Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Blogging: Is It Journalism?

From Time Magazine's Lev Grossman:

Sunday, Jun. 13, 2004
Meet Joe Blog
By Lev Grossman

A few years ago, Mathew Gross, 32, was a free-lance writer living in tiny Moab, Utah. Rob Malda, 28, was an underperforming undergraduate at a small Christian college in Michigan. Denis Dutton, 60, was a professor of philosophy in faraway Christchurch, New Zealand. Today they are some of the most influential media personalities in the world. You can be one too.

Gross, Malda and Dutton aren't rich or famous or even conspicuously good-looking. What they have in common is that they all edit blogs: amateur websites that provide news, information and, above all, opinions to rapidly growing and devoted audiences drawn by nothing more than a shared interest or two and the sheer magnetism of the editor's personality. Over the past five years, blogs have gone from an obscure and, frankly, somewhat nerdy fad to a genuine alternative to mainstream news outlets, a shadow media empire that is rivaling networks and newspapers in power and influence. Which raises the question: Who are these folks anyway? And what exactly are they doing to the established pantheon of American media?

Not that long ago, blogs were one of those annoying buzz words that you could safely get away with ignoring. The word blog — it works as both noun and verb — is short for Web log. It was coined in 1997 to describe a website where you could post daily scribblings, journal-style, about whatever you like — mostly critiquing and linking to other articles online that may have sparked your thinking. Unlike a big media outlet, bloggers focus their efforts on narrow topics, often rising to become de facto watchdogs and self-proclaimed experts. Blogs can be about anything: politics, sex, baseball, haiku, car repair. There are blogs about blogs.

Big whoop, right? But it turns out some people actually have interesting thoughts on a regular basis, and a few of the better blogs began drawing sizable audiences. Blogs multiplied and evolved, slowly becoming conduits for legitimate news and serious thought. In 1999 a few companies began offering free make-your-own-blog software, which turbocharged the phenomenon. By 2002, Pyra Labs, which makes software for creating blogs, claimed 970,000 users.

Most of America couldn't have cared less. Until December 2002, that is, when bloggers staged a dramatic show of force. The occasion was Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday party, during which Trent Lott made what sounded like a nostalgic reference to Thurmond's past segregationist leanings. The mainstream press largely glossed over the incident, but when regular journalists bury the lead, bloggers dig it right back up. "That story got ignored for three, four, five days by big papers and the TV networks while blogs kept it alive," says Joshua Micah Marshall, creator of talkingpointsmemo.com, one of a handful of blogs that stuck with the Lott story.

Mainstream America wasn't listening, but Washington insiders and media honchos read blogs. Three days after the party, the story was on Meet the Press. Four days afterward, Lott made an official apology. After two weeks, Lott was out as Senate majority leader, and blogs had drawn their first blood. Web journalists like Matt Drudge (drudgereport.com) had already demonstrated a certain crude effectiveness — witness l'affaire Lewinsky — but this was something different: bloggers were offering reasoned, forceful arguments that carried weight with the powers that be.

Blogs act like a lens, focusing attention on an issue until it catches fire, but they can also break stories. On April 21, a 34-year-old blogger and writer from Arizona named Russ Kick posted photographs of coffins containing the bodies of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan and of Columbia astronauts. The military zealously guards images of service members in coffins, but Kick pried the photos free with a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. "I read the news constantly," says Kick, "and when I see a story about the government refusing to release public documents, I automatically file an FOIA request for them." By April 23 the images had gone from Kick's blog, thememoryhole.org, to the front page of newspapers across the country. Kick was soon getting upwards of 4 million hits a day.

What makes blogs so effective? They're free. They catch people at work, at their desks, when they're alert and thinking and making decisions. Blogs are fresh and often seem to be miles ahead of the mainstream news. Bloggers put up new stuff every day, all day, and there are thousands of them. How are you going to keep anything secret from a thousand Russ Kicks? Blogs have voice and personality. They're human. They come to us not from some mediagenic anchorbot on an air-conditioned sound stage, but from an individual. They represent — no, they are — the voice of the little guy.

And the little guy is a lot smarter than big media might have you think. Blogs showcase some of the smartest, sharpest writing being published. Bloggers are unconstrained by such journalistic conventions as good taste, accountability and objectivity — and that can be a good thing. Accusations of media bias are thick on the ground these days, and Americans are tired of it. Blogs don't pretend to be neutral: they're gleefully, unabashedly biased, and that makes them a lot more fun. "Because we're not trying to sell magazines or papers, we can afford to assail our readers," says Andrew Sullivan, a contributor to TIME and the editor of andrewsullivan.com. "I don't have the pressure of an advertising executive telling me to lay off. It's incredibly liberating."

Some bloggers earn their bias the hard way — in the trenches. Military bloggers, or milbloggers in Net patois, post vivid accounts of their tours of Baghdad, in prose covered in fresh flop sweat and powder burns, illustrated with digital photos. "Jason," a National Guardsman whose blog is called justanothersoldier.com, wrote about wandering through one of Saddam Hussein's empty palaces. And Iraqis have blogs: a Baghdad blogger who goes by Salam Pax ( dear_raed.blogspot.com) has parlayed his blog into a book and a movie deal. Vietnam was the first war to be televised; blogs bring Iraq another scary step closer to our living rooms.

But blogs are about much more than war and politics. In 1997 Malda went looking for a "site that mixed the latest word about a new sci-fi movie with news about open-source software. I was looking for a site that didn't exist," Malda says, "so I built it." Malda and a handful of co-editors run slashdot.org full time, and he estimates that 300,000 to 500,000 people read the site daily. Six years ago, a philosophy professor in New Zealand named Denis Dutton started the blog Arts & Letters Daily artsandlettersdaily.com) to create a website "where people could go daily for a dose of intellectual stimulation." Now the site draws more than 100,000 readers a month. Compare that with, say, the New York Review of Books, which has a circulation of 115,000. The tail is beginning to wag the blog.

Blogs are inverting the cozy media hierarchies of yore. Some bloggers are getting press credentials for this summer's Republican Convention. Three years ago, a 25-year-old Chicagoan named Jessa Crispin started a blog for serious readers called bookslut.com. "We give books a better chance," she says. "The New York Times Book Review is so boring. We take each book at face value. There's no politics behind it." Crispin's apartment is overflowing with free books from publishers desperate for a mention. As for the Times, it's scrutinizing the blogging phenomenon for its own purposes. In January the Gray Lady started up Times on the Trail, a campaign-news website with some decidedly bloglike features; it takes the bold step of linking to articles by competing newspapers, for example. "The Times cannot ignore this. I don't think any big media can ignore this," says Len Apcar, editor in chief of the New York Times on the Web.

In a way, blogs represent everything the Web was always supposed to be: a mass medium controlled by the masses, in which getting heard depends solely on having something to say and the moxie to say it.

Unfortunately, there's a downside to this populist sentiment — that is, innocent casualties bloodied by a medium that trades in rumor, gossip and speculation without accountability. Case in point: Alexandra Polier, better known as the Kerry intern. Rumors of Polier's alleged affair with presidential candidate Senator John Kerry eventually spilled into the blogosphere earlier this year. After Drudge headlined it in February, the blabbing bloggers soon had the attention of tabloid journalists, radio talk-show hosts and cable news anchors. Trouble is, the case was exceedingly thin, and both Kerry and Polier vehemently deny it. Yet the Internet smolders with it to this day.

Some wonder if the backbiting tide won't recede as blogs grow up. The trend now is for more prominent sites to be commercialized. A Manhattan entrepreneur named Nick Denton runs a small stable of bloggers as a business by selling advertising on their sites. So far they aren't showing detectible signs of editorial corruption by their corporate masters — two of Denton's blogs, gawker.com and wonkette.com, are among the most corrosively witty sites on the Web — but they've lost their amateur status forever.

We may be in the golden age of blogging, a quirky Camelot moment in Internet history when some guy in his underwear with too much free time can take down a Washington politician. It will be interesting to see what role blogs play in the upcoming election. Blogs can be a great way of communicating, but they can keep people apart too. If I read only those of my choice, precisely tuned to my political biases and you read only yours, we could end up a nation of political solipsists, vacuum sealed in our private feedback loops, never exposed to new arguments, never having to listen to a single word we disagree with.

Howard Dean's campaign blog, run by Mathew Gross, may be the perfect example of both the potential and the pitfalls of high-profile blogging. At its peak, blogforamerica.com drew 100,000 visitors a day, yet the candidate was beaten badly in the primaries. Still, the Dean model isn't going away. When another political blogger, who goes by the nom de blog Atrios, set up a fund-raising link on his site for Kerry, he raised $25,000 in five days.

You can't blog your way into the White House, at least not yet, but blogs are America thinking out loud, talking to itself, and heaven help the candidate who isn't listening.

---

From Poynter's Steve Outing:

What Journalists Can Learn From Bloggers
By Steve Outing

Bloggers and journalists do not need be the Red States vs. the Blue States -- though in some quarters both sides have acted that way lately. We're heading into a period, I hope, where each group takes tips from the other to enhance their own craft.

Bloggers and mainstream journalists likely won't end up as twins, but perhaps cordial cousins.
What's a blog?

At this point, I probably don't need to explain what a blog is to most people. But it's worth defining the type of blogs I refer to in this article: those written and published by independents, rather than blogs produced by journalists under the brand name of their employers. It's not that journalists who blog aren't bloggers; they are. Yet it's the independents who are doing most of the innovation -- and thus have the most to teach traditional journalists.

Are bloggers journalists? That's a loaded question, and not one I mean to take up in this article. Suffice it to say that among the millions of people now publishing blogs -- and among the relatively small number who blog professionally and/or have built up huge audiences -- some act as journalists, some do not. Some bloggers see themselves as journalists; some do not.
No-restraint journalism

If there's a leading complaint that traditional journalists often make about bloggers, it's this: Some bloggers are too quick to publish anything that falls into their laps -- without bothering to vet the material to determine if it's accurate, or to consider the consequences of publishing it. In some cases, such "careless" publishing can have far-reaching results. Even bloggers, the traditionalists say, have a responsibility to the public not to trade in unsubstantiated and possibly dangerous rumors.

The poster child for just-about-anything-goes is Ana Marie Cox, otherwise known as Wonkette, who does a popular daily news and gossip blog covering the Washington, D.C., political scene. Cox insists she's not acting as a "journalist" with Wonkette, though she is a journalist by background.

On November 2, Cox was one of the bloggers who received leaked early results from exit polls in the U.S. presidential election -- the ones that led many to believe early in the day that John Kerry was on his way to victory. Cox's popularity has left her with a big group of sources -- people who feed her interesting tidbits and sometimes leaked material. People with access to exit-poll numbers sent her leaked numbers; she posted them quickly, with cautionary words to the effect of, "don't take this too seriously."

Cox acknowledged during an interview that she didn't think much about the ethics of it all that day, though she's well aware of the controversy surrounding exit polls affecting voting in states where the polls haven't yet closed. "Exit polls are like crack," she quips, and just like curbing drug use, no one is likely to stop early publication of them by bloggers as long as there are people with access willing to leak the results.

"It's impossible to maintain privileged information" in an environment where anyone can instantly publish leaked information to a potential worldwide audience on the Web, she says.

But there's more to Wonkette's method than "I publish anything because I can." Cox points out how she also posted pre-election reports sent to her of rumors that presidential candidate John Kerry had an affair with a young woman. "I posted the Kerry affair stuff and said it's stupid," she says. (The affair rumor turned out to go nowhere.)

Cox's point of view reflects a libertarian notion that it's fine in a democratic society for people to receive most any information. This line of thinking suggests that the publisher's responsibility lies in being clear about what's been confirmed and what hasn't been, acknowledging that the information, depending on circumstances, could be accurate or could be groundless. Let readers decide for themselves whether it's useful information, in other words, but be transparent in explaining where you got it and how much of it you've confirmed. Respect the intelligence of the audience, this argument goes, and don't try to play nanny by deciding what you will and will not publish without audience input.

The key word in the paragraph above is "transparency." Many bloggers feel that it's OK to publish just about anything if they make it clear where it came from, what they know about it, and that it may or may not be accurate.
The news, faster

Could such an approach be taken by mainstream news organizations? Let me suggest that current trends are pushing them toward a new way of doing journalism that is a bit more blog-like.

The Internet, of course, has speeded up the news publishing cycle. No longer is it easy for a news organization to sit on a big story and publish it at a set time, when all the dust has settled. (Think of how the Monica Lewinsky story played out -- when blogger Matt Drudge published leaked reports of a Bill Clinton affair that Newsweek was investigating but wasn't ready to make public -- to understand what I mean.)

"Newspaper people (especially) still have the mindset of putting out the edition and then they're done with it," complains Glenn Reynolds, a law professor best known as the blogger behind Instapundit, one of the most popular blogs on the Internet today.

What Mainstream Journalists Can Learn from Bloggers
In an interview, Reynolds explained that the way he approaches information that comes his way is profoundly different than how a traditional journalist would. For instance, he says, if the infamous "Rathergate" documents about George W. Bush's military record ended up in the hands of a blogger like him rather than CBS News, the approach likely would have been to publish them immediately. Rather than find an expert or two to review the documents, a blogger would recognize that among members of his audience would be people capable of doing credible analysis. Imagine the ensuing conversation as the story started in one blog, quickly spread to others, and people far and wide started discussing the credibility of the documents.

It's not hard to imagine a different outcome than what actually happened: CBS News got dragged through the mud when it became obvious that the Bush documents were faked and CBS messed up.

Yes, it is hard to imagine the New York Times or Washington Post taking this approach, I admit. Yet it might make sense in some cases.

Imagine, say, the coverage of Watergate being treated in part this way. Rather than Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward being the sole storytellers, blog-influenced journalism would have had them in part leading a conversation about the scandal -- and probably turning up new sources in the process. What if Woodward and Bernstein had accompanied their Watergate investigative pieces with a blog that facilitated public conversation and brought in tips from government insiders? I suspect that a Watergate investigation in the blog era would have come to a conclusion faster.
News is a conversation

"Big media has to learn to be more honest," says Jeff Jarvis, a media executive who moonlights as a blogger, "that is, to level with its public, to reveal its prejudices, and process as citizen journalists (bloggers) do."

The popularity of bloggers is leading to a new way of thinking about news. Jarvis said in an e-mail interview that the most profound thing he learned when he started blogging is this: News is a conversation, not just a lecture. The story doesn't end when it's published, but rather just gets started as the public begins to do its part -- discussing the story, adding to it, and correcting it.

Jarvis is by day president of Advance Internet, the new-media arm of Advance Communications; by night he is the popular independent blogger behind BuzzMachine. As a 50-something media executive with a lengthy print-journalism background (including as a reviewer for TV Guide) and a new-found enthusiasm for blogging, he's well suited to advise the profession on striking a middle ground between traditional journalism and blogging.

"The news isn't done when we print it," he says. "That's when the public can add questions, corrections, perspective. That will improve news. And it also will change our relationship with the public."

Bloggers have adopted this credo, and mainstream news organizations would be well advised to do so, too, at least to some extent.

"We have owned the printing press for centuries; now the people have the power of the press" through blogs, Jarvis says. "They are speaking and it's our turn to listen and engage them in conversation."

To do that represents a profound shift in the type of journalism practiced in the U.S. and most Western countries with a free press. Engaging the public at the level Jarvis suggests would likely mean inviting readers to contribute to the end product, either in the form of published reaction to articles written by professional journalists or by reader-produced content in such forms as blogs or "citizen journalism" entries.
Personality journalism

Most blogs are highly personal, usually reflecting their authors' personalities. If you have favorite bloggers, you probably know their political views and even a fair bit about their personal lives.

With the exception of columnists, you probably know next to nothing about a newspaper's staff journalists. Reporters keep their opinions to themselves, for the most part, to comply with newsroom policy and longstanding journalistic convention.

But what if reporters were allowed to reveal more about themselves? Would the journalistic world end? Many bloggers doubt it; indeed, the refusal of mainstream news organizations to allow their journalists to reveal their opinions and personal perspective is a leading criticism leveled at news companies by bloggers.

Perhaps Slate, the successful Microsoft-owned webzine (and not a blog), suggests a coming tidal shift. Before this last U.S. election, Slate announced that 45 of its 49 editorial employees planned to vote for John Kerry. Can you imagine the New York Times announcing a breakdown of how its employees planned to vote? That would represent quite a departure from the traditional candidate endorsements the paper publishes, without bylines, on its editorial page.

Some bloggers would say that kind of opening up is a good idea, and maybe mainstream news organizations would be smart to acknowledge the obvious -- that their staffs of professional journalists do have opinions. How surprising was it that Slate's staff leaned heavily to Kerry? Would it surprise anyone, say, if Fox News employees overwhelmingly supported President Bush? As I said, this probably wouldn't cause the media world to collapse.

Indeed, you can view this loosening of the grip on editorial employees' personal lives as a way to better connect journalist and reader -- to forge a stronger relationship between them and in theory support greater loyalty by readers.
'We were wrong'

One significant difference between mainstream journalism and blogging is the way each handles its mistakes. On this one, the bloggers seem to have an edge.

Although the working styles of bloggers varies considerably, some of today's leading bloggers take a similar approach to mistakes: They prominently post corrections to errors, publishing them quickly. Reynolds typically posts a correction of an earlier item as a new item at the top of the blog if the item in error has scrolled down the page, so his readers are sure to see it.

And because most bloggers embrace interactivity with their audiences, they hear about it when a mistake is made (via the comments areas on their own blogs, and from other bloggers noting and publicizing the error if it's significant) -- and so do all the other readers.

Contrast that with how the typical old-media news organization handles mistakes. It's a rare day when a TV news program announces a mistake in the previous day's coverage; newspaper corrections typically are relegated to an inside page in a special corrections area, unseen by many readers.

Perhaps bloggers rank higher when it comes to corrections because they are in more direct touch with their readers. When a blogger makes a mistake, his or her readers make it known; there can be no ignoring it. As mainstream news organizations evolve to have more direct interaction with their readers and viewers, they'll have to change how they acknowledge and handle mistakes.
A different reporting style

While reporting styles among bloggers of course vary wildly, you do often see (among those bloggers who do reporting, not just commentary) a different approach than what's typical in mainstream reporting. After all, many bloggers are not journalists and have not had training in traditional reporting techniques. Perhaps there's something to be learned from this fresh perspective on reporting.

In covering a technical story, you sometimes see bloggers go far down the corporate ladder; perhaps it's partly not having the access to or experience at reaching people at the top for comment. The conventional journalist will seek out company executives or go through the PR department. But bloggers sometimes get their information from people further inside an organization -- the programmers. It makes for a different type of storytelling, as new and different voices are heard.

Again, it leads back to the theme that bloggers often get closer to the people than do mainstream journalists.

Of course, in many instances it's the people "down the corporate ladder" doing the blogging themselves. Take, for example, the blog Call Centre Confidential, written by the anonymous team leader of an unidentified phone marketing call center.
Other lessons

What else can mainstream journalists learn from bloggers? Perhaps …

* That publishing unpolished thoughts (written by smart people) can be valuable -- that in the lightning-fast Internet era, unrefined commentary and analysis has a place. And the polishing process sometimes takes place after the Publish button has been pushed -- as the audience adds its knowledge and perspective to keep a story alive well past the point when it is first published.
* That fast-to-publish content like that on blogs doesn't have to go through a rigorous editing process -- that there's value in the speed of blogging that can be applied to mainstream journalism. (If that sounds scary to editors, remember than when reporters go on live radio and TV programs, there's no editing there either. It's a matter of trust in the journalist to be given such freedom and responsibility.)

Meeting of the media

From an old-media perspective, the ideas presented above may sound unreasonable. Indeed, presented in 1990, they would have seemed outlandish. Yet in today's world, they represent possibilities that traditional news organizations should be considering.

I'm not suggesting that newspapers and TV news operations mimic blogs, only that they experiment with some of the ideas that blogs present.

Choire Sicha, editorial director of Gawker Media, one of the leading publishers of independent blogs (including Wonkette), said in an e-mail interview of the difference between mainstream journalists and blogs: "I think there's really not that much to distinguish between journalists and bloggers except for a formalized edit process before print.

"Nearly all journalists traffic privately in gossip, anonymous sources, and thinly veiled juicy items -- they just don't usually get to throw those things into print, and so they IM these tidbits to us bloggers," he says. "Bloggers are really just the id of the journalism world."

Put another way, by Wonkette's Ana Marie Cox, "On blogs, it's all chocolate cake and no potatoes."

And if you really want to get a sense of how blogs and mainstream journalists are coming together, Sicha offers this: "Here's a little peek behind the curtain over here at Gawker Media HQ: I just had a two-hour meeting with a blogger who edits one of our sites. We discussed new staffing assignments and rotations, some feature ideas, and six-month goals. Sound familiar, print people? Sound boring, bloggers?"

With much in common as well as many differences, bloggers and mainstream journalists should be looking to one another for ideas on how to navigate our newly revised media world.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified the blog Call Centre Confidential.

---

Also from Poynter's Steve Outing:

hat Bloggers Can Learn From Journalists
By Steve Outing (More articles by this author)

More in this series

Blogging can be not only influential, but also great fun. As Wonkette.com's Ana Marie Cox has said, "It's all chocolate cake and no potatoes."

Of course, as blogging has grown up -- from exclusively the domain of hobbyists typing for the world from their spare bedrooms to the addition of top-flight bloggers making careers of it and bringing in professional salaries -- the diet has become a bit more balanced, at least for some.

THE FLIP SIDE

What Journalists Can Learn From Bloggers
Bloggers need to eat their vegetables, too, if they expect to grow up and win the respect of larger audiences and survive the rigors of long-term publishing.

So, while mainstream journalists have much that they can learn from the experiences of bloggers (as this article explains), bloggers could learn a thing or two from traditional journalists.

Let us count the ways.
Checks & balances (a.k.a., the editor)

The principal difference between traditional journalists and the vast majority of bloggers is: an editor. The lack of one is one of the charms of blogging, of course. The blogger ponders, perhaps reports, analyzes, types, and publishes. It's fast; it's creative; it's different from mainstream journalism.

Even when there is an editor involved with a blogger, it's often after publication.

But having an editor involved -- even if it's immediately after hitting the Publish button, a.k.a. back-editing -- is a brilliant idea, even for solo bloggers. An extra pair of eyes can certainly help to catch spelling, grammar, and factual errors, but more importantly they can catch really dangerous issues -- such as when you're about to libel someone.

With so many new people involved in blogging, most of them having no training in journalism practices, ethics, and media law, personal legal liability is a big deal. Bloggers publishing without the protection of an employer to pay for their libel defense are on their own should they make a mistake. In the years ahead, I expect to see some solo bloggers get in trouble -- and some get driven to personal ruin when they lose libel lawsuits. It's a wonder it hasn't happened yet.

Ah, but some bloggers say, audience members are our editors. Mistakes are pointed out quickly and bloggers readily acknowledge and correct their errors in plain sight. Good point, but a blog item that libels someone will remain on the record, likely archived for a good long time, and a libelous statement left online for even a day puts a blogger at tremendous risk. So bloggers, take a tip from traditional journalists and find yourself some form of editing safety net.
Reporting isn't a dirty word

Let's face it, the majority of bloggers don't do original reporting. They comment on the work of others, or write about personal experiences. But more and more, we are seeing bloggers who do reporting. The only real difference between what they do and the work of professional journalists is that most bloggers lack the credentials to gain access to sources as easily as their journalist cousins. That's become less of a problem for top bloggers lately. Quite a few of them got credentialed to cover the U.S. national political conventions this year, for example.

But solid reporting can help any blogger. Learn the value of journalistic legwork. Talk to multiple sources, and check out the credibility of those sources. Double-source information that seems suspect. Seek out the aid of public- and media-relations professionals for corporations and public institutions; today, many of them are accustomed and willing to work with bloggers as well as traditional journalists. Don't be afraid to go to the top of an organization for comment, but also know the value of seeking information from those much further down the organizational ladder.

Avoid anonymous sources when you can, for just as in traditional journalism, bloggers can lose credibility when quoting from them, unless there's a darn good reason.

Speaking of anonymous sources, there's talk in the U.S. about the idea that bloggers should be entitled to the same protection against revealing sources that traditional journalists get. First Amendment lawyer Floyd Abrams has suggested that bloggers acting as journalists should get that protection -- but that bloggers who confine their writing to personal opinions and reflections should not get any special protection.
The blogger's toolbox

Bloggers have much in common with journalists, of course; ergo, they have the same rights to gather information. And that includes using resources long available to traditional journalists to help get the right information.

The U.S. Freedom of Information Act is a journalist's best friend, and a blogger's, too. Anyone has the right to access public records (at least here in the U.S.), and sometimes FOIA is the tool necessary to get the job done. It's not just for professional journalists.

Bloggers also would be wise to frequent resources designed for journalists. Poynter Online, publisher of this article, can be a useful site for bloggers. And there are so many more journalistic and reporting organizations whose resources will help bloggers produce better, more accurate work. Poynter Online maintains lists of them here and here.

Bloggers may not get chosen to participate in in-person seminars at the Poynter Institute or other journalistic training organizations, but increasingly such institutions are offering online learning programs that allow bloggers to join in -- sometimes for free. At Poynter, NewsU is the institute's e-learning program, offering a variety of online courses. Bloggers wishing to get better at their craft, just as with journalists, should consider taking advantage of these opportunities.

Let's think about ethics

If there's one area about blogging that raises the most concern, it's ethics. With most mainstream news organizations, you can pretty much be assured that a reporter isn't taking money for writing about someone or some company.

But guess what: That's not the case with blogging. A hot controversy in the blogging world right now is a company that's paying bloggers a monthly fee to write about its clients. While some of those participating bloggers are being up front and acknowledging when they do this, there's nothing stopping other bloggers from doing this surreptitiously.

Part of the problem is lack of any community blogging standards that might discourage unseemly behavior. Perhaps a current effort to establish a blogging ethics committee, as suggested by Jason Calacanis of Weblogs Inc. and Nick Denton of Gawker Media, will lead to a blogging model that at least articulates ideal blogger behavior. While still in the planning stages, such a committee might provide member bloggers with a sort of "seal of approval" that suggests adherence to reasonable ethical standards.

Bloggers need only to look at the ethical standards developed by various journalism groups to get ideas on important issues to be included in a bloggers' guide. Cyberjournalist.net's Jon Dube also wrote a Blogger's Code of Ethics in 2003 that's worth reviewing.
Ask before you attack

Here's something you frequently see with bloggers that trained journalists usually avoid: Making accusations or strong criticisms without asking the target for reaction. For the sake of balance, it just makes sense to be fair and to seek the other sides of the story.
Get to the point quickly

In journalism, one of the first things you learn is the importance of the inverted-pyramid style of news writing. Putting the most important information in a story up top makes much sense online, where attention spans are short and you can't count on readers looking beyond the first sentence or paragraph.

Write those headlines with care, too. Strong, intuitive wording is important in getting readers to go beyond the first words. Professional journalists have long been refining the craft of headline writing, and bloggers should pay equal attention to it. Ignore this aspect of traditional journalism and bloggers risk not engaging their audience.

That's not to say that bloggers can't be creative -- I'm not suggesting that they copy the styles of mainstream journalists -- but I do advise that bloggers take traditional news writing theory into account.

Some of those journalism resources cited above can lead you to advice on better headline writing .
Accuracy, accuracy, accuracy
Finally, bloggers can learn a thing or two about accuracy from traditional journalists. No, I'm certainly not implying that journalists reporting for mainstream news organizations don't make mistakes -- they make plenty of them. But there's an institutional ethic in professional journalism to try to always get it right.

With blogging, it's up to the individual blogger. With no institution or organization watching over them and guiding their behavior, we can only hope that most bloggers adhere to a mission of accuracy and accountability.

When done without proper care and thought, blogging can be dangerous -- not only to the blogger's reputation, but to the community at large. Inaccurate blogging can damage personal reputations and worse, just as can sloppy journalism. So bloggers, please make accuracy a guiding principle, just as it is in all successful journalism.

Journalists, as members of the "Fourth Estate," have long held power. Now bloggers are positioned to share some of that. Take care, please.

19 comments:

  1. "Accusations of media bias are thick on the ground these days, and Americans are tired of it. Blogs don't pretend to be neutral: they're gleefully, unabashedly biased, and that makes them a lot more fun."

    That quote from Grossman's Time Magazine article speaks the most to how I feel about the relationship between blogging and journalism, but I still need to explain my position a lot. I know that there is a wide variety of blogs available to readers with just as wide a range of credibility, but I do not regularly read any of them. As an aspiring journalist, I struggle a lot with the whole blog thing and whether or not I think it's good or bad. However, I have also come to realize that the mainstream media itself is quite flawed. The truth is that anyone who gets his or her news from one single source, even an accredited news source, is receiving biased information. Media outlets are owned by corporations, and we can all see the consequences of that when we compare American news to news in other countries. If any regular person wants to get a full, comprehensive view of a news event, he or she has to do a whole lot of reading from many different sources, and then a lot of his or her own thinking, too.

    The nice thing about blogs is their honesty. They don't pretend to be unbiased or objective; their appeal is in their subjectivity. And by following the source links, blog readers can trace a blogger's thought path and draw their own conclusions. When you read an article in the Chicago Tribune, you don't get to ask the reporter where he or she got the sources--you trust the reporter's credibility. I think transparency in blogging is really cool, and I think it is one of the things that journalists can learn from bloggers.

    I don't think that bloggers will ever be able to get access to the high profile sources that journalists have, and I think that assures job security for journalists. For high ranking officials in government or in companies, blogs are probably really scary. Unless bloggers "grow up" like Outing suggests they should in the last article, I cannot imagine that high profile sources would ever intentionally give them information. Blogs are too much of a free for all, and it's easier as a source to trust a journalist with valuable information.

    I'm developing more of an open mind about blogging, but I would still rather be a journalist than a blogger. The internet is huge and important, and the world is definitely digitally trending. Even so, it's important to keep things in perspective. From my worldview, everything seems digital, but I know that most people in the world--and even in the United States--don't have a computer in their home, internet access on their cell phones, or even the skills and knowledge to navigate the internet. Blogs and the internet are a new and exciting way for people to get news and information if they know how to use the internet, but there are millions of people who will continue to depend on journalists for information.

    Of course, the economically disadvantaged are rarely considered in revolutions of this nature.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Reading the articles on blogging versus journalism gave me a little more insight into what blogging is, and what its main functions are. A couple definitions of blogs that I noticed: “amateur websites that provide news, information and, above all, opinions,” a “website where you could post daily scribblings, journal-style, about whatever you like,” and “a mass medium controlled by the masses.” That last definition in particular makes the most sense: it was only a matter of time before media became a completely interactive institution.

    In class we talked about writers, and what categories they are grouped into: bloggers, journalists, journalists who blog—it seems like there is now a fourth group forming: bloggers who are getting the audience following, and consequently, the credentials of journalists, without ever getting the professional training or experience with a formal publication.

    One part of the article said that blogs are “America thinking out loud.” I think that is a good way of putting it, and put like that, I have no problem with it—I agree with the sentiment that, to a certain extent, the news should be interactive, with people providing feedback and creating discussion. But I think it should stop there—the average person should absolutely be able to respond to the news, but maybe not write it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Reading Response #1

    These articles which discuss blogging and its relationship with journalism (or lack there of) offer interesting viewpoints from both sides of the spectrum. These "sides" tend to revolve around the same question: is blogging truly journalism?

    Grossman provides a statement which seeks to explain an aspect of blogging: "Unlike a big media outlet, bloggers focus their efforts on narrow topics, often rising to become de facto watchdogs and self-proclaimed experts." I believe this notion to be a fair assessment of blogging. However, I don't believe that journalist can only be defined as those who work within mainstream media.

    It seems as though most bloggers are not journalist, however some are. Blogs can be viewed as a medium for providing content that may or may not be journalism. The majority of blogs are informal conversations. For journalistic purposes, blogs are more of a small scale publication.

    As Outing points-out in his article, most bloggers do not do original reporting. Obviously this is a key component of journalism. Nonetheless, the difference between blogs and publications of traditional standards is rapidly blurring. Major news web sites are already displaying some of the characteristics of blogs. As a result, these blogs are giving these "mainstream news outlets" a "run for their money" because of the amount of readers they are acquiring and not to mention revenue.

    ReplyDelete
  4. As the keyboards keep clicking around the world, it’s hard to ignore the exquisite harmony bloggers have composed. Typing within the safe haven of the internet, an outlet where all people connect instantly, authors have the freedom and opportunity to be, write, and display anything. Within the blink of an eye, ideas are transferred from screen to screen, connecting and informing all of what you have to say. Free of censorship from talking heads, fat cats, or advertisers, people are allowed to type what they think. And the cherry on top, it is the world wide web. There is an almost 99% certainty that bloggers will find someone who agrees and enjoys hearing what they’ve written. Writers saying what they want, when they want, however they want, to potentially anyone in the world. Sounds too good to be true.

    With all that being said, I do believe that blogging is journalism, but a much more primitive form. Maybe how it was suppose to be: people relaying thoughts, messages to others. Okay, so maybe everything in a blog isn’t news to all, but I personally enjoy knowing that this type of vehicle exists. A vehicle that I can use today.

    While clicking through the web, hopping from blog to blog, link to link, thought to thought, it’s very hard for me to imagine a future where blogging doesn’t find itself at the forefront of media. The content (multimedia etc. etc.) now, plus the staggering potential for evolution that the blog possesses make me excited to enter the industry. Journalism is not dying, its just morphing to something different. I'd bet this different will be better.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Journalism and blogs have many similar traits, but does that make them equitable? In my opinion, Ana Marie Cox metaphorically sums, "On blogs, it's all cake and no potatoes." Blogs are a step in the journalistic process, but are not the finished product.

    This is evident with Russ Kick’s blog, thememoryhole.org, when he posted photographs of coffins of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Kick’s controversy drew attention and eventually it was on the front page of major newspapers across the country. Blogs act as a vehicle for topics to travel to mainstream America.

    Bloggers have the ability to post tips and rumors without experiencing the effects a journalist working for a publication might encounter if he or she chose to do the same. This is where a blog is clearly identifiable as a step of the journalistic process, rather than the finished product; credibility. If I get my information from a newspaper and find an opposing accusation in a blog, which is clearly not stated as an opinion, I will trust the publication.

    Jeff Jarvis brings up the point that the story does not end when it is published, but rather just gets started as the public begins to discuss it, add to it, and correct it. I somewhat disagree with this because news is the facts. After it is reported it is discussed and added to by bloggers. When Americans are watching the evening news, they are not looking for mistakes, they are looking to be informed. Therefore, viewers are expecting the information to be accurate. Bloggers, especially those focused on the political realm, dissect the information using their knowledge to understand and break down the actions of the individuals that made the evening news. Bloggers are the cake, but only after you have eaten your potatoes.

    ReplyDelete
  6. The most important thing for news organizations, journalists and the public to recognize is the incredible capabilities that blogging has to transform public information. We’ve been watching this transformation happen for several years now, and it will probably still be several more before we’ve figured out where to draw the ever-blurring line between blogging and journalism. But regardless of what we define as blogging or define as journalism, I think the most important thing is that blogging is leading journalists even closer to their public audience. The great success of blogging has served as a valuable lesson to news organizations and journalists, reminding them whom the news is for: the people.
    Take Lev Grossman’s example, Russ Kick. The soldier’s personal blog probably tells the story of the soldier’s experience to the audience much better than a journalist doing interviews with the soldier, simply because the individual is taking the time to formulate their thoughts and memories in writing. On top of that, the reader has the ability to directly communicate with the soldier through the blog – a dialogue is easily facilitated between the writer and the reader. I think Jeff Jarvis points out the values of this new communication arena quite well in Steve Outing’s article when he says, “The public can add questions, corrections, perspective.”
    Blogging is making news more communal rather than being handed down from a disconnected organization, and I think that the ultimate benefit both the writers and the readers reap is that such a vast amount of information and experience is available so easily and quickly.

    ReplyDelete
  7. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  8. All of the articles for this week’s homework bring up really good and thought through points. The first article immediately caught my attention when it said that I, too, could be one of the world’s most influential personalities.
    I think that the world of blogging has exploded for one main reason: people are sick of reading biased, watered-down news. People, especially young people, today don’t want to hear the same information over and over again from major news corporations. Blogs, like the article said, have no constraints. They allow people to express opinions as well as give hard news without censorship or worrying what the “higher-ups” will have to say about it.
    Along with this, your everyday, nine to five, working person longs to get their opinion heard. The government, for the most part, doesn’t give you an outlet where anyone can go about expressing their thoughts on anything and everything without consequences. Blogs are just that. It is a place for the average person so air their grievances without really having to worry about any consequences.
    However, I do agree that bloggers can learn something from Journalists and vice versa. Bloggers do need to realize that what they publish can have an enormous effect on people and journalists need to come up with a more interactive and not so biased and tight way of writing the news. While these things are difficult for both bloggers and journalists to do, I believe that there can be a synergy formed between blogs and accredited news organizations so that they work seamlessly and compliment one another.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I found this set of readings very informative because I was new to blogging and needed a clearer picture as to what blogging really meant. The main question that was asked within these readings was, “Is blogging journalism and are bloggers journalists?” The answer that I can give after reading going through these readings is that yes bloggers are journalists. I say this because bloggers are journalists that do not have to comply with rules that are set by their employer instead they are the columnists and the chief editor which is a very powerful position.
    With great power comes great responsibility and this is where many people make the assertion that bloggers are not journalists. They say that the traditional values of journalism that are followed in a news room such as omitting personal view points and personal suggestions are disregarded by bloggers.
    Although this is true I feel that the conventional journalism of today’s newspapers has its own role in journalism while blogging has its rightful place alongside traditional journalism. Sometimes I want to hear the personal view points of a blogger rather than the writing of a columnist in the paper. With advances in technology and growth of the internet I believe that journalism and blogging is a match made in heaven.

    ReplyDelete
  10. If “online journalism” leads us to a class blogging project – it must be an appendage to journalism of some description. The disconnection happens when the extraction of its elements is sought in traditional Cronkite-Pulitzer corporate media institutions. As Andrew Sullivan commented in the Time article, the liberation from advertiser control brings us closer to a free press. The integrity of a news outlet – in ink or hyperlinked – depends as much on the content of what is published as what is not published. The shell of “privileged information” shattering attributes to the advent of blogging. PERIOD.

    Although we fall under the “journalists who blog” umbrella, to disseminate news-worthy information is our task. A blog-post qualifies as journalism when it does exactly that. It should be defined by its means rather than its maker. Enhanced by the interactivity of its readers, blogging can be an extender of democracy. When bloggers share informed opinions they are of no lesser value than those of journalists.

    When Outing notes the most contrasting feature of blogging to traditional journalism is the editorial absence, he substitutes this by pointing to the fact-checkers the respondents in the blog-conversation become. A successful editing process is essential in all journalism, and this is why the suggestive tool-swapping of each medium enables blogging to become a bit more journalistic, and journalism to return to its maiden name: democracy.

    Each article cites the big-hit posts in the blogosphere’s short life. The Strom Thurmond story exemplifies how the major media conglomerates have become answerable to the public as citizens, rather than as their consumers. Recalibrating news judgment on the basis of actual public interest shows how bloggers can alert the news media to stories with relevance of their choosing. Deployed on a story via a blog-sourced tip allows journalists “in the business” to tackle a story from their power-endowed position, which is what might spur a presidential press conference. Just because we cannot depend on blogs to make the top headlines, we cannot diminish their ability to identifying the story. The partnership of blogging and “in the business” journalism forms a more credible, indispensible authority. It is indelibly intertwined, and so each partner must complement, rather than compete with the other.

    ReplyDelete
  11. When I first became interested in journalism I was unaware of blogs. When I did hear of blogs and became aware of what they were, I thought very little of them; just another outlet for people with too much time on their hands. And as a started to learn about journalism as a profession I completely ignored the existence or importance of blogs. I don’t know if I am convinced that blogging is journalism. Although this article says that some of the wittiest and best writers are bloggers, what does this say about professional journalists? I believe many journalists are not as interesting or controversial as some bloggers because they do not have the freedom to be. I believe that many journalists have an obligation to write unbiased stories, or lose their jobs. Yet an American soldier describing Saddam Hussein’s palaces and his experiences is something that people want to hear, and there probably would be a great demand for. This is where I recognize the need for blogging, because of out of the millions of people who do it, you can find some truly good writers and stories. Yet the integrity of the writer can always be questioned, unless they are affiliated with a major news outlet. I see blogging and journalism as two different entities, but the line seems to be becoming less evident as time goes on.

    ReplyDelete
  12. (This is Laura Bolin's entry)

    READING RESPONSE #1
    The first thing that caught my eye about this blog was the line "Youcan be one too." It made me instantly think that blogging was an easyand acceptable form of getting news out - so easy that anyone couldhandle it. Another main point that I saw, and agree with, was thatblogs provide, "above all," opinions. I've always thought about blogsthat way - places for people to share thoughts and feelings moresothat news, facts, or FOIA information. I never really realized howmany different sorts of blogs there were – this article mentions "carrepair" and "haikus," but I always thought blogs were places forpeople to post pictures of the brand new baby so that grandparentsthat lived halfway across the world could see him/her. Blogs andprint journalism has even crossed over now – the Chicago Sun-TimesQ.T. column now has a section called, "Just in case you thought therewas something in the world there is not a blog about," and then listssome sort of random blog. Another thing that surprised me was howblogs have evolved. Instead of just being a space for twelve yearolds to ease their woes on MySpace or college kids to send out e-vitesto the latest kegger on Facebook, blogs are now a place where realnews can be written about and where real news can break – like the DanRather example in class, the Trent Lott example given in the piece,and the Russ Kick coffin example. I also think could be much moreeffective that newspapers in that they're available to anyone withInternet access, and nowadays, you can get on the Internet anywhere –from a cell phone, at a McDonald's, even in your local Starbucks.Like the piece says, blogs are free, always a good selling point forjust about anybody, and they're constantly updated. If you read yourdaily newspaper at 7:00 p.m., it's old news by then, but if you go ona blog at that time and a new story was just posted, it's "new" news.Another selling point is that anyone can have a blog – there are blogsfor journalists talking about the trade, PR companies, soldiers,teachers, dog groomers – anyone and everyone.
    What Journalists Can Learn from Bloggers
    The second piece made me see how similar journalists and bloggers are- the defining area is definitely a gray one, and it will probablytake some time before there is a true, set differentiated definition.As to the similarities, journalists and bloggers both make careersthrough writing, have lists of sources and contacts, conductinterviews, file FOIA requests, get news tips, and break stories.This piece also talks about the differences between journalists andbloggers - with bloggers trying to get the information up as quicklyas possibly, there are instances where the facts are incorrect ornonexistent. Bloggers, however, can also post news faster and breakstories more quickly than the newspapers, like when the Dredge Reportposted a story Newsweek wasn't ready to break. Lastly, bloggingstories can never be finished - instead of having a print editionwhere it on a doorstep and then the reporters move on, bloggers canconstantly add on and update stories.
    This last article showed the flip side of article #2, and detailedwhat bloggers can learn from journalists. The first thing is therelationship between editors and reporters/writers. For me, I thinkthat is the most important journalistic relationship - maybe onlysecondary to the reader/reporter relationship, but even then, it's theeditor that makes the final decisions and sends out a solid product tothe readers. I think that something is lacking in the blogger worldwithout an editor - people can post whatever they like and have to usetheir own news judgement, which may not be the strongest. I remembergoing to a New York Times workshop where one of the editors said itwas the editorial staff, not the reporters, that "won 88 PulitzerPrizes," and I think that can be true - the editors are the ones doingthe final fact checks and spellings of names and running througheverything for one last time before the paper goes to print. Withonline, it's up instantly - no fact checking.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I still maintain that blogging is not Journalism as long as bloggers do not adhere to the rules, guidelines, and ethics expectations that governs Journalism. Having said that, I would agree that blogging is at its best one of the quickest ways to get information and allows individuals to participate and air their opinions on articles or issues that they are of interest to them. While it is true that journalists can learn from bloggers on certain aspects of blogging to bring information to the mainstream, bloggers on their parts, have a lot to learn and consider when airing their views on blogs, like verifying sources, allowing any involved party to give their side of the story to avoid bias and partiality in their opinions. Until bloggers begin to show some of these principles in their posts, I, personally, will not consider blogging to be journalism. However, journalists should look into blogging to increase the methods and avenues that feed information to the mainstream in order to stay ahead of bloggers.

    ReplyDelete
  14. This set of readings has opened my eyes to the argument between bloggers and journalists. Both sides had great points, and I feel that both are important to the media scene today – yes, both.

    The internet community has evolved enough to recognize that the world is so much bigger than what we are practically force-fed by traditional media outlets. The fact that we can experience war, or love, or birth, or death firsthand because some person wrote about it in their blog is a new and fascinating trend in how we live our lives. Speaking from personal experience, I know my life has been enriched by topics discussed in blogs. Blogs offer how-tos, advice on everything from cooking to dating to book-binding.

    However, the excellent point was brought up that these are, for the most part, regular individuals, not experts, so you probably want a second opinion on some things you read in blogs. And this goes back to the point that blogs are basically a playground for people’s biased opinions. A blog can be anything you want, and that is where the inherent danger lies. Can you imagine if Jon Stewart started a blog under a false name and reported fake news? If that blog became popular, the internet would be flooded with unbased rumour after rumour. And yet, that happens occasionally. In this case, the more regulated reporting of traditional media is the better way to go.

    Blogs are here to stay, let’s face it. They give people the opportunity to share and educate. However, they do have a dark side, in that they are not regulated and thus often are biased, and only show a narrow point of view. That said, I think that blogs, newspapers, bloggers, and newspapers can get along. They have different markets with different expectations, and in this way we may continue to push the boundaries of our culture.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Reading # 1

    Is blogging journalism...I feel that blogging is in no doubt a form of journalism. Now you may not have the credibility, which is backed by a large news corporation, but like the one reading said, "you can be one too". The thing about blogging is that anyone in the world can do it no matter who you are. You are not discriminated against nor do you need to abide by a certain view to meet an editors criteria. Many times blogs are just the thoughts of people's views on news that has already been covered, which is a great thing to have in the media. With news websites and newspapers people can only read the news and cannot truly give their own opinion on the issue. Blogging allows for the discussion of a topic rather than it just being something read by millions of people and simply stored in the back of there minds with the rest of the meaningless dribble that much of the media can be today. Now as i said before much of the things posted on the blog are only thought about already reported news, which means there isn't much investigating done making it hard for these people to call themselves journalists. There are many though, like the man who got the coffin pictures posted in the newspapers who truly did journalistic work to report the news. Even if bloggers just give their opinions it still has the essence of a journalist. He/she writes their opinions, ideas and beliefs and people read it. Is that not all the newspapers are. A company produces a "credible" newspaper and their followers read it, and in exchange believe what they read. Each newspaper has its own political view, so they are writing what "they" believe, which in the end is all that bloggers are doing. In the end, Blogs are just very convenient and it allows for the U.S. population to stay on top of and provide some point of views on the current events going on in our country.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I see the blogging medium as being a double-edged sword; on one hand, it opens up journalism, and allows any person with an opinion to be heard. Rather than relying on larger mainstream media outlets for news or opinions, people can log onto the internet and get their information from blogs. With blogs, people get some news items faster than they could from newspapers, TV news, or even news websites. This is one of the most positive things blogs do; on top of that, I think it’s great that people can their information from someone not employed by a major news outlet. As Grossman words it, it makes the internet, “a mass medium controlled by the masses, in which getting heard depends solely on having something to say and the moxie to say it”.
    On the sword’s other edge resides the lack of accountability. One of blogging’s biggest selling points is that they can break news quickly; the problem here is that this news may not always be true. There isn’t always a sense of responsibility from bloggers: breaking the story is sometimes more important than verifying the story’s truth, and the lack of sturdy ethical grounds sets it apart from other forms of journalism.

    ReplyDelete
  17. There is no doubt that blogging has taken a permanent hold in the media. And as the readings mentioned, one of the biggest advantages to blogging is that it serves as a watchdog for the major corporate media outlets that dominate the world. (particularly the Western world)They give regular citizens another avenue to access information without having to worry about their sources being filtered or censured by the "powers that be". With that said, blogging still needs to be approached with a grain of salt. There is still such a thing as irresponsible journalism, and blogging has in a sense opened up a Pandora's Box by literally giving anybody with basic computer skills the opportunity to voice their opinion. But if you believe in the United States of America, then this is something that you are going to have to live with. This is where something called "a personal opinion based on logical and indisputable facts" comes into play. Its true, there is a ton a BS out there, especially on blogs, but this is the part where you have to filter the information you are reading and go out there and see what is really true for yourself. In this sense, blogging also helps, as evident with the Trent Lott story. Blogging, although not perfect (but what really is?) is definitely legitimate journalism, contingent on the source and credibility of that source.

    ReplyDelete
  18. (This is Daewoo Chong's post)

    Is blogging journalism? Before the topic was mentioned in class, I had never put any thought into this debate - nor did I consider it one. Not because I think I am above this subject, but it is due to the lack of credibility of blogging. I believe that there is no comparison. For example, it is comparing Michael Jordan to John Smith that plays for his junior high school basketball team. Is John Smith a basketball player? Well, yes, John Smith does play basketball, but to compare the two would be absurd. I think you would be hard pressed to find someone who believes that you can properly deduct that the two play basketball, and therefore, the two can be mentioned in the same breath. Bloggers, to me, have infiltrated the world of syntax and rhetoric, and unleashed to the masses an ostensible empowerment rife with grammatical errors and insufficient reporting technique. You may be thinking, “Hey, Lebron James used to be a junior high basketball player. Look how great he turned out to be.” And I would agree, yes, Lebron James is a great player, but he is one of the few exceptions. There are some good blogs out there, but there are many more bad. I could go on, but to respond to these articles appropriately, I do believe that bloggers need to take some cues from journalists and vice versa. But there is no comparison.

    ReplyDelete