Rise of the Blog Illuminati

There's an interesting piece titled Blah, Blah, Blah and Blog over at Wired news today. It's about the growing number of weblogs on the internet, and quotes a number of people who, for some reason or other, seem to be authorities on the notion of what makes a good blog and what doesn't.



Yes, I have done some thinking aloud on the subject myself, but I'd hardly compare that to the authoritative statements made by some folks in that article. Calling somebody a "Wanna-be" because of the way they write their blog strikes me as just a wee bit pretentious and elitist. (And there I go, meta-quoting some random web-person's quote. Now who's pretentious?)



Which isn't to say that there isn't a lot of bland or downright awful writing out there, or pages and pages devoted to personal interests that most of the rest of us might find dreadfully boring... but I always thought the attraction of keeping a blog was less about impressing the rest of the blog intelligentsia and more about writing about whatever it is that you enjoy writing about. Personally, I realize that most of my entries on this site are probably overlong and overly opinionated (especially my more colorful comments about Los Angeles), but when I started this site, my only reader was myself... and even though I now get about 50 search engine hits a day, I don't see why I should write any differently.

Also

Syndicate content

Twitter

  • New post: Feeding the Bow Tie Habit http://tinyurl.com/yaewh8r 4 years 20 weeks ago
  • You wouldn't think so, but speed skating is kind of boring compared to curling. #fb 4 years 20 weeks ago
  • "The problem with quotes on the Internet is they're usually sourced improperly." - Abraham Lincoln (via @prouty) #fb 4 years 21 weeks ago
  • RT @nquabbinlodge: 26th District Lodge of Instruction is at NQL tonight! Potluck supper at 6:30, instruction at 7:00, speaker at 7:30. 4 years 21 weeks ago
  • New post: Camptown Hornpipe: Minstrel Banjo Tablature http://tinyurl.com/y93tdhd 4 years 21 weeks ago

Older

Contact

Andy Chase
(978) 297-6402
andychase [at] gmail.com
GPG/PGP Public Key