Archive for the ‘Blogs’ Category

Blogger Incivility

Monday, April 9th, 2007

Maybe you saw the front page NY Times article about blogger incivility and some moves afoot to do something about it. I was cracking my knuckles and limbering up my fingers for a fine reply when my computer stalled, went to investigate the far reaches of the internet it seems, and didn’t come back, despite all my persuasive use of the F word, for over two hours. So now it’s back and I’m out of time. Fortunately the fabulous Digby has said it all.

Meanwhile, on the media page is a story about the execrable Don Imus and the fact that he routinely makes racist, misogynistic and eliminationist jokes on his show while half the Washington press corps spends time there kissing his ring. For some reason that kind of “incivility” doesn’t upset the journalistic prima donnas half as much as the uncivil blogosphere does.

So what’s up with this? The blogosphere is admittedly an uncivil place. Nobody disputes that. But it is comprised of a bunch of disparate individuals who are arguing amongst themselves with varying degress of seriousness and talent as part of the national (and international) dialog. There is a corner of it that is despicable and revolting, as the misogyny that set off this latest debate clearly demonstrates. But for inexplicable reasons it’s the liberal blogosphere that is being particularly attacked for our alleged incivility by the mainstream media. (I suspect it’s the fact that we drop the “F” bomb too much, which is simply shocking in American life)

However, for almost two decades now, talk radio has been spewing vile racist, misogynistic and eliminationst spew — and their stars have been feted and petted for it among the highest levels of the capital cognoscenti.

Civility and Uncivility

On Line Media Grows

Saturday, March 17th, 2007

The story behind the furor over the firings of the 8 US Attorneys is the story itself. In the days following the firings little was made of it by the big D.C. media players. No there there was the implication. When bloggers, and particularly Josh Marshall at Talking Points Memo, kept at it elements of the Certified by Selves crew in Washington hissed about left wing conspiracy theorists. Well well. While these Certifieds were drafting their snark Marshall and others kept at it, doing elemental gumshoe dectective work, combined with the new online networks of volunteer cullers and linkers. Turns out there was much of a there there.

CJR (Columbia Journalism Review) has a good rundown on the matter, and shows how a new media is evolving.

TPM reporter Paul Kiel says that David Kurtz, a reader of TPM who posts for Marshall on the weekends on TalkingPointsMemo, noticed some stories in the Arkansas papers about Timothy Griffin — a former adviser to Karl Rove — replacing Bud Cummins, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas. Then on January 12, TPM’s Justin Rood flagged a piece in the San Diego Union-Tribune that raised questions about the firing of U.S. Attorney Carol Lam, and according to Kiel, “that’s when our collective hair caught fire, and over the next couple days, putting Griffin’s appointment together with Lam’s [story], and then the other firings as they were reported, we went back and tried to put the pieces together.”

At the time — mid-January — TPM’s reporters were surveying media around the country and following up links to local papers sent in by readers, “so it was kind of a mix of what you might call blog reporting and traditional reporting,” or what might be termed a kind of “wisdom of crowds” method of reporting, combined with some good old-fashioned banging of the phones.

… Marshall seems to be blazing a unique middle ground between “citizen journalism” and true investigative reporting, while not buying in to some of the more robust claims by some in the blogosphere (particularly on the right) that this “new journalism” is crushing traditional news-gathering operations. In fact, if it weren’t for reporters at smaller newspapers around the country raising alarms in the first place, the story would likely have died a quiet death.

Read it. It’s good.

My take is that this shifting and growth follows well known patterns of evolution. New conditions (weather changes, terrain shifts in the natural world; technology in the social world) change the foundations of life; what was once easy, becomes difficult; what was once unknown becomes opportunity. Adaptation or disaster follows. Big Player (Viacom) screaming over the unfairness of posting bits of video on YouTube is the screaming of lizards over terrain change. They can sue all they want. The world is changing and unless they find a way to adapt their days are numbered. So too with the big print media. Of course we need paid reporters, smart and unencumbered with loyalties other than to the truth. To get that, new financial models will have to emerge so reporters can be paid. We who need others to get the facts, shape them into coherent stories, determine their order of importance in the telling, have to be part of this new economic model: that is, nothing is free. We get there I believe by looking forward at the opportunities coming up rather than by howling about the warm and familiar spots atop the food chain lost.

Hate Merchants: ABC

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

The links we posted yesterday about KSFO (a San Francisco radio station) and its merchants of hate made the print press today. On page 2 of the San Francisco Chronicle is a decent summary of the issue: KSFO shock jocks spew hate speech; blogger listens, records and sends clips to advertisers on the shows; advertisers pull ads; ABC (owner of KSFO) sends legal threats to blogger; Internet provider of blogger takes down site; other bloggers pitch in to help…

Yes, it’s hate speech, just the kind of radio hate used by the Nazis and the Hutus:

Some sponsors have pulled their ads, after hearing clips like one of KSFO’s Lee Rodgers suggesting that a protester be “stomped to death right there. Just stomp their bleeping guts out.”

The Chron didn’t provide links so I’ll help out:

Here is Spocko, the blogger, at his new site: here.

Here is the Media Matters article with links to get hold of ABC and others: Media Matters

p.s. Here’s a comment to our original post from an enlightened soul, a supporter, it seems, of stomping deaths:

To Hell with your “Reclaiming American Democracy”. Democracy is three wolves and a sheep voting on what’s for dinner. It’s a liberal codeword for Soviet-style tyranny. How about reclaiming the American Republic? You’re the hatemongers here, not talk show hosts on KSFO.

Disney Supports its Merchants of Hate

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

KSFO is a San Francisco based radio station owned by ABC (of Disney-ABC). It hosts some of the most vicious talk show hosts on radio, Melanie Morgan, Brian Sussman, Lee Rodgers among them. It is a shame on the City that Knows How these bilge-mouths are associated with the sweet Saint’s name. Here for example are two Rodgers’ quotes:

* Rodgers on a repeat offender in Lincoln, Nebraska: “Some SOB like this — you know, lock him up, throw away the key. Better yet, put a bullet between his eyes and get it over, because he’s never gonna be worth a damn, never gonna be anything but a criminal anyway. … Now, you start with the Sears DieHard — the battery cables connected to his testicles and you entertain him with that for a while, and then you blow his bleeping head off.” (8/16/06)

* Rodgers’ suggestion of how to punish an arsonist responsible for a forest fire: “I say they catch the person, tie ‘em to a post and burn ‘em. Set ‘em on fire.” Morgan added: “Hog tie ‘em first. That would be good.” (10/27/06)

Various bloggers have posted audio clips and portions of transcripts from the hate-filled swill — you know, freedom of speech and all that.

ABC Inc, on December 21st, sent to one of the most prominent bloggers, one Spocko, and to his Internet provider, a Cease and Desist letter claiming that the posted clips infringed copyright. The Internet provider turned tail and Spocko went off the air for a while.

He seems to be back up, here. And still on his campaign to inform advertisers of what they are paying for. Whyn’t you join him?

More from Media Matters on the affair.

And as if this were not enough to replace your morning coffee with its own wake-up call, add this: ABC has hired Glenn “I believe there is a cancer that is radicalized Islam, and it must be cut out or it’s going to kill all of us,” Beck as a regular commentator on Good Morning America. Media Matters covers this and has some links to help you SHOUT>

Saudi Arabia & Bloggers

Monday, November 13th, 2006

Interesting Washington Post article on bloggers in Saudia Arabia, followed by lots of interest from those selfsame bloggers.

The number of bloggers in Saudi Arabia has tripled since the beginning of the year, reaching an estimated 2,000.

Young women make up half the bloggers in the kingdom, one of the most traditional countries in the world, where women are forced to dress modestly and are not allowed to drive cars or travel without permission from a male guardian. Lured by the possible anonymity of the medium, Saudi women have produced a string of blogs filled with feminist poetry, steamy romantic episodes and rants against their restricted lives and patriarchal society.

New Clicks In The Arab World


Crossroads Arabia

Aqoul

Mystique

Iran: Bloggers Too

Friday, September 1st, 2006

The World Policy Journal, out of The New School in NYC, has an interesting line-up of articles this month, not the least of which is a Bill Berkowitz piece about blogging in Iran.

In September 2001, a young Iranian journalist named Hossein Derakhshan, who had recently moved to Canada, established one of the very first weblogs in his native Persian. In short order, Derakhshan created a simple “how-to-blog” guide in Persian. Less than five years later, there are now more than 75,000 Persian blogs. In neighboring Iraq, by comparison, there are fewer that 50 known bloggers. Persian is believed to be the third most frequently used language in the blogosphere, behind only English and Chinese. These are astonishing developments.

“Blogging in Iran has grown so fast because it meets the needs no longer met by the print media,” Alavi writes. “It provides a safe space in which people may write freely on a wide variety of topics, from the most serious and urgent to the most frivolous.” She quotes one blogger writing in November 2004, “I keep a weblog so that I can breath in this suffocating air…. In a society where one is taken to history’s abattoir for the mere crime of thinking, I write so as not to be lost in my despair, so that I feel that I am somewhere where my calls for justice can be uttered…. I write a weblog so that I can shout, cry and laugh, and do the things that they have taken away from me in Iran today.”

There’s lots more in the article — history, attitude, young vs. old, how an external enemy is used to shut up internal opposition…

New Progressives

Monday, August 14th, 2006

As I have said before I believe that new technology (the internet) has created new circumstances in the political landscape. It’s as though climate change has brought rain to formerly drought sticken areas. New growth is happening, mostly at random and all sorts of “varieties” not yet “species” are still working out their place in various niches in the new ecology. Bloggers are no more than folks with strong social/political instincts who now have a decentralized, democratic means to express their views. As such, some trends, coalitions, finding of each other is happening. For some this is exciting; for some it is threatening. Matt Stoller who posts at MyDD picked this up at Roll Call:

.. the growing number of bloggers, which, as this source said, represent “the Democratic version of the Christian right.”

“They are a little bit scared of the bloggers,” the operative said of the party leadership.

Stoller goes on to muse about such views:

there’s something very different about the progressive movement that’s emerging today. We’re not an aggregation of single-issue voters, and we don’t operate through fear. Our rhetoric is hot, but it’s not irresponsible or atomizing, and it’s two-way. Unlike proposition 13 in California, which passed with low turnout in the late 1970s, our key fight in Connecticut was a high-turnout fight based on substantive public and private debate.

In other words, there’s a pluralistic element to what the progressive movement is doing that is quite populist and democratic. We are fundamentally arguing for a tolerant and pluralistic society, and we’re doing it aggressively and somewhat viciously. That’s why it’s so hard to pigeonhole.

Stoller at MyDD