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Died in obscurity
Died in obscurity










died in obscurity

Most entrepreneurs struggle with getting attention because they are afraid of how they may be perceived by others. Think of it as your ethical duty to tell as many people as possible about what you do so you can help them. You must get sold and have total belief in your business. My friend, Gary Vaynerchuk, says in his book, Jab Jab Jab Right Hook, “if you are going to interrupt people’s entertainment, you better be entertaining.”

died in obscurity

To cut through the clutter you must entertain. Understand that your customer is oblivious to you and overwhelmed with content. What will make them stop what they are doing and pay attention to you? What makes you read or watch one thing over another? Communicate to others with that in mind. It is very important to vary the content and be informative, but most importantly, I must entertain. In every communication, my goal is to create an effect with the recipient of that message. Related: Grow Your Business a Thousandfold in One Year With Content Marketing When you have something to offer, offer it. If you’re out there all the time, you’re going to get more and more eyes. The quality will not matter if you don’t push content frequently enough to get results. To me, quantity is more important than quality in the beginning because you aren’t going to figure out the quality without the quantity. I have found that "creativity follows commitment" so make sure you commit first, then worry about content. It takes work and the willingness to try new things, learn what works and what doesn’t, make improvements and move forward. I also recently launched Whatever It Takes Network, a digital platform with video programming intended to help people with their businesses and life. I’ve posted over 1,000 videos on YouTube and written thousands of blogs, strategies and posts on other social mediums. I have used radio, TV, advertising and social media. She had a heartache, and I think it caused her to be a recluse.Over the last five years, I have worked hard to get the right kind of attention. “But that heart covered up a lot of bitterness. “She was sensitive, and kind, with an overflowing heart,” Allstopp said. In her later years, Carpenter passed time at thrift shops, sitting on used furniture while browsing through old copies of National Geographic.Ĭarpenter showed magazines to friends and explained why photographs were composed the way they were. Paul, Carpenter ran a wedding photo business and worked as a nurse to support her mother and child. By 1951, the marriage - and her career - were over. The omnipresent Swede is in a host of bands. Her new husband, a radio announcer, took her to Denver, where they had a son. If youre a fan of Swedish death metal, or death metal in general, you probably know who Rogga Johannsson is. When the affair ended, Carpenter remarried.

died in obscurity

In Washington, she fell in love with a Capitol journalist. Marion was a very private person, and she kept a lot of things from everybody.”Īccording to what she told her friends late in life, a love affair with a married man may have helped end her career prematurely.Ĭarpenter’s marriage to a Navy officer who abused her ended in divorce. “But we’ve all just got pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. “This is a story and a half,” said a friend, Beverly Allstopp. How her life unraveled is a book with many missing pages. One of the photos, which shows Truman striding uphill toward the Washington Monument, bears the message: “It’s good exercise if you keep it up, but not for high-heeled shoes, Miss Carpenter.” In her belongings when she died were photos she took of Truman, which the president inscribed to “Miss Carpenter.”

died in obscurity

She won the White House job as a photographer for the International News Photos syndicate. Paul and went to Washington when she was about 24. She was the only woman among a handful of photographers who traveled with Truman.Ĭarpenter studied photography in St. In the 1940s, Carpenter was one of the first women in the White House News Photographers’ Assn. The women who came along in the ‘30s, ‘40s and ‘50s had it the hardest. “It’s sad that we don’t know about a Marion Carpenter. “She sounds like the type of woman upon whose shoulders we all stand,” said Susy Shultz, president of the Journalism and Women Symposium. The body is still at the county medical examiner’s office while friends - most of whom Carpenter met at garage sales or thrift shops - try to track down her only child, a son whom she had not seen in more than 30 years. Paul, Minn., home, bundled up tightly against the cold because the thermostat had been lowered to save money. 29, it was reported this week, on a couch at her St. Although Carpenter broke ground in her profession, she died alone and destitute at the age of 82. Marion Carpenter, one of the first women to be a White House photographer, who traveled with President Harry Truman and covered him daily, has died.












Died in obscurity