Yeah, blogs are so last year, dude…

by Mathew on February 18, 2006 · View Comments

Lots of chatter in the blogosphere about whether blogs are dead, whether blogs can ever achieve anything, whether blogs will mean the death of civilization as we know it, whether my blog can beat up your blog, and so on – all of which was sparked by this article in Slate magazine.

The point of the piece seems to be that blogs as a business, in terms of making money and being acquired, is over. Fair enough. As many have pointed out, however – including my friends Tris Hussey, Mark Evans and Rob Hyndman, as well as Steve Borsch, Dan Gillmor and Steve Rubel – there is a lot more going on than Slate seems to think. Whether it’s “monetizable” or not (and how) remains to be seen.

I find it interesting that only a couple of people, including Rob, Paul Kedrosky and Munir at Blogging Journalist have mentioned an even more in-depth look at how blogs aren’t all they’ve been cracked up to be, which appeared in the Financial Times (written by Trevor Butterworth, who as Paul points out has a name that is almost too British to be believed), under the headline “Time for the last post.” In it, he quotes Choire Sicha (ex of Gawker and now at the New York Observer) as saying blogs are essentially a waste of time and accomplish little.

“The word blogosphere has no meaning,” he said from across a folding table vast enough to support the battle of Waterloo in miniature (the apartment owes much to eBay, the Ikea of bohemia). “There is no sphere; these people aren’t connected; they don’t have anything to do with each other.” The democratic promise of blogs, he explained, has just produced more fragmentation and segregation at a time when seeing the totality of things – the purview of old media – is arguably much more important.”

It’s fine to say – as the article does – that blogs aren’t a revolution, won’t kill the “dinosaurs” of old media, and other lame truisms. But Sicha’s point is a different one: that blogs are bad because they fragment things, that they aren’t connected the way they pretend to be, and that old media needs to be there to “see the totality of things.” As tied to the early success of Gawker as he might have been, this shows that Sicha never really got it to begin with. Do there need to be aggregators or filters or sources that coalesce some of the fragmentation that democracy brings? Yes. Does that have to be “old media?” No. Sicha and others are short-changing themselves and others with their narrow-minded views.

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  • http://www.rightconversation.com/2006/02/blog_bubble_bur.html AMY GAHRAN: The Right Conversation

    the blog hype (and yes, there is a lot of blog hype), the tools and channels of conversational media are fast becoming as crucial to the fabric of business and the economy as doors and phones. And if you don’t believe me, read Dana Blankenhorn andMathew Ingram. They nailed it even better. Then chill out and proceed with your blog and your other conversational media efforts without fear or guilt. Don’t let Chicken Little shake you.

  • http://chuquet.com/chuquet.aspx Chuquet

    (7 hours ago)mathewingram.com/work: “Yeah, blogs are so last year, dude…” (12 hours ago)

  • http://www.thebloggingjournalist.com/2006/02/ingram_on_point.html The Blogging Journalist

    No. Sicha and others are short-changing themselves and others with their narrow-minded views.I think he did a better job of responding to it than I did, and I agree with his conclusion. For more of his analysis, please see “Yeah, blogs are so last year, dude…”

  • http://peterdawson.tyepad.com /pd

    I think that old media will continue to “report” by one method or the other. While blogs will continue to be more personal type reporting. for example – I don’t expect to see an article/column about “what I cooked today”- as a comic strip. Whereas bloggers look for that ‘personal’ story.

    …And any one can report too :)-

  • http://mashable.com/journal/11/ Mashable.com/journal »

    [...] world of passionate, independent writers, it may become harder to own the bloggers themselves. Trackback from your ownsite. [...]

  • http://b2binsight.com/blog/2006/02/23/weather-forecast-50-chance-of-a-blogosphere-reputation-backlash/ B2B Insight Blog » Weather forecast: 50% chance of a blogosphere reputation backlash

    [...] Mathew Ingram goes after an ex-Gawker trying to push a backlash. [...]

  • http://www.mathewingram.com/work/2006/04/19/bloggers-and-money-the-eternal-debate/ Bloggers and money — the eternal debate » mathewingram.com/work

    [...] The last time this kind of theme came around, it was spurred by a couple of pieces in the mainstream or traditional media, including one in the Financial Times, and an even more shallow take on the topic at Slate. I wrote this response at the time, and I would stand by it. [...]

  • http://www.geocities.com/flower42pineapplegar/buy-aquarium-flower-plants-online.html vareck

    perfect site good information, very nice news and etc… tnx

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