@RyanNewYork

Ryan J. Davis is the 30 year-old Executive Director of Social Innovation at Blue State Digital. He's also the co-founder of The Four 2012.

He sits on the Broad of Directors of The Ali Forney Center, where he is the founding producer of their annual Broadway Beauty Pageant fundraiser. He's also on the Board of Directors of The Deconstructive Theatre Project and the Board of Advisers of the startup TV Dinner.

He's also a director/producer, who lives in Brooklyn, NY and created the musical White Noise. Ryan writes about politics for The Huffington Post & The Hill. He has been a guest editor for Queerty and is the host of the podcast Gay History: Uncut.


Here Ryan blogs about politics, film, TV, history, religion, science, books, theater, digital media, LGBT issues, Bushwick & Williamsburg, New York City, and anything else he's interested in at the moment. Oh, and he'll probably talk a lot about himself.


This is a personal blog. Any opinions expressed here and on my Twitter represent my own and not those of my employer or clients.

Recent Tweets @ryannewyork
Posts tagged "Ryan J. Davis"

So, Dorian Davis is talking shit before our big debate tonight at ELECTORAL DYSFUNCTION 2013: SUMMER OF SEQUESTRATION! I did pick the worst possible week to argue from the left.

Show is at 9:30. Tickets here.

sidetour:

12 Hours with Social Media Guru Ryan Davis

Ryan Davis runs social media at Blue State Digital, the firm best known for both Obama campaigns. He also travels around the world speaking about social media, political action and LGBT issues and tweets at @RyanNewYork. With such an active career, his…

Check out Sidetour on my perfect Saturday in Bushwick.

The Four 2012 won! We took home a 2013 Silver Pollie Award for Best Use of Social Media.

Congrats to our amazing team: Brian Ellner, Richard Socarides, Andre Banks, Jeremy Heimans, Jett House, Hayley Comet, Evan Moody, Hannah Volfson, Judah Ferst, & more!

Big Life News: After over three years at Blue State Digital, I’m leaving to pursue new adventures in digital. I’ll miss my talented, smart, dedicated, progressive colleagues lots. It’s a really cool place to work.

More details on what’s next coming soon. And, I’ll still be available to speak on digital at your college or conference!

Here’s me talking about Twitter’s 7th Birthday. Click here to watch.

Speaking with Michael Crawford about LGBT organizations and digital media at CampaignTech 2013 in Washington DC.

Get your tickets today.

Took this green screen photo at Richard French Live’s studios last night. I want my graphic designer friends to go nuts with this. ;)

Here’s me on Richard French Live talking about Bill Clinton & DOMA.

I’m really looking forward to the Broadway Beauty Pageant this year. Can’t believe it’s been seven years since Jeffery Self & I put up the first production. I’ve directed the last six years, but am passing the torch over to longtime friend Seth Sikes. He’s doing a great job rebooting the show and I’m staying on as a producer. 

Get your tickets today and I’ll see you on May 20th.

Photo below from 2008 Broadway Beauty Pageant tech with Andy Lott (left) , me, Seth Sikes, & Jeffery Self.

Picture below of me and Seth in London in the fall of 2008.

afc24:

The Broadway Beauty Pageant, now in its seventh year, is an annual extravaganza benefiting the Ali Forney Center, NYC’s primary housing resource for homeless LGBTQ youth. Join us on May 20th!

Buy tickets here.

The Broadway Beauty Pageant is a beauty contest of sorts, in which male performers from current Broadway shows compete for the coveted title. Celebrity judges and hosts help to guide contestants through the impressive talent portion, interviews, and the swimsuit competition. In the end, the audience casts ballots to determine who will walk away with the crown.

BUY Tickets.

Photos from past Broadway Beauty Pageants.

My mom scanned this 1997 interview with me at 15 about my very first website, The Conservative Teen E-Zine. Getting this out there now, so it won’t hurt any future congressional runs. ;)

Higher quality versions on Facebook.

My mom scanned my St. Francis de Sales 8th grade yearbook page. I’m pretty much the same person now as I was then.

I’ve known Corey Johnson for nearly ten years; we met as young staffers on Howard Dean’s 2004 Presidential Campaign. Corey and I were those young progressive idealists that you can really only be in your extremely early twenties. The kind willing to work sixteen hours a day for ten months straight because we believed in what was possible. Even now that a decade has passed, Corey has never stopped working or believing in what is possible for New York City.

Although we met so young, Corey had already made a mark for himself as a leader in high school. As captain of his school football team, he came out of the closet in 2000, making national news while retaining his team’s leadership position. Corey has never avoided what’s difficult in the expense of what’s right.

I’m a Brooklynite, who lived in Manhattan’s District 3 for five years, and remain an active member of each of its neighborhoods’ cultural and political worlds, from the West Village to Hell’s Kitchen. So, the idea of having a young, pragmatic progressive like Corey on the council is an opportunity that we as New Yorkers must take.  

We know that Corey puts the work in, because we’ve seen it in the eight years he’s served on Manhattan Community Board 4, including several years as the youngest chair in New York City. Corey demonstrates that government can make peoples’ lives better, from the solid middle class to the marginalized and disenfranchised.

In Corey, we see what a Millennial brings to the table as a councilmember. During Hurricane Sandy, Corey proved his digital credentials by instantly reporting over Facebook and Twitter the latest storm and recovery news. He reached tens of thousands of local residents with his updates, spurring volunteer action and empowering New Yorkers with safety information. I know digital and am proud to say that Corey didn’t even have to be elected, before adding serious value to our community. 

I’ve fought for equality for years, by co-founding The Four 2012 and working closely with human rights organizations including The Ali Forney Center and All Out. I know that Corey is more than an LGBT ally - he’s a leader. He serves on the board of The Ali Forney Center, has worked full time at GLAAD, and has knocked on doors in states around the country to support Barack Obama and pass marriage equality. As a councilperson, we’ll gain a strong activist.    

Corey is the right person at the right time to represent NYC Council District 3. I know he’ll be a reliable liberal voice for the middle class, justice, and common sense. How lucky we’d all be if he had a seat in the New York City Council and I’m proud to support him.

Visit Corey2013.com to get involved and connect with him over Facebook and Twitter.

I’m spending my hurricane day putting together a presentation I’m doing on Social Media & Crowdfunding for the 2012 National Arts Marketing Project Conference in Charlotte. Should be a great day, there is still plenty of time to register.

Looking forward to speaking for Blue State Digital at ArtezInterAction in Toronto again this year, on marketing to Millennials.

Details on my keynote below. Still plenty of time to register.


Engaging Digital Natives
Ryan Davis, Executive Director of Social Innovation, Blue State Digital

This is the first generation of digital natives, who engage with technology in a more natural and instinctive way than any prior generation. How do we connect with the over-connected? Ryan will talk about strategies, tactics, and content that Blue State Digital has learned truly target this new demographic, with client examples from The Born This Way Foundation to The NAACP and cultural movements like #Kony2012 and Occupy Wall Street.