For example Kevin-V, had one of the better blogs out there, but all of a sudden we as fans have no access to what didn't make the front page cut. I truly miss reading some of his random thoughts from time to time, and there are other authors too following suit.I hope this doesn't come off as if I am a crazy stalker who is demanding every gamespot employee get a twitter and facebook accounts so I can follow their next bowel movement. This is about the on-site profiles with their blogs and passions about new and old video games.
One compromise could be giving gamespot members to follow editiors and be notified when they post an article that is available to the public.
By no means am I demanding this kind of access, nor do I think a company wide policy demanding employees be more interactive with the visitors would be appropriate either. I am simply stating I appreciate all the blogs and extra content that is found on many of the employees' pages and hope whatever drove you to making your profiles private gets resolved.
Lastly, I love most of the new changes to gamespot, and I even feel you found a much better middle ground with the way you do advertisement on your website! The new content is freakin' awesome, and even if it doesn't quite work out I applaud all of your efforts. KEEP IT UP!
TL/DR: great site, great changes, it would be nice if we could subscribe to content producers on the site and see when they post a public article or video.
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