Well, the weird thing is that when all was said and done, people responded to my blog as if it were #1 -- my hobby. I'm not just a hobbyist though, I'm someone who has been tracking the library field online for almost a decade, has certain pet topics I try to track down good information on, and have a measured tone and a sense of humor that people like. You choose which media to read by which has a certain "spin" why would reading content online be any different? If some friend of mine went someplace I couldn't or wouldn't go, sure I'd love to read about it.
Then again, maybe I'm just fooling myself and I'm just guilty of being a #2 gatekeeper. It sure doesn't seem that way since I didn't know most of the people at the DNC before I got there and they sure didn't know me.
I'll say it again: blogging for me isn't journalism. And yet, it is some sort of writing. Lots of what is in the paper isn't strictly objective journalism, yet if it plays in the NY Times or in the Register somehow it's more valid [or vetted] than what bloggers are writing? Plus there's a cross-linking element that you still don't see in most standard media [how many news articles do you read in traditional media outlets with any more product links than one to the product or person being described?] which makes it a horse of a different color.
At the end of the day, I guess I don't care much what it is, for my own personal edification. I don't need to get a degree in blogging, I'm not in academia, and I'm not really dabbling in the medium. Personally the "unique snowflake" answer is my favorite, but I guess that one doesn't count.
Posted by jessamyn at August 6, 2004 07:56 AM"to live outside the law, you must be honest..." -Dylan
Blogging is the reality behind the "news", the honesty that is the individual, who is the true reality behind the manufactured and manipulated surface cover of the certfified perspective of the ruling class and their pocket media outlets.
Blogging is ... the true reality behind the manufactured and manipulated surface cover of the certfified perspective of the ruling class and their pocket media outlets...
Again this displays a lot of wishful thinking. For example, in what way is Seymour Hersh, who at the New Yorker has revealed the mechanics of the Office of Special Plans, the sanctioning of Gitmo-style interrogations, and the Hobbesian philosophy espoused by the OSP, not "reflecting reality"?
I suspect that in your desire to bind authenticity to a specific tool, you leave yourself no other conclusion. But this is silly, most people don't think like this, and it's precisely the trap I describe.
There's good and bad, but no magic light sabres here.
Posted by Andrew at August 6, 2004 08:39 AMBlogging is ... the true reality behind the manufactured and manipulated surface cover of the certfified perspective of the ruling class and their pocket media outlets...
Again this displays a lot of wishful thinking. For example, in what way is Seymour Hersh, who at the New Yorker has revealed the mechanics of the Office of Special Plans, the sanctioning of Gitmo-style interrogations, and the Hobbesian philosophy espoused by the OSP, not "reflecting reality"?
I suspect that in your desire to bind authenticity to a specific tool, you leave yourself with no other conclusion. But this is silly. Most people believe such reasoning to be absurd, and it's precisely the trap I describe.
There's good and bad, but no magic light sabres here.
Posted by Andrew at August 6, 2004 09:20 AMNot to go snowflake on you, but my personal take on blogging and living (and I can still tell the difference, though it's growing increasingly more subtle) is that meaning is ascribed, not inherent. The meaning of blogging? Reminds me of the psychiatrist's adage: Anyone who ponders the meaning of life is by definition mentally ill. Don't think, just blog, or whatever the hell else you do in your own snowy little world. My own blog probably has less than a dozen readers and still it gives me immense satisfaction to know somebody is reading my political/social/left-wing/pinko-commie ranting. I think I can speak for snowflakes everywhere in saying that it kinda sucks if no one looks to see if you really ARE unique. So rack me for door #3, maybe a touch lighter on the metaphysics.
Posted by CluelessInBlogland at August 6, 2004 02:31 PMThis reminds me of the Pixies song, "Where Is My Mind?"
Don't think, just blog...
I think we have enough mindless blogging already - in the hope that the "hive mind" / "collective consciousness" will provide a kind of safety net.
Blogging as therapy? As ego gratification? By all means, go ahead. But if you're trying to persuade us that your brand of therapy is overthrowing the media, or actively curing deep social and political problems, when the evidence doesn't support such claims - then don't surprise if we blow you a raspberry back. It's nothing personal.
Posted by Andrew at August 6, 2004 05:36 PM