This section of my Fanpop User Guide describes how to create a club on Fanpop, and was last substantively edited on 4 June 2013.
Covered in this article:
Determining need
Creating a club
Determining need
So, you are a fan of some topic and want to post a bunch of links for it, right? Before you create a club for it, you need to make sure that there isn't already a club that covers that territory. Duplicate clubs get reported and may eventually be removed from the site, so this is important: always perform a thorough search for your topic before you create a new club!
link
At least two searches should be conducted before you create a new club: a search for keywords for the club itself, and a search for keywords on a key link you want to add to the club. For example, if you wanted to create a spot for the punk band 'The Dead Kennedys', you should first search for the most common terms associated with the topic (in this example, it might be 'dead' 'kennedy' 'punk' 'Jello' and 'Biafra'). You'll get one of three types of results: either the list of results will show a 'Dead Kennedys' club (in which case you don't create another one), the list of results will show no clubs that match those search terms, or the site will report "we couldn't find any exact matches." If some of the search terms you entered do match material on the site, this will be followed by "Here are the results for:" and a list of results that match those terms. If you don't get any matches, is it time to create the club? The answer is NO - you do not create a new club before making sure that the content you wish to add isn't already in some other club that duplicates that content without using the same keywords you thought to use. Conduct that second search first. Say you want to add a video for "California Über Alles": search for 'california' 'Über' 'Alles' and 'Uber' (many users will not use the extended character set). It might show up in a club for "Hardcore music", and if you don't have a lot more Dead Kennedys-specific content to add, posting what you do have to the "Hardcore music" club probably works just as well.
But, if you do have a lot of content and/or the search results show that there isn't a club that adequately covers what you want to post, then create your club!
Note: before you create a new club, it is best to have the logo and banner images ready in advance. More on that below.
Creating a club
To create a club, go to the top page of the site, scroll down to the 'browse content' section and click on the link just above it labeled 'Create a New Club'. As an alternative, you can click on one of the content categories at the top (Television, Movies, Music, and so on) - it doesn't matter which one you click - and then you'll find the same 'Create a New Club' button in the upper right. Finally, you can just go link (astute users will note the mention of "spot" in that URL: "clubs" were called "spots" until late 2007). Finally, if you don't find any matches in your searches (described above), you will be presented with a form to create a new club there.
The form presents you with "Step 1: Choose Topic", followed by six fields for information on your new club.
Choose Topic: this should be the title of your club. You should make the title as specific as possible and not use acronyms. Consider: the title should have no ambiguity as to what the club is intended for, and acronyms or too-general titles cause confusion leading to content being posted to a spot inappropriately. This is VERY IMPORTANT, because the name of the club is the one thing that can never be edited after it is created. For example, here are two clubs where the creators would have done better to come up with more specific names:
* link uses a common acronym for its name. A quick online search reveals that there are dozens of different uses for the acronym "JDM", from computer programming, database management to various church ministries. The possibilities for content related to an acronym such as "JDM" are endless, and users are completely justified in posting content relating to any of the many topics in a club with such a vague name.
* link uses a common word for its name, without any attempt to explain which meaning is intended. Is it intended for unanswered questions? For the musical group Enigma? The title gives no indication that it is intended for fans of World War II cryptographic machines, and so the club has become muddled with all kinds of content unrelated to what its creator originally intended.
The users who created those clubs could, with a bit more forethought, have avoided all the confusion by spelling out the acronym (the first club could have been called "Japanese Domestic Market") and adding a word for specificity (the second club could have been called "Enigma machines").
Another thing to avoid in club naming is the use of punctuation. Some types of punctuation have caused errors in the resulting clubs, so avoid using commas, semi-colons, apostrophes, quote marks and parentheses when naming your club. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't...it's better to be on the safe side and avoid them altogether.
So please name your club carefully. Again, you will not be able to change the name once it is created...ever.
Club Motto: This should be a brief sentence describing the club (it used to be called "Club Description"). The Club Motto, along with the club's logo, is the primary means you have for attracting users to your club, as the logo, title and motto are what appear as results when users perform searches. If the motto is descriptive, users will be inclined to take a look.
However, note that the motto is one of the primary ways that Fanpop searches the site. So don't get cute and write a motto that is just a funny phrase. This will be useless for people looking for your content. The motto should be a clear description of what the club's topic is. For example, a club devoted to link should NOT have a motto like "For everybody who thinks she's great" or "Yowza!", but instead have a motto like "Everything to do with the talented supermodel Adriana Lima". Such a descriptive motto presents both the topic of the club (Adriana Lima), and explains why it might be of interest (she's an international model).
Channel selections: These are the next three fields, which represent the channels or categories into which your club will be sorted. Only the first channel selection, the 'primary channel', is required, and this will be used to determine how the breadcrumbing works for your club. Thus, to continue with our example, if you used the three pull-down menus to put the Dead Kennedys spot into the 'Arts & Culture', 'Music' and 'Society & Lifestyle' channels (in that order), the breadcrumbing would be displayed as:
link > link > dead kennedys
when perhaps you wanted
link > link > dead kennedys
instead. Whichever you list first, in the 'primary channel' field, is what will be listed in the breadcrumbing. The other two selections will cause your club to be listed under those channels, when users browse them.
Club keywords:
These are the key terms for the club that you think people will use in their searches when trying to find your club. Remember, the primary purpose of the keywords is to be found in searches, so that users can find your club.
The keywords should be separated by commas. For example, the Dead Kennedys club might have:
dead, kennedys, jello, biafra, punk, music, california
as keywords. Each club can have ten keywords maximum, so choose carefully.
Once you have filled out each of the required fields, click "submit". If any of the required fields haven't been filled out, the fields exceed the allowed length/number of characters (or allowed number of keywords, in the case of the 'Club Keywords' field), or the club name has already been used, the site will produce an error message prompting you to correct the problem and re-submit.
Once you have successfully submitted, you will get a brief confirmation screen, and then the site will automatically load your new club. Your new, blank, empty club. What next?
Logo and banner
First, you need to create a logo and banner for your club. The club logo is the square image that is rendered as an icon across the site to represent the club, whenever an update or other reference to your club is made. The banner is the long image that goes across the top of the club's page. Providing the logo and banner is important to do now, for two reasons:
1) Clubs without a logo and/or banner don't get as much traffic, since users prefer a good image to the generic fanpop images that appear on all new clubs.
2) Your newly created club is considered a pending or upcoming club as soon as it is created. Pending bears little significance to how the club appears to users (though savvy fanpop users do check the link occasionally to see what's new on the site), since users can immediately join your club and/or add links and other content to your club the moment it is created. There is a complicated algorithm that determines whether a club is 'promoted' from the pending status, based on the number of fans of that club, the amount of links in the club, how many ratings there are in the club, and whether there is a logo and banner for the club. However, while having fans join your club will not immediately elevate it from the 'pending' status, it will prevent you from editing the logo and banner. This bears repeating: once other fans join your club, you can't edit the club without moderator privileges. So, as I mentioned earlier, it is best for you to have your logo and banner ready before you even create the club, so that you can load them in the often-narrow time window while you still can.
Creating the club logo and banner
For a club to be promoted from the 'pending' status, it needs to have both a logo and a banner.
The logo should be a perfectly square image of at least 100 pixels across by 100 pixels high. While you can use a smaller square image, it is not recommended, as smaller images than the minimum size get inflated to fill the minimum size, and that can lead to blocky 'pixelized' pictures. The other consideration for a logo is that it read well...by that I mean that the image should be fairly simple and should well represent the topic of the club. Users should be able to look at the icon and immediately be able to tell what the club is (or at least have a fair guess at it) without even reading the club title. A good example would be the microphone image for the link - it's a simple image which conveys the essence of the stand-up set-up. I won't bother pointing out bad examples, as any icon is better than the default fanpop icon which doesn't indicate anything for a club other than that you are on the fanpop web site (and hopefully we all know this). But I do encourage users to try for images that are universal rather than specific to your country (bad examples: a phone booth, a toilet, or a taxi, all of which have very different appearances in various countries). Finally, you should consider that the club's logo is used all over Fanpop, scaled to various sizes...therefore you should try to come up with an image that reads well even at a miniscule size. For an example of what to avoid, there's this image. It may read well at 100x100, but at this size, what is it? An hostile alien? A fractal? A masterpiece of Cubism? Similarly, logos with small text should be avoided, as they are illegible at small sizes. Try to make sure that your logo is simple and represents the club topic well.
The banner is a little more difficult to create than the logo, as the minimum dimensions for that are 800 pixels wide by 100 pixels tall, an 8:1 ratio that can be difficult to accommodate with typical publicity pictures and the like. Again, you can use a larger image (which will scale down) or a smaller one (which will expand with the same pixelation problem mentioned before), as long as the dimensions remain in the 8:1 ratio.
Note: whenever you submit an image to fanpop that must be of certain dimensions (your portrait picture, pictures for picks, club logos and banners) but your image does not meet those dimensions, the site will expand and/or crop your image in new and exciting ways in order to make it fit. For example, for a club banner you could submit an image that is 400x50 pixels, and Fanpop would expand it to the 800x100 dimensions. You can use this in a pinch, but it's better to prepare your images to be the correct dimensions before you submit them...if you want the images to look good.
Because it can often be difficult to find an image in the public domain that is 800 or more pixels wide, you will probably have to use image editing software in order to combine multiple images into something that fits the 800x100 dimensions. Everyone has his/her favorite image editing software. Many people use Photoshop; myself I use GIMP.
In contrast to the concerns about the logo, the banner can be any kind of image you like (as long as it doesn't violate the link, of course!), directly related to the club's subject, or only indirectly related. The purpose of the banner is to provide some personalized visual interest to the club, making it unique. Ideally, that image would also serve to tell the user where he/she is, but if it is distinctive enough it can work regardless of the image's subject. It should be said, too, that the banner can be much more visually complicated than the logo, as users will likely look at the banner much longer than they do at the logo. I've seen spots for TV shows with a banner of pretty flowers shot against a blue sky. Having been to those, I would recognize where I was again just by glancing up and seeing the image, it was that distinctive.
For a more in-depth description of how to create a banner, try reading link.
Once you've created the club, you add the logo and banner by clicking the "edit club" link in the upper right of the club page, in the right column just under the banner and the green "1 Fan: You're a fan!" counter. This will load a form where you can edit the motto and keywords of the spot, as well as upload forms to submit your logo and banner. Note: fanpop's site takes issue with some anti-virus/firewall combinations, causing the 'banner upload' portion of the form to disappear. If that is the case, you will have to either use a different system or manually de-activate your anti-virus/firewall software, then making sure to reactivate it as soon as the form is submitted.
Your new logo and banner should appear as soon as the page reloads.
'Seeding' the club
The last thing you do for a new club (aside from inviting your friends to check it out) is to submit some initial links and other content for the site. This works just the way it would on another club, regardless of how it was created or by whom it was created. You can submit links, videos, images, polls, write articles, start a quiz, create picks and forum threads, or even write on the wall. Each type of content you add will update the list of "recent content" of that type, linked from the top page of the site (www.fanpop.com). It used to be that the top page of the site actually promoted user content. But now, we just have the second-level listings of "Browse most recent content" (most recent videos, most recent images, most recent articles, et cetera). So, to increase the likelihood that people will find your club, you should post quality content in each of those categories.
Here's links to other parts of the guide for your quick reference:
* link
* 1: link
* 2: link.
* 3: link
* 4: Picks: this is the generic name both for the poll questions that you see on the site and for the answers you can pick to that question. Papa has created a link.
* 5: link
* 6:
link
* 7: link
You may also want to see:
* link feature
* link
Covered in this article:
Determining need
Creating a club
Determining need
So, you are a fan of some topic and want to post a bunch of links for it, right? Before you create a club for it, you need to make sure that there isn't already a club that covers that territory. Duplicate clubs get reported and may eventually be removed from the site, so this is important: always perform a thorough search for your topic before you create a new club!
link
At least two searches should be conducted before you create a new club: a search for keywords for the club itself, and a search for keywords on a key link you want to add to the club. For example, if you wanted to create a spot for the punk band 'The Dead Kennedys', you should first search for the most common terms associated with the topic (in this example, it might be 'dead' 'kennedy' 'punk' 'Jello' and 'Biafra'). You'll get one of three types of results: either the list of results will show a 'Dead Kennedys' club (in which case you don't create another one), the list of results will show no clubs that match those search terms, or the site will report "we couldn't find any exact matches." If some of the search terms you entered do match material on the site, this will be followed by "Here are the results for:" and a list of results that match those terms. If you don't get any matches, is it time to create the club? The answer is NO - you do not create a new club before making sure that the content you wish to add isn't already in some other club that duplicates that content without using the same keywords you thought to use. Conduct that second search first. Say you want to add a video for "California Über Alles": search for 'california' 'Über' 'Alles' and 'Uber' (many users will not use the extended character set). It might show up in a club for "Hardcore music", and if you don't have a lot more Dead Kennedys-specific content to add, posting what you do have to the "Hardcore music" club probably works just as well.
But, if you do have a lot of content and/or the search results show that there isn't a club that adequately covers what you want to post, then create your club!
Note: before you create a new club, it is best to have the logo and banner images ready in advance. More on that below.
Creating a club
To create a club, go to the top page of the site, scroll down to the 'browse content' section and click on the link just above it labeled 'Create a New Club'. As an alternative, you can click on one of the content categories at the top (Television, Movies, Music, and so on) - it doesn't matter which one you click - and then you'll find the same 'Create a New Club' button in the upper right. Finally, you can just go link (astute users will note the mention of "spot" in that URL: "clubs" were called "spots" until late 2007). Finally, if you don't find any matches in your searches (described above), you will be presented with a form to create a new club there.
The form presents you with "Step 1: Choose Topic", followed by six fields for information on your new club.
Choose Topic: this should be the title of your club. You should make the title as specific as possible and not use acronyms. Consider: the title should have no ambiguity as to what the club is intended for, and acronyms or too-general titles cause confusion leading to content being posted to a spot inappropriately. This is VERY IMPORTANT, because the name of the club is the one thing that can never be edited after it is created. For example, here are two clubs where the creators would have done better to come up with more specific names:
* link uses a common acronym for its name. A quick online search reveals that there are dozens of different uses for the acronym "JDM", from computer programming, database management to various church ministries. The possibilities for content related to an acronym such as "JDM" are endless, and users are completely justified in posting content relating to any of the many topics in a club with such a vague name.
* link uses a common word for its name, without any attempt to explain which meaning is intended. Is it intended for unanswered questions? For the musical group Enigma? The title gives no indication that it is intended for fans of World War II cryptographic machines, and so the club has become muddled with all kinds of content unrelated to what its creator originally intended.
The users who created those clubs could, with a bit more forethought, have avoided all the confusion by spelling out the acronym (the first club could have been called "Japanese Domestic Market") and adding a word for specificity (the second club could have been called "Enigma machines").
Another thing to avoid in club naming is the use of punctuation. Some types of punctuation have caused errors in the resulting clubs, so avoid using commas, semi-colons, apostrophes, quote marks and parentheses when naming your club. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't...it's better to be on the safe side and avoid them altogether.
So please name your club carefully. Again, you will not be able to change the name once it is created...ever.
Club Motto: This should be a brief sentence describing the club (it used to be called "Club Description"). The Club Motto, along with the club's logo, is the primary means you have for attracting users to your club, as the logo, title and motto are what appear as results when users perform searches. If the motto is descriptive, users will be inclined to take a look.
However, note that the motto is one of the primary ways that Fanpop searches the site. So don't get cute and write a motto that is just a funny phrase. This will be useless for people looking for your content. The motto should be a clear description of what the club's topic is. For example, a club devoted to link should NOT have a motto like "For everybody who thinks she's great" or "Yowza!", but instead have a motto like "Everything to do with the talented supermodel Adriana Lima". Such a descriptive motto presents both the topic of the club (Adriana Lima), and explains why it might be of interest (she's an international model).
Channel selections: These are the next three fields, which represent the channels or categories into which your club will be sorted. Only the first channel selection, the 'primary channel', is required, and this will be used to determine how the breadcrumbing works for your club. Thus, to continue with our example, if you used the three pull-down menus to put the Dead Kennedys spot into the 'Arts & Culture', 'Music' and 'Society & Lifestyle' channels (in that order), the breadcrumbing would be displayed as:
link > link > dead kennedys
when perhaps you wanted
link > link > dead kennedys
instead. Whichever you list first, in the 'primary channel' field, is what will be listed in the breadcrumbing. The other two selections will cause your club to be listed under those channels, when users browse them.
Club keywords:
These are the key terms for the club that you think people will use in their searches when trying to find your club. Remember, the primary purpose of the keywords is to be found in searches, so that users can find your club.
The keywords should be separated by commas. For example, the Dead Kennedys club might have:
dead, kennedys, jello, biafra, punk, music, california
as keywords. Each club can have ten keywords maximum, so choose carefully.
Once you have filled out each of the required fields, click "submit". If any of the required fields haven't been filled out, the fields exceed the allowed length/number of characters (or allowed number of keywords, in the case of the 'Club Keywords' field), or the club name has already been used, the site will produce an error message prompting you to correct the problem and re-submit.
Once you have successfully submitted, you will get a brief confirmation screen, and then the site will automatically load your new club. Your new, blank, empty club. What next?
Logo and banner
First, you need to create a logo and banner for your club. The club logo is the square image that is rendered as an icon across the site to represent the club, whenever an update or other reference to your club is made. The banner is the long image that goes across the top of the club's page. Providing the logo and banner is important to do now, for two reasons:
1) Clubs without a logo and/or banner don't get as much traffic, since users prefer a good image to the generic fanpop images that appear on all new clubs.
2) Your newly created club is considered a pending or upcoming club as soon as it is created. Pending bears little significance to how the club appears to users (though savvy fanpop users do check the link occasionally to see what's new on the site), since users can immediately join your club and/or add links and other content to your club the moment it is created. There is a complicated algorithm that determines whether a club is 'promoted' from the pending status, based on the number of fans of that club, the amount of links in the club, how many ratings there are in the club, and whether there is a logo and banner for the club. However, while having fans join your club will not immediately elevate it from the 'pending' status, it will prevent you from editing the logo and banner. This bears repeating: once other fans join your club, you can't edit the club without moderator privileges. So, as I mentioned earlier, it is best for you to have your logo and banner ready before you even create the club, so that you can load them in the often-narrow time window while you still can.
Creating the club logo and banner
For a club to be promoted from the 'pending' status, it needs to have both a logo and a banner.
The logo should be a perfectly square image of at least 100 pixels across by 100 pixels high. While you can use a smaller square image, it is not recommended, as smaller images than the minimum size get inflated to fill the minimum size, and that can lead to blocky 'pixelized' pictures. The other consideration for a logo is that it read well...by that I mean that the image should be fairly simple and should well represent the topic of the club. Users should be able to look at the icon and immediately be able to tell what the club is (or at least have a fair guess at it) without even reading the club title. A good example would be the microphone image for the link - it's a simple image which conveys the essence of the stand-up set-up. I won't bother pointing out bad examples, as any icon is better than the default fanpop icon which doesn't indicate anything for a club other than that you are on the fanpop web site (and hopefully we all know this). But I do encourage users to try for images that are universal rather than specific to your country (bad examples: a phone booth, a toilet, or a taxi, all of which have very different appearances in various countries). Finally, you should consider that the club's logo is used all over Fanpop, scaled to various sizes...therefore you should try to come up with an image that reads well even at a miniscule size. For an example of what to avoid, there's this image. It may read well at 100x100, but at this size, what is it? An hostile alien? A fractal? A masterpiece of Cubism? Similarly, logos with small text should be avoided, as they are illegible at small sizes. Try to make sure that your logo is simple and represents the club topic well.
The banner is a little more difficult to create than the logo, as the minimum dimensions for that are 800 pixels wide by 100 pixels tall, an 8:1 ratio that can be difficult to accommodate with typical publicity pictures and the like. Again, you can use a larger image (which will scale down) or a smaller one (which will expand with the same pixelation problem mentioned before), as long as the dimensions remain in the 8:1 ratio.
Note: whenever you submit an image to fanpop that must be of certain dimensions (your portrait picture, pictures for picks, club logos and banners) but your image does not meet those dimensions, the site will expand and/or crop your image in new and exciting ways in order to make it fit. For example, for a club banner you could submit an image that is 400x50 pixels, and Fanpop would expand it to the 800x100 dimensions. You can use this in a pinch, but it's better to prepare your images to be the correct dimensions before you submit them...if you want the images to look good.
Because it can often be difficult to find an image in the public domain that is 800 or more pixels wide, you will probably have to use image editing software in order to combine multiple images into something that fits the 800x100 dimensions. Everyone has his/her favorite image editing software. Many people use Photoshop; myself I use GIMP.
In contrast to the concerns about the logo, the banner can be any kind of image you like (as long as it doesn't violate the link, of course!), directly related to the club's subject, or only indirectly related. The purpose of the banner is to provide some personalized visual interest to the club, making it unique. Ideally, that image would also serve to tell the user where he/she is, but if it is distinctive enough it can work regardless of the image's subject. It should be said, too, that the banner can be much more visually complicated than the logo, as users will likely look at the banner much longer than they do at the logo. I've seen spots for TV shows with a banner of pretty flowers shot against a blue sky. Having been to those, I would recognize where I was again just by glancing up and seeing the image, it was that distinctive.
For a more in-depth description of how to create a banner, try reading link.
Once you've created the club, you add the logo and banner by clicking the "edit club" link in the upper right of the club page, in the right column just under the banner and the green "1 Fan: You're a fan!" counter. This will load a form where you can edit the motto and keywords of the spot, as well as upload forms to submit your logo and banner. Note: fanpop's site takes issue with some anti-virus/firewall combinations, causing the 'banner upload' portion of the form to disappear. If that is the case, you will have to either use a different system or manually de-activate your anti-virus/firewall software, then making sure to reactivate it as soon as the form is submitted.
Your new logo and banner should appear as soon as the page reloads.
'Seeding' the club
The last thing you do for a new club (aside from inviting your friends to check it out) is to submit some initial links and other content for the site. This works just the way it would on another club, regardless of how it was created or by whom it was created. You can submit links, videos, images, polls, write articles, start a quiz, create picks and forum threads, or even write on the wall. Each type of content you add will update the list of "recent content" of that type, linked from the top page of the site (www.fanpop.com). It used to be that the top page of the site actually promoted user content. But now, we just have the second-level listings of "Browse most recent content" (most recent videos, most recent images, most recent articles, et cetera). So, to increase the likelihood that people will find your club, you should post quality content in each of those categories.
Here's links to other parts of the guide for your quick reference:
* link
* 1: link
* 2: link.
* 3: link
* 4: Picks: this is the generic name both for the poll questions that you see on the site and for the answers you can pick to that question. Papa has created a link.
* 5: link
* 6:
link
* 7: link
You may also want to see:
* link feature
* link
Yesterday, I was fanpoping. I come across the link spot- And went to videos. link is what I saw. There were apple pie videos there. Submitted by Hulu.
link are some images by other fanpopers reporting this.
Hulu's videos should NOT be done by a webcrawler. (or whatever you call it) Dave, either have a manual team do hulu's videos, or dont do it at all.
EDIT: as amazondebs says in the comments, Fanpop isen't even getting paid for hulu's videos. What is the purpose of having them here?
(Another) EDIT: more of this maddness. and in link spot!
Creators of Fanpop,
This really is a fantastic site, it is like a
cooler, safer Facebook in my opinion. But, there
has been a decline in users, and not any increase. One thing is the new default style is less user friendly and a lot of people don't like it. So, you could make the old fanpop style the default style, or make the option to change to it more obvious. There is also the issue of a lack of advertisement; I had literally never known or even seen anything about this site until late March this year. I have never seen an ad for this website in my life. If it is to expensive or the ads just aren't being shown in a lot of places you could at least encourage people to share it with others.
This really is a fantastic site, it is like a
cooler, safer Facebook in my opinion. But, there
has been a decline in users, and not any increase. One thing is the new default style is less user friendly and a lot of people don't like it. So, you could make the old fanpop style the default style, or make the option to change to it more obvious. There is also the issue of a lack of advertisement; I had literally never known or even seen anything about this site until late March this year. I have never seen an ad for this website in my life. If it is to expensive or the ads just aren't being shown in a lot of places you could at least encourage people to share it with others.
Today on June 6th, The Meebo bar was not working. Many fans could not log on and all of them thought that it was a glitch or a fail. But then, according to snakemanfan, Google shut down Meebo permanently to work on Google+. It is totally damn stupid. I know that many people use the meebo bar in order for chatting on Fanpop and other stuff, But this is just sad. Google want to dominate the whole internet. Just because Google+ is being updated just does not mean that you have to shut down the Meebo bar permanently. So today, We have to say our Final Words to the Meebo bar as it shuts down forever.
This will be a really sad thing for users who have used the Meebo Bar. I really do not know if they will replace it or bring it back, But for now, Meebo is gone, Forever. :( :( :(
Riley
NOTE: I wrote all of this on my tablet.
This will be a really sad thing for users who have used the Meebo Bar. I really do not know if they will replace it or bring it back, But for now, Meebo is gone, Forever. :( :( :(
Riley
NOTE: I wrote all of this on my tablet.
Yeah, I know this is kinda lame, but this is all I could think up! :'(
Just go to an article, (or look the person who you want to message up) and click their name near the top. Fanpop will show you their profile page and scroll down until you find the "Message" tab. Click it and ...voila!
Just type your message and send it. If they message you back, your inbox will tell you! Try it!
Sorry if this was lame! :(
But please remember to
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Just go to an article, (or look the person who you want to message up) and click their name near the top. Fanpop will show you their profile page and scroll down until you find the "Message" tab. Click it and ...voila!
Just type your message and send it. If they message you back, your inbox will tell you! Try it!
Sorry if this was lame! :(
But please remember to
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Have a great day!!!!!!