As Yogi Berra might say, “It’s deja vu all over again.” Remember the spate of articles published in the mid-late 1990s about people who used the then-new medium called the Internet? What did many of them focus on? Obsessive Internet use. So today, The New York Times writes about blogs. And what do they focus on? Obsessive bloggers.
Blogging is a pastime for many, even a livelihood for a few. For some, it becomes an obsession.
Can’t the mainstream media come up with something else to write about? There are probably a couple of million blogs out here in the blogosphere. There’s got to be something more newsworthy in all that wealth of punditry, rants, raves, personal details, pet and child photos, and general snarkiness. There’s got to be at least a few good stories in there somewhere.
The cynic in me suggests that if mainstream media were to take a more realistic look at blogs and blogging, they would have to ask themselves some hard questions about whether they don’t have some things to learn about reporting from the blogosphere. (Jeff Jarvis has touched on this subject over at Buzz Machine). So instead, they look at the freakshow aspects.
I certainly don’t consider myself to be obsessed with my blog. There are days I post multiple times, there are days I don’t post at all. If I don’t post for a couple of days, I do start feeling like I ought to get something up here, but it’s hardly a compulsion. And I suspect many – dare I say most? – casual bloggers feel the same way.
But of course, that’s not newsworthy.