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Pop On The Clock
Entertainment expert Chris Serico and guests put pop culture on the clock in this irreverent entertainment podcast.
Hosted by Chris Serico
With special guest Aimee Brock
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18 Funny Women You Should Be Following On Twitter
Featured funny lady on the popular news website and content aggregating blog.
Appeared on HuffingtonPost.com
On July 18, 2011
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Twitter Wit: Brilliance in 140 Characters or less
Edited by Nick Douglas
Content contributed by Aimee Brock
Click here to purchase your copy.
Sometimes, what happens on Twitter shouldn’t stay on Twitter.
Twitter Wit is the first ever compilation of Twitter aphorisms and witticisms, celebrating a medium that has enabled millions of users to broadcast their lives and quips within Twitter’s 140-character limit, thus reinventing wordplay in the tradition of Dorothy Parker and Oscar Wilde. This collection includes hundreds of the most memorable and hilarious tweets to date, demonstrating that inside every moment is a joke waiting to be written.
Everybody’s twittering—from millions of regular folks to world-famous celebrities and writers like Ashton Kutcher, Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Sarah Silverman, Penn Jillette, Neil Gaiman, Paula Poundstone, Susan Orlean, Russell Brand, Margaret Cho, Stephen Fry, Rainn Wilson, and Diablo Cody—they’re all here, and all of them sharp as stilettos.
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TWIPS
Twitter-based comic collaborations
Illustration by Greg Williams
Content created by Aimee Brock

65 million years ago, I would’ve been a crazy dinosaur lady instead of a crazy cat lady who wishes they were dinosaurs.
Appeared in The Tampa Tribune.
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Threadless.com
Tweet-based, crowd-sourced Internet t-shirt
If I were a vegetable, I’d be a radish. Because I’m only kind of rad.
By Aimee Brock

Click here to buy your own. I did!*
*Yes, I know that makes me “that guy.” Surprisingly, I’m fine with it.
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Twitter Gives Rise to a Network of Amateur Comedians
By Rex Huppke
Appeared in the Chicago Tribune
On May 18, 2009
Sean Cusick, who teaches comedy writing at the Second City Training Center, said Twitter provides a sound training ground for comedic writing, largely because of its quick pace and immediacy.
“The creative process is similar to what we use here at Second City,” he said. “It’s rooted in improvisation. You’re walking down the street and you say, ‘Holy crap, this just happened,’ and then you’re Twittering about it. The best comedy tends to pop into your head.”
That’s what Aimee Brock — known to her followers as “Aimee_B_Loved” — has found.
“Sometimes you only have a 140-character thought and it’s probably best if it’s not expanded,” said Brock, 24, who works as a copywriter at a branding agency in Wichita, Kan. “The type of things that people would worry about if you said them out loud are usually the kind of things I come up with.”
Things such as this recent tweet: “Is it still illegal to kill and eat a panda? I’m asking for a friend.”