The Growth of the Soil
Friday, February 18, 2005
 
Peggy Noonan on Blogs
Interesting editorial on blogs in WSJ. What an instantly self-referential medium this is. Here're some choice quotes:

There are blogs that carry political and ideological agendas. But everyone is on to them and it's mostly not obnoxious because their agendas are mostly declared.

I don't know if the blogosphere is rougher in the ferocity of its personal attacks than, say, Drew Pearson. Or the rough boys and girls of the great American editorial pages of the 1930s and '40s. Bloggers are certainly not as rough as the splenetic pamphleteers of the 18th and 19th centuries, who amused themselves accusing Thomas Jefferson of sexual perfidy and Andrew Jackson of having married a whore. I don't know how Walter Lippmann or Scotty Reston would have seen the blogosphere; it might have frightened them if they'd lived to see it. They might have been impressed by the sheer digging that goes on there. I have seen friends savaged by blogs and winced for them--but, well, too bad. I've been attacked. Too bad.

Most of the blogstorms of the past few years have resulted in outcomes that left and right admit or bray were legitimate. Dan Rather fell because his big story was based on a fabrication, Trent Lott said things that it could be proved he said. But coming down the pike is a blogstorm in which the bloggers turn out to be wrong. Good news: They'll probably be caught and exposed by bloggers. Bad news: It will show that blogging isn't nirvana, and its stars aren't foolproof. But then we already know that, don't we?


UPDATE: More on the same topic from Simon's favorite bathroom aid.
Comments:
Does Peggy Noonan have Alzheimer's? She sounds like she wrote that from the sticky floor of an opium den. What kind of sentence is this? "But everyone is on to them and it's mostly not obnoxious because their agendas are mostly declared."

I'm not sure what she's going for by comparing bloggers with 19th century pamphleteers and the mean-spirited simpletons on the editorial pages of the New York Daily Herald. That was not a Golden Age in American journalism, as the addled Mrs. Greenspan seems to suggest. Those were the dark ages, my man. If anything, her foggy mutterings diminish the actual merit of your blogs.
 
yeah. I should have stopped at the first paragraph, where my eyes glazed over.

PS: People keep writing because they're egomaniacs.
 
How did you know where I do my reading? If you are so smart, which of my three bathrooms is the Business Week bathroom? Which is the Vanity Fair bathroom, and which is the Magazine's with New York in the Name bathroom?
 
Post a Comment

<< Home

Powered by Blogger