Comments: London Bombings and Blog Evangelism

Not sure if you caught this, but the Register's Andrew Orlowski (one of the better writers in tech journalism, IMHO) did a piece on the London disaster, and references you. You're both quite right. He ties it more directly to the grand blogosphere circlejerk to which you often allude.

Posted by Dave at July 9, 2005 02:05 AM

Gack! It's not ambulance chasing; unless the blog is making money from it, it's only rubber-necking.

Please, if you're going to try to be insulting atleast try to be accurate.

Posted by Ian Woollard at July 9, 2005 07:36 AM

Journalists? Accurate?

Posted by Dan100 at July 10, 2005 12:37 PM

I'd call schadenblog. I seem to remember writing something about this post-tsunami. Breaking News: Earthquake hits, media sinks.

Posted by Jon Garfunkel at July 11, 2005 12:50 AM

Usually I enjoy Orlowski's writing. Not so this time, as he used that unattributed quote from my blog to make a point . . . a point not made in my post, when read in context.

Maybe he's envious that I link to you and to Shelley, but not to him. Oh wait, that would be too self-congratulatory. Strike that.

Posted by Dean Landsman at July 12, 2005 01:47 AM

Quote: (Ian Woolard)

Gack! It's not ambulance chasing; unless the blog is making money from it, it's only rubber-necking.

Please, if you're going to try to be insulting atleast try to be accurate.

Er.... Gack and double-gack! It's not rubbernecking unless someone is just slowing down to take a look. Taking photos for their own use or publishing on the internet is actually lends itself more to Ambulance-Chasing than to Rubber-necking because there is a gain (albeit a non-financial but very sick and perverse one).

Please Ian, if you're going to be petulant at least try to be more accurate.


Doggie

Posted by Doctor Doggie at July 13, 2005 06:55 AM

My sympathy is out to the people in London who suffered at the hands of thoughtless killers. However I am always curious how 50 people being killed in London trumps 150 being killed in a train wreck in pakistan. That latter event just got a one day mention in the top news but no "how tragic", "minutes of silence" from the world in general. Why is that

Posted by lou at July 14, 2005 08:33 AM