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A Grand Slam of New Sites: Introducing Huff/Post50, HuffPost High School, HuffPost Gay Voices, and HuffPost Weddings

Posted: 10/03/11 09:50 AM ET

I hope you are all in the mood to try new things, because I am delighted to announce four new additions to the Huffington Post menu today: Huff/Post50, HuffPost High School, HuffPost Gay Voices, and HuffPost Weddings (how's that for a diverse quartet?).

Let's start with Huff/Post50, our new site devoted to those of us who are part of the so-called "baby boom" generation born between 1946 and 1964 (the site's name was the brainchild of Rita Wilson, Huff/Post50's editor-at-large). There are currently 77 million of us in America (and 116 million aged 50 and over).

Our country has a very schizophrenic relationship with aging. On the one hand, we are a culture that is obsessed with youth and staying young. At the same time, thanks to advances in science, health, and medicine, Boomers are living longer and staying more active than ever before.

Huff/Post50 covers the challenges, complexities, and joys faced by Boomers -- everything from the "sandwich" pressures of simultaneously taking care of children and aging parents, to navigating the latest innovations in health and the science of aging, to sex and relationships at 50+ , to the question of reinventing oneself -- either out of necessity (sudden unemployment) or a desire to explore new interests and find new meaning in life.

F. Scott Fitzgerald famously said that there are no second acts in American life. Boomers are proving him wrong on a daily basis. After all, I co-founded HuffPost in my mid-50s. And I'm far from alone in launching a new project after 50. Indeed, one of the reasons I asked Rita to help create Huff/Post50 was how inspired I was by seeing her pursue her lifelong dream of performing in a musical, realized when she made her Broadway debut, at age 49, in Chicago.

Huff/Post50 will question the conventional wisdom that life post-50 is about winding down, and spotlight other Boomers who embrace the idea of taking on new challenges and reinventing themselves, regardless of their age. It will offer the latest news and information on the issues that matter most to men and women 50+, including health, relationships, politics, retirement planning, spirituality, humor, culture, philanthropy, and facing illness and death. And we are creating a robust community for conversation and engagement on all these topics.

Huff/Post50 of course features a dynamic and vibrant group blog. Among those weighing in today are Bill Maher, on being in his fifties and finally being able to "see over the crest of the mountain"; Ann and Nancy Wilson on the important role music can play in life's journey; Christiane Amanpour on life's certainties evaporating after 50; and Rita Wilson on learning how to rebalance being there for her loved ones while exploring all the things she still wants to do. We are also launching our "Late Blooming" series with a funny and revealing Q/A with Jane Lynch.

Located on the other end of the demographic spectrum is HuffPost High School, devoted to teens and the issues they care about. The new section features content from some of the nation's top teen journalists and writers, and a group blog where teen bloggers can weigh in on everything from college prep to high school sports, to homework, to the role technology plays in their lives, to comedy, poetry, politics, proms and beyond.

Over the years, HuffPost has regularly covered the troubled state of America's education system, with plunging test scores, skyrocketing dropout rates, and crumbling classrooms. It's a system that's become a bloody battlefield, with our children too often getting caught in the crossfire.

But these failures are symptoms of flawed policies, an antiquated approach to learning, and our leaders' perverted priorities -- not a reflection of the intelligence, curiosity, and passions of our nation's teens. Indeed, as I travel around the country, I've been consistently impressed by the talented young people I meet, so many of them engaged by the most important issues of our time, and committed to being part of making a difference in the world. HuffPost High School intends to put the spotlight on them, and to give them a safe and welcoming platform to talk about what's really happening in their lives -- socially, academically, and culturally.

Driven by the creative input of smart, talented young people with a desire to share their ideas, we hope the site will become a go-to destination for -- and by -- America's teens. To this end, we've forged a long list of partnerships, including with TeensinTech.com (their "Teen 2.0" column will highlight amazing teen entrepreneurs around the country); Dosomething.org (they've developed a widget for HuffPost High that helps make stories on the section "actionable"); Varsitynetworks.com (to help cover high school sports); Figment.com (featuring some of the best student fiction and poetry); and iKeepSafe.org (a group devoted to making the web a safe place for teens).

The third of our new sites is HuffPost Gay Voices, a section offering the latest news and unfiltered opinion on any and all matters of interest to the LGBT community. The issues addressed will be as varied as the community itself. Everything is fair game, including -- but not limited to -- race, class, ethnicity, faith, family, sex, work, culture, marriage, civil rights, and politics, as well as everyday topics such as travel, food, style, health, and celebrity gossip.

HuffPost has long covered LGBT news, culture, and opinion -- with a special focus on the struggle over gay rights. We've cheered the advances (the repeal of DADT, the incremental advance of same-sex marriage), and criticized the setbacks (boos rained on a gay soldier's question during a GOP debate, the recent refusal of an appeals court to rule DADT unconstitutional, complicating the efforts of discharged gay service members to be reinstated). HuffPost Gay Voices provides a platform for all these stories to live in one place -- making it easier for readers to find, share, and discuss them. In the end, HuffPost Gay Voices is just that, a section comprised, first and foremost, of voices -- offering opinions as diverse as the community they spring from.

Today, you can check out our not-to-be-missed interview with Lady Gaga, where she weighs in on bisexuality, outing, DADT, pop culture's ability to change society, and creative re-invention. We also have the exclusive debut of lesbian folk singer Melissa Ferrick's new video "Still Right Here," and, coming later in the week, a slideshow on the gayest moments on Glee. And we have fresh takes from Margaret Cho, blogging on why she considers herself queer even though she's married to a man; Bruce Vilanch on the community he found while attending the North Louisiana Gay & Lesbian Film Festival; and "Glitterbomber" Nick Espinosa on what it's like being a straight male activist for gay rights.

Finally, we are also launching HuffPost Weddings, a section that will cover the joys and headaches of weddings and modern marriage. At HuffPost, we've always done things unconventionally, so it should be no surprise that one year after launching our popular Divorce site, we've decided to go back to the beginning with a site bringing you the latest news and opinion on getting -- and staying -- married.

We'll cover it all, from wedding day minutiae (gowns! cakes! bridesmaids! first dances!), to dream honeymoons, to anniversaries, to the latest research on coupledom, to the challenges of making a modern marriage last.

Launch day stories include a post from reporter Catherine Pearson on the trend toward unconventional weddings and the couples who have them; a look at ten video marriage proposals that went viral; a collection of our readers' wedding day disaster stories; the first installment of our "10 Things You Don't Know About My Marriage," from Joy Behar; a slideshow of The Most Awkward Wedding Photos of All Time; a Q/A with the National Marriage Project's Brad Wilcox about a new report that reveals the many ways marriage is good for the economy; and a blog post from Lori Leibovich, our Executive Women's Editor, about IndieBride, a site she founded and which will now be part of HuffPost Weddings.

These four sections bring the number of new sections we've launched since March to 21 -- all part of our continued effort to provide content, community, and a platform for self-expression for as many of our readers' interests and passions as we can.

So check out Huff/Post50, HuffPost High School, HuffPost Gay Voices, and HuffPost Weddings and use the comment section on this post to let us know what you think -- and what other interests and passions you'd like to see us cover.

 
 
 

Follow Arianna Huffington on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ariannahuff

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Binea
Only a fool denies she is a fool, I am no fool
07:57 PM on 10/05/2011
wow..this is great ! I'm going to send my son here,he will be voting this election cycle. I want him to see all points of view and discuss/debate ( though if he doesn't vote for Ron Paul..his Butt is Grounded :)
04:20 PM on 10/04/2011
Like any corporate news publication, HuffPost has a site for "Business," and under that, the "Jobs" site which also serves primarily the interest of business through its focus of telling workers how to conform to the requirements of the corporate world. How about a section on "Working People" from their point of view? "Labor" issues should be included, though I think that is too narrow and loaded a term for the section name. There should be articles (if not a subsection) on unemployed working people, and articles on the strategies workers employ in dealing with the work/corporate world. Articles on what businesses are doing to undermine (or, at times, support) the rights and well-being of working people would also go well here.
04:26 PM on 10/04/2011
Forgot to mention: stories on how people started their own businesses or non-profits, especially if they had little start-up money to begin with, would be worthwhile.
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04:19 PM on 10/04/2011
How can it be that a site such as this, with all of it's sections devoted to this group or that group, has no section devoted to men?
Maybe we're not "worth" a dedicated section at HuffPo?
Talk amongst yourselves.
02:56 PM on 10/04/2011
And does anyone of these ridiculously self centered websites address the absolute incompetence and corruption in the White House? Thought not.
12:32 PM on 10/04/2011
Where is HuffPo Asian voices? How is there a section for high school kids, and one specifically for women having weddings but not one for us?
12:16 PM on 10/04/2011
I think this point I just posted about Huff/Post 50 explicitly underlining the difference between Boomers and Jonesers is pretty crucial to this new site's success, which Im very much rooting for. In that spirit, here are a few more resources I think are worth reviewing about Generation Jones and its national emergence:

Jonathan Alter writing about GenJones in Newsweek:
http://www.newsweek.com/2008/02/02/twilight-of-the-baby-boom.html

Clarence Page writing about GenJones in Chicago Tribune:
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2008-10-22/news/0810210264_1_swing-voters-mccain-and-obama-george-w-bush

Jonathan Pontell writing about GenJones in USA Today:
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20090127/column27_st.art.htm

This 5 min. video has over 20 top political figures—from David Brooks to Stuart Rothenberg--discussing GenJones’ importance:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Ta_Du5K0jk

Here is a website about GenJones and the UK election last year:
http://www.generationjones.org.uk/
04:33 PM on 10/04/2011
Interesting distinctions here, thanks!
12:02 PM on 10/04/2011
Huff/Post 50’s basic premise is fundamentally flawed, but can be quickly corrected. Most of the people described here as Boomers are in fact part of a different generation (Generation Jones, born 1954-1965). By more prominently and explicitly signaling to Jonesers that it “gets†this, Huff/Post 50 can show it is up with current trends. Otherwise, it looks out-of-date and will likely alienate a big chunk of its potential audience.

Yes, the traditional birth years for the Baby Boom Generation was 1946-1964. But that currently has virtually no support among the social scientists who define these terms. There was a demographic baby boom during those years, but generations are about formative experiences, not birth charts, and two generations—Boomers and Jonesers—were born then.

Polling repeatedly shows most Jonesers do not believe they are Boomers. For example, one of your competitor sites--Third Age--commissioned a nationwide poll of those born the same year as Obama (1961) and found that they overwhelmingly believe they are part of this generation between Boomers and GenXers. Sociologists have repeatedly shown statistical differences vis-a-vis attitudes and values between Boomers vs. Jonesers to often be dramatic.

Some of the HuffPo articles about GenJones which are worth reading:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/will-bunch/along-came-jones-why-my-g_b_603861.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nancy-snow/generation-jones-our-time_b_162644.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bennet-kelley/obama-and-generation-jone_b_98444.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onlyThis
All I Am is You
09:45 AM on 10/04/2011
Weddings?!?! Science section! Science section! Science section! Say it with me! Science section!
08:52 AM on 10/04/2011
Ditto on the Huff Post Men and Huff Post Science!

If Huff/Post50 works for people, why not. However, as a Gen Xer, I have to chuckle a little bit -- NOT at the idea that getting older isn't worth discussing, reframing and overlaying on top of many other issues, but at the idea that the Boomers wouldn't and aren't doing this already. You're a massive group, and you dominate and frame the issues already!

However, as always, you go group! You accomplish so much and always will. Besides, every time you turn a new decade, and it's the new 50/40/30, I get to be 30. :-) Can't help but love you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Danio Jr
Breaking the barrier to share and sell..
04:09 AM on 10/04/2011
Nice, more is better. But you have to choose what is best suited to you..
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06:45 PM on 10/04/2011
More is not better with a site whose computers cannot comfortably handle the material (mostly ads that are used to fill in around the news) it already has. I have not yet been able to give up HuffPo as I have other sites similarly burdened, but it crosses my mind with increasing zeal.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oferdesade
03:09 AM on 10/04/2011
i dont believe you're not leading with the protests. sure your lead is on republicans who democrats would like to cast as the baddies. but as you know (and your new owners know) above them sit the real enemies of the people. why are you not leading with the protests?
... devil got your soul?
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
01:10 AM on 10/04/2011
I ask again: why is this site so afraid of my posts in general, but inanely so when they concern columns from Ms. H herself? Why is cowardice the operating principle on here when it comes to discussion and debate?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smartmama
resist the second law
11:38 PM on 10/03/2011
The old folks thing really sucks so far...like a" we're spending the kids' inheritance" bumper sticker on a Winnebago
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04:40 AM on 10/04/2011
I haven't even bothered to look at it. There's enough here already.

I still say they need to take the "WORLD" out of the "MORE" tab and add it to the "FRONT PAGE". Before it was moved, it was one of three or four pages I always looked at, then I thought it had been removed till I found it under "MORE". Ridiculous and ill-fitting with the other categories there. Like WORLD NEWS is as trivial as "SPORTS". dumb.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smartmama
resist the second law
10:12 PM on 10/04/2011
Nosilly, Yes, It's the niche marketing approach which makes it even more likely that different groups won't interact.
11:04 PM on 10/03/2011
Oh and maybe HuffPro Giving. To talking about volunteering, causes/charity and philanthropy.
11:01 PM on 10/03/2011
Since HuffPost has every type of site now, what about HuffPostYoungPros for Young Professionals ages 21-42? :) Just a thought.