Jason Calacanis

Jason Calacanis
Jason McCabe Calacanisis an American Internet entrepreneur and blogger. His first company was part of the dot-com era in New York, and his second venture, Weblogs, Inc., a publishing company that he co-founded together with Brian Alvey, capitalized on the growth of blogs before being sold to AOL. As well as being an angel investor in various technology startups, Calacanis also keynotes industry conferences worldwide...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBusinessman
Date of Birth28 November 1970
CountryUnited States of America
I think Google's a brilliant company, filled with brilliant people who have done brilliant things.
I'm suggesting that, until America takes care of its debt, untangles the housing mess and gets unemployment under control, we all commit to working six days a week. Yep, move the standard 35-40 hour work week right up to 48 hours.
The problem today isn't low-quality journalism, it's too much noise. If one out of five 'Business Insider' stories is original, the other four would be culled.
The problem most people make with their media presence is they're trying to craft a media presence as opposed to just consistently publishing who they are.
I have hundreds if not tens of thousands of fans... The people who have negative things to say are typically loser-type people who are probably in some cases mentally ill.
Obviously, New York and Boston and Los Angeles have pretty vibrant entrepreneurial scenes.
Search folks don't understand editorial. I'm not afraid of editorial costs, just like machine-search folks are not afraid of computer servers.
Selling out isn't selling out anymore. It's getting the brass ring.
Since the number has been stated as not out of line it sounds like someone is trying to play this down.
My first company produced 'Silicon Alley Reporter' magazine, where I held the dual titles of CEO and Editor.
Of course the first version of an all-electric sports car is going to be expensive.
No one has looked at news from new atomic units of content, like a tweet on Twitter.
Let's make it so the more you invest in YouTube, the better deal YouTube gets for you.
I find very few folks are watching their Facebook feed, some are watching their Twitter feed, and all of them are watching their email box. So, while social networks are nice, email is still the killer application.