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Monday, April 11, 2005

The Silence of the Blogs

ResurrectionSong has been a little quiet for the last few days. I guess it could be attributed to blogging malaise, although I would generally say that it’s more a case of general weariness. It’s been a busy few weeks and I still have a few more to go.

What I will say about blogs is this, though: Michele (if you clicked through the VodkaPundit link, you’ve already seen her post) is spot on about what makes for easy blog readership. Controversy, vitriol, infighting, bitching, and general noisiness. And that is almost as wearying as the rest of my workload; I don’t read it and I don’t really want to participate.

The same kind of philosophy that led Daniel Okrent to decry the “eye-goggling pursuit of scoops” in his NYT editorial is the same driving philosophy of much of the blogging world. It’s the search for the “gotcha” moment, for the early report, for being the first so that all the other bloggers have to link your site that compels most people to keep blogging. The worst of journalism is, to me, also the worst of blogging.

What I want to read and what I enjoy far more than the kind of blogging that brought us the “look, John Kerry is pulling a pen out of his jacket pocket in clear violation of the debate agreement” moment that spawned the even more ridiculous “look, Bush is wearing a radio receiver underneath his suit coat” tripe. Neither of those was meaningful or useful--they were just attempts to find a “gotcha” moment that would destroy the election hopes of one candidate or the other.

The absolute worst of reporting is blindly partisan or blindly in search of ratings above all else. I still believe that 60 Minutes would have run the memogate story if the target had been Kerry, but their own search for a scoop led to a miserably useless vetting process for the supporting documentation. Instead of getting a story right (or instead of spending their time on something more meaningful), they went for a cheap ratings boost with almost sophomoric glee.

The best of the blogs is still worth noting, of course. Exposing stories that you wouldn’t otherwise have noticed, impressive analysis of world events, humorous takes on daily stories, and, yes, even some very important “gotcha” moments. Memogate would never have been exposed if it weren’t for the efforts of bloggers. Not me--I was in the camp that wanted to slow down and analyze it before we came to any complete judgments on the authenticity of the memo, a position I still think is responsible while admitting that without the early zeal of some bloggers it may never have been a national story exposing 60 Minutes as peddling a fairytale.

But much of what I think is the best of blogging is the stuff that no one comments on because it isn’t shocking, it isn’t going to bring down a candidate, and it isn’t something that will start an all out war between bloggers. I like the things that are well considered, thorough, and illuminating; something that makes me think instead of just reacting from the gut. There is room for both--in my head, I generally think of them as the agitators and the philosophers, although that is overly simplistic--but it seems that most bloggers see the road to fame, glory, and ad revenue as being the path of the agitator. And, while Oliver Willis may make a living peddling thoughtless, partisan crap, I have no use for him (and that goes for some of the right leaners who don’t make the same money, but do the same thing). I read Jeff G not because he’s a right leaner, but because he’s an original: he’s creative and intelligent, and honestly provocative.

Most writers don’t rise to that level. I know I don’t. But making noise and getting noticed is an easy task; just be a jerk. Witness the gentleman who very publicly delinked a number of high profile bloggers for not having the right (as defined by him) view on the Schiavo story--I’m certain his traffic has never been better, but as to whether he actually managed to add anything to the debate the answer is a resounding “no.” Acrimony is not terribly edifying.

This isn’t an “I’m quitting” rant, an “I hate blogs” rant, or even a public scolding. It’s just me noting that bloggers fall into the same traps that traditional journalists fall into. We do it for precisely the same reason: we are all searching for that one big story that cements our reputation and it seems easier to do it with a scoop than with an original, well-researched, thorough story.

Think of your favorite journalists, though, and think about what kind of writing it is that you most enjoy reading. Is it someone like Mark Morford and his asinine rants? Or is it Chris Hitchens, who can be just as offensive, but who does it with original thoughts, research, and well-formed ideas. Hitchens is maddening to me--when I read him I swing between passionate agreements to passionate disagreements with rarely a stop in between. But I never find him anything less than thought provoking; the only thing I get from Mark Morford and Ted Rall is a profound sense of disgust. That might be fine for the faithful, but it sure as hell isn’t converting new minds to their causes.

I wouldn’t want anyone to think that I’m a writer who even approaches the skill of someone like Hitchens, but I know which kind of author I would rather emulate. That acts as a pretty accurate description of what I want to be reading.

PS-- A few days ago, McGehee asked a question that might be related. The answer is actually “no” for me. I’m enjoying what I’ve been writing lately, even if no one else has. I enjoyed writing about Daryl Hall and the Pope. I enjoyed writing about the place politics shouldn’t be taking in the passing of the Pope. What I’ve been enjoying less is reading some sites that I used to read regularly. That’s the part that’s been more difficult for me.

PPS-- Be sure to read Bryan’s thoughts on the subject. I suspect that he’s right in some ways: this is a seasonal thing that will, hopefully, pass.

PPPS-- And Randy has a post that dovetails nicely with this issue.

Comments & Trackbacks
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Exposing stories that you wouldn’t otherwise have notices

This is what I strive to do at my site. I try not to do the stories that everyone else is doing. I didn’t do any Terry Schaivo stories. I didn’t do any on Memogate or Dan Rather. What was the point? You could read that from hundreds of other sources. I think the key to a good blog is to have a specialty or specialties and not just rehash what every one else has rehashed from other site that everyone else has already read.

You know, kind of like your unhealthy man-crush on Mark Whatshisname from Queens of the Stone Age.  LOL Just kidding.

The other key is to be very well written. Written well enough to keep people interested. I think RS does both very well. I only do one of those well.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 11:37 AM

Ooh!  Nice point.  And this helps me understand what you have meant when you’ve talked about “bringing more accountability to the blogosphere”.  I’ve never understood that, because no one can enforce accountability on me, and I don’t want someone to.

...but, yeah: I hate “gotcha journalism”, and I really haven’t made any attempt at “gotcha blogging”.

I think this is one of the things that will shake out over time.  When more people read blogs for news commentary and differing viewpoints, and when more bloggers have years of track record for a reader to know what to expect, the value of blogs will increase.

Right now it is all too muddled to the outsider; that certainly detracts from the value to the non-blogger.

I must consider…

on Apr 11 2005 @ 11:41 AM

Let me also say that I’ve never considered myself a journalist. I’m just a loudmouth with an opinion and a website.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 11:46 AM

What I’ve been enjoying less is reading some sites that I used to read regularly. That’s the part that’s been more difficult for me.

That’s the part that’s bothering me, yes. I suppose I could go back to my original approach of just posting on news items, but I’d hate to have to trim my blogroll (more than I already have) to make it readable for me.

Far better for everybody to just KNOCK IT OFF! Yet they probably won’t listen to me.

What’s up with that, anyway?

on Apr 11 2005 @ 11:50 AM

Trench, I consider myself pretty much the same thing--I’m not a journalist, I just like sharing my thoughts. (Thanks, by the way, for exposing a typo--I fixed it and damned my spellchecker passionately). Thanks, as well, for the compliments, although now everyone knows that my unhealthy obsession is actually a man crush. I’m so embarrassed.

Nathan, I think I’ve lost a lot of people with my accountability talk--which means that either I was wrong or I wasn’t explaining myself well. But, yes, this really is what I was trying to get at.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 12:23 PM

And, McGehee, I’ll always listen to you. Promise.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 12:25 PM

And, McGehee, I’ll always listen to you. Promise.

Right. So where’s the T-bird I asked you to buy me?

on Apr 11 2005 @ 03:31 PM

Hey, just I said I would listen, there was no promise of implementation.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 03:45 PM

Oh, good. I thought it was me, or a change of seasons. Actually, I am working to get back to writing what I enjoy writing: Humor. Fans (or heavily medicated frat boys who urinate in my front yard, it’s hard to tell the difference) have been after me to post another installment of The Little Stories: Tales From Nowhere series to my humble place in cyberspace.

So stop by the URL above, stay tuned, and remember to wear your aluminum hat out-of-doors, especially when the meteor season begins.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 04:44 PM
Trackback from Arguing with signposts...
That monkey on your blog
Zombyboy, Michele, McGehee post about blogging malaise, or some sort of bloginal affective disorder that makes them ponder the "State of the Blogosphere" these days. Michele is, of course, right about much of what she is saying. There is a sense i...
Apr 11 2005 @ 11:58 AM
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McGehee asks: Schiavo Derangement Syndrome? I think he's right that our (very human) tendency to think about what we'd feel like/do if we were in that place has fueled a lot of the flaming. I think he's also right that it's time to calm the hell down. Nathan, meanwhile, is trying to find a replacement for the phrase, "Culture of Death," which is, I think, as inflammatory as he suspects it might be. I can't think of a good replacement, but there has to be one. And……
Apr 11 2005 @ 03:47 PM
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Malaise? Naw ... I say mayonnaise.
Michele makes some interesting points even as I shy away from a word I've always come to associate with Jhimmi Carter. I like writing, I love blogging but that doesn't mean I don't find it frustrating at times, or...
Apr 11 2005 @ 05:54 PM
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Apr 11 2005 @ 06:16 PM

Hey, just I said I would listen, there was no promise of implementation.

Story of my life.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 06:21 PM

Great post Zomby.  There is a lot of self blog-reflection going on.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 06:21 PM

I’ve felt the same way for a long time, but I view it as just being sick of politics.  And I still think the post-election slump is in effect to some extent.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 08:40 PM

Post-election and post-Schiavo for a lot of people, I’m sure.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 08:58 PM

To make a play on Jewel’s lyrics…

We’re tired and we’re weary
And many of us are worn out

If living a life uncommon is spent away from the internet, heck, I dig.

on Apr 11 2005 @ 10:29 PM

I got all my post-election and post-Schiavo ennui out of the way before either of those things happened.

You gotta plan ahead, ya know?

on Apr 12 2005 @ 08:31 AM
Rae

This is why I stick to stream-of-consciousness.

on Apr 12 2005 @ 10:55 AM

My stream of consciousness is polluted.  LOL

on Apr 12 2005 @ 11:00 AM

Mine is dammed...or should that be “damned”?

on Apr 12 2005 @ 12:44 PM
jed

I guess it’s catching. Not only have I felt less like blogging lately, I haven’t been reading as much either. Sometimes I get the feeling that my blog-circle is on a tape loop. It’s the same scenery going by the window, day after day.

And then something comes up that makes me go read something I wrote 2 years ago or so, and I wonder why I don’t write like that any more. One thing I wanted to do was improve my writing.

And yeah, sometimes I decide not to post on something because it’s already all over the place.

Well, enough navel gazing. Maybe I should get a pet monkey, and name it Paul.

on Apr 12 2005 @ 02:42 PM

Yeah, I feel some of the same things. Although I also have a tendency to look back at things that I wrote and wonder how it is that I ever managed to build a regular audience. Some of the writing was (and remains) horrible.

Drives me absolutely crazy to read myself.

One of the things that I had wanted to do was branch out into business writing--but I found that I have less to say about that than I do about politics and culture. Hence adding new voices. Although I know that they don’t necessarily post regularly, I do know that they add some spice to the site that might otherwise grow pretty stagnant.

on Apr 12 2005 @ 02:59 PM
Rae

Z- I think writing is like learning to really make love to someone: desire, honesty, lots of practice, lots of pleasure, some needed reassurance, and we get good.  Sometimes really good :D

You are your own worst critic.

on Apr 12 2005 @ 11:37 PM
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Apr 15 2005 @ 02:33 AM
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