Andrew Nelson (author)

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Andrew Nelson is a writer and professor living in New Orleans. He worked as a senior producer of Britannica.com, [1] a creative director for Cyberflix, a visiting professor at Loyola University New Orleans, and a Public Relations and Social Media Account professional at Peter A. Mayer Advertising in New Orleans. Two computer games he developed for CyberFlix Titanic: Adventure Out of Time (1996) and Dust: A Tale of the Wired West (1995) were bestselling PC game and Macintosh Games of the Year. [2] In 2007 he was awarded a Lowell Thomas Award for his work with the Society. [3] He is a writer-at-large for Salon, National Geographic Traveler , ReadyMade , The New York Times , Via magazine, Weekend Sherpa and San Francisco Magazine (which featured Nelson’s monthly history column).

Contents

Nelson is a Missouri School of Journalism Alumni.

Projects

Harlem Renaissance websites were developed by Andrew Nelson and Tom Michael as a spotlight for Encyclopædia Britannica Online, to promote the encyclopedia and to serve customers in schools by observing Black History Month. [4] He developed the format for National Geographic Traveler’s award-winning "Insiders" series that uses social media to explore a travel destination. He ran a Twitter guided travel project for the National Geographic Society in 2010. [5] [6] The resultant story "Tweet Me in Miami" for National Geographic Traveler won the Folio Award for magazine writing in 2010. [3] His @WWIIToday Twitter feed won a 2009 Public Relations Society of America award and endorsements from the Pritzker Military Library and CNN News. [3]

Awards

Websites

Games

Journalism

Public relations

Citation

  1. Credits, Kids Britannica
  2. Timothy Garrand, Writing for Multimedia and the Web, page 338, Focal Press, 2006, ISBN   9780080474861
  3. 1 2 3 Biography, School of Mass Communication, Loyola University New Orleans
  4. Timothy Garrand, Writing for Multimedia and the Web, page 178, Focal Press, 2006, ISBN   9780080474861
  5. NG Radio Archived February 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  6. NG Traveler

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