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What’s In The Technorati Top 100?

Earlier in the month Technorati founder/CEO David Sifry published the latest of his “State of the Blogosphere” reports. This one doesn’t break a lot of new ground — Farsi edges out Dutch as the 10th most-used language! — but it does look as if the Technorati team has taken previous criticisms into consideration. Numerous bloggers derided the August report as inaccurate (or worse) by counting dead blogs and spam blogs among the exponentially rising number of blogs in the known universe. In this installment

The State of the Blogosphere continues to be strong.

though the curve representing new blog creation finally begins to flatten:

Technorati blog creation growth curve flattens

Sifry says this “may be” the result of improved spam-fighting measures: “Spam-, splog- and sping-fighting efforts at Technorati are paying dividends in terms of the reduction of garbage in our indexes, even if it does seem to impact overall growth rates.”

He also buries the lede by skipping too quickly past this newsworthy finding:

About 55% of all blogs are active, which means that they have been updated at least once in the last 3 months.

As usual the report is not lacking for beautiful charts (some of which I have appropriated for this post) but a chart showing the number of active blogs is not among them. Contrary to the bold-faced boast

Currently Tracking More than 57 Million Blogs and Counting.

there are not actually some 60 million active blogs out there. The number is closer to 33 million, which still sounds impressive even if it too is probably a little inflated, and most importantly, has the virtue of being a useful number.

In the (now mysteriously unavailable) comments on the post, one of the early respondents asked that a future report show what the top blogs are actually writing about, perhaps based on the search engine’s top 50 tags. Anyone can check out the most-used Technorati tags for themselves, but I thought it might be interesting to go down the list and figure out what genres or categories define the Top 100 and count them up.

As you can imagine, that’s quite a list. So here’s the color key for the chart and a sample:

At right you’ll find the Top 10 sites of the 100, current to November 2006. Below, a color-coded key that tells you what each pastel means.
  Technology & Business 30
  Politics & News 21
  Niche/Other 18
  Foreign Language 17
  Entertainment/Gossip 12
  Duplicate 2

 

 
  Technorati Top 10
  Engadget
  Boing Boing
  FC2 Blog
  Gizmodo
  Xujinglei
  The Huffington Post
  Techcrunch
  Daily Kos
  PostSecret
  Lifehacker

Ready for the full list of 100? After the jump:

Continue reading ‘What’s In The Technorati Top 100?’

Why, You Little—!!!

There’s a curious and twisted form of homerism on display right now at Power Line, where readers have been falling over themselves to first nominate and now vote for their hometown newspaper as the “worst newspaper in the United States.”

I don’t doubt that there are legitimate criticisms to be made about most or all of these papers, but I also don’t doubt that the examples provided are not nearly enough to make such a drastic judgment. Indeed, while a couple submissions refer to specific grievances, the post is characterized by allusive grumbling and generalized complaints. Which gives me an idea…

Can you match the newspaper with its corresponding critique? Answers in the nomination post at Power Line, as well as below the fold. No peeking!

a. Los Angeles Times   1. “Farther left than the Guardian, but without the snappy prose.”

b. The Oregonian   2. “All around worst paper, general purposes”
c. San Francisco Chronicle   3. “Not nominated by any readers, but a paper that few will dispute belongs on this list.”
d. Washington Post   4. “Relentless liberalism, then spiteful revenge pieces.”
e. Kansas City Star   5. “Slavish liberalism (probably all those gummint workers).”

Continue reading ‘Why, You Little—!!!’

Paging Jackie Chiles…

Any day with two stories where the leftosphere and rightosphere agree is an unusual day, so let’s not let it pass unnoticed.

This afternoon News Corp. announced it would not be publishing the O.J. Simpson book, “If I Did It,” and it naturally follows, Fox would not be airing the accompanying Judith Regan interview. If there’s anyone in the blogosphere who’s upset with this turn of events, you won’t find them on Memeorandum. When Firedoglake and Michelle Malkin agree on something, pause to savor the moment (or let your stomach settle).

Before the announcement, Newsweek had a story prepped for the issue out today that you just know the authors had a great time writing:

Regan’s imprint at HarperCollins, which has put out books about convicted wife-killer Scott Peterson and a memoir by porn star Jenna Jameson, is set to publish a “fictional” account by O.J. that details how he would have killed Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman if he did kill them, which he still insists he did not. The book, titled “If I Did It,” will go along with a two-part “Fox television event” in which Regan—a former National Enquirer reporter—will interview O.J., who’ll apparently spell out in gory detail precisely how he didn’t commit the crime.

Time may have hired Ana Marie Cox, but Newsweek can do the snark, too.

Next, how could we ignore the bizarre, racist and unfunny Michael Richards meltdown this weekend — making the former hipster doofus another victim of the YouTube revolution, if not actually YouTube itself. Any sympathy for him in the blogosphere? Not a bit. There really is only one take on this, although as Roy Edroso points out, after the initial condemnation, the tangents followed by some are less than enlightening.

Bonus Fun Fact: Longtime readers of Gothamist’s franchise in the District might recall that this is not the first indication that there was something odd about Richards:

Michael Richards — you know, Cosmo Kramer — got interested in Freemasonry around the time that “Seinfeld” ended. In 2001 he told the Post’s Peter Carlson about reading [impenetrable thousand-page Masonic text written by an alleged Kluxer] “Morals and Dogma.” Said Richards: “I don’t fully understand it, but I have an intuitive understanding of what it means.” That Kramer — he’s always up to something!

I’m not sure exactly how to tie in that episode of “Seinfeld” where Kramer played the O.J. role in a re-enactment of the Bronco chase or Jackie Chiles’ Darden-esque courtroom gambit — “Of course a bra’s not going to fit on over a leotard. A bra’s gotta fit right up against a person’s skin… like a glove!” — but then again, I suppose I just did.

IPDI/Edelman on Political Blogging (and Wal-Mart)

Edelman/IPDI LogosBecause I’m a sucker for nametags and PowerPoint presentations, during lunchtime hours on Wednesday I attended a panel discussion co-sponsored by GWU’s Institute for Politics Democracy & the Internet (yes, “Politics Democracy”; no, I’m not sure which word is supposed to modify the other) and PR agency Edelman*. But there was another reason to attend, and Edelman was it — the advertised presence of CEO Richard Edelman, that is.

If you don’t follow business or PR blogs, then you may not be aware of the ethical scrape Edelman recently got its blue chip client, Wal-Mart, into. The friction involved revelations that a few presumably grassroots pro-Wal-Mart blogs were in fact astroturf blogs — one might call them “astroblogs,” if the term “flog” wasn’t already gaining popularity.

To recap, as briefly as possible: In early October, BusinessWeek revealed that a blog called Wal-Marting Across America — featuring a couple driving their RV cross-country, using Wal-Mart parking lots as rest stops — was conceived and launched by Edelman on behalf of Working Families for Wal-Mart. The problem is, none of the parties involved disclosed the arrangement. Once outed, the blog was quickly shuttered.

In short order, B.L. Ochman called on WOMMA to throw Edelman out for having violated a code of ethics Edelman had helped develop, Richard Edelman started doing damage control on the company’s own website, his firm fessed up to two more flogs, and Edelman-employed blogger Steve Rubel drew flak for saying as little as possible about the incident (though he did not work on these Wal-Mart projects). It was quite the swarm.

In the end, WOMMA put Edelman on probation and the company started posting disclosures to their still-extant Wal-Mart blogs. So naturally, if Richard Edelman was going to be taking questions from the audience at a blogger conference, I would have to be there.

However — guess who didn’t show? Richard Edelman. And guess who did show? Activists from Wal-Mart Watch. They stood outside the lobby of the conference room at George Washington University handing out flyers titled “THE WAL-MART BFLOG.”

·      ·      ·

Nevertheless, there was still a panel discussion to be attended. Because the conversation ranged across many topics, allow me to fall back on the ol’ faithful of transition-averse writers — the bullet-point:

IPDI Political Blog Trends Conference Presentation

  • Perhaps the main reason for convening the panel was a new survey by Edelman’s research arm, StrategyOne, titled “Blog Readership in the USA.” Danny Glover has already recapped most of the findings at Technology Daily, so I won’t go into them here. I will point out that whereas the Edelman study focused on all blogs, the panel discussion was titled “Trends in Political Blogging” — which gave the discussion a mild case of multiple-personality disorder during the Q&A period.

  • For example, StrategyOne found that half of all blog readers are in the 18-24 age range, whereas BlogAds and ComScore surveys have shown that readers of political blogs tend to be middle-aged. Panelist Jacki Schechner of CNN offered that at CNN’s recent election night party, their invited bloggers were mostly aged 35-50, and almost none of them were below 30. Because political blogs were what post attendees were interested in, IPDI (note: pronounced “ipdee,” not “I-P-D-I”) director Carol Darr called on BlogAds founder Henry Copeland to generalize about numbers related to the political blogosphere. His estimates: About 100,000 people are blogging daily with an audience of “more than just their friends.” Some 10,000 of them have what could be considered a “commercial audience” — at least 1,000 daily readers (and keep in mind there are only 50,000 brick and mortar journalists in the U.S.). And how many readers of political blogs? Copeland thinks it’s somewhere between 2 and 5 million.
  • RNC eCampaign director Patrick Ruffini, another panelist, praised the netroots’ Use It Or Lose It pre-election campaign, in which liberal bloggers called on safe incumbents with big warchests to donate more to fellow Dems in tight races — or else. Ruffini figures they probably raised as much money then as by collecting the small donations bloggers are best known for. Another good point from Ruffini: When candidates’ positions are fairly similar, such as in a primary campaign, blogs become all the more influential.
  • Edelman Paris representative Guillaume Du Gardier made a great point about podcasting (or netcasting) and video-casting (no one likes “vlogging”) — while often mentioned in the same breath as blogging, they are more top-down, like traditional media. Blogs are a conversation, but podcasts tend to be one-way communications. I would add, this is one reason why YouTube has been so successful — it makes video-blogging almost as interactive as a regular text-based weblog.
  • Schechner said doesn’t consider journalists who blog to be “bloggers” — if your voice is already represented in the media, then you can’t properly be one. I follow that, but it seems incomplete. Not a few bloggers hate the term “blog” and by logical extension, the term “blogger,” too. And it is certainly used as a term of derision, mostly in meatspace rather than cyberspace. Maybe it would be nice to do away with the term, but it’s just not going to happen. Perhaps it would be better to redefine it: Jeff Jarvis likes to say journalism is an act, not a profession — but surely the same must be true of blogging. But if you’re a call center manager whose blog is mentioned in the New York Times, they’re still going to call you a “blogger” on first reference.

IPDI Political Blog Trends Conference Panel

  • Responding to Schechner’s actual point, I would say that a blogging journalist who often links to “true” bloggers should be considered part of the blogosphere. Will Bunch of the Philly Daily News-hosted Attytood is one who does. Chris Cillizza, who writes The Fix for the Washington Post, does not. So you don’t have to be a blogger first to be a part of the blogosphere, while having a blog does not necessarily make you a blogger. This ticket has not been resolved.

  • Bias and balance are an eternal theme of political bloggers right and left, as both believe the mainstream media favors the other side. But this also extends to non-partisan panel discussions, evidenced by a representative from NewAssignment.Net asking if any effort was made to court Democratic representation. (In addition to Ruffini, StrategyOne research director Robert Moran mentioned he had previously worked in GOP politics.) You could tell that Darr didn’t want to say “No.” She said they had sought a range of views, hinted that panelist Bill Allison’s Sunlight Foundation wasn’t exactly a member of the VRWC, and added that Schechner represented “the media.” Pressed about whether IPDI had specifically sought a Democrat for the panel, she conceded the answer was: “No.”
  • The consensus seemed to be that if the Internet had existed in 1976, Ronald Reagan would have defeated Gerald Ford for the Republican presidential nomination. I tend not to ponder such impossible “what ifs,” but that one is interesting to think about.
  • Predictions for 2008? Schechner believes candidates will be better schooled in the ways of the blog. Ruffini wants to see better wireless capability for field organizing — SMS isn’t sophisticated enough. Moran predicted the “ad guys in Old Town” will start getting “jealous” (call me a pedant if you must, but the proper word is “envious”), because blog advisers will start getting the good salaries. Personally, that’s the one I’m counting on.
  • And nobody said a word about the Edelman/Wal-Mart controversy.

*Full disclosure: Edelman is a competitor of my employer. At my last job, I spoke at an event co-sponsored by Edelman. I also know a handful of current and former Edelman employees, whom I count as friends or friendly acquaintances.

Separated At Mirth

I have just been sent a YouTube video purporting to show my former boss, Hotline editor-in-chief Chuck Todd, on “The Price is Right”:

If you ask me, it only really looks like him for a split second — but if I’m wrong, congrats on winning the five grand. I hereby nominate this for the Friday “Separated at Birth” section of Last Call.

P.S. Speaking of Chuck, his assertion that the netroots could support a Rahm Emanuel challenge for House Speaker is roiling the lefty blogosphere today. Markos Moulitsas says the opposite:

I’m pretty confident in predicting that bloggers 1) wouldn’t launch a grassroots effort to promote a Rahm Speakership, and 2) would actively and energetically oppose it.

Jonathan Singer has taken a poll which confirms the sentiment:

MyDD poll about potential Speaker Rahm Emanuel

And I concur: At best Rahm will have their grudging respect, should Democrats win by a comfortable margin. Many don’t trust his courting of Wall Street money managers, and they don’t like his criticism of Howard Dean’s “50 state strategy” — even though as DCCC chair he is institutionally obliged to focus only on key races.

In today’s Blogometer, Chuck has issued a statement:

Regarding the blowback my ‘Speaker Rahm’ speculation is receiving with the liberal blogs, I just didn’t realize how bad his rep was with some. Frankly, I should have been more aware of how the Rahm-Dean strategy feud damaged things. So, here’s a question for the left; if not Pelosi and if not Rahm, then who could you support as Speaker?

It’s a good question, though it should be added to the end of his column. Otherwise, he’s liable to get more responses like this one from DuckmanGR at MyDD (please excuse his language):

Chuck Todd is … a Beltway 500 tool. Let me further add, fuck Chuck Todd, may he soon rot on assignment covering the rapidly shrinking Greenland Ice Cap that reporters like him helped enable, and tell us how the shilling that he has been doing for the GOP and the DLC earned him this important post. … progressives need to stop listening to or relying on self serving low life scum like Todd and Halpern [sic] and Charlie Cook (oh I know, he’s so fucking smart, right?) and the rest of their revolting ilk. 18 seat gain is an abject failure by Rahm, that control will be entirely in spite of him, not thanks to him. What a crock, Crock Todd, Fucktard.

Well, now. If that isn’t a compelling argument, I don’t know what is.

In all seriousness, Chuck knows more about politics than almost anyone, even if he is, like everyone, wrong from time to time. I do think this one was an obvious mistake, but even for avid readers, the political blogosphere is a harder nut to crack than even political meatspace.

Who “runs” the netroots? Kos? The Townhouse group? Both are influential, but neither have the message control of the Democratic party, which obviously isn’t saying much. And who leads the Republicans? Is it non-Republican Glenn Reynolds? Comparatively low-traffic RedState?

Believe me, it’s not just the Beltway establishment that doesn’t know what to make of the bloggers; the bloggers don’t know what to make of themselves, either.

Stabbing Eastward: Lamont, the Netroots and Barack Obama

Shortly after Ned Lamont upended Holy Joe Lieberman in the CT SEN primary this summer, I noted a report by TNR’s Ryan Lizza arguing that Washington Democrats would steer clear of the race from there on, letting the blue-on-blue rhetorical violence work itself out. Two and a half months later, that looks eerily prescient. Lamont has fallen behind in the polls, and there’s little question that a victorious Lieberman would retain his committee assignments even if the newspapers called him (I-CT).

Also not looking too bad: My question at the time, about what the Lamont primary victory — then hailed by some as the first breakthrough win for a netroots candidate — about what this would mean:

Could it be that what seemed less than 100 hours ago like the first major gate-crashing will actually end up building more barriers between Beltway Democrats and the party’s online activists?

Keep that in mind as you read excerpts from yesterday’s Matt Stoller classic, “Senate Democrats and Bill Clinton Stab Us In The Front”:

Why did Lamont let Joe get away? Well there are a number of reasons, but among the most prominent is the total abandonment of Lamont by the party establishment. And let’s be very clear - this is not Lamont that they are abandoning, it’s the party primary voters that they are abandoning. …

Make no mistake, these DC Democrats are only our temporary allies. They have total contempt for the rules of the party, and they cheered Joe after he faced us in the primary. It is no longer reasonable for them to call for party unity, because they no longer have any legitimate claim to call themselves leaders of the party. They may be leaders for the next few decades simply due to inertia, but it’s very clear that Bill Clinton and Barack Obama are liars who think nothing of insulting Democratic primary voters who play by the rules. …

The American people know this. They know that Democratic Senators aremoral lepers, weaklings, and that is the only reason we aren’t furtherahead when the Republicans screw everything up. The Democratic Senateleaders will sell us out at every opportunity, be it torture, Iraq, Alito, Lieberman, the Bankruptcy Bill, or stopping war with Iran. They aren’t poll-driven, they aren’t fear-driven, and they aren’t driven by strategic differences. They are simply driven to beat us down, their voters, by any means necessary. …

We can win this fight, as the polls are tightening. But it would be a whole lot easier without that knife in our back.

Leaving aside the obvious question of which side the Stollerites are supposed to be bleeding from, there’s enough hyperbole here to last until the first big straw poll.

As I’ve demonstrated previously, Stoller’s over-reliance on self-righteous anger and quick imputations of bad faith to his political opponents (even those ostensibly on his side of the fence) makes him seem less a sharp-tongued political street brawler and more like a circus clown exaggerating his act.

And as usual, the response in the MyDD comments is mixed. A contingent protests that Stoller is being unreasonable, but his sentiments are shared by a larger set. Meanwhile, Stoller’s hyperventilation obscures what is actually a pretty interesting question to pick apart: How did Lamont lose his momentum, and what explains Senate Democrats’ reluctance to join the netroots in the War on Lieberman? I recommend this thread, which includes MyDDer Chris G gamely trying to explain to the wounded ‘roots that it’s not all about them:

Dem leaders are not trashing Lamont, and they’ve expressed their support. but by “cutting loose” Liberman [sic], and trashing Liberman, as you suggest, they run the risk of the following: Liberman winning nonetheless, and organizing with the GOP.

Quite. Senate Democrats are too worried about being stabbed by Joementum in a 50-49 split to carry out any personal vendetta against the netroots. It’s not personal. It’s politics.

Still, as for MyDD, it’s a marked improvement from last week’s poll-frustrated Conn. voter-bashing thread:

A bunch of idiots do live in CT. What a fucking embarassment.

Now that’s what I call people power.

·      ·      ·

Another interesting thing about the philosophical and political differences between the Beltway establishment and Democratic-aligned bloggers is the split opinions about Barack Obama. If you don’t know that Obama ‘08 is in its ascendancy at the moment, then you must be in a persistent vegetative state. With Republican newspaper columnists Charles Krauthammer and David Brooks offering genuine praise of the freshman Democrat, it becomes all the more clear that his surge is a media-driven sensation. Though hyped excessively by celebrity-obsessed reporters, Barack Obama has demonstrated, potentially, a very broad appeal. Yet there is one group seemingly impervious to his charms: the netroots, of course.

First, note Stoller’s derogation of Obama above. It’s not the first time; Stoller has a long history of badmouthing Obama going back to the 2004 convention in Boston, where he was disinvited by Terry McAuliffe’s DNC from continuing on as a coordinator after writing that Obama hadn’t said “anything really interesting or useful.”

But also note the comments from others in the threads below the post. Here’s one, from a former Hillary Clinton supporter (somewhat rare among liberal bloggers in good standing) no less:

I do know one thing: I do not support Obama for any office. He has ZERO spine. He didn’t even want to filibuster Alito when even Hillary was among the first to advocate filibuster for BOTH Alito and the Alito-with-pretty-blue-eyes, Roberts.
And this one:

I wouldn’t go so far as to call Obama a liar, but he HAS been a major disappointment. He’s got one of the safest Senate seats around, having romped to a landslide victory in what was a dreadful year for Democrats nationwide, and he’s done next to nothing to advance Democratic values, choosing instead to scold Democrats for, among other things, not being religious enough.

Well, Barack, let’s talk religion, since it’s one of your favorite subjects. When the torture bill came out, where the hell were you? … Mr. Obama, I still have some hope for you, but your silence on the torture bill means that you have abdicated any credibility in lecturing ANYBODY on “moral values”. You’re not a whole lot better than Republicans in that regard.

Maybe Krauthammer and Brooks know something the MyDD crowd doesn’t? In any case, Obama is not without his defenders:

In fact, I would like to see in print where Obama promised to come to CT and campaign for Lamont. He has publicly supported Lamont, but just because he supports Lamont publicly does not mean he has to bad mouth Lieberman. … But please if you can provide written proof on where Obama has lied about CT, I would love to see. Until then, I have to chalk it up to your irrational dislike of the man.

In the meantime, you have to wonder: if Washington Democrats’ lukewarm support for Ned Lamont is tantamount to treason, what would the netroots say if Barack Obama actually got the nomination in 2008? Or Clinton/Obama?

P.S. It’s worth remembering that only a week ago, Stoller posted a comparatively thoughtful essay titled “Why Barack Obama Should Run for President.” Was he being disingenuous then or is he being exciteable now? It’s hard to tell, but I wouldn’t rule out the possibility that the answer is both.

The Hunt For Blog October

Stop me if you’ve heard this one: Previously unknown, weeks-old blog makes waves by posting the results of e-mails ultimately leading the blog’s target to vacate office.

This time the target here is not a congressman, but the blogger who first published e-mails exposing the poor judgment (and spelling) of now-ex-Rep. Mark Foley. TPMmuckraker headlines it:

Final Foley E-Mail Mystery Solved (Sorta)

“Sorta” is right, as the blogger behind the original Stop Sex Predators has not been publicly named (though the “final” part remains to be seen). The SSP blogger apparently is — to the satisfaction of Republican Washington — until just now an employee at left-leaning gay rights outfit Human Rights Campaign, and prior to that a Democratic campaign staffer.

Credit goes to the NYT for giving this space in their pages, but of course they don’t credit the blogger who actually uncovered the facts, the pseudonymous GTL of Stop October Surprises.

Until just today, SOS (as we must call it) was linked by and interacting with only a few conservative blogs.

SOS’s first substantive entry, posted nearly two weeks ago, explains quite simply how the anonyblogger was caught:

how to catch an idiot? Start with something simple… Send the moron an email using a tracing tool like ReadNotify, wait until the email is read. This little adventure all started with a simple email sent from an account ‘dcguy191@yahoo.com’. One of the persons behind StopSexPredators, using the email address ’stopsexpredators@gmail.com’, read this email from several network locations. (Don’t think physical location, think network location.)

Contrary to what New Yorker cartoons would have you believe, these days on the Internet people sometimes do know that you’re a dog (provided they sign up for a free trial with ReadNotify). A subsequent post included screen shots from ReadNotify’s tracking history, demonstrating that SSP had read the tracked e-mail from a network address assigned to none other than the Human Rights Campaign.

Before long the HRC was issuing statements, and as the MSM coverage was being readied for publication yesterday, SOS’s GTL added:

I know who this employee is, and have for some time, but I cannot prove that he has been fired. I will let others go after that for now. There is more to this story… It seems to me that the HRC has more work to do in this matter, and I communicated that message to Brad Luna.

SOS has been left out of most MSM and blog coverage up to this point, but blogger Joe. My. God. has a brief e-mail interview with GTL (Mike Rogers makes a special appearance in an update, giving his take on the matter). The transcript includes this possibly meaningful exchange:

JMG: Isn’t it possible that the IMs were leaked internally at HRC without the knowledge of top management? SOS: no comment.

Hmm. Needless to say, HRC may have a PR problem on their hands. At the very least they should release the staffer’s name; if these episodes have taught us anything, it’s that such information is going to come out anyway [Update: Yep. See update below].

Before you’re done with this, make sure you look at these two blogs back to back, Stop Sex Predators and Stop October Surprises. Even a cursory glance reveals that they are identical in almost every meaningful way: Similar titles, subject matter, short duration (though SOS wisely dispensed with the fake history), fraternal twins down to their Blogger accounts — SSP uses the black Minima template; SOS chose white Minima.

So there is at least one more Foley e-mail mystery to be solved: Who is behind Stop October Surprises?

P.S. Looks like Mickey Kaus blogged too soon:

Foley? That rings a bell. I remember there was something about a guy named Foley a while back.

The Kaus Faster Theory (as I call it, considering I’ve never once heard Bruce Feiler weigh in on the subject) may well have a wide range of applications, but there’s still that one thing which can render it inapplicable to an ongoing story — new developments.

Update: There you are, Radar, I knew you couldn’t not follow this one up. At least this time, you’ve actually contributed to the conversation. SSP turns out to be one Lane Hudson. Ace has more.

Of course, did Radar Online mention Stop October Surprises? No, no it did not. No points for you.

Remedial Math: Democrats, Bloggers and Political Reporters

I imagine this occurs naturally in any subject area, but the great aggravation we so-called insiders have with the blogosphere is how often stupid things are published. For so-called outsiders to relate, how often have you heard someone make an ignorantly flippant remark about something in your area of expertise? You might leave it alone because the fight isn’t worth it — but now imagine this person writes a blog in your field.

It’s really annoying.

Take this example.

Matt’s third point bugs me:

Elect Tester, Get a Seat on Approps, and Start Building Some Seniority: Start building seniority with a new Senator now, so that when Max leaves, we’re not left with no seniority and no seats on powerful committees, but rather have a man who is by all accounts an able and honest legislator well into his second-term on Approps.

He’s referring to this story:

Democratic leaders in the U.S. Senate say they will give Jon Tester a seat on the influential Senate Appropriations Committee as soon as they can if he beats Republican incumbent Conrad Burns in the November election. Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada said in a statement Thursday he will “work very hard” to secure a seat for Tester - even as a freshman senator - “as soon as possible.”

This is classic case of a DC outsider who thinks he knows something about the process (or actually does know something and is being disingenuous; another post topic).

Jon Tester is not getting an appropriations seat. Key phrases in that article being “as soon as they can” and “as soon as possible.”

First, there is the seniority issue in the Dem caucus in general — you think a freshman gets to jump over 2-term senators whose own states lack an appropriations seat? Second, there are “red states” up next cycle where a Dem would need a prime committee to defend his/her seat, e.g. Mark Pryor (AR). Third there is the potential retirement of Robert Byrd which would result in his fellow WVer John Rockefeller (also up in ‘08) making a play for the seat. Fourth, Chuck Schumer of NY will likely need persuasion to stay on as DSCC chair or take approps as a prize for winning back the Senate. And lastly, Tester’s own incoming class would knife-fight him for that seat — Claire McCaskill of MO and Bob Casey Jr. of PA are both Dems without senior senators in their own states while Bob Menendez already has seniority in the ‘06 class.

Bottom line, he ain’t getting that seat.

And people might say, “NPB, get off your lazy ass and join the conversation.” To which I reply, “There are just too many conversations to join, too much remedial math to teach.” If I wanted to teach, I would start a blog called “Politics for Third Graders.” But I do want the occasional polling number leaked to Left In The West about the Montana Senate race. When it comes to the blogosphere, I want the news which they provide, but I’m forced to put up with the crap that comes with it.

But maybe I’m being too hard on them.

Let’s see: Occasional tips, exaggerations about process, bullshit opinions, morons who think too highly of their opinions who wouldn’t last 15 minutes on the inside… sounds like some political reporters and columnists I’ve worked with. Maybe bloggers and the MSM have more in common than I thought!

·      ·      ·

On A Completely Unrelated Note: News story leaving out the important details, facts not quite up to par, not satisfield with the news as reported? Assignment: blogosphere!

In this week’s installment, can you finish where the NY Times left off and tell us who is the girl in the Harold Ford Jr. Playboy ad and how I can get her number? And the gun guy — was that Charlie Sheen? Did Adam Sandler play the porn producer? Holy trimmed-down Wilford Brimley-sighting batman, Canada will get those terrorists!

Now all of us political guys know that the occasional actor is needed for a commercial, but I want the story behind that. Popular commercials lead to bigger and better things — have ya’ll noticed that the Capitol One buffoon (”Noooooooo!”) is on “Studio 60″? Is that girl getting new offers? (That “call me” was so sassy at the end.) Will she show up on “Entourage”? And really, I’m not kidding, is that Charlie Sheen making a cameo in camo?

Hop to it, blogs! Get your Variety sources on Skype and get moving!

You Jackin’ It?

“The Daily Show” certainly jacks some of its content from the web, and it’s almost hard to imagine “The Colbert Report” without web interaction. Other entertainment programs and news outlets are also jacking story concepts, news leads and other useful content from online amateurs — and as I noted last week, they don’t always give credit where credit is due.

This past weekend, I was invited by the online magazine Brainwash to expand on this very theme for their latest edition:

You’re with me, blogger by William Beutler | Oct 8, 2006 On Sept. 28, Comedy Central’s long-running program “The Daily Show” ran a segment with correspondent Jason Jones lampooning the “trench coat, stick-mic journalism” of one Carl Monday, an on-air reporter for WKYC-TV in Cleveland. If you are familiar with the segment, chances are good you had first heard of Monday from the Gawker Media-owned sports blog, Deadspin. In May, Deadspin’s Will Leitch turned Monday’s relentless reports about a college student caught (on tape) masturbating at a public library into an Internet phenomenon. YouTube, Daily Show, Deadspin, Carl MondayOn Oct. 5, on-again, off-again journalistic enterprise Radar Online posted an “Exclusive” story pointing out that a weblog hawking stories of former Rep. Mark Foley’s advances toward House pages — including the ambiguous e-mails now causing Denny Hastert so much trouble — was not a real blog at all. The weeks-old site was, they wrote, “filled with plagiarized, hastily-assembled posts, which no one seems to have heard of, visited, or linked to before last week.” But this story was hardly exclusive to Radar — political bloggers at Just One Minute, Daily Kos and elsewhere had uncovered all these details the weekend prior.

Of course, so had Blog P.I., but I’m not about to cite myself as an authority… at least not yet. To read the column in full, just click here.

Photoshop: Still Harder Than You Think

Yesterday afternoon, Michelle Malkin and Charles Johnson reported more or less simultaneously on a curious image (since removed) from the front page of the DNC website, purporting to show a U.S. soldier “hurting” because of “GOP broken promises.” To wit:

Canadian soldier fauxtoshop job by the DNC

Only problem: The pictured soldier is actually Canadian, and Johnson’s readers quickly located more stills, providing conclusive evidence that a Democratic Photoshopper had doctored the image to remove a medal evidently believed to be a dead giveaway (but embarrassingly leaving another — the funny lapel pin).

This phenomenon is common enough now that such images have come to merit their own word: Fauxtoshop. In November 2005, MoveOn.org ran a TV spot conservative bloggers found politically outrageous, and which luckily happened to be an example of this burgeoning trend. Much like this latest imbroglio, the uniforms of foreign troops (this time, British) were modified to look more American:

British soldier fauxtoshop job by MoveOn (original)British soldier fauxtoshop job by MoveOn (doctored)

In both cases, one wonders just how hard it would be to find a genuine photograph of members of the U.S. armed services looking vaguely aggrieved or lining up for a plateful of slop. The circumstances were slightly different in one of the earliest instances of blog-era political fauxtoshoppery, an image from the front page of the Bush-Cheney ‘04 official website, offending sections encircled by an unidentified Kossack:

American soldier fauxtoshop job by RNC

Here, the idea was to make it look a lot cooler, as if this wall of troops just went on forever. Just as their counterparts on the right saw leftist perfidy in later fauxtoshop jobs, this manipulation was seized upon by the nascent netroots as another strike against A”W”OL.

But what should we make of all this? Be assured, neither side is above manipulating images of American troops for political expediency. These incidents say a lot less about comparative patriotism than than about the primacy of images in propaganda. Good visuals are hard to come by, and if a deceptive visual is more striking than a real image, unfortunately, that’s considered good enough.

P.S. There is also, of course, the recent case of photo manipulation by Lebanese Reuters photographer Adnan Hajj, also brought to light at Little Green Footballs:

Adnan Hajj Reuters fauxtoshop job

While it falls beyond U.S. partisan considerations and does not involve soldiers per se, it is also probably the biggest Photoshop fraud uncovered by those pesky bloggers, and certainly deserves mention here.

P.P.S. Any journalism professor worth his whiskey makes sure freshman communications students hear about the distortive power of photographs. Already in the curriculum, I’m sure, is the recent case of an ambiguous photograph by Thomas Hoepker of young Brooklynites observing South Manhattan on Sept. 11, which has been the recent subject of debate at Slate:

Thomas Hoepker's 9/11 photo

Unlike the military-themed images above, this photo underwent no changes. When it’s hard enough to tell what undoctored images mean, one might hope that propagandists would use images in their proper contexts — but one might be hoping for an awful long time.