New media
   
Homepage

By George, a reason
for the dollar bill


If America went to coins, it wouldn't be the same

Apr 15, 2008
Share |

Should the dollar bill be dumped? It's been a bubbling issue for years now, and just last year the U.S. government even began minting a new $1 coin depicting the U.S. presidents. The hope: That it would catch on better than the Susan B. Anthony dollar of years back.

Good luck. The dollar coin hasn’t gotten much public support, with just 13 percent favoring it over the paper dollar in a new Harris Poll. Who wants another bulky coin to fish after?

But there's another solid reason for sticking with the paper dollar: the web site Where’s George. Named after the president whose face is on the bill, wheresgeorge.com tracks the travels of dollar bills as they meander across the country – and the world.

This year, Where’s George turns 10, a venerable age in internet years, and that makes its creator, Hank Eskin, right proud. Says the 43-year-old database architect: "I survived the dotbomb and all that."

It works like this. Users, or Georgers, as they are called, enter the serial number of their bills on the site, along with where they live, where they got each bill, and its condition.

Before spending those dollar bills, they may choose to mark them in some way to alert the next owner that he or she ought to visit Wheresgeorge.com and also log in data on the bill's progress. In effect, it's a chain letter made possible by the U.S. government and the internet.

Be it noted: The site serves no practical purpose whatsoever. This may appear similar to tagging the last of an endangered species. It is not. 

Georgers, fingers now crossed, visit Where's George to see whether another Georger has happened on that bill and filed an update on its whereabouts.

You never know. Maybe that one you entered last week will be a boomerang, a bill that whizzes across the country before turning up back to one's hometown.

The site now has more than 4.5 million registered users and tracks 126 million bills worth $694 million, though surely some share of those are out of circulation. There about 60,000 active users a week responsible for roughly 20 million pageviews.

Where's George also blossomed into an active offline community, with George gatherings around the country.

“I never expected it to take off,” says Eskin. He says he got the idea from a dollar bill he received one day with a handwritten, chain letter-type note on it encouraging him to write on 10 more bills for good luck.

Part of the draw for devotees is the idea of registering a bill that manages to top the famed results of the record-holder, a 1999, I series bill that was spotted 15 times. This one dollar bill traveled 4,191 miles in three years, 12 days 17 hours and 25 minutes for an average of 3.8 miles per day.

It was entered first in Dayton, Ohio, back on March 15, 2002. Over the next four months it scooted through Kentucky and Tennessee. It then turned up in Milton, Fla., before making numerous stops in Texas, where it at one point it was used to make change at a racetrack and at another was found on the floor of an upscale strip club, presumably having fallen from the G-string of a dancer.

After Texas the bill legged its way through Utah before turning up in rather tatty condition in Michigan, in March 2005, some 456 miles from its starting location.

Despite its revered status among Georgers, this bill is now most likely on the scrap heap. On average dollars stay in circulation only about 18 months.

A switch to coins would likely put a similar crimp in wheresgeorge.com's  circulation, as the nation switched over and fewer and fewer bills circulated.

The site would go on without the dollar bill, says Eskin. It also tracks fives and twenties. But it just wouldn't be the same. Now 73 percent of the registered bills are dollars.

"Personally I do like the $1 and $2 coins," says Eskin. "But for the sake of the web site, I would really like the one dollar bill to continue."

***

Meanwhile, in online ratings for the week ended April 6, according to Nielsen Online, Google claimed the top spot among parent companies, followed by Microsoft, Yahoo, Time Warner and News Corp. Online. The top five brands were Google, Yahoo, MSN/Windows Live, Microsoft and AOL Media Network for the third straight week.

NexTag surpassed Experian Group Limited as the No. 1 advertiser with nearly 6 million impressions, just ahead of Experian’s 5.88 million. With almost 27 million ads served, Yahoo was again the top advertising site, well ahead of No. 2 MySpace at 3.9 million.
 
Sessions per person per week were down one from the previous week to 16, and domains visited per person were down two to 38. PC time per person was flat compared with the previous week, at 17 hours and 43 minutes.

 

Top 25 parent companies
Through April 6

#

Parent

Unique Audience (000)

 Reach %

Time Spent per Person (hh:mm:ss)

1

Google

91,281

64.2

0:34:46

2

Microsoft

85,679

60.3

0:43:46

3

Yahoo!

77,476

54.5

1:06:36

4

Time Warner

67,306

47.4

1:20:50

5

News Corp. Online

43,421

30.6

0:46:55

6

eBay

33,454

23.5

0:58:41

7

InterActiveCorp

28,804

20.3

0:11:44

8

Amazon

26,030

18.3

0:12:19

9

Wikimedia Foundation

24,368

17.2

0:09:41

10

Apple Computer

23,870

16.8

0:33:19

11

Walt Disney Internet Group

21,932

15.4

0:21:34

12

Landmark Communications

21,811

15.4

0:10:02

13

New York Times Company

21,527

15.2

0:10:38

14

AT&T Inc.

19,060

13.4

0:20:10

15

RealNetworks, Inc.

14,361

10.1

0:21:28

16

Comcast Corp.

13,674

9.6

0:28:06

17

E.W. Scripps Company

13,305

9.4

0:06:01

18

Verizon Communications

13,081

9.2

0:17:35

19

Bank of America

12,664

8.9

0:26:41

20

Viacom Digital

12,199

8.6

0:21:54

21

Facebook

11,853

8.3

0:38:20

22

United Online

11,584

8.2

0:29:59

23

CBS Corporation

11,553

8.1

0:19:08

24

CNET Networks

11,049

7.8

0:05:51

25

CraigsList

10,935

7.7

0:42:24

Source: Nielsen Online

 

Top 25 brands
Through April 6

 

Parent

Unique Audience (000)

Reach %

Time spent per person (hh:mm:ss)

1

Google

84,588

59.5

0:26:33

2

Yahoo!

76,038

53.5

1:07:24

3

MSN/Windows Live

60,477

42.6

0:47:18

4

Microsoft

56,441

39.7

0:15:21

5

AOL Media Network

54,195

38.1

1:30:29

6

Fox Interactive Media

37,423

26.3

0:50:00

7

YouTube

34,662

24.4

0:22:56

8

eBay

27,697

19.5

1:02:58

9

Wikipedia

24,037

16.9

0:09:46

10

Apple

23,870

16.8

0:33:19

11

Amazon

21,202

14.9

0:11:53

12

Weather Channel

19,581

13.8

0:10:13

13

Blogger

16,109

11.3

0:05:42

14

CNN Digital Network

15,622

11.0

0:18:54

15

Ask Search Network

15,557

11.0

0:12:38

16

Real Network

14,350

10.1

0:21:28

17

AT&T

13,792

9.7

0:24:22

18

About.com

13,736

9.7

0:03:02

19

Bank of America

11,954

8.4

0:27:40

20

Facebook

11,853

8.3

0:38:20

21

Comcast

10,942

7.7

0:33:50

22

Craigslist

10,935

7.7

0:42:24

23

PayPal

9,238

6.5

0:10:14

24

ESPN

8,735

6.2

0:18:25

25

Chase

8,624

6.1

0:17:43

Source: Nielsen Online

 

Top 25 advertisers 
(excludes house ads)
Through April 6

#

Company

Impressions (000)

1

NexTag, Inc.

5,990,590

2

Experian Group Limited

5,881,030

3

Vonage Holdings Corp

2,343,971

4

Netflix, Inc.

2,245,949

5

CoolSavings, Inc.

2,002,273

6

Lions Gate Entertainment Corp

1,600,458

7

Johnson & Johnson

1,576,856

8

HSBC Holdings plc

1,171,992

9

Echostar Communications Corporation

1,075,028

10

Fidelity Investments

811,806

11

General Motors Corporation

759,256

12

AT&T Corp.

706,687

13

Privacy Matters

631,676

14

TaxACT

608,393

15

Verizon Communications, Inc.

556,570

16

InterActiveCorp

539,543

17

Scottrade, Inc.

538,197

18

Bank of America Corporation

536,925

19

Ford Motor Company

499,153

20

Countrywide Financial Corporation

493,225

21

Deutsche Telekom AG

423,145

22

United Online, Inc.

419,195

23

E*TRADE FINANCIAL Corp.

352,329

24

Weight Watchers International, Inc.

349,630

25

National Telephone Advisory

298,062

Source: Nielsen Online, AdRelevance

Note: Nielsen Online, AdRelevance service estimated online advertising expenditures account for CPM-based image-based advertising. All reported estimated expenditures and impressions do not account for the following placement types: text only, paid fee services, performance-based campaigns, sponsorships, barters, in-stream ("pre-rolls") players, messenger applications, partnership advertising, promotions and email campaigns. AdRelevance currently does not report estimated spending for paid search advertising. Also, Nielsen Online, AdRelevance reporting data reflects advertising activity served on pages accessible via the World Wide Web and not within AOL's proprietary service.

 

Top 25 advertising sites
(excludes house ads)
Through April 6

 

Company

Impressions (000)

1

Yahoo!

26,946,283

2

MySpace

3,877,689

3

MSN

3,017,606

4

AOL.com

1,252,430

5

eBay

804,419

6

MSNBC

738,994

7

Comcast.net

601,514

8

The Weather Channel

541,368

9

IMDb

470,128

10

FOXNEWS.COM

458,870

11

New York Times

416,675

12

Amazon

331,614

13

ESPN.com

325,647

14

Photobucket

315,756

15

CNN

310,290

16

Excite

248,440

17

CBS SportsLine

234,793

18

NetZero

228,733

19

Facebook

223,765

20

CNN Money

210,580

21

Pogo

197,268

22

NeoPets

184,933

23

Juno

159,843

24

Digg

150,796

25

FOX Sports on MSN

150,377

Source: Nielsen Online, AdRelevance

Note: Nielsen Online, AdRelevance service estimated online advertising expenditures account for CPM-based image-based advertising. All reported estimated expenditures and impressions do not account for the following placement types: text only, paid fee services, performance-based campaigns, sponsorships, barters, in-stream ("pre-rolls") players, messenger applications, partnership advertising, promotions and email campaigns. AdRelevance currently does not report estimated spending for paid search advertising. Above data does not include any house advertising activity. Also, Nielsen Online, AdRelevance reporting data reflects advertising activity served on pages accessible via the World Wide Web and not within AOL's proprietary service.

 

Average use
Through April 6

 

Current Week

Last Week

% Change

Sessions/Visits per Person

16

17

-5.88

Domains Visited per Person

38

40

-5

PC Time per Person

17:43:17

17:51:34

-0.77

Active Digital Media Universe

142,108,408

139,991,432

1.51

Current Digital Media Universe Estimate

221,126,803

221,138,541

-0.01

Source: Nielsen Online

 

***
 
 
Subscribe to Media Life
Latest headlines
ABC wins night with Billboard Music Awards
The five big trends to look for next fall
GM: We're skipping the Super Bowl
Houston TV and radio: Hot, hot, hot
'Men at Work,' doesn't work at all
Tell us, what shows look promising for fall?
Your client at the veterinarian's office
For Fox's 'House,' the long good-bye

Franklin Foer becomes editor at The New Republic
Elizabeth Flock joins U.S. News & World Report
Amanda Ross becomes fashion director at Departures
Lucy Maher becomes digital director at Self
Kristen Wiig exits 'Saturday Night Live'
Mark Walters becomes SVP of advertising at Politico
Patrick Meyer becomes global correspondent at Innovation Excellence
Nigel Lythgoe to J. Lo: Decide if you're staying or going
 
 
 
 


Heidi Dawley is a staff writer for Media Life.




© 2012 Media Life Privacy Statement