Saturday, May 2, 2015

Biased Tattoo Reviews (Why Yelp isn't good for finding a Tattooer)

This is just my opinion (like everything I write) but I'd love to hear what others think as well. I made a Yelp account for my business, like I've done with each business I've had before. When you claim the account, they send you an email that talks about how to get reviewed, and what types of review content will get suppressed by their screening algorithm.

Don’t ask your customers to review your business; just say "Find us on Yelp"
Yelp uses automated software that aims to showcase opinions that best reflect the Yelp community, so we don’t recommend every review. The recommendation software runs daily so a review might be recommended one day but not the next, or vice versa, as the recommendation software considers new information each day. Learn more.

I clicked "Learn More" for the first time and found a very vague description of what content is a red flag to Yelp's algorithm.

  • There are a number of reasons why a review might not be recommended. For example, the review might have been posted by a less established user, or it may seem like an unhelpful rant or rave. Some of these reviews are fakes (like the ones that originate from the same computer) and some suggest a bias (like the ones written by a friend of the business owner), but many are real reviews from real customers who we just don’t know much about and therefore can’t recommend.


Let's focus on the least vague part of that answer (the end of it), not the part where they are looking at quantifiable data (a bot using the same IP to make multiple reviews), but instead the part where they are deciding secret requisites for what constitutes a bias.

This may work for restaurants or retail stores and I want to stress that I'm not attacking Yelp as an entity, but wanting to create a dialog about how a site (Yelp if they wanted) could review tattoo artists and studios better. When you go to Denny's you could have a bad experience because someone else at your table got a fly in their meal, or because the night staff isn't as good, or because you haven't been there since you were a kid and it has gone downhill. You can review it, and then review another place for lunch and another for dinner. Then you can review four retail establishments, a cafe, then a couple bars and call it a night. You'd be a superyelper (and likely broke from shopping all day), but it wouldn't mean you knew more about tattoos. In fact, most of the experiences above aren't good ways to determine if a tattoo artist is right for you, and if they are, it doesn't mean that they're right for everyone that reads your review.

The choice to pick a tattoo artist is not one to be taken as lightly as where to go for a mocha.

You should never trust a review or a referral. I know a lot of tattooers are like "Shut your face, Lisa, we make a living on word-of-mouth", but it's true. You listen to reviews and referrals, and use them as leads which you should investigate yourself.

Suppressing the friends of the business owner has some flaws. I like the baristas at the Starbucks on Woodside road, they're good people and they are always kind. I know about the girl who cut her hours to go to school more, her dad games on his laptop sometimes and I wave to him. They all show me when they get new tattoos. One of their baristas is a bonafide maven of macchiatos and he will never cease to try to get me to switch from soy to coconut milk. I'm not sure I'd call them friends, but I spend more time with them than half of my facebook "friends", so if I saw they had reviews calling their service shitty I would write a good one and say that they rock. Hell yes I would.

In tattooing specifically, we do a job more personal and permanent than making coffee. I don't need to explain how personal it is, anyone who read this far already knows. With anything involving striking a personal connection for money (or commissioned art of any kind), sometimes the connection is stronger than others. I had a guy I talked to three jobs ago reccomend his girlfriend to see my tattoo page. She shared and image which was liked by a sweet girl I never met. I don't know how I never met her, because she also used to test games and grew up in my neighborhood and hung out at the same haunts with many of the same people. She's now a good friend, and I am happy to have her in my life (I'm looking at you Emily!) But I haven't really seen her outside of the times we sit down and I tattoo her and we talk and get coffee and talk more and make awesome art together. It is a friendship that was born of this business, born of referrals and word-of-mouth. If she's showing my page to a friend (which she has and would do I'm sure) and sees that I've got dumpy reviews (I actually don't have any reviews on my business yet since I just claimed it) and she wants to review me, shouldn't she be allowed to? She can attest to expectations upon meeting me and the fulfillment of them, to my customer service, cleanliness, and everything else. If there's a bias, good! The experience I have given her left her totally into what I do.

I hope you only get tattooed by people who make you biased. I hope you write reviews telling Yelpers proudly how much you love it. Don't ever slam someone on there because if you didn't connect, you shouldn't have gotten the tattoo. You should know the artist's ability and be comfortable before they ever put on gloves or before you pay a deposit. If it's too late, fuckitall and lose your deposit because shame and coverups and lasers cost more than that. If it was a real "infection" you'd have gone to the doctor and they'd contact the health department, this isn't an issue for Yelp it's a public health issue get out of here and save the others, don't walk around with a fresh zombie bite.

Yelp isn't good for reviewing tattoos. Walk around and talk to people with tattoos (don't touch), ask your friends on facebook or instagram, go to expos, walk into some shops and talk to the artists. Drive around town and collect some business cards until you have a list of who you might want to do your piece, then talk to a few of them. Don't string them along, let them know you're considering a few artists and they'll be honest whether they're into doing it or not. Be biased about your tattoo artist because you know they are so much better for you than the other guys, not because they have a higher score but because you thoroughly checked so you know for fucking sure. Then use Yelp to find a Starbucks and bring the artist a dirty soy chai.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Arty Pants Episode 3




Name: Matthew Tarkman
Artistic Focus: Tattoos and Sketch Art
Background: As the owner/principal artist  of MT TATTOOS in Redwood City, Matthew Tarkman has had a passion for art since childhood. At 20, his dream to share his art with the world became a reality when he started tattooing. Since opening his first tattoo parlor in 2003 he has become known in the Bay Area for quality work at reasonable prices. Redwood City's MT Studios is Matthew's third shop, this time refocusing back to the origin of his tattoo passion; art. Already established as a talented artist with 15 years experience, Matthew is still striving to challenge himself and elevate his work even higher.

The vision many people have of a tattoo shop owner is a guy going to nightclubs with tattoo models and rarely working because the vision is of a networking businessman, not a working artist. With Matthew Tarkman (MT), this couldn't be further from the truth. Upon entering his living room, pencils and eraser debris lay scattered on top of a glass drafting table that is covered in many different drawings in varying stages of completion. He balances his personal art and develops new skills while also completing an astounding amount of tattoo work. His space is hardly lit except for the radiating light beneath his table to trace iterations of his designs and the glow of a movie on the TV while he works with his dogs resting just beside him. We sit down on his couch to talk with him while he continues to work on drawings after work and witness his personal process in his native space.


(Full Disclosure: Matthew Tarkman is the owner of MT Tattoos where Lisa works and was her mentor in her apprenticeship to become a tattoo artist. Thanks, Yoda, for letting me pick your brain, as always.)

The Overalls:

Artists Mentioned

Media

The Briefs:


  • “It’s not soft … I don’t care for that.” - MT (About his photorealism tattoos)
  • “Weaponized Photorealism, write that down.” - MT
  • “I’ve never stayed with anything before and enjoyed it until tattooing…” - MT
  • “The way I treat a person’s skin is like a canvas or a paper…” - MT
  • “We are conduits for other people’s emotions” - MT (About being artists)
  • “I’ve never envisioned myself having a whole mess of artwork on my skin.” - MT (On his own tattoos)
  • “I was building relationships with my body … it ended up not happening that way.” - MT (On networking by getting tattooed)
  • “(He’s) still having a lot of fun and producing great work.” - MT (On Bob Tyrrell)
  • “What you can do on paper or canvas if you can translate it … it really makes a difference.” - MT
  • “You have to win your client.” - MT
  • “It’s not a matter of me meeting them on their level … I want to be recognized as a good artist.” - MT (Speaking on other famous artists)

Matthew's Work-space:




Escher piece that Matthew based a tattoo on to place in a competition 



Tattoos by Matthew Tarkman








Thursday, February 26, 2015

Arty Pants Episode 2




Name: Devon Grey
Artistic Focus: Multimedia Crafting, Poetry, Design
Background: Born in Portland, OR. Living in Vallejo, CA
Website: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Devon-Grey/655329381226382
Etsy Link: http://glassfables.etsy.com/



Through an iron gate and up a twisted path, a sprawling porch eases you into the comfort and intricacy of a classic Californian revival Victorian home, but something is different here. Inside, it contains expertly curated collection of unique and one-of-a-kind treasures which breathe life and creativity into the open hallways. The curator's touch is dark and full of poetic instinct which is precious to anyone lucky enough to be welcomed inside. In its essence, the house is a representation of the artistic spirit that haunts it; the house has history, its unique, and its presence will persist for a long time to come. All of these things are a reflection of Devon Grey; a Vallejo based artist who fuses her unique style into design, poetry, glass art, and jewelry. In this episode of Arty Pants, we go on site to her home to speak with her about how she draws inspiration from her surroundings to fuel her artistic passions.

The Overalls:

Artists Mentioned

Bands Mentioned

Books Mentioned



~Black Wedding~
by Devon Grey

Floating down a petal laden path
lined of candelabras of the past.

Black corset of opulent brocade,
sinuous swept skirt of tulle and crepe.

Silk ribbons streaming from my hair,
the scent of foreboding in the air.

Broken chandeliers slowly swaying
from trees which are decaying.

A September ceremony drenched in sighs,
set amidst images of twilight lullabies.

Violins echoing hauntings
of bitter sweet symphonies.

My eyes fixed on my destiny
as he proudly stands in front of me.

A distant shot sounding of thunder
penetrates thoughts of two loves torn asunder.

Vows filled with promises of hopes elated,
beneath an altar of ruins becomes ill-fated.

A single white gardenia bloom
stained to red from blood soaked doom.

A second shot sent resonated
as my beloved falls permeated.

Loved ones once gathered here
only to witness two lives disappear.

Into a blackened night
our souls together will take flight.

Realizing this day a dream,
not of life but a black wedding.

As I take my last breath,
I see our love story's depth.

It's that of two immortal of heart
even in death shall never part.




Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Arty Pants Episode 1


Name: Michaela Jerabek
Artistic Focus: Mixed Media Abstract 2-dimensional art
Background: Half Moon Bay California raised, personal friend of hosts
Website: @kaelaisflying on instagram