Jack Smith

The Hustle - Vice meets Fast Company

by•

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Jack Smith
From the makers of Hustle Con, The Hustle has been creating waves over the past few weeks with their controversial, investigative articles. I personally liked this piece about a runner going 30 days only eating Soylent. I also liked this piece ;)
Robleh Jama
@_jacksmith I liked that piece too 👆! Love the hustle :)
Kamil
@_jacksmith I like the spotify playist.
Olivier Alcouffe
@_jacksmith this article was really good !
Sam Parr
Thanks for posting us Jack. Hey everyone, I'm one of the people who makes The Hustle. We started as a conference but are now taking our stab at building a big ole media company like Vice. I'll be checking out these comments throughout the day, but we wrote this post explaining our progress over our first two months in business: http://thehustle.co/the-first-2-... A few highlights: - 500,000+ visitors - 20,000 emails - Not sure what else to put here, but these lists look better in threes. Anyway, if you have any questions you can holler here or email me at sam@hustlecon.com
Shira Abel
It's like Buzzfeed for startups.
Sam Parr
@shiraabel In our dreams :)
Kate
The Hustle certainly has been hustling! They launched only a few months ago, but they are executing beautifully-- and hilariously. Their emails and articles are extremely well written, I can't wait to see how they continue to grow.
david grossblatt
These guys go for it and grind just like the rest of us. Hustle is for hustlers by hustlers.
Craig Barber
Been following these guys for a while. They write some great stuff.
Dre Durr💡
Big fan of The Hustle newsletter! Their copy is incredible:-)
Eric Bahn
One of the most unique voices I've seen in a mag.
Matt
Best welcome email I have ever seen
Ross Currie
I am loving the idea of this site... have been enjoying browsing through the articles today. I ended up watching their intro video and something was said during it that really reasonated: "It worked because most content floating around our Facebook page was a horrible mix of shitty clickbait listicles on Buzzfeed or Upworthy, or just completely shallow and meaningless artilces that treat their readers like a bunch of morons" It's like somebody drilled a hole into my brain, put a straw in and sucked out my thoughts. I couldn't agree more. For example, let's look at the latest tweeted (at time of writing) article from Entrepreneur.com: 4 Steps to Pick Yourself Up From a Tough Situation 1. Go through an emotional detox. 2. Write down the facts. 3. Write down the lessons you learned. 4. Create a plan based on facts. Each point features about a paragraph of inane, condescending advice that's really not helpful, with a couple of them linking to other articles you can read. And it's not just entrepreneur.com doing this. At every level of the blogosphere, writers are producing content like this. Kudos to you guys for producing real content in an Internet era that's swamped by pageview journalism. The revolution has begun!
Sam Parr
@rossdcurrie Yeah man, it's freakin crazy. I actually think some of Business Insider's stuff isn't bad, but Inc, Forbes, and Entrepreneur are the worst. It feels like it's mostly made up of people who are awful writers but wanna brag that they are a contributor to those sites. It kills me on the inside.
Ross Currie
@thesamparr If you haven't already, check out Trust Me I'm Lying by @RyanHoliday - it really puts that whole journalism model into perspective. I'm also loving Content Machine by @DanNorris because I think he touches on the idea of creating content that really matters... But yeah, I think the end of clickbait and pageview journalism is on the horizon (but we're going to have to make it happen).
123
Next
Last