During his five-year stint as new media editor at Billboard, he was among the first reporters to document the development of Internet-based digital downloading and streaming media technologies. His expertise in this area has resulted in numerous analyst and commentator appearances at several national print and TV outlets, including Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, CBS Evening News, USA Today and Wall Street Journal.
Online
At Amazon.com, he managed and developed editorial content for several of the e-commerce site’s operations, including the debut of the Computer & Video Games, Electronics and Toys stores. At RealNetworks, he managed content development for various music properties at the streaming media company, including MusicNet, LiveConcerts.com and RealGuide Music. In addition, he co-founded Internet music service Rolling Stone Radio with Rolling Stone magazine. At Linden Lab, he works on editorial and content strategy for multiple products including the Internet-based 3D digital worldSecond Life and the social VR platform Sansar.
Academia
Atwood is an associate professor at the Edward R. Murrow College of Communication at Washington State University, where he teaches courses in digital content production, reporting and social media persuasion. In 2006, he was the recipient of a U.S. Speaker and Specialist Grant from the U.S. Department of State. This grant enabled Atwood to travel to Minsk, Belarus to conduct workshops on Internet content development among independent journalists. Under the regime of Alexander Lukashenko, the government has all but suffocated traditional distribution outlets for independent journalists due to its intolerance of dissenting viewpoints. In 2008, he received a grant from the McCormick Foundation to conduct a featuring workshops and presentations about reporting within 3D spaces. The effort comes as a result of the growing popularity and influence of virtual reality worlds, where there are many real stories unfolding within the "metaverse" and its newly created 3D spaces. For example, real-world news organizations, such as CNN and Sky News, once held "in-world" virtual news bureaus that aimed to document and report on the virtual economy and activities within Second Life. In 2010, he worked with the McCormick Foundation again to create the . This virtual world project features 3D "citizen journalism" training kiosks and a multimedia exhibit dedicated to famed broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow. In 2011, he was a co-recipient of a U.S. Department of State grant for the .