As the dust settles on twitter, it's nice that quite a few people are cross-promoting each other's work out of solidarity for the women and minorities who aren't getting cut any breaks.
But I'm seeing a slightly worrying trend - it's all written.
Aren't they listening to one of the most important and frequently repeated pieces of advice out there? Video content, regardless if it only gets a couple views, is incredibly important to EiC's. Even Danny said his shitty youtube channel helped land him the gig at GamespotUK and admits to not being a good writer.
Having amazing prose is great, but it's not going to get you far with video outlets like Giant Bomb (and the increasing amount of places copying their style). Applicants are not doing themselves any favours by thinking it's 1998 and being so insistent on the written word. Would anyone begrudge Jeff for refusing to hire someone who doesn't already make regular videos?
So far the only video content I've been exposed to which is created by women is Sore Thumbs, which isn't a bad effort, but neither of the hosts applied.
I suspect that for a lot of minorities, exposing themselves to the public can be difficult (I'm taking this from the gittip boondoggle). A lot of them deal with serious body and image issues, for instance, or just don't feel safe exposing themselves to the public that way.
Granted, this makes it difficult to cover games in a 'modern' way, but that itself is kind of at the heart of the problem. People aren't paying Mattie Brice a livable wage to write about games, but people kind of aren't paying people to write about games, period.