Walrus Media is involved in all areas of internet creative design.
The media and programming professionals at Walrus Media have created
several commercially successful web sites.
Our Commercial Projects
In late 2002, we launched Beatles News. The site was
originally called What Goes On, named after the song on the Beatles' Rubber Soul album, and became Beatles
News on December 1, 2008.
Beatles News is a dynamic compendium of news about the Beatles and rock 'n roll music, collected
from sources all over the internet.
Our editorial staff searches for the latest articles and updates the site
six days a week.
Beatles News continues to be our most popular and successful web project
to date, and is consistently the #1 listing when you search
for "Beatles News" in Google.
Wizard News
went live on January 1, 2003. Like our Beatles news web site,
Wizard News is an indexed collection of the latest news about Harry Potter and
Lord of the Rings from our own staff of reporters,
and from various sources all over the internet.
Our newest project, Beatles Collecting,
went online on January 1, 2008. It features free For Sale and Wanted Classified Ads and Forums
for the Beatles collecting community. The software that powers Beatles Collecting (and all our
sites) was written completely from scratch to better suit the needs of our users.
Other Sites We've Created
At Walrus Media we're all big Beatles fans.
The Internet
Beatles Album, created by Dave Haber, has been around in one form or another since 1995.
The traffic to the Internet Beatles Album became so large that
in 2001 we split the
site into two sites, moving the recording-related info to a new site
called Beatle Tracks.
In early 2002, we created another site, this one about one of the earliest
Beatles records in the US, She Loves You. In early 2007, all of our Beatles
sites were once again reunited back into the Internet Beatles Album.
Being Beatles fans, we couldn't help but be
Rutles fans as well.
All You Need Is Cash
was a 1978 TV parody of documentaries which affectionately spoofed the
Beatles story. It included a wonderful performance
of the John Lennon character by
Monty Python alumnus
Neil Innes,
who also created all of the Beatle-like music for the film. The ficticious
Rutles are presented on our Tragical History Tour site
as if the group actually existed.
We're also big fans of the
Harry Potter books, and we've created several web sites which carry on
with the concept we started with the Rutles web site, creating web sites
which present the fictional characters and stories as if they are real.
Our original Harry Potter web site, created in 2002, was Wizarding Wireless Net,
and was presented as if it is the online version of the Wizarding Wireless,
the radio that witches and wizards listen to in the books.
In 2006 we combined the
various content of our Harry Potter micro-sites into a new online Harry Potter
fan conference called Beyond Hogwarts.
We're really proud of what we've done here at Walrus Media. If you have questions about any of
our current web services, please contact
Oh, and by the way, the walrus was Paul.
WARNING: These web sites may cause excitement. After viewing, do not
drive or operate heavy machinery.