About
Bio
Written for consumers and food connoisseurs in the San Francisco area. Promotes the finest products and services for culinary, healing and creative arts. Includes reviews of local entertainment events, restaurants, bars and clubs, a calendar of events and some poetry. Sections include: Faststreet, highlighting food finds in the San Francisco area; Zoetry, featuring products, events, and services for health, awareness, organics, creative and holistic services, environmental and global-consciousness organizations; and Feste's Finds, recommendations for San Francisco food and wine festivals, tastings, and cultural and culinary events.
Email
email@cision.one
Website
site@cision.one
Social media
Location
United States of America
Frequency
upgrade
Circulation
upgrade
Sectors
Cooking & Baking, Gourmet Foods, Nutrition, Organic Food, Restaurant Reviews, Society & Culture, Vegetarianism & Veganism, Wine/Winemaking
Bio
Written for consumers and food connoisseurs in the San Francisco area. Promotes the finest products and services for culinary, healing and creative arts. Includes reviews of local entertainment events, restaurants, bars and clubs, a calendar of events and some poetry. Sections include: Faststreet, highlighting food finds in the San Francisco area; Zoetry, featuring products, events, and services for health, awareness, organics, creative and holistic services, environmental and global-consciousness organizations; and Feste's Finds, recommendations for San Francisco food and wine festivals, tastings, and cultural and culinary events.
Website
Social media
Location
Frequency
Circulation
Sectors
Cooking & Baking, Gourmet Foods, Nutrition, Organic Food, Restaurant Reviews, Society & Culture, Vegetarianism & Veganism, Wine/Winemaking
Most recent articles by Foodism
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit
Article description
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit
Article description
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit
Article description
Explore outlets similar to Foodism
-
TThe New York Times
The New York Times offers the latest news from around the world. It has several different editions for Eastern and national regions. In addition, the paper gets much of its content and reporting from its many bureaus. The foreign desk oversees correspondents and stringers around the world. Daily deadlines are usually between 5pm and 6pm ET. The paper does not accept artwork. The lead time for news coverage is one day to one week, the lead time for special section features is three weeks.. The lead time for advertising is 30 days.
ViewMMashedThe blog covers all things Food, including Restaurant reviews, How-tos, Tips, Recipes and more. The fundamentals of working with bloggers are the same as with traditional journalists at traditional media outlets: respect their schedules; take time to read their material to learn their interests; and only contact them if/when they want to be contacted. You will also find that if a blogger is a journalist for another outlet(s), Cision tracks their contact preferences there as well. The outlet offers RSS (Really Simple Syndication).
ViewTThe AtlanticDesigned as a news magazine written for upscale readers who have a high degree of intelligence and critical capacity and are interested in contemporary trends in finance, politics, the arts, literature, books, cuisine, public and foreign affairs, science and technology, culture, food and travel. Editorial content is aimed at the serious reader and is comprised of reflective pieces and non-fiction that provide different perspectives on what is occurring in contemporary society.The magazine was founded as The Atlantic Monthly in Boston, MA, in 1857. It was created as a literary and cultural commentary magazine. It quickly achieved a national reputation, which it held for more than a century. It was important for recognizing and publishing new writers and poets, and encouraging major careers. It published leading writers' commentary on abolition, education, and other major issues in contemporary political affairs.The magazine's founders were a group of prominent writers of national reputation, who included Harriet Beecher Stowe, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., John Greenleaf Whittier and James Russell Lowell. Lowell was its first editor. The editor-in-chief as of November 2009 is James Bennet. The publisher as of November 2009 is Jay Lauf, who is also a vice-president of Atlantic Media Company.The Family section looks at covers the political, cultural and economic factors that impact American family life. The section has it's own public Facebook group and newsletter and runs coverage both print and online as well as in The Atlantic's podcasts and video content.The switchboard will transfer the caller directly to the journalist.Direct contributed content to submissions@theatlantic.com. When sending in content be sure to submit it as a PDF. Also include a short paragraph about the author and a description of the piece being submitted.
ViewNew York MagazineNew York Magazine covers, analyzes, comments on, and defines the culture, lifestyle, fashion and personalities that drive New York City. It was founded in April 1968 by the editor Clay Felker and the graphic designer Milton Glaser, and was among the first "lifestyle magazines" meant to appeal to both male and female audiences. Geared for an audience that is generally college-educated working professionals, its readership includes both area residents and visitors interested in keeping in touch with local lifestyles. Created to report on and interpret recent events in the New York metropolitan area, it contains news about the city as well as reporting and criticism about restaurants, the arts and entertainment, shopping and services in New York. The publication is comprised of reader letters, opinions, news, features and interviews. Editorial content is broken down as follows: The Intelligencer section features New York people, places and happenings. It includes three subsections; a quick survey of the city’s most important events is included in It Happened This Week; Party Lines is a photo page; and the Competition, which challenges readers to solve New York-specific problems such as designing a new bridge or remaking an urban health club. The Features section showcases the big stories about people, politics, business, the media, food, fashion, crime, culture, real estate, medical issues, parenting, and quality of life issues. The Strategist section is dedicated to inspiring New Yorkers to live well by providing advice in the following subsections: The Best Bet, Mating, The Look Book, Storefront, Market Research, Food, The Everything Guide, Economy of One, Map, Body, Real Estate and Travel. The Culture Pages section gives the low-down on entertainment with subsections on Movies, Theater, Music, Art, Books and TV. The Agenda section at the back of each issue provides succinct listings for things to do. Subsections include Movies, Broadway & Off-Broadway, Art Museums, Galleries, Photography, Special Events, Music & Dance, Nightlife, Readings, Lectures & Panels, Restaurants, Kids and The Word. The final page is reserved for the Artifact section, highlighting current ideas, trends or interesting information reflecting city life. The magazine's website, nymag.com features several off-shoot digital publications including The Cut, Vulture, and Science of Us.
ViewGGood Morning America - ABC Television NetworkGood Morning America is a national morning news program that airs on the ABC Television Network. The show covers multiple topics. Recent news story topics include divorce in America, spoiled children, and eating disorders. Features include weather, food, health, technology, home and garden, consumer reports, music, musical guests and political analysis. In fall 2004, Good Morning America expanded to a seven day schedule with weekend editions every Saturday and Sunday. Good Morning American premiered in 1975.As part of the show's format, Good Morning America often interviews guests. The booking department wants interesting stories on any topic. They receive an extremely high volume of contact due to the broad content of the show, so they prefer to receive information via fax. Information sent is rapidly passed on to the appropriate person or place. Therefore, called-in information is easily lost. The show will contact you if they are interested. The show accepts mailed video, books and samples of products along with press kits. General information and news should be faxed to the news assignment desk. Breaking news and day of news is distributed through "the slot," the rotation of reporters that answer calls and faxes to the assignment desk for a certain time frame. Non-breaking news should be sent to the Futures assignment editor by fax. The outlet offers RSS (Really Simple Syndication) and a digital Podcast.
ViewUse CisionOne to find more relevant outletsDiscover the stories that impact your brand. In realtime.
CisionOne delivers relevant news, trends and conversations that matter to your brand with the world’s most comprehensive media monitoring service across Print, Online, TV, Radio, Social, Magazines, Podcasts and more.