
As I show you, notice the minimalistic, user-friendly, intuitive design of Tumblr. And the tone they use with instructions.
Primary
vs
Secondary
(CAN password, group
CAN'T ask, submit, like, follow)
+ Your own content
As I scroll down my dashboard, notice...
I'll show you a few examples. And you'll kind of "know" Tumblr culture the way I know it from these.
And they're not too biased - even though they're things bloggers I follow reblogged, they are all posts with MANY notes; which means popular throughout Tumblr in general.
You would think, Tumblr is about image over text, and you're right, there are a lot of images.
Any funny/important posts in other social media? You bet they're on Tumblr.



Sometimes it's more than original content. It's about the fact that you interact with each other when reblogging that makes Tumblr valuable.
Example of something where the comment is probably what got the many notes:



Interpretation
If you say something wrong/ignorant/insensitive, you bet somebody's going to call you out on it. Look at the notes on that thing!

I bet you're noticing that there's a lot to do with sexism/feminism, healthy body image or self-image, self-respect, etc... very vocal, while they vary.
Quickly think about the demographics!

I was actually going to argue that texts are just as important in Tumblr. Images are indeed important. But let this one on the left be our last one...








Sometimes they are just funny, sometimes they are more than that, and sometimes it's a little bit of both. It's cultural to our age/era.
It's an inside-text.


I think this Facebook post I wrote just a few days ago really represents my feelings (and probably many's) about it well. It just doesn't go. It doesn't go with the minimalistic design & youth culture of Tumblr. I'm just waiting for a popular text about Tumblr ads.
You can make profit if you have a certain number of followers. Let's look at one of my favorite: internetcallgirl
She asks her followers if they would click on the ad. There are ways to verify it, and she'd check out/promote your blog (people even look for "tumblr gf to make famous). Once you're close to your followers, you develop a certain personality.
YouTube stars make Facebook/Tumblr accounts. Hayley went from Tumblr famous to YouTube famous; her followers watch her videos.

Thank you!