A dedicated and motivated SEO Consultant and SEM Analyst with extensive experience gained working on a large number of Web Marketing for key clients. Focused upon maximizing the transparency of client sites through the management of SEO, Web Analytics, Link Building Strategy and Social Media campaigns. 

Michael Jackson dead at 50 after cardiac arrest

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

A Los Angeles fire official told CNN that paramedics arrived at Michael Jackson's home after a 911 call.

Michael Jackson arrives at UCLA Medical Center on Thursday.

(CNN) — Entertainer Michael Jackson died after being taken to a hospital on Thursday after suffering cardiac arrest, CNN confirmed.

Lt. Fred Corral, the Los Angeles County Coroner said Jackson was pronounced dead at 2:26 p.m. Thursday.

He also said Jackson was unresponsive when he arrived at the hospital.

Brian Oxman, a Jackson family attorney, said he was told by brother Randy Jackson that Michael Jackson collapsed at his home in west Los Angeles, California, Thursday morning.

Family members were told of the situation and were either at the hospital or en route, Oxman said.

“I can only tell you that the family members are crying,” Oxman said.

Fire Capt. Steve Ruda told CNN a 911 call came in from a west Los Angeles residence at 12:21 p.m.

Ruda said Jackson was treated and transferred to the UCLA Medical Center.

Law enforcement officials said the Los Angeles Police Department robbery-homicide department opened an investigation into Jackson’s death. They stressed there is no evidence of criminal wrongdoing.

Still, officials said they would conduct interviews with family members and friends. The Los Angeles County Coroner will be conducting an autopsy to determine the cause of death.

CNN Analyst Roland S. Martin spoke with Marlon Jackson, brother of Michael Jackson.

“I talked to Frank Dileo, Michael’s manager. Frank told me that Michael last night was complaining about not feeling well. He called to tell him he wasn’t feeling well.

“Michael’s doctor went over to see him, and Frank said, ‘Marlon, from last night to this morning, I don’t know what happened.’ When they got to him this morning, he wasn’t breathing. They rushed him to the hospital and couldn’t bring him around.”

The music icon from Gary, Indiana, was known as the “King of Pop.” Jackson had many No. 1 hits and his “Thriller” is the best-selling album of all time.

Jackson was the seventh of nine children from a well-known musical family. He is survived by three children, Prince Michael I, Paris and Prince Michael II. Video Watch Jesse Jackson share memories »

Jackson’s former wife, Lisa Marie Presley, said she was “shocked and saddened” by Jackson’s death. ” My heart goes out to his children and his family,” she said.

At the medical center, every entrance to the emergency room was blocked by security guards. Even hospital staffers were not permitted to enter. A few people stood inside the waiting area, some of them crying.iReport.com: Your Michael Jackson tributes

A large crowd gathering outside the hospital, could be seen on video footage.

Some of Jackson’s music was being played, said Oxman. The sounds of “Thriller” and “Beat It” bounced off the walls.

“It is one of the most unbelievable, surreal scenes I have ever experienced,” Oxman said. Video Kingston: Jackson “a legend” »

Outside Jackson’s Bel Air home, police arrived on motorcycles. The road in front of the home was closed in an attempt to hold traffic back, but several people were gathered outside the home.

Jackson had some legal troubles later in his career.

He was acquitted of child molestation charges after a well-publicized trial in Santa Maria, California, in March 2006.

Prosecutors charged the singer with four counts of lewd conduct with a child younger than 14; one count of attempted lewd conduct; four counts of administering alcohol to facilitate child molestation; and one count of conspiracy to commit child abduction, false imprisonment or extortion.

1st Filipino Google Doodle on Philippine Independence Day

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

To commemorate the country’s 111th anniversary of its declaration of independence, Google announced that it has created the first-ever Google doodle for the Philippines. The unique doodle can be viewed on Google’s Philippine website, www.google.com.ph.

A Google doodle is a “decoration” Google makes to its logo every so often. Doodles are designed to celebrate worldwide events, anniversaries, and the lives of notable artists and scientists. Among the doodles that have been displayed on Google’s website are international holidays New Year, Valentine’s Day, and the December holiday season, and logos commemorating Albert Einstein, Charles Darwin, and Edvard Munch.

“This is the first-ever Google doodle for the Philippines so we wanted to make it very classic and meaningful for Filipinos. We created a special doodle on the Google Philippines homepage for June 12, 2009 to commemorate the Philippines’ Independence Day,” said Jay Trinidad, Regional Product Marketing Manager, Consumer Products, Google Asia Pacific.

“Google doodles also celebrate important local events and holidays such as this one. It is our honor to celebrate more than a century of national excellence and achievement with all Filipinos in our own creative and Googley way. On behalf of Google, I wish my fellow Filipinos another century of increasing prosperity and success. Mabuhay ang Pinoy!”

Trinidad said Google designers used the sun with its eight rays, which represents the eight Philippine provinces that pledged their support to the revolution, and used it as the first ‘O’ in the Google logo.

“We also used red, white, and blue, the Philippines’ national colors, which stand for patriotism, equality, and justice, respectively. We also incorporated the flag’s three stars in the design, symbolizing the three major geographic regions of the country,” he said.

On June 12, 1898, revolutionary forces under Emilio Aguinaldo, the country’s first and youngest President, declared independence from Spanish colonial rule. The Philippine Independence Day doodle is based on the country’s current national flag, which is very similar to the one Aguinaldo raised 111 years ago.

Pacquiao vs Hatton Fight Photos

Monday, May 4th, 2009

pacquiao vs hatton photos
(Photo by Will Hart; HBO)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
pacquiao vs hatton photos
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Manny Pacman Pacquiao vs Ricky Hitman Hatton Fight Photos

Google’s Matt Cutts Talks State of the Index

Friday, February 20th, 2009

By Chris Crum

Your Presentations Should Make it to Your Site

You may recall a little over a month ago Matt Cutts from Google’s Search Quality Team talked about Google getting more transparent this year and making his talks from conferences available online so that everyone can easily see what he has to say.

He started then with a video
based on his “Preventing Virtual Blight” presentation from the Web 2.0
Summit in San Francisco from November. He also provided his
presentation slides.

Now Cutts has posted a video and slideshow based on his “State of the Index” talk from PubCon Las Vegas a while back. Here are both:

As I said when he posted the first video,
a lot of people are going to be appreciative that Cutts is posting his
presentations. Quite honestly, most speakers at industry conferences
would be wise to follow suit and include their own presentations on
their respective sites/blogs.

If the content was good enough for a presentation in front of a live
audience, chances are there is enough valuable information in it that
it can benefit visitors to your site/blog. And considering the
increasing popularity of online video (not to mention the ranking implications) it’s a win-win situation.

How is Google Weighing Forum Results?

Friday, February 13th, 2009

By Chris Crum

WebmasterWorld founder Says They Devalued Forum Links
There is an interesting thread going on at the WebmasterWorld forum looking at whether or not Google favors forums in search results. Matt Cutts tells me that he can neither confirm nor deny this. The thread is started by someone with the handle “bouncybunny,” who posts:

Once it was directories, then blogs, now forums… maybe.

I have no empirical evidence for this, but it seems to me that Google is increasingly returning results from forum posts…

The thread did provoke a few responses of note. For example, SEO consultant Jaan Kanellis says, “It is normal for Google to favor forum threads for certain queries. Naturally websites do not optimize themselves for long-tail queries that forums are automatically optimized for by way of user-generated content.”

Brett TabkeWebmasterWorld founder Brett Tabke himself chimed in, “Since Google clearly devalued links from blogs last year, they devalued forums as well. It has been my experience that most inbound links on forums come from blogs. The top 30 forums last year all lost 1 to 2 pr points on the green fairy dust bar.”

When it comes down to it, webmasters will probably do well to not harp on things like this too much, and put more effort into the user experience of their own sites. As discussed repeatedly, traditional SEO tactics aren’t necessarily as likely to be as helpful moving forward as simply improving your site’s quality.

Google Penalizes Itself

Friday, February 13th, 2009

By Jason Lee Miller

Google Japan Busted For Paid Links
Go ahead and laugh, because it is funny. Google Japan’s probably too embarrassed too laugh, though, and someone somewhere is likely to resemble the spittle-drenched apologist from the movie Gung Ho.

Google Japan, according to its apology, was apparently unaware of the company’s own terms of service. Paying a Japanese pay-per-post promotion company to pimp its new Hot Keywords blog widget caused the website to be busted down from PR 9 to PR 5.
Matt Cutts Samurai
Many thanks goes out to blogger Akky Akimoto for discovery and English translation of what might described as a big, corporate party foul. When searching for (in Japanese) Google Hot Keywords Ranking  + “Blog Widget” + “CyberBuzz,” Akimoto found over 30 posts writing about the widget, all of them acknowledging being paid by CyberBuzz.

Akimoto says CyberBuzz pays pretty handsomely for blog posts—up to $100 per post. Small ads were present at the bottom as well.

The apology issued from Google Japan is priceless since it suggests Google Japan is just now learning of Google’s search guidelines:

“Google Japan is running several promotional activities to let people know more about our products.

“It turns out that using blogs on the part of the promotional activities violates Google’s search guidelines, so we have ended the promotion. We would like to apologize to the people concerned and to our users, and are making an effort to make our communications more transparent in order to prevent the recurrence of such an incident.”

Hopefully no form of seppuku will be required and a simple gomenasai (or, if you’re a real Samurai: katajiganai on all fours with head bowed low) and Matt Cutts tweeted policy of treating all sites the same will suffice. Cutts tweets that he expects Google Japan’s new PR5 to remain as is for a while.