turn features on and do some promotions.
So that means that all the people who joined culturekitchen as far back as April and had not been granted member privileges, now you've got them.
I have promoted some members to contributor status. And I have set in place a community promotion system or "mojometer" that allows all members to vote to move posts by non-editors and/or contributors to the front page. Yes, it's not just me who can move stuff to the front. In one way or other the whole community can do this now.
I will be writing about it later today, just giving you the heads up.
If you have not been granted anything other than unmoderated commenting rights, then please, holler here in the comments. And also let me know of any technical difficulties you might be having. I know Lorraine was having trouble posting this morning but I can't find what was happening.
Anyhow, hollaback y'all!
Administrivia | Collaboration | Community | Editorial Policy | Membership | User Points | Voting
In our site there is more to do than blogging
There are many ways to contribute to culturekitchen than just blogging. Here's a run down of some of what's available on the site :
- Quotes
When I don't have time to blog about a bit of news, I use the Quotes form to take good excerpts out of articles and have them rotating in the QUOTES block that appears towards the bottom of the left side column on every page. Some have images, some don't.It just occurred to me to use it to also excerpt good posts from other bloggers outside of our site. So use it, please, especially if you don't have time to blog about a good post you've read from blogs we don't have in our blogroll.
- Image Galleries
After the last fix our image galleries got all screwed up, but when they are working, they work marvelously.If you'd rather open a photo-essay gallery instead of a blog, just make your case and we will do that for you. We have here a wonderful source that gets massively hit through the search engines ready for the community.
- Recipes
Yes! After a test run, the recipe module is working again (that's a shout-out to Jeffrey). A girl doesn't just live of ideas. She needs a good, hearthy portion of Chocolate Mousse Pie to feed her soul too.
Administrivia | Collaboration | Community | Editorial Policy | FAQs | Membership | Terms of Use
How to do guerilla marketing for your work at culturekitchen?
Have you ever wondered how you can help get the word out there about your contributions to our blog? Well, look no further. This list is meant to break down some of the features we have on the site that should help people spread the word about how y'all are contributing to any or all our culturekitchen blogs.
Blogs | Celebrity | Marketing | Public Relations | Collaboration | Community | Editorial Policy | FAQs | Sponsorships | Syndication
New York Times : from Grey Lady to leech?

I refuse to give The New York Times the hard earned Google juice and page rank I have earned with my blogs. When I checked out their new design I noticed their "Most blogged" box linking to .... no blogs. Excuse me? How can you know it is most blogged if you don't show who is blogging to you in the first place?
Well, I'm glad I am not the only one who noticed.
[via New York Times faux "most blogged" list -- what a bunch of leeches. - The Jason Calacanis Weblog]:
Just when you think the NYT is starting to get it they create a "Most Blogged" list *without* the back up data of who's blogging the stories!!!
Come on NYT... would it kill you to link to a blog!??!?!?!
Let me get this straight: you'll mine the data from the blogosphere to make your list, but you won't reward the blogosphere by linking back?!?!?!
That makes you a bunch of leeches--you take but you give nothing.

You see, the more we link to them, the not only the more traffic the get, but the higher in Google ranking they will be. And that is worth money. A. LOT. OF. MONEY. Jason Calacanis knows this. That's why he calls them leeches.
So boo to them.
Washington Post, on the other hand ... Thanks to Technorati, they get my heart-felt, "Yeah!"
Sure, they effed up royally with Ben Domenech, but at least they acknowledge the existence of blogs ... most importantly my blogs.
Other blog friendly publications?
Google | Media | Newspaper | Editorial Policy
Please register with us if you want to leave comments
Unfortunately we do not have a team of moderators to handle anonymous or unverified commenters.
Why should you register with our site? The answer is here.
Editorial Policy | FAQs | Membership | Privacy Policy
READ THIS! 10 things you need to know about our site
1. ONLY EDITORS CAN MAKE CHANGES TO PROMOTED POSTS
First off, if your blog post gets promoted to the front page, unless you have front-page privileges, you cannot edit your post. If you do so, the updated version will be saved with your privileges and the post will disappear from the front-page. For that matter, make sure you send me or any of our editors the edited copy. We'll be glad to make the update.
2. ALL FRONT PAGE ARTICLES ARE NOW AUTOMATICALLY SHORTENED
I did this to fit more articles on the page. If you don't like where the system automatically shortens your entry you can always change it by putting the following bit of code (but without the spaces) under the paragraph or image you'd like the cut-off point to be:
< !--break-- >
Remember, no spaces if you want the code to work.
3. YOU HAVE TO GO TO YOUR USER PAGE OR WORKSPACE TO START A POST
The side bars were starting to get unruly and for that matter I decided to move the work sections to ... ahem ... your workspace and member page.
4. FEEDS ARE NOW IN A SEPARATE PAGE
In my quest to clean up the sidebars, I set up a page with links to all the varieties of feeds to the front page available to you. But we have other feeds as well.
Design | Editorial Policy | FAQs
I edited my promoted blogpost and now it's gone!
Members cannot edit your blogpost after it has been promoted to the front page. Since you are not a Contributor or Contributing Editor, once you save it, the post will revert back to the "Counter Talk" batch.
If you want to correct grammar or anything else once the post has been promoted, please forward any changes to the editor who promoted the post.
Collaboration | Community | Editorial Policy | FAQs
If I wanted to start my own blog, can I republish my posts?
Absolutely!
When you publish your blog, book reviews, recipes, event calendar, and other content with us, you are doing so under a Creative Commons Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share-alike license.
You are free:
* to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work
* to make derivative worksUnder the following conditions:
by
Attribution. You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor.nc
Noncommercial. You may not use this work for commercial purposes.sa
Share Alike. If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under a license identical to this one.* For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work.
* Any of these conditions can be waived if you get permission from the copyright holder.
What does this mean? In the event you or I get a contract to re-publish your content in any form, we need to get each other's permission.
Other than that, you are free to republish your content in any blog you decide to start. Just make sure we know about it so we can link back to you.
Community | Copyright | Editorial Policy | FAQs | Membership























