Au Revoir, Spring 2020!

Ah yes, cheers! Yet another college semester has come and gone.
But this wasn’t just any college semester. This one was a doozy.
From this being my first semester at Texas State as an ACC transfer student to the global fucking pandemic that broke out, I’d say it was an eventful few months.
And oddly enough, it has such a passionless ending.
I pictured myself sitting alongside Lake Austin, writing this wrap-up post at Mozart’s Coffee Roasters with a fruit tart and iced latte in hand. I anticipated prepping for my Japan study-abroad trip after knocking out my finals. I looked forward to the relief and satisfaction that I’d feel after successfully finishing my first semester at Texas State.
But instead, I’m sitting in bed with greasy hair and a migraine, repeatedly having to scoot my cat off of my keyboard so that I can type and tell the story that I’ve been struggling to find the words for.
It’s hard to sum up a semester that you have such mixed feelings about.
I had so much fun starting at Texas State- walking around that beautiful, topsy turvy campus everyday and seeing a whole new side of the city to which I’ve become a local, sitting front row in my giant, 400-person lectures and loving it so much that I fought even the harshest of hangovers to make it to class, granting a smile and a wave to the Bubble Believer on my way to the coffee shop, and most of all, actually feeling inspired after leaving campus each day- it was all such an improvement from how I felt at community college.
I remember the last day before spring break, there was lots of talk about Coronavirus, but we all expected an extended spring break as the most dramatic possibility. We all laughed when my advertising professor said, “Alright, well I guess I’ll never see y’all again!” to dismiss class that day.
But alas! Here I am, having never seen my advertising class again. All classes are online. Lectures have been either links to podcasts, a short youtube video, or a professor talking over a powerpoint for two hours. Assignments for most classes have been some boring online activity, but thankfully not for Fundamentals of Digital Online Media, the class I am writing this blog for.
I’m both grateful and frustrated that I’ve had to continue content creation in the midst of all this. It feels good to make something and document my experience, and some of it feels even more meaningful than pre-COVID content, but finding the motivation most days is damn near impossible.
But even on the rough days, I have found solace in writing this blog. Even when I’m unable to create the type of posts I imagined myself creating, it feels nice to write and share my experience with those other than my roommates, whom I am quarantined with.
Reflecting on My Blogging Experience
I would have loved to have been able to stay true to my mission for this blog, and fully explore Austin as if I were a tourist. It became quite difficult once this virus hit, but I intend on updating this blog once it is actually safe to return to society.
I predominantly promoted this blog via Twitter, but also shared my first post to Facebook and kept the link in my Instagram bio. I think I could have better promoted my posts and gained a bit more traffic by regularly sharing posts to Facebook, as well as mentioning them in my Instagram stories. I’m still getting used to transitioning my social media pages from a pure source of recreational communication to something that I can also use to promote myself in a professional manner. We’re definitely making some progress though- when the semester started, my Twitter name was “Honda Daddy.” (the fact that i’ve changed my Twitter name does not negate my status as Honda Daddy, though)
Initially, my best experience of this blogging project was finally having an excuse to explore Austin in a way that I had always thought about, but neglected to do. I got stuck in a rut of going to the same few places that I knew and loved, and this blog made me excited to branch out. This plan obviously didn’t work out once COVID hit, but this blog remained my motivation to go out and do something other than lay in bed, work on puzzles or day drink. Having to create content for class in the midst of a crisis sort of kept me sane and forced me to find creative new ways to branch out.
I feel that this blog will continue to give me an outlet as well as a source of accountability for stepping out of my comfort zone and documenting it. I look forward to picking up where I left off once I can continue exploring the area in which I live.
I also look forward to using this blog as a part of my professional portfolio. As someone who is going into a field of communications such as advertising, it is important to continue building on my digital communication/documentation skills. This blog is an excellent way to put myself out there, get some practice and show off my ability to tell a story.
Let’s Talk Numbers
WordPress offers a free look into the stats behind your blog, which is quite interesting to explore. Let’s take a gander:

It looks like my two most popular weeks were the first week of posting (02/03/20 – 02/09/20) with 42 views and 24 visitors, as well as the week of 02/17/20 – 02/23/20 with 47 views and 22 visitors. These two weeks probably had the most traffic because I was more heavily promoting these posts than ones later throughout the semester.
My most popular post as far as visitors was my introductory post, which makes sense as I promoted this post on Facebook. However, my most liked posts were the two where I was actually able to explore Austin as intended. These two posts had the most interesting content in my opinion, which explains why they would acquire the most likes.


You can also see on the “Stats for 2020” screenshot above that most of my traffic came from Twitter, which makes sense because I did the bulk of my promoting here. However, I got a lot of traffic from Facebook from the one time I posted my blog link there- Facebook seems to be the most effective way to promote my blog in the future.

I’m surprised to see that I got a few visitors from other countries. Most of my tags are things like, “ATX, 512, Texas”, etc. so I find it interesting that some people from all around the globe stumbled upon my blog.
This also made me curious about my twitter stats, so let’s take a peek at those:

I find my top tweets to be interesting- the tweet that got the most impressions was just me exclaiming, “!!!!!!! literally” in response to a friend’s tweet- this checks out as I do not have a huge following on Twitter myself.
My other top three tweets this month were all pictures of my lovely new orange hair. This especially makes sense, as I look pretty great with bright orange locks. Thanks for the validation, internet.
Most of my blog-promotion tweets got anywhere between 2-5 link clicks, but my first real post got 13. This one actually got a response from a fellow Austinite who read my post, so it’s likely that some of his followers saw this and decided to give me a click, boosting those numbers.

These statistics are insightful, even when I’m not tracking a project for school. It’s interesting to see who’s looking at your posts, and which types of posts do better than others. I love using data to gather information and piece together a story, so I’m excited to familiarize myself with these tools even further for use in my advertising career.
A Big Thank You
*insert pleading, puppy eye emoji – you know the one*
I just want to say thank you to my professor, Jon Zmikly, and my lab instructor, Faith Fuentes, for such an interesting, enjoyable semester!
I’m very sad that I didn’t get to finish off the semester in person with you guys but I truly appreciate everything you have taught me. This class has opened my eyes to the world of content creation as well as innovations in digital media, and you guys have proven to me that embracing innovation and creating content doesn’t have to be as intimidating or difficult as it may seem.
Thank you for reading my posts, not docking points for my painfully cheesy humor, and making me a better creator and student. Hope to see y’all around once things return to normal.






































