
There is some seriously good content being produced on Steemit.
The current system of Topics and Tags and lack of filters in one's feed means that much of this will pass you by.
I do not want to miss that great piece of work submitted tomorrow by someone who joined today.
I also want that creative person to get the rewards they deserve!

A high number of votes does not necessarily equate to great content.
Let us not get into that here!.
The photo competition is great and the quality is outstanding - I mean outstanding!
So, in an attempt to provide a sort of filter, why not have other categories of competition?
This will create a series of galleries of work through which one can easily browse, now and into the future as a repository of excellence.

Poetry, paintings, drawings, philosophy, jokes, magic, investment, conservation, language, etymology.
As the topic/tag system is not really functioning very well - topics on steemitchat do not appear on steemit, please suggest the topics you would like to see.
The organisation will require a person(s) to act as judge(s) in each category of competition; please also show your willingness to perform this crucial function.
The judging does not need to take up huge amounts of time so 14 twenty minute video submissions would be too onerous. Similarly, a competition for the best interpretation of how to wear a toga may be interesting but a bit too niche!
I need to say in recognition that @curie and @screenname do a great job with their support for the lesser recognised posts in general with The Curie Project (project-curie has its own tag now) and Daily Tribune respectively. For that we are thankful and we salute you.
Please, especially to the people with large followings, I need this resteemed for obvious reasons.
Do we need a central message service which goes to everyone into a special tag on your home page, or is it just me? I know ... my bum looks big in this!
Finally, thank you to all the amazing creators out there - you are truly amazing!

Image Credits: yougrassmudhorse, France 2, William Shakespeare, Andy Warhol