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Posted On 01.19.10

There are exceptions, okay. But very few bloggers can actually write. Bloggers pander to a crowd trying to satisfy the hive mind. Blogging is entertainment. Many bloggers are good at marketing, building community, relationships, and especially aggrandizing self-promotion, but not writing.

Crowdsourcing is a bloggers’ anthem. I remember my first blog. I deleted it. The posts didn’t get commented on and weren’t passed around. That wasn’t the point. But for bloggers, that is their mission; to create 500-word packages, bold-faced and headlined, read and digested in two minutes or less, bursting with lackadaisical opinion and junk epithets.

“Blogging is not writing,” the author of You Are Not a Gadget Jaron Lanier agrees. “It’s easy to be loved as a blogger. All you have to do is play to the crowd. Or flame the crowd to get attention. Nothing is wrong with either of those activities. What I think of as real writing, however, writing meant to last, is something else. It involves articulating a perspective that is not just reactive to yesterday’s moves in a conversation.”

Blogging is in its essence, not about originality, but about the aggregation, recycling and digesting of ideas. It is the darling of the open culture ideology of the web, where mediocre collaborations have produced a destructive new social contract, reports the New York Times.

“The basic idea of this contract,” Lanier argues, “is that authors, journalists, musicians and artists are encouraged to treat the fruits of their intellects and imaginations as fragments to be given without pay to the hive mind. Reciprocity takes the form of self-promotion. Culture is to become precisely nothing but advertising.”

We posit ourselves into believing that we’re taking down the establishment, but we’re only contributing to the dull masses, eager for mega numbers of comments, subscribers, fans and followers, and other easily influenced analytics. In an age where anyone can be famous with the push of “Publish,” we have lost the creation of enduring legacies that enthuse, provoke and delight.

Bloggers are not writers, nor are they press, or superior to old media. Where disintermediation in the media shines, where a cadre of reporters has eliminated the need for a specific background (say, a degree in journalism or the need to pay dues at the right newspapers), is not evidence of bloggers taking over the world, but rather that the term blogger is now so broad that its definition no longer suits the myriad stacks of people and posts underneath.

Take a journalist for the Wall Street Journal, a reporter for the Huffington Post, a novelist, a Mashable blogger and a Gen Yer typing about their quarter-life crisis. They are not the same, nor equal, and certainly not held to the same standards or expectations. They are, despite the fact that we’d like to give little credence to the notion, entirely different.

“It’s as if culture froze just before it became digitally open, and all we can do now is mine the past like salvagers picking over a garbage dump,” Lanier writes. “Creative people — the new peasants — come to resemble animals converging on shrinking oases of old media in a depleted desert.”

Blogging is entertainment. Maybe it didn’t use to be. Maybe when bloggers were first getting started, it was about thought and connection. But increasingly, it bows to the “appeal of a new online collectivism that is nothing less than a resurgence of the idea that the collective is all-wise.”

Writing is something more. And it is in the reading of such writing that enduring ideas, observations and philosophies satiate what we spend hours a day trying to glean from skimming any number of blog posts.

There is nothing wrong with blogging. But let’s give credit where it’s due – to the true writers, journalists, novelists, reporters, columnists, and others who inspire us to boil their ideas down in an effort to hold onto them just a little longer.

Written Word.

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Comments

01.19.10

Writing is anything the author wishes it to be, regardless of whether it is ever read by anyone. Your suggestion is oafish and egocentric. "True writers." What a concept. Are you going to burn the books of trashy romance editors? How about the lyrics to 2Live Crew? There IS no true writer. Writing is defined by an act, not by a standard.

01.19.10

I actually touched on this topic on my personal blog a few months ago...saying that blogging ruined me as a writer and journalist.

It took me months to go back to the basics and rediscover the writer/journalist in me before I was accepted by a publication for a relationship column. Sure, blogging is fun but it's also easy. Our readers don't require us to use AP style, or great headlines. We can curse when we can't find sufficient words to get our message across.

I've blogged on different platforms and I know that when it comes to blogging, mainstream and drama sells...Blog readers aren't usually looking for thoughtful insights that are a paragraph too long to hold their attention span.

01.19.10

I have to say that I agree with Alex on this one. I also think that you are making sweeping generalizations about bloggers. Many bloggers are not trying to generate traffic. Many bloggers do not know anything about marketing. Most bloggers do not make any significant income from their blogs. Believe it or not, you can have a blog without caring about any of these things.

At its core, blogging is just a technical platform. How it is used depends on the author. You fail to give credit to the flexibility of the medium and the wide range of creativity displayed by many of those who use it.

jennifergleason5
01.19.10

I would like to think, depending on what comes to mind to publish on my blog, I am the exception to this, but I did write a paper on how bloggers consider themselves online journalists when all they are doing is, as you said, regurgitating ideas that have already been stated a million times. They just have the upper-hand because, if they know how, they can promote their stuff better than other sources...

jennifergleason5
01.19.10

Oh yeah, and to add, I have yet to monetize my blog, nor do I care to. I don't even care if I get a lot of people to my blog. I write for me. I'm a true, narcissistic blogger. I'm glad you said in the beginning that there are exceptions, though. Because I'm sure this topic could anger lots of writers who have blogs...

I have been writing all my life and plan to pursue a career in journalism--hopefully... I just blog to pass time and to get that creative part of my brain pumping...

01.19.10

I'm also with the majority vote here. I blog not for an audience, but because it helps me process my thoughts, build memories and even increase my own awareness -- I notice that I pay more attention to my days simply because I see more depth in them. Blogging is an online diary and many good writers got started with childhood journals. Knowing this, knowing that people become better writers by both reading and writing, I feel that blogging is simply a tool one could use the same as a paintbrush.

The value of writing, no matter the venue, lies with the individual, as it does with being educated. If someone can better form thoughts, maybe they can write a better letter to their school's PTA and be a better advocate for their child's education, for example.

Bloggers are indeed writers. Anyone who writes is a writer. The measure of success one reaches is defined individually. For some, success means recognition, publishing, or money; others, memories. The journey is different for all of us.

I have an enormous respect for good writing and the value excellent writers offer to society. I could never be that kind of writer. But I can admire them. And still enjoy writing too.

Blogs also offer a sense of community -- I read them because I want to know how people are doing just as I write to friends on email. There are many ways to use this tool; bloggers may indeed blossom as writers in their own lives. Let us all write however we must.

aurora
01.19.10

Ditto what Holly said. I applaud you for taking a stance, Rebecca, but I'd put it more like: people whose blogs are not about the writing, are not writers.

I've run into this issue recently with my own blog, when I started to realize that I can stop reading about how to be a "successful blogger", because I don't WANT to do what it takes to get a lot of traffic or make lots of money blogging. For me, it's about the writing. I take the writing seriously, and I wouldn't compromise that just to make it easy for someone to read.

You're talking about a certain kind of blogger, and you're contrasting it with the traditionally published writer. Let's not forget all the amateur, self-published, intrinsically-motivated writers who write for the love of it.

01.19.10

I'm a blogger, and a writer. In different forms, both online and in print. Oddly, I think one contributes to the other for me. I've never been a big fan of crowdsourcing. Until last week, i didn't even know what it was.

What i will say, is that blogging has allowed for things such as citizen journalism to come to the fore. Not all of it is good writing, just as not all novels or articles are written by good authors.

I think blogging has the potential to spread new creative ideas. I think done right, this is extremely beneficial. And to top, the blogs that I do follow are written by good writers.

I agree credit is due to the many people who do this for a living, in tough times, but at the same time, there are many who do it daily without being able to reach millions through a well-branded newspaper or magazine. I admire their ability to put themselves out there.

01.21.10

It probably makes sense why as a C+ English student I don't think I'm that bad of a blogger- it's writing but not in the sense we normally think of it.

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