The Blogging Revolution - Don't know
what a blog is?
Weblogs Are To Words What Napster Was To Music.
By
Andrew Sullivan
In
the beginning - say 1994 - the phenomenon now called
blogging was little more than the sometimes nutty,
sometimes inspired writing of online diaries. These
days, there are tech blogs and sex blogs and drug
blogs and onanistic teenage blogs. But there are
also news blogs and commentary blogs, sites packed
with links and quips and ideas and arguments that
only months ago were the near-monopoly of established
news outlets. Poised between media, blogs can be
as nuanced and well-sourced as traditional journalism,
but they have the immediacy of talk radio. Amid it
all, this much is clear: The phenomenon is real.
Blogging is changing the media world and could, I
think, foment a revolution in how journalism functions
in our culture.
Blogs
do two things that Web magazines like Slate and Salon simply
cannot. First off, blogs are personal. Almost all
of them are imbued with the temper of their writer.
This personal touch is much more in tune with our
current sensibility than were the opinionated magazines
and newspapers of old. Readers increasingly doubt
the authority of The Washington Post or National
Review, despite their grand-sounding titles and
large staffs. They know that behind the curtain are
fallible writers and editors who are no more inherently
trustworthy than a lone blogger who has earned a
reader's respect.
The
second thing blogs do is - to invoke Marx - seize
the means of production. It's hard to underestimate
what a huge deal this is. For as long as journalism
has existed, writers of whatever kind have had one
route to readers: They needed an editor and a publisher.
Even in the most benign scenario, this process subtly
distorts journalism. You find yourself almost unconsciously
writing to please a handful of people - the editors
looking for a certain kind of story, the publishers
seeking to push a particular venture, or the advertisers
who influence the editors and owners. Blogging simply
bypasses this ancient ritual.
Twenty-one months ago, I rashly decided to set up a Web page myself and
used Blogger.com to publish some daily musings to
a readership of a few hundred. Sure, I'm lucky to
be an established writer in the first place. And
I worked hard at the blog for months for free. But
the upshot is that I'm now reaching almost a quarter
million readers a month and making a profit. That
kind of exposure rivals the audiences of traditional
news and opinion magazines.
And
I have plenty of company. The most obvious example
is Glenn Reynolds, a hyperactive law professor who
churns out dozens of posts a day and has quickly
become a huge presence in opinion journalism. This
is democratic journalism at its purest. Eventually,
you can envision a world in which most successful
writers will use this medium as a form of self-declared
independence.
Think
about it for a minute. Why not build an online presence
with your daily musings and then sell your first
book through print-on-demand technology direct from
your Web site? Why should established writers go
to newspapers and magazines to get an essay published,
when they can simply write it themselves, convert
it into a .pdf file, and charge a few bucks per download?
Just as magazine and newspaper editors are slinking
off into the sunset, so too might all the agents
and editors and publishers in the book market.
This,
at least, is the idea: a publishing revolution more
profound than anything since the printing press.
Blogger could be to words what Napster was to music
- except this time, it'll really work. Check back
in a couple of years to see whether this is yet another
concept that online reality has had the temerity
to destroy.
Andrew Sullivan writes for www.andrewsullivan.com, The New Republic, and The
New York Times.
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