SEO report of cheapandcleanproject.com

CHEAP&CLEAN
www.cheapandcleanproject.com/
Error! The "meta description" is missing, the page has no summary description!
Tasks
- Make the site mobile device friendly.
- Avoid using deprecated HTML tags.
- Implement the viewport meta tag.
SEO
URL
Domain : www.cheapandcleanproject.com/
Character length : 29
Title
CHEAP&CLEAN
Keywords (meta keywords)
Good! The website does not use “meta keywords”.
Open Graph Protocol
Error! The website does not use the OG (Open Graph) protocol.
Dublin Core
Dublin Core is not used
Underscores in the URLs
Good! No underscore (_) found in the URLs.
Search engine friendly URLs
Good! The website uses SEO friendly URLs.
Checking the robots.txt file
There is robots.txt file.
https://cheapandcleanproject.com/robots.txt
https://cheapandcleanproject.com/robots.txt
User-agent | Disallowed for the search engines |
---|---|
* |
|
Social
Social Engagement
No info found.
Content
Doctype
XHTML 1.0 Strict
Encoding
Perfect! The character encoding is set: UTF-8.
Language
Error! No language localization is found.
Title
CHEAP&CLEAN
Character length : 15
Good! The title’s length is between 10 and 70 characters.
Character length : 15
Good! The title’s length is between 10 and 70 characters.
Text / HTML ratio
Ratio : 13%
Error! The text / HTML code ratio is under 15 percent on this website. This value shows that the website has relatively few text content.
Error! The text / HTML code ratio is under 15 percent on this website. This value shows that the website has relatively few text content.
Headings
H1 | H2 | H3 | H4 | H5 | H6 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Heading structure in the source code
- <H1>
- <H3> ABOUTThis project, developed by the artist Ebony G. Patterson, seeks to investigate the performative aspect of gender through explorations of the masculine as it constructed in popular Jamaican Dancehall culture, and is part of an ongoing body of work concerned with how masculine ideologies function within the Dancehall construct These particular performances however, were fabricated by the artist, utilizing Dancehall fashion, language and 'actors' who were directed by the artist in various scenarios.Given the youth-driven nature of Dancehall, the artist worked with 14 young men and explored their own ideas about masculinity through fashion. Participants were asked to design outfits based on these ideas/ideals of manhood. The artist then had the outfits made and embellished for the participants to wear and model for pictures taken in a embellished 'photo studio,'posing and /or posturing as their ideal male. The photo studio space was constructed as a dollhouse based Georgian architecture,referencing both the domestic space and toys . Both object and space are important 'tools' for understanding how gender roles are shaped by and react to those of an early age. The 'studio' was located in downtown Kingston, Jamaica. All participants were able keep their hand embellished tailored outfits along with a photograph of themselves in said outfit.Participants were documented in both clothing and space, not only photographically but also in video. The recording of the project was viewed live, virally projected to linked public spaces in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, Bermuda, the Bahamas, United States and the web,via Facebook, on March 10th, 2012. In addition a series of ten 'street interviews,' dubbed "Real Talk," were conducted with a number of young men from communities in and around downtown Kingston centering around a series of questions interrogating notions of "the masculine" as it relates to role- playing, performativity , fashion, home, relationships and community.This site and downlodable catalog documents the evolution of this project as an archive. This project was funded by the 2011 Rex Nettleford Fellowship for Cultural Studies, and supported by the Multi-Care Foundation of Jamaica, a not –for- profit organization working with youth from the inner city in the Arts and Sports.
- <H3> ABOUTThis project, developed by the artist Ebony G. Patterson, seeks to investigate the performative aspect of gender through explorations of the masculine as it constructed in popular Jamaican Dancehall culture, and is part of an ongoing body of work concerned with how masculine ideologies function within the Dancehall construct These particular performances however, were fabricated by the artist, utilizing Dancehall fashion, language and 'actors' who were directed by the artist in various scenarios.Given the youth-driven nature of Dancehall, the artist worked with 14 young men and explored their own ideas about masculinity through fashion. Participants were asked to design outfits based on these ideas/ideals of manhood. The artist then had the outfits made and embellished for the participants to wear and model for pictures taken in a embellished 'photo studio,'posing and /or posturing as their ideal male. The photo studio space was constructed as a dollhouse based Georgian architecture,referencing both the domestic space and toys . Both object and space are important 'tools' for understanding how gender roles are shaped by and react to those of an early age. The 'studio' was located in downtown Kingston, Jamaica. All participants were able keep their hand embellished tailored outfits along with a photograph of themselves in said outfit.Participants were documented in both clothing and space, not only photographically but also in video. The recording of the project was viewed live, virally projected to linked public spaces in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, Bermuda, the Bahamas, United States and the web,via Facebook, on March 10th, 2012. In addition a series of ten 'street interviews,' dubbed "Real Talk," were conducted with a number of young men from communities in and around downtown Kingston centering around a series of questions interrogating notions of "the masculine" as it relates to role- playing, performativity , fashion, home, relationships and community.This site and downlodable catalog documents the evolution of this project as an archive. This project was funded by the 2011 Rex Nettleford Fellowship for Cultural Studies, and supported by the Multi-Care Foundation of Jamaica, a not –for- profit organization working with youth from the inner city in the Arts and Sports.
- <H3> ABOUT
- <H3>
- <H2> This project, developed by the artist Ebony G. Patterson, seeks to investigate the performative aspect of gender through explorations of the masculine as it constructed in popular Jamaican Dancehall culture, and is part of an ongoing body of work concerned with how masculine ideologies function within the Dancehall construct These particular performances however, were fabricated by the artist, utilizing Dancehall fashion, language and 'actors' who were directed by the artist in various scenarios.
- <H2> Given the youth-driven nature of Dancehall, the artist worked with 14 young men and explored their own ideas about masculinity through fashion. Participants were asked to design outfits based on these ideas/ideals of manhood. The artist then had the outfits made and embellished for the participants to wear and model for pictures taken in a embellished 'photo studio,'posing and /or posturing as their ideal male. The photo studio space was constructed as a dollhouse based Georgian architecture,referencing both the domestic space and toys . Both object and space are important 'tools' for understanding how gender roles are shaped by and react to those of an early age. The 'studio' was located in downtown Kingston, Jamaica. All participants were able keep their hand embellished tailored outfits along with a photograph of themselves in said outfit.
- <H2> Participants were documented in both clothing and space, not only photographically but also in video. The recording of the project was viewed live, virally projected to linked public spaces in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, Bermuda, the Bahamas, United States and the web,via Facebook, on March 10th, 2012. In addition a series of ten 'street interviews,' dubbed "Real Talk," were conducted with a number of young men from communities in and around downtown Kingston centering around a series of questions interrogating notions of "the masculine" as it relates to role- playing, performativity , fashion, home, relationships and community.
- <H2> This site and downlodable catalog documents the evolution of this project as an archive. This project was funded by the 2011 Rex Nettleford Fellowship for Cultural Studies, and supported by the Multi-Care Foundation of Jamaica, a not –for- profit organization working with youth from the inner city in the Arts and Sports.
Word cloud
- artist5
- space4
- participants4
- project4
- dancehall4
- outfits3
- embellished3
- masculine3
- fashion3
- jamaica3
- both3
- constructed2
- how2
- young2
- men2
- series2
- downtown2
- kingston2
- home2
- studio2
- photo2
- based2
- around2
- catalog2
- essay2
- real2
- gender2
- talk2
Keyword matrix
word | title | descriptions | heading |
---|---|---|---|
artist | |||
space | |||
participants | |||
project | |||
dancehall | |||
outfits |
Two Word cloud
- young men2
- this project2
- downtown kingston2
- participants were2
- real talk2
- project was2
404 Page
The website has no standard 404 error page.
Flash content
Good! The website does not have any flash contents.
Frame
Good! The website does not use iFrame solutions.
Images
We found 1 images on this web page.
Good! Every image has an alternative text attributes set on this website.
Good! Every image has an alternative text attributes set on this website.
Technologies
Mobile optimization
Error! This website is not optimized for mobile devices... It is optimized for devices which have at least 1018px wide display!
Deprecated HTML elements
Error! Deprecated HTML tags are used on this webpage. You should improve your website.
Deprecated HTML tags | Occurrences |
---|---|
<font> | 28 |
<center> | 5 |
Redirection (www / not www)
Good! The web address is accessible only in one version. The version without www is redirected to the version with www.
Deprecated HTML elements
Error! Deprecated HTML tags are used on this webpage. You should improve your website.
Deprecated HTML tags | Occurrences |
---|---|
<font> | 28 |
<center> | 5 |
Printability
Suggestion! Unfortunately, no printer-friendly CSS found.
Meta Tag (viewport tag, mobile devices)
Error! The meta tag named viewport is missing.
Speed test
Server response time
The server response time is fast enough.
Loading time
2,046 ms
Table layout
Error! Avoid using nested tables!
Render blocking resources
Good! No render blocking elements found!
Speed test – Javascript
Javascript
Good! Just a few javascript files are detected on the website.
File size of all javascript files combined
0.00
Javascript minifying
Great! The Javascript files are minified.
Speed test – CSS
CSS
Good! Just a few CSS files are used on this website.
File size of all css files combined
0.00
CSS minifying
Great! The CSS elements are minified.
Speed test – Compression
Uncompressed size of the of the HTML
0.00
Gzip compression
Your site uses compression.
Speed test – Browser cache
Browser cache
The browser cache is set correctly for all elements.
Speed test – Images
File size of all images combined
0.00
Image optimisation
All images are optimized.
Links
We found a total of 14 different links.
Internal links: 11
External links: 3
Internal links: 11
External links: 3
External links:
Link text (anchor) | Link strength |
---|---|
Tweet | |
Free Website | |
http://www.quantcast.com/p-b8x17GqsQ_656 |
Internal links:
Link text (anchor) | Link strength |
---|---|
Home | |
ESSAY | |
ESSAY | |
GALLERY | |
REAL TALK | |
DOCUMENTARY | |
BEHIND THE SCENES | |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | |
BIOGRAPHY | |
CATALOG | |
http://www.cheapandcleanproject.com/. |
Website security
IP
104.18.57.160
External hidden links
Good! No hidden external links found
Looking for eval()
Good! No eval(bas64_decode()) scripts are found
Checking for XSS vulnerability
No XSS vulnerability found
Email encryption
Good! We have not found any unencrypted email addresses.
Sites on same ip
Icons
Favicon
Error! No favicon is found. Using favicon helps to build a better brand quicker.
Order of Heading elements on mobile by position
- H1 : , ( 110px from top )
- H3 : ABOUTThis project, developed by the artist Ebony G. Patterson, seeks to investigate the performative aspect of gender through explorations of the masculine as it constructed in popular Jamaican Dancehall culture, and is part of an ongoing body of work concerned with how masculine ideologies function within the Dancehall construct These particular performances however, were fabricated by the artist, utilizing Dancehall fashion, language and 'actors' who were directed by the artist in various scenarios.Given the youth-driven nature of Dancehall, the artist worked with 14 young men and explored their own ideas about masculinity through fashion. Participants were asked to design outfits based on these ideas/ideals of manhood. The artist then had the outfits made and embellished for the participants to wear and model for pictures taken in a embellished 'photo studio,'posing and /or posturing as their ideal male. The photo studio space was constructed as a dollhouse based Georgian architecture,referencing both the domestic space and toys . Both object and space are important 'tools' for understanding how gender roles are shaped by and react to those of an early age. The 'studio' was located in downtown Kingston, Jamaica. All participants were able keep their hand embellished tailored outfits along with a photograph of themselves in said outfit.Participants were documented in both clothing and space, not only photographically but also in video. The recording of the project was viewed live, virally projected to linked public spaces in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, Bermuda, the Bahamas, United States and the web,via Facebook, on March 10th, 2012. In addition a series of ten 'street interviews,' dubbed "Real Talk," were conducted with a number of young men from communities in and around downtown Kingston centering around a series of questions interrogating notions of "the masculine" as it relates to role- playing, performativity , fashion, home, relationships and community.This site and downlodable catalog documents the evolution of this project as an archive. This project was funded by the 2011 Rex Nettleford Fellowship for Cultural Studies, and supported by the Multi-Care Foundation of Jamaica, a not –for- profit organization working with youth from the inner city in the Arts and Sports., ( 436px from top )
- H3 : ABOUTThis project, developed by the artist Ebony G. Patterson, seeks to investigate the performative aspect of gender through explorations of the masculine as it constructed in popular Jamaican Dancehall culture, and is part of an ongoing body of work concerned with how masculine ideologies function within the Dancehall construct These particular performances however, were fabricated by the artist, utilizing Dancehall fashion, language and 'actors' who were directed by the artist in various scenarios.Given the youth-driven nature of Dancehall, the artist worked with 14 young men and explored their own ideas about masculinity through fashion. Participants were asked to design outfits based on these ideas/ideals of manhood. The artist then had the outfits made and embellished for the participants to wear and model for pictures taken in a embellished 'photo studio,'posing and /or posturing as their ideal male. The photo studio space was constructed as a dollhouse based Georgian architecture,referencing both the domestic space and toys . Both object and space are important 'tools' for understanding how gender roles are shaped by and react to those of an early age. The 'studio' was located in downtown Kingston, Jamaica. All participants were able keep their hand embellished tailored outfits along with a photograph of themselves in said outfit.Participants were documented in both clothing and space, not only photographically but also in video. The recording of the project was viewed live, virally projected to linked public spaces in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, Bermuda, the Bahamas, United States and the web,via Facebook, on March 10th, 2012. In addition a series of ten 'street interviews,' dubbed "Real Talk," were conducted with a number of young men from communities in and around downtown Kingston centering around a series of questions interrogating notions of "the masculine" as it relates to role- playing, performativity , fashion, home, relationships and community.This site and downlodable catalog documents the evolution of this project as an archive. This project was funded by the 2011 Rex Nettleford Fellowship for Cultural Studies, and supported by the Multi-Care Foundation of Jamaica, a not –for- profit organization working with youth from the inner city in the Arts and Sports., ( 436px from top )
- H3 : ABOUT, ( 436px from top )
- H3 : , ( 486px from top )
- H2 : This project, developed by the artist Ebony G. Patterson, seeks to investigate the performative aspect of gender through explorations of the masculine as it constructed in popular Jamaican Dancehall culture, and is part of an ongoing body of work concerned with how masculine ideologies function within the Dancehall construct These particular performances however, were fabricated by the artist, utilizing Dancehall fashion, language and 'actors' who were directed by the artist in various scenarios., ( 487.796875px from top )
- H2 : Given the youth-driven nature of Dancehall, the artist worked with 14 young men and explored their own ideas about masculinity through fashion. Participants were asked to design outfits based on these ideas/ideals of manhood. The artist then had the outfits made and embellished for the participants to wear and model for pictures taken in a embellished 'photo studio,'posing and /or posturing as their ideal male. The photo studio space was constructed as a dollhouse based Georgian architecture,referencing both the domestic space and toys . Both object and space are important 'tools' for understanding how gender roles are shaped by and react to those of an early age. The 'studio' was located in downtown Kingston, Jamaica. All participants were able keep their hand embellished tailored outfits along with a photograph of themselves in said outfit., ( 567.59375px from top )
- H2 : Participants were documented in both clothing and space, not only photographically but also in video. The recording of the project was viewed live, virally projected to linked public spaces in Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, Bermuda, the Bahamas, United States and the web,via Facebook, on March 10th, 2012. In addition a series of ten 'street interviews,' dubbed "Real Talk," were conducted with a number of young men from communities in and around downtown Kingston centering around a series of questions interrogating notions of "the masculine" as it relates to role- playing, performativity , fashion, home, relationships and community., ( 707.390625px from top )
- H2 : This site and downlodable catalog documents the evolution of this project as an archive. This project was funded by the 2011 Rex Nettleford Fellowship for Cultural Studies, and supported by the Multi-Care Foundation of Jamaica, a not –for- profit organization working with youth from the inner city in the Arts and Sports., ( 817.1875px from top )
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