Bored Panda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bored Panda is a Lithuanian website that publishes articles about "lightweight and inoffensive topics". It was founded in 2009 by Tomas Banišauskas, who was then a business administration student at Vilnius University. As of November 2017, the site had 41 employees. It makes most of its revenue from the advertisements that run on the site.[1] According to NewsWhip, Bored Panda's Facebook page received over 30 million likes, shares, comments, and reactions in October 2017, more than any other English-language news website that month. Bored Panda also reported that it was viewed by 116 million unique visitors that month. In November 2017, Wired reported that the site had flourished despite Facebook cracking down on attention-grabbing clickbait headlines, a change that had made controversial political news much more successful on the platform.[2] Banišauskas attributes the success of his site to his decision to publish a small number of higher-quality articles, and to avoid using clickbait headlines.[3] Wired contributor Evan Griffith described Bored Panda as "...a throwback to when the Internet was less an addictive, stress-inducing reflection of the ugliness of modern life, and more a place to kill time when we were bored."[2]

References[]

  1. ^ Roose, Kevin (2017-11-30). "How 41 People in Lithuania Took Over Your Facebook Feed". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-01-07.
  2. ^ a b Griffith, Erin (2017-11-28). "How Bored Panda Survived Facebook's Clickbait Purge". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2019-01-07.
  3. ^ Silverman, Craig (2017-09-28). "Publishers Overseas Are Making Money By Targeting Americans With Cheap — And Sometimes False — Information About Niche Topics". BuzzFeed News. Retrieved 2019-01-07.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""