Why do people dislike julia allison




















There were humbling moments. It was just ugly. Then, in , one of my pilots was finally picked up by Bravo. Producers sent me to a mind architect, a love coach and a witch in the pursuit of love. But it came too late: In my heart, I was finished trying to be Carrie.

The experience made me really look at myself: I was trying so hard to be liked that it was coming across as inauthentic and bitchy. Also, it was miserable to have cameras around all the time. I stopped blogging and writing. I rarely post on Instagram. These days I work as a change activist, mounting summits for world leaders and serving as an adviser to startups and entrepreneurs looking to better the planet. But dating is not front and center in my life anymore, although it was all I talked about in my 20s.

Crushed and needing to regroup, I took a sabbatical and lived in Bali for eight months on a healing journey. I was also celibate during my time there. For a while, things were quiet. And Ms. Allison, the ostensible star of the show. While the two mating-and-dating professionals onscreen seem in-control, if a bit eager to find their mates, Ms. Allison is unvarnished. At one point, we see her trying on tutus and strapping one on her dog.

I failed so miserably, I just gave up. If readers want an extra shot of Allisonana, her Twitter stream provides periodic updates like a postmodern news ticker. This article has been reproduced in a new format and may be missing content or contain faulty links. Contact wiredlabs wired. After about 15 minutes, a police officer wanders by to bust up the party. Allison doesn't have the required performer's license, and her admirers are clogging up Times Square.

No problem! The mob follows her a couple of blocks uptown, looking for another vacant patch of asphalt where she can make a scene. As we cross 44th Street, a passerby squints at us. Want to see how your online q-rating measures up to Julia Allison's? Using Google's PageRank technology, you can scan trusted sites to measure your Internet fame on a scale of 1 unknown to ubiquitous.

Good luck! But to make sure that your rep doesn't get confused with someone else's, add a minus sign before terms associated with your namesake's. For instance, if your name is Michael Jordan, you might want to throw a — in front of "basketball" and "Bulls". Good question. Allison may not be famous by the traditional definition; certainly nobody here seems to recognize her.

But to a devoted niche of online fans — and an even more devoted niche of detractors — she is a bona fide celebrity. She says that more than 10, people read her blog daily, and gossip sites like Gawker, Radar Online, and Valleywag detail her every exploit. An anonymous blogger has set up a site, Reblogging Julia, dedicated to parsing Allison's posts.

The New York Times has profiled her, and New York magazine has called Allison — a dating columnist for Time Out New York and former editor-at-large for Star — "the most famous young journalist in the city.

But with all due respect, Allison's renown has little to do with her day job. Indeed, it's hard to describe exactly what she's famous for. She's not an actress or a singer or a misbehaving heiress to a hotel fortune. She doesn't flaunt tech knowledge like bloggers Robert Scoble or Dave Winer. She is undeniably pretty — flowing black-coffee hair, sparkling eyes, gamine physique, broad smile — but beauty alone can't account for her celebrity. Allison is the latest, and perhaps purest, iteration of the Warholian ideal: someone who is famous for being famous.

Like graffiti writers who turned their signatures into wild-style gallery pieces, she has made the process of self-promotion into its own freaky art form. Traditionally, it takes an army of publicists, a well-connected family, or a big-budget ad campaign to make this kind of splash.

But Allison has done it on her own and on the cheap, armed only with an insatiable need for attention and a healthy helping of Web savvy. It's easy to dismiss Allison as little more than a rank narcissist — and many of her vocal online critics are happy do just that.

But come on, admit it: You've spent a good half hour trying to pick out the most flattering photo to upload to your MySpace page. You struggle to come up with the mot juste to describe your Facebook status. You keep a bank of self-portraits on Flickr or an online scrapbook on Tumblr or a running log of your daily musings on Blogger.

You strategically court the gatekeepers at StumbleUpon or Digg. You compare the size of your Twitter-subscriber rolls to those of your friends. You set up Google Alerts to tell you whenever a blogger mentions your name. Self-promotion is no longer solely the domain of egotists and professional aspirants.

Anyone can be a personal branding machine. I'm searchable on Flickr or Google. The Hopkinson Report podcast interviews Julia Allison about personality-based marketing, multi-platform journalism, and why she won't be buying an iPhone. And nobody gets people to pay attention quite like Julia Allison. In the week after her midtown dance party, reactions will pop up on blogs across the Internet. One typically tart comment refers to the tableaux as "suburban girls gone wild.

Chalk up another win for the Julia Allison juggernaut. Now we are all our own publicists. And we all have to learn the tricks. When she was a junior at Georgetown University in the fall of , Allison decided she had a thing for medical students. They were smart and driven and a little older than she was, all big turn-ons.

So she got a job at the medical school library, where she had the opportunity to meet the entire class — and date several of its members. The only intrigue is seeing whether the women realize their relationship advice is a bunch of nonsense.

This is the same person who had a nose job to alleviate a deviated septum. Allison has photos of herself up on her blog dressed in a dress made of condoms for Halloween She referred to the event as Slut-O-Ween. And check out these photos of her from the Burning Man festival where she's "dressed" as a stripper and sexy angel. Every move she makes will be ruthlessly dissected on the anti-Allison hate-blog, Reblogging Donk. You can view the list on her blog, here.

What could possibly go wrong? Perhaps she should have been cast in "Gallery Girls," the show featuring girls obsessed with "Sex and the City. Advertisers may shy away from backing Bravo's show given Allison's past endorsement fails.



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