Difference between revisions of "The Columbia Lion"

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(The Lion (2015 - ))
(External Links)
 
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* [http://columbialion.com The Columbia Lion]
 
* [http://columbialion.com The Columbia Lion]
 
* [http://columbialion.com/about/ The Columbia Lion's About page]
 
* [http://columbialion.com/about/ The Columbia Lion's About page]
* * [https://twitter.com/TheColumbiaLion The blog's Facebook page]
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* * [https://facebook.com/RoarerTheLion The blog's Facebook page]
 
* [https://twitter.com/TheColumbiaLion The blog's Twitter feed]
 
* [https://twitter.com/TheColumbiaLion The blog's Twitter feed]
 
* [http://theblueandwhite.org/may13/cub_reporters.pdf "Cub Reporters,"] May 2013, ''The Blue and White''
 
* [http://theblueandwhite.org/may13/cub_reporters.pdf "Cub Reporters,"] May 2013, ''The Blue and White''
  
 
[[Category:Student blogs]]
 
[[Category:Student blogs]]

Latest revision as of 16:47, 28 April 2016

The Lion's logo

The Lion (known as the "The Columbia Lion" because of its URL, columbialion.com) is a student blog that originally launched in February 2013. Unlike Bwog or Spectrum, The Lion is focused on creating a forum for student discussion and debate. In December 2014, it was announced that it was being put up for sale.[1] In January 2015, it was announced that The Lion would be relaunching in Fall 2015 with a new team led by William Essilfie, Joshua Burton, Toni Airaksinen and Michele Lin.

The Lion (2015 - )

The Lion relaunched at the start of the Fall 2015 semester with a new website, structure, and management team. It is currently the only publication with an open submissions policy.

The Lion 1.0

The Lion (1.0) was the brainchild of Stephen Snowder, former Spectrum editor, and Jake Davidson, former Online Editor of the Columbia Daily Spectator. Davidson told The Blue and White, "[I]t became clear that Spec was too serious. We just wanted to be weird about it and make weird Columbia jokes"[2].

To protest the fact that many of the candidates in the CCSC 2013 elections were running unopposed, The Columbia Lion ran their own write-in ticket.[3] To no one's surprise, they lost, but received roughly 7% of the vote, the best ever showing by a write-in candidate.[4]

In fall 2013, off the heels of Abby Abrams' investigative reporting about ZBT, the Lion published the details of SAE's hazing violation that ultimately got them kicked off campus.

In spring 2014, the Lion launched a campaign to add a "Sandwich Ambassador" to CCSC, which ultimately succeeded. The first sandwich ambassador was elected in September.

The Lion was parodied by the CUMB in spring 2014 for an anonymous post by a Columbia student claiming to be a male gigolo that went viral. If you google "Sean Augustine-Obi Columbia," several results involving the gigolo still show up.

References

External Links