The blogosphere has become respectable... what a drag

Mon, 07/06/2009 - 12:57pm

Laura McKenna has a great post on the current state of the blogosphere.  The title to this post sums up (but does not do justice to) her argument.  Lots of respones from other "oldie bloggers": Matt Yglesias, Megan McArdle, Kevin Drum, Russell Arben Fox, Adam Kotsko, Ezra Klein, and Tyler Cowen.

The fact that it took me a few days to stumble onto it suggests she's onto something.  Some of her key points:

Bloggers have undermined the blogosphere. Bloggers do not link to each other as much as they used to.  It's a lot of work to look for good posts elsewhere, and most bloggers have become burnt out. Drezner and Farrell had a theory that even small potato bloggers would have their day in the sun, if they wrote something so great that it garnered the attention of the big guys. But the big guys are too burnt out to find the hidden gems. So, good stuff is being written all the time, and it isn't bubbling to the top.

Many have stopped using blogrolls, which means less love spread around the blogosphere. The politics of who should be on a blogroll was too much of a pain, so bloggers just deleted the whole thing....

In the past, I could easily figure out which blogs had linked to me and then send them a reciprocal link. For whatever reasons, Google Blog and Technorati aren't picking up the smaller blogs, and I have no idea who's linking to me....

So blogging has changed a lot in the past six years. It's still an excellent medium for self-expression and professional networking, but it will no longer make mega-stars. It's actually a good thing that the hoopla has died down. No one should spend that much time in front of a computer. The expectations were unrealistic. Use your blogs to target particular audiences and have a clear mission, and you'll get a following. Blogging should be the means to another goal -- a rough draft for future articles/books, a way to network with professionals, a place to document your life for your children, a way to have fun. Those are very real and good outcomes of blogging and that's why I'm continuing to keep at.  

Laura is definitely onto something -- professionalization, partisanship and speciaization have hit the blogosphere pretty hard.  The linksearch problem might be abetting this -- like Laura, I have more difficulty now tracing who's linked to my posts than I did a few years ago. 

That said, I will defend the "focal point" argument Henry and I made oh so many moons ago.  When the unexpected happens in the world, I do think new blogs and new bloggers can emerge rapidly.  Think of Simon Johnson's Calculated Risk Baseline Scenario blog in response to the global financial crisis, or Tehran Bureau in response to the Iran election imbroglio. 

The difference might be that new bloggers are not exactly neophytes on their subject matter.  Johnson was the IMF's chief economist, for example.  My fellow bloggers here at Foreign Policy are not exactly novices in the subject matter.  So it might be more accurate to say that the days when someone like Matt Yglesias or Kevin Drum could be vaulted into the top tier of bloggers has come to an end. 

As to whether this is a good or bad thing, I'm hopelessly compromised here because of my total selling out move to Foreign Policy.  I'll let the readers be the judge.



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Simon Johnson is the bolgger

Simon Johnson is the bolgger behind the "calculated risk"? What is the source of this information?

Whoops!

I meant Baseline Scenario, not Calculated Risk. Apologies for the error -- I'll try to fix the post.

I agree with the general

I agree with the general idea. Once blogs gave the opportunity to a lot of unknown and frustrated ones to be heard. Now, this time is over. If I read a blog and not the NYT, it is bc this has to give something valuable.

If you want to talk about nothing, you go on facebook. If you want to read something useful, you select a few smart blogs. And these people have to be specialists in their fields.

best

The love is now twitterized

Dr. Drezner

As a blogger, I've found it easier to post interesting links on twitter immediately than to wrap up a bunch of links in a post. Since my twitter followers consist of my blog fans as well as many others, I have more reach there than if I just posted a link dump or included sites in a blogroll.

What this means however is that I push specific data instead of a whole web site reading experience. I am pushing other blogger's information instead of their communities. It is somewhat selfish, honestly. But communities have moved from web sites to social networking platforms.

The love isn't gone, it's just moved.

Unscientific Sample

I don't know if this says something about anything, but around the middle of this decade I guest-blogged (blog-sat?) over a period of about a year for four bloggers with small to mid-sized audiences: Djerejian, Drezner, Yousefzadeh and Umansky.

Of those, one (Umansky) has given up blogging for paid journalism. Another (Djerejian) put his blog on hiatus, giving in to the competing demands of work and family, though after confessing to blog burnout. The other two have, as Dan says, "sold out," with Dan coming here and Yousefzadeh writing and editing at The New Ledger. Up or out seems to be the rule -- either up to a position that provides some compensation for the time and effort needed to blog, or out of the game altogether.

That's obviously not a complete picture. Back in 2004 Josh Marshall's TPM site was a sort of A- list opinion blog, and it's now a sort of journoblog empire. There are a few other bloggers who have taken advantage of the decline of paid print journalism to make a business of blogging. There are also a lot more former and current journalists and former junior government officials blogging, some providing really valuable reporting and/or discussion and some, well, not. Time will separate wheat from chaff in this regard.

Speaking of chaff, comment sections have changed as well. As a rule, they're a lot less interesting. Dan's blog here, for example, gets many fewer comments than he did on his own site a few years ago, and they express a much smaller range of views. A look at some blogs that draw lots of comments -- Steve Clemons' Washington Note, or the more lowbrow Washington Monthly blog -- reveals that most of the comments are posted by a relatively small number of commenters saying the same things over and over. A blog post, or series of posts, that generates an actual discussion among people with some knowledge of the subject, like Tom Ricks' about the service academies a few months ago, is now fairly unusual.

As I say, none of this may be significant. I will say that years ago I strongly considered starting my own blog, deciding against it mostly because I couldn't spare the time I thought it would need. It was a difficult decision then, but it wouldn't be now. As the blogosphere has evolved, the point of starting a new blog -- at least an independent one -- has evaporated.