Blogs

Why do I blog, Follow up.

Several days ago, I wrote a Why do I blog? blog post, as part of a meme floating around the blogosphere. In it, I asked five other bloggers why they blog. So far, Camille and Jaya have responded with very thoughtful posts. Jafabrit has a great post relating her blogging to her visual art. I hope you read all three posts.

The mirror question has also been catching my interest recently, why don’t you blog? Of course, I can’t go tag a bunch of blogs to ask that question, so it is a question I’ve been talking about with people on phone calls or at dinners. One reason many people don’t blog, is that they don’t know what blogging is, or how to get started. I’m always around for blogging classes and it looks like I’ll be teaching a few different classes over the summer.

A second reason is concern people have about controlling the impression that others form of them online. I touch a little bit on this in my post about collective identity formation. There is something permanent and easily searchable about what we post online and we do have to be careful about what we post. Many people talk about how kids often don’t think about possible implications about what they put on Facebook or MySpace.

Just as we can try to shape, but can’t control, the impressions that people form of us when we meet face to face, the same applies to impressions that people form of us based on what we post online. It is more complicated because so much of what we post online lacks the visual cues that people pick up on face to face. Yet the same issue applies. We can try to shape, but we can’t control the impressions others form of us, either online or off.

So, why don’t you blog? If it is because you don’t know how and want to learn, drop me a note. If it relates to impression formation, or something I’ve missed and you want to share your ideas, let me know.

Music Man '08

Jaya has an interesting post about recent blogging trends. She looks at BlogPulse graphs of the seven deadly sins and the ‘Seven Deadly Sins’ and the ‘Seven Roman Virtues’. The two deadly sins that top the charts are Pride and Anger, averaging over four times as much traffic as the other deadly sins. I cannot help but wonder if these are related. After all, how much anger is a result of someone’s pride being damaged? Not only is this the case on the individual level, but where does national pride and national anger fit in?

When you look at the virtues, Hope runs away with the traffic, averaging over six times the traffic of the other virtues. Perhaps hope is the antidote to the pride and anger that is causing so much problems in our society today.

Friday, I went to see my daughter in her school production of The Music Man.



Music Man, originally uploaded by Aldon.

For those of you who haven’t seen, or don’t remember the musical, it is about a traveling salesman showing up in Iowa selling band instruments. The problem is that he doesn’t know anything about music. Typically, he sells the instruments and gets out of town before anyone knows better.

Yet in this small town in Iowa, he becomes interested in a local librarian, sticks around a little longer than he planned and has to confront what he has done. Yet it all turns out well, as the instruments and the band, even though it doesn’t play all that well, brings joy, meaning and hope to the children and their parents.

These days there is a man who spends too much on haircuts and another who is lacking in years of experience traipsing around Iowa trying to sell their wares. When we are lucky, people might talk about the issues they are discussing. More of the time, people are talking about what they look like or other unimportant minutiae.

Yet when you get right down to it, what they are really selling is hope, a commodity that has been in short supply the past six years. They are selling hope, an antidote to the pride and anger that has so damaged our political system and our standing in the world. Which one has the better prescription? Right now, I’m rooting for haircut guy, but they both have the right message and the right approach. Will they be able to deliver? Well, that is part of the magic of hope. The Music Man changed people’s lives for the better, even though people thought he wouldn’t be able to deliver. I believe that our candidates will do the same.

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Connecticut NOW’s 19th Annual Feminist Awards Dinner

Last night, I attended Connecticut NOW’s 19th Annual Feminist Awards Dinner. The food was surprisingly good for an award dinner. The speeches were particularly long, but they were very inspiring. At one point, the woman next to me and commented about it being a pity that no one from the press was there. I pointed out that there were at least three bloggers there, Maura, Larkspur, and myself.

Maura and I were sitting at a table with Ned Lamont and Jim Himes. I had gone in Kim’s stead, since Kim had company visiting from out of state. She told me that it was important to make sure that Ned and others did a good job of introducing Jim around.

Jim was given a chance to say a brief hello to the crowd.



Jim Himes addreses CT NOW, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Ned was there to receive the Eleanor Roosevelt Award for Political Activism on behalf of Women's Rights. I took a brief video of his comments. Unfortunately, I only had my Digital Camera, no lighting, and only thought to record his comments half way through.

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A Clash of Cultures

It seems as if much of the discussion online about the Obama MySpace page has gotten mired down in people attacking either Joe Anthony or the Obama campaign, and it is missing something much bigger. The event was but one small example of a clash of cultures, a clash between volunteer driven bottom up activities and paid top down controlled activities. As the Internet empowers more people to take action on their own, we will see more clashes like this.

At the Media in Transition conference, there were discussions about historical contexts. We can look at the Summer of Love when Free Love was the rage, and see how it applies to today when free information is all the rage.

Woodstock started off as a commercial enterprise. An heir to a drugstore and toothpaste manufacturing fortune hooked up with a record company executive and two other people to create Woodstock. Things spiraled out of control until it became a free concert and a precursor to Altamont.

More recently, we see legal battles between groups like the MPAA and RIAA trying to control the distribution of copyrighted materials, going after file sharing companies, individual students, and even sites like Digg. We see a billion dollar lawsuit between Viacom and Google’s YouTube.

Google, themselves, are out there profiting off of all the volunteer driven bottom up activities. They index websites that have been freely put up and make money off of the searches they provide. MySpace is predicted to be worth $15 billion in three years. How did they get there? All the free content created for them by MySpace users. Clearly Rupert Murdoch has done well on his $580 million acquisition.

So, Joe Anthony has spent two years tending to a MySpace page that created value for Rupert Murdoch and for Barack Obama. At some point, issues came up about who has what control over the page and what sort of compensation should be tied to that control. The negotiations didn’t work out well, and now everyone is looking at what happened.

Wikipedia, another organization that benefits greatly from volunteer driven bottom up activities, defines the Gift Economy as “an economic system in which goods and services are given without any explicit agreement for immediate or future quid pro quo. Typically, a gift economy occurs in a culture or subculture that emphasizes social or intangible rewards for generosity”

That definition was a gift to Wikipedia. I hope that the person who wrote those words has at least gotten adequate “social or intangible rewards”. This blog post is, in part, a gift to Google and I sure hope I get some “social or intangible rewards” for the blogging I do. It seems as if Joe Anthony participated in the gift economy as well, yet the rewards, social, intangible, or economic appears to have been illusive.

The gift economy is a great thing. Many of the great things in our country and our world have been a result of the gift economy. Yet we all still need to feed ourselves, pay our rent or mortgage, pay for our children’s education, and so on. You can’t do this on karma alone. There is the old saying, “Follow your dreams and the money will follow”. For my sake, for Joe Anthony’s sake, for the sake of so many who have poured their hearts and souls into campaigns, past and present, I hope it is true.

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(Cross posted at Greater Democracy)

Jim Himes addresses Fairfield DFA



Multimedia message, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Jim Himes addresses Fairfield DFA

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