He promotes shows online  as manager of digital marketing
By Dan Edelen
 When MTV Networks checks the pulse of the digital age, it looks to Jeff  Carroll ’02, manager of digital marketing at the network’s Comedy  Central. The Daily Show, Chocolate News, The Sarah  Silverman Program, and the rest of Comedy Central’s cable TV lineup  find their online presence bolstered by his creative spark.
When MTV Networks checks the pulse of the digital age, it looks to Jeff  Carroll ’02, manager of digital marketing at the network’s Comedy  Central. The Daily Show, Chocolate News, The Sarah  Silverman Program, and the rest of Comedy Central’s cable TV lineup  find their online presence bolstered by his creative spark.
“Search,  mobile, on air, email, viral, wikis, gaming, and social networking—we  make sure that Comedy Central speaks to our audience the way they want  to be communicated to,” he says. “The beauty of digital marketing is our  ability to react to change quickly and see results almost instantly.”
The route to TV’s home of comedy came partly by way of the golf  course. In 2002, Carroll worked for Jay Mottola ’72 at the  Metropolitan Golf Association. There the English major learned basic web  design skills and tech knowledge, which he later augmented while  working in digital marketing for AIG and Furnished Quarters. “I really  just took to the digital space,” he says. “It came naturally.”
Despite his tech bent, Carroll’s real passion lay elsewhere: “I  always wanted to do television and movies.” Though he worked on the  final episode of the PBS series “New York: A Documentary Film” by Ric  Burns, he wanted more. He posted his r�sum� online and got his break  when an MTV Networks recruiter called him about the Comedy Central  position.
During Carroll’s first day on the job, his boss noted the new hire  owned every South Park DVD available. The comment proved to be  Carroll’s epiphany: “I get to work with cultural institutions like South  Park, The Daily Show, and The Colbert Report. If  you’re a musician, it’s like playing with the Rolling Stones.”
Now he develops viral media content based on Comedy Central’s shows  for inclusion on hot web sites such as celebrity tracker  PerezHilton.com, political talker The Huffington Post, and gaming  headquarters Kotaku. He brainstorms online vertical marketing for the  channel’s shows, checks search engine placements, monitors demographics,  and oversees development of desktop widgets and online social  networking applications for sites like MySpace and Facebook. He  particularly enjoyed creating an interactive application tied to the  show Lewis Black’s Root of All Evil that asked online  participants which of two subjects or items—say, Coke or Pepsi—is more  “evil.”
Carroll, recently featured in Fortune magazine’s “Faces of the  Future,” explains the passion: “The fact that I love these shows means  they’re not just something I’m being paid to market. They’re something I  care about.”
Though the irreverent Comedy Central work atmosphere— cranking Guns  N’ Roses in the office, spreading ManBearPig awareness, or live blogging  Indecision 2008 after hours while downing margueritas every time some  talking head calls John McCain a “maverick”—flashes a single upraised  digit to stodgy, corporate America, the frenetic demands of the TV  business remain. Carroll faces relentless market space changes that tax  his skills and keep him hunting for trends.
“Consumer market and digital market branding are converging, becoming  the same thing,” he notes. “If you don’t know both, you’re out of the  game.”
Yet as the stuff of everyday living, cell phones, iPods, and cars,  increasingly merge with his digital domain, Carroll spots new  opportunities. “The TV producer of 20 years ago is now also the  executive producer of the web site and the video game.”
For Carroll, despite the challenges in the industry, the payoff makes  the long hours marketing Comedy Central worthwhile. “If people come  home and turn on The Daily Show or South Park and for an  hour they laugh and forget that the economy is bad, or that politics in  this country is down the tubes, or that their jobs are in jeopardy,” he  says, “then I have done my part in making their day better.”
Though Carroll now works in New York City, it took time at Lafayette  for him to appreciate that “the greatest city in the world is an hour  away from school.” After graduation, he moved to Manhattan and now lives  in Hoboken, N.J, where he writes poetry, enjoys drumming, and avidly  reads science fiction and military history books—though, occasionally,  quite slowly. He jokes that it took him 13 years to read one novel, a  yellowed sci-fi tome he’d started as a teen and only finished recently  after discovering it during his move.
With his channel having enjoyed its best year ever in 2007, he’s  never been happier. “Seeing a show succeed and how a campaign helped  drive that” is one of Carroll’s daily satisfactions. “Comedy Central is  where I hit my stride,” he says.