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O Captain! My Captain! Rise Up and Read the Blogs

On Saturday, John Fund wrote a story in which he inadvertently referred to a certain well-known political blogger as:

…Ed Morrissey of the conservative blog Captain’s Quarters…

This prompted Morrissey to joke:

I’ll have to get John to update his Rolodex.

On Saturday, a Los Angeles Times op-ed by George Washington University proefessors John Sides and Eric Lawrence began:

Daily Kos. Little Green Footballs. Talking Points Memo. Instapundit. Firedoglake. Captain’s Quarters. These are among the thousands of political blogs that are increasingly a factor in U.S. politics.

If you see where I’m going with this, you are probably someone who is a constant reader of conservative blogs. If you don’t, then you probably are not.

Here’s where I’m going: Twice in two days somebody with access to the mainstream media, from just outside but interested in and conversant with the blogosphere, has failed to recognize that Morrissey shuttered his Captain’s Quarters blog almost five months ago, and has been writing for Michelle Malkin’s Hot Air ever since.

It’s almost the inverse what I’ve said about how MyDD didn’t miss a beat when its top two writers decamped for a new website: as long as it continues to fulfill its mission, many casual readers will barely notice, and will be unlikely to remove it from their bookmarks. In this case it seems that casual observers of the blogosphere are so familiar with Captain’s Quarters that they assume it must be going strong, and it will be ever thus.

In a sense, the blog appears to be influential even when unread. More accurately, Captain’s Quarters simply has strong brand equity. Morrissey’s considered, even verbose explications of the latest political developments from a realistic (though not a “realist”) conservative viewpoint maintains a presence in the mind of even very occasional readers, even if the blog itself is no longer maintained, or present.

That’s not to say his impact has diminished: in fact it may be greater than ever. And so this presents a good opportunity to run another site traffic comparison, counting unique visitors, via Compete:

Captain’s Quarters vs. Hot Air on Compete.com

When Morrissey pulled up stakes, he took his entire readership with him. They didn’t have much of a choice, as typing in the old captainsquartersblog.com URL will swiftly deposit you at hotair.com without displaying so much as a redirect page first. In fact, initially it seems Hot Air grew by an even greater number of visitors than were lost at CQ, even counting the growth in traffic Morrissey experienced in his last month blogging solo. This rapid growth has leveled off and even dipped slightly, but it’s clear now that Hot Air is twice as big as it was before. The move appears to have paid off exactly as they hoped.

I confess that back in February I was personally skeptical of Morrissey’s decision, based primarily on the fact that he was giving up such a strong brand to go join a stable of bloggers under someone else’s shingle. I’m glad now that I didn’t write about it then. But even if Hot Air had received only a modest bump in traffic, the joining of forces would probably have still been a good idea, at least for Morrissey.

Now, if the worst that can be said is that some small number of readers are still thumbing through his archives, perhaps under the impression that he is still updating posts as “Captain Ed,” then that’s fine. It even helps us spot the ones who aren’t really paying attention.

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10 Responses to “O Captain! My Captain! Rise Up and Read the Blogs”


  1. 1 NahnCee

    I read HotAir now because of the Morrissey move. I do not seek out Morrissey to read any more, but am delighted when I notice that something I choose to pursue in HotAir has been written by him. I very rarely post any more, either on HotAir or on Morrissey’s posts. I wish he had stayed Captain’s Quarters and separate, as it was a distinctive voice (and morality) that has been lost in the general conservative oatmeal that is HotAir.

  2. 2 Carl in Jerusalem

    On my blog (Israel Matzav), I link to Ed regularly at HotAir, but I still refer to him as Captain Ed.

  3. 3 John H.

    Instead of going to CQ I now go to Hot Air and real all of Ed’s posts, and no others. Nowhere near as convenient as CQ, but there are only so many hours in a day.

    I wonder if Michelle tracks clicks by authors. It would be interesting to see how Ed’s readership count stacks up against Allahpundit and the rest.

  4. 4 CatoRenasci

    Count me as thoroughly disappointed with Ed’s move. I liked Captain’s Quarters very much. Hot Air leaves me cold. Too busy, not focused. I go, but I just don’t much like it. I would say I read Ed every day before, now, perhaps 1-2 a week. Fah!

  5. 5 Passerby

    Apparently Ed’s tied up allahpundit and is preventing him from updating.

    Either that or AP is on vacation … or something. If there was an announcement, I missed it.

    One of the things I like about HA as opposed to CQ is the admixture of the two articles. Allsh has a more Instapundit flair for summary and comment while Ed does essays.

    -

  6. 6 patrick neid

    Every blog has its own comment section that can never be recreated somewhere else after a transition. Even a new page design can cause upheaval. There’s a bizarre ether like backdrop that is very dangerous to tinker with.

    There were many folks at CQ’s that refused to go to Hot Air based on exiting biases.

    CQ’s, now the James Dean of sites. Dead at such an early age.

  7. 7 Mark in Dallas

    I miss CQ, HotAir.com readership in my case did not increase since I was already reading both… I go straight to Day by Day before heading over to HotAir now instead of going to CQ to see what Capt Ed and the Day by Day gang were up to.

    At any rate what is done is done… Let the mainstream media keep bashing CQ, It is kind of like the Radio Talk show host who has a “special number” for his liberal left wing callers…

    Cheers!
    Mark

  8. 8 Gregory Koster

    Another reason for newspapers to hate blogs: When Captain Ed moved to HotAir, almost all of his readers followed him. That NEVER happens when two newspapers merge. The merged newspaper invariably has a circulation less than the sum of the premerged papers. Another reason to chortle as the MSM sinks into the swamp.

  9. 9 Mark30339

    It seems like Ed is head and shoulders over his teammates on technical know-how and is at least Michelle’s equal on access to guests of substance. He seems to both deserve and enjoy his autonomy. And in case the H.A. brass ever ponders pushing him out, there’s an army of us that will move with him.

    Just 2 things - 1. get rid of “Duuude” links 2. Flush the lines of all commenters and do re-registration.

  1. 1 Defunct Blog Increasingly Influential | Outside The Beltway | OTB

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