Separating the pros from the amateurs

Submitted by Robert Jung on Wed, 04/11/2007 - 6:19am.

See? The reason why this blog is a third-rate lost-in-the-crowd rambling discourse by one schmuck and not an internet-reknown seven-thousand-hits-per-hour high-profile site is because I'm too slow to jump on the blatantly obvious.

Digby show how the professional bloggers do it:

Hey, Must Be The Money

So I make myself some coffee and open my dead tree version of the NY Times this morning only to see a call for blogger ethics on the front page. How interesting. Another call for "managed civil speech" (which is claimed to be "freer" than unfettered free speech.) There was no word on who would be the managers of such speech, but I think we can count on those who call for it to be the ones who feel they are most qualified to define and enforce it. (Apparently, this will all be done "voluntarily" and will be dealt with through purges and link boycotts and the novel concept of moderated comment sections. Or something.)

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.

ZINGO!

The discourse that everyone is so shocked to see is now uncivil and "nasty" was polluted decades ago by a bunch of rich, white businessmen who saw that they could make a very nice profit at exploiting the lizard brain of the American rightwing and help their political cause at the same time. The media thought it was all in good fun (and good for their bosses) just as they do today.

We bloggers didn't make this toxic, fetid environment, we just live in it. And toxic and fetid it is.

There's lots more in the full essay that's well worth a read. Which is another thing that the pros do so well -- they actually write original content for their blog instead of simply quoting someone else's (awesome) writing into their own blog entries...

Categories - Current Events :: Media :: Politics