Enron of the Blogosphere

? I’ve got work to do today and tomorrow, so I don’t have time to go into this in detail, so I’ll just drop the clues and bug off. There will be a wall of silence from the members of Sullivan’s J-List regarding the torrent of criticism his Blogger’s Manifesto has inspired. Sullivan employs Enron … Continue reading “Enron of the Blogosphere”

? I’ve got work to do today and tomorrow, so I don’t have time to go into this in detail, so I’ll just drop the clues and bug off. There will be a wall of silence from the members of Sullivan’s J-List regarding the torrent of criticism his Blogger’s Manifesto has inspired. Sullivan employs Enron tactics by paying off the J-Bloggers by touting their blogs. They reciprocate by lavishing praise on him (see Reynolds, Jacobs, and Layne). Meanwhile, the little people suffer. It’s Enron and Krugman all over again, only this time Sullivan is Enron.

I’m shocked, I tell you, shocked — it’s like gambling in Casablanca.

Another spanking for Sullivan

from megnut.com, by the co-creator of Blogger: My point is we shouldn’t be so quick to say that Journalists get it right and webloggers don’t. She “fact-checks his ass” quite effectively. Be sure and check out the Jason Kottke discussion she links: I have a hunch that weblogs are not “for journalism”, in the same … Continue reading “Another spanking for Sullivan”

from megnut.com, by the co-creator of Blogger:

My point is we shouldn’t be so quick to say that Journalists get it right and webloggers don’t.

She “fact-checks his ass” quite effectively. Be sure and check out the Jason Kottke discussion she links:

I have a hunch that weblogs are not “for journalism”, in the same way that the Internet is not “for business”, but that they will have an important role to play in the informal movement, filtering, dissemination, and refining of information.

It’s way more than journalism, folks.

Managing the media

? There’s a nice entry on Happy Fun Pundit about Rumsfeld’s skill at managing the media: “…Rumsfeld has managed to keep reporters at bay and even on his side, while completely controlling the direction and theme of an interview.” Check it out.

? There’s a nice entry on Happy Fun Pundit about Rumsfeld’s skill at managing the media: “…Rumsfeld has managed to keep reporters at bay and even on his side, while completely controlling the direction and theme of an interview.” Check it out.

All journalists, all the time

? Andrew Sullivan’s favorite blogs (Daily Dish) BLOG-ROLLING IN OUR TIME: Some of you have asked me to name a few other blogs out there that I read often and that you might enjoy. Of course, Instapundit rules. So does the never-boring Mickey Kaus.Virginia is prickly but perceptive; Matt Welch kicks ass; Tim Blair is … Continue reading “All journalists, all the time”

? Andrew Sullivan’s favorite blogs (Daily Dish)

BLOG-ROLLING IN OUR TIME: Some of you have asked me to name a few other blogs out there that I read often and that you might enjoy. Of course, Instapundit rules. So does the never-boring Mickey Kaus.Virginia is prickly but perceptive; Matt Welch kicks ass; Tim Blair is the Aussie to Joanne Jacobs’ Harriet; Ken Layne tells it like it is; Josh Marshall weighs in on the left; and newcomer John Ellis (friend and supporter) is the dark horse. They’re all acquired tastes ? so go acquire them.

It’s good to know we civilians can rant on all we want, secure in the knowledge that Sullivan will never read us, let alone lift ideas from our blogs. Heh.

A new form of journalism?

— Writing in The Sunday Times, Andrew Sullivan describes blogs to his readers as a new form of journalism: Blogging is the first journalistic model that harnesses rather than merely exploits the true democratic nature of the web. It’s a new medium finally finding a unique voice. Stay tuned as that voice gets louder and … Continue reading “A new form of journalism?”

— Writing in The Sunday Times, Andrew Sullivan describes blogs to his readers as a new form of journalism:

Blogging is the first journalistic model that harnesses rather than merely exploits the true democratic nature of the web. It’s a new medium finally finding a unique voice. Stay tuned as that voice gets louder and louder

This isn’t surprising given that Sullivan is himself a journalist, and he writes a personal story highlighting the Enron/punditgate story with which he was so obsessed for so long. The blogger/journalist connection is also a given for anyone whose knowledge of blogs is limited to the selection of new voices promoted by Fox News this past week.

But I think this misses the point. As the Far Eastern Economic Review points out in a piece quoted by Sullivan, blogs are an evolution of the Internet, not of the newspaper:

?Weblogs are where the real action is. They are the creation of individuals, usually musings on national, local or personal events, links to interesting articles, a few lines of comment or discussion collected and presented by one person. Weblogs are a milestone in the short history of the internet.?

For every journalist, former journalist, or free-lancer with a blog, there are hundreds of civilians. And while journalists delight in the freedom to express without the mediation of the tyrannical editor, civilians delight in the ability to reach an audience without the space and content constraints of the Letters to the Editor section, as well as the ability to get the inside dope on any manner of things straight from an insider without the mediation of an enterprise whose primary skills are sentence structure and ad sales.

If many blog postings are stimulated by news and opinion features in the press, the better ones go far beyond the superficial and provide insider’s perspective and detail, without the space constraints and mannerly concerns that govern all journalistic enterprises, in print or on the Internet.

The Internet’s first applications enabled engineering researchers to communicate with each other about matters of common interest, typically their work on government contracts. With the advent of the accessible blog, we’re finding it enables citizens to communicate with each other regarding larger matters of common interest: our culture, our politics, and our government. This is way beyond free-lance journalists with computers.

Before everybody who’s ever had a drink with a reporter jumps up and screams that I’m being mean to journalists, let me just toss out this observation: the journalist as we know him today is a creation of a certain form of technology, a generalist with an ability to quickly ferret out information using a limited set of tools (a telephone and a Rolodex,) made necessary because high-speed web printing presses are a scarce commodity to which only a few have access. Now that every computer is a press capable of reaching more people than the New York Times dreams of on their best day, journalists will have to reinvent themselves in order to remain relevant. Blogging, to be sure, is part of that process, but it’s also much more than that. And as a non-journalist who’s had plenty of contact with political reporters for several years, it’s the “much more” that interests me.

If a tree falls in the forest

and nobody hears it, does it show up in your log? I was Instapundited on the ninth, and didn’t know about it until I poked around on Blogdex and saw the link. There was no unusual upsurge of traffic over here that day, either. It must have been one of those days when Blogspot had … Continue reading “If a tree falls in the forest”

and nobody hears it, does it show up in your log? I was Instapundited on the ninth, and didn’t know about it until I poked around on Blogdex and saw the link. There was no unusual upsurge of traffic over here that day, either. It must have been one of those days when Blogspot had the vapors, or my story was too lame, or something. Weird.

Well anyhow, I can shut down this site now and get back to work.

The Man’s keeping us (hic) down!

by Kevin L. Hoover Monday, January 28 7:38 a.m. 2:05 p.m. There was some telephone back-and-forth between a marijuana clinic and an individual. Everyone was advised to cool out. 3:01 p.m. A hysterical call came in from Western Avenue, with the caller reporting that people all hopped up on marijuana and methamphetamine were going to … Continue reading “The Man’s keeping us (hic) down!”

by Kevin L. Hoover

Monday, January 28 7:38 a.m. 2:05 p.m. There was some telephone back-and-forth between a marijuana clinic and an individual. Everyone was advised to cool out.

3:01 p.m. A hysterical call came in from Western Avenue, with the caller reporting that people all hopped up on marijuana and methamphetamine were going to try to run him over as he blocked their vehicle from leaving the scene. The line then went dead. Police found a more or less routine landlord/tenant dispute; not the dire druggie-drivey sitch earlier described.

10:25 p.m. Wanted on warrants
He scrammed when he saw police
Chased down, cuffed; look – pot!

Tuesday, January 29 9 a.m. A young man out on a sprainting spree, clad in a classic 21st Century hood uniform including the mandatory sweatshirt and identity-concealing hood, vandalized the Ninth and G phone booth and marked the PG&E box there. In this case, they actually snagged the little creepy crawly. Sure, he denied it at first, then admitted and erased the ugliness. Now he’s on file and effectively neutered as a graffiti tagger.

Continue reading “The Man’s keeping us (hic) down!”

Hot links

Hot off the referer log, we have some new linkers: A Dog’s Life Coyote at the Dog Show Kyle Still Free Press And the most intriguing Google search of the day: http://www.google.com/search?q=Male+Model,+Richard Thank you one and all. The best thing about this referer log dealie is that you can find all the most tasteful and … Continue reading “Hot links”

Hot off the referer log, we have some new linkers:

A Dog’s Life
Coyote at the Dog Show
Kyle Still Free Press

And the most intriguing Google search of the day:
http://www.google.com/search?q=Male+Model,+Richard

Thank you one and all. The best thing about this referer log dealie is that you can find all the most tasteful and discriminating blogs just by looking at who links you. Very cool.