By Ed Driscoll · March 10, 2005 04:41 PM
·
Run To Daylight
This is pretty cool! The Kansas City Chiefs' official Website runs a piece quoting from the 2002 article I wrote about Weblogs for SpinTech and Catholic Exchange:
Every morning, millions of working men and women – and many more than a few who are out of work – rise from their beds and turn on the coffee pots and subsequently their computers. No more looking outside for the boy on his bicycle who is bringing the morning newspaper, they turn instead to the humming sounds of their machines and enter the blogosphere and, perhaps, become bloggers themselves.
Drawing upon content from the world’s media and the World Wide Web, bloggers operate in a world of new agenda-setting power ranging from politics to American football. What began as merely a way to pass time has suddenly become a powerful tool to influence world leaders, journalists, and the person who sits at the desk next to you.
The word blog didn’t exist until a few years ago. It’s short for weblogs, which are periodically updated journals, providing online commentary with minimal or no external editing. They are usually presented as a set of “posts,” or entries of news or commentary on news.
The word blog didn’t exist until a few years ago. It’s short for weblogs, which are periodically updated journals, providing online commentary with minimal or no external editing. They are usually presented as a set of “posts,” or entries of news or commentary on news.
Blogs often include hyperlinks to other sites, enabling the commentators to draw upon the content of the entire World Wide Web. Some are personal diaries, analysis, or offer advice on any number of subjects. Many bloggers operate under pseudonyms (ahem!) and risk termination from their jobs for operating them on company time. Blogging, says Jonathan Segal, an employment attorney, “is inconsistent with the business mission,” advising that “most employers as of now do not have blogging policies, just as 10 years ago they didn’t have e-mail policies and now they do.” (Amy Joyce, Washington Post, February 11, 2005)
According to blogger Ed Driscoll, “the cost of putting up a Web site ranges from free to a hundred bucks or so a month.” The number of blogs continues to grow at a dizzying pace. In 1999, the total number of blogs was estimated to be around 50; five years later, the estimates range from 2.4 million to 4.1 million. The Pew Internet & American Life Project revealed that there are eight million personal Web logs today, but I’ve seen estimates that by the end of this year more than 10 million blogs will have been created.
The site you are visiting right now is not a blog but it has features that are blog-like and they are among its most popular. The official site of the Chiefs (www.kcchiefs.com) is really a blend of conventional news – much of it decidedly pro-Chiefs – transcripts from official events or media sessions, injury reports, cheerleader appearances, official history, and opinion columns. This column has many more of the features of a blog than what you will find in ones written by Bob Gretz and Jonathan Rand. It takes what’s out there and comments on it and although Gretz does it from time to time, he does less of it than this author does.
Conventional media have gotten into the act, a sure sign that they feel the growing pressure of competition from the blogs or other independent sites. Even non-print media like radio stations have their own sites where they include audio of programming along with personality profiles of hosts or disc jockeys. Driscoll remembers when “Rush Limbaugh began his national radio show in 1988, Ed McLaughlin, his producer had to go from station to station to get them to buy his show.” By comparison, when Limbaugh went on the Net, he was able to reach a national audience almost immediately for the cost of a Web server.
Now let’s not lose our minds and believe that a couple million bloggers can change the world. Howard Dean took an early lead in the Democratic primaries because he was able to tap into the power of the Internet but when it came time to push the buttons to elect a candidate he fell well short. But bloggers did help take CBS News down a peg when they exposed documents as forgeries purporting that George Bush received special privileges in the National Guard. Moreover, blog sites really took off around 9/11 when the Web servers at CNN and New York Times were maxed out and the breaking news was coming from small sites around the city.
That last point came directly from our article as well, which sadly they quoted without linking to.
That's a minor complaint; I'm just stoked to see the piece quoted. All I can add is, just keep matriculating the blogs down the field, boys!