I was thumbing through Facebook on my phone yesterday and I came across a story that all Dollar Tree stores will be closing up shop for good by October 1, 2017.
In a hilarious Facebook post, a Hannibal woman takes a subtle dig at Internet keyboard warriors and shows us all the proper way to use social media to complain about about the stupidest stuff.
The Hannibal Alliance for Youth Success organization will host a presentation for parents called Social Media Safety. This program will be held in the Hannibal High School Cafeteria from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, October 20.
A story that the Herald-Whig published last month has climbed to the top of Facebook’s trending list. It was a story about the Zanger family of Quincy, which reached the plateau of 100 grandchildren!
I was recently at a meeting when the speaker starting saying that his organization would be utilizing social media including Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, and before he could reel off another option, was interrupted with a comment from an elderly person who said “What the hell are you talking about?”
I was thumbing through Facebook the other night and came across a post from rebootillinois.com which listed the 25 most dangerous Illinois cities according to Law Street Media. These are cities under 100,000 people based on the FBI's violent crime rates and Quincy is listed at number 13.
It’s that time of the year, when pop culture websites and critics publish their annual Best Of lists and we heap praise on the best and most beloved movies and TV shows of the year. But what about the average moviegoer and TV-viewer? That’s where Facebook comes in. The social media site has released their top 10 movies and top 10 TV shows of the year, based on the most discussed titled of 2014. While some are fairly obvious, the lists might surprise you and inspire you to contemplate the overlap between what’s popular and what’s actually good.