Politics
The New Elite in the Fourth Estate, you have the power, the danger of a new incumbency, and holding on to the long tail.
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 09/17/2006 - 04:33(Cross posted at Greater Democracy)
Three years ago, many of us went to rallies where a presidential candidate told us, “You have the power”. We dutifully replied, “We have the power” and went about owning our newfound power in different ways. Some of us did what we were told as volunteers, some became leaders of new or revitalized Democratic clubs or local parties. Some of us went on to become candidates or even elected officials. Some of us are now incumbents running for re-election. Many of us found our voice online. Gov. Dean has gone on to become head of the DNC.
At a meeting in Burlington a year or so ago, I warned that as we became the new leaders, the new consultants, we also would become the new incumbents, and we faced the danger of acting out our own version of the line from Animal Farm, “All grassroots activists are created equal, but some or more equal than others.”
This has come home to me with the recent discussions of a meeting of bloggers with President Clinton. Two years ago, I was privileged to be one of the bloggers that received credentials to cover the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston. I remember the blog posts back then about who got to go and who didn’t. It is a difficult issue when there are few slots available. Some of the posts sounded like people expressing their disappointment about not making the short list, but others raised important points about what the selection criteria was, or should have been.
Now, there is a similar discussion about the Clinton gathering. The Republic of T started it off. Liza picks up the ball and runs with it. Micah Sifry at Personal Democracy Forum and kid oakland, in a DailyKos diary explore the issue further.
The most blaring concern is the lack of racial diversity. This is a big problem that I cannot speak nearly as well as Liza can about, perhaps in part because of my own whiteness. Yet I suspect the lack of racial diversity is just the most blatant part of the problem. Micah writes about how “power is seductive” and “most of them [the invited bloggers] were pretty awed by the event”. The bloggers represented are the new elite of the fourth estate. They have a great number of readers. They are the high frequency population in a statistical distribution, and not the Long Tail.
The problem is, they also have the danger of being a monoculture. Part of the beauty of the long tail is the diversity, the hybrid vigor that it brings. So, I get worried when I read writeups about the event, such as Christy Hardin Smith saying, “we wanted to emphasize the need for better messaging and coordination/cooperation with blogs and the Democratic leadership”. Whose message is being coordinated?
Do we have a new elite in the fourth estate? Do we have grassroots activists that are more equal than others? Have we moved from Edward R. Murrow, whom the http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/M/htmlM/murrowedwar/murrowedwar.htm >Museum of Broadcast Communications describes as “the most distinguished and renowned figure in the history of American broadcast journalism,” and Walter Cronkite, “the most trusted man in television news” to a new generation?
Perhaps. Yet the long tail remains. The belief that all of us have the power, and not just a select few, remains. The belief that anyone can start a blog and get their voice heard remains. Yes, there is the problem with getting people to read our little blogs. There is the big problem of the digital divide. The voices that we really need to hear, the voices of the dispossessed, the disabled and the disenfranchised, regardless of their race, do not have access to blogs, and if they do, know one ever finds their blogs. Perhaps Winston Smith was right when he wrote, “If there is hope, it lies in the proles”. Perhaps what really matters isn’t lunch with a former President to better coordinate messaging, but helping at a Community Technology Center to bring new voices online.
I’ve looked at blogs from both sides now, from win and lose, and still somehow, it’s blogs’ illusions I recall. I really don’t know blogs, at all.
Zephyr and LonelyGirl
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 09/16/2006 - 16:36(Cross posted at Gather)
As I as driving home from the store this afternoon, I heard an interesting juxtaposition on the NPR show, On the Media. I tuned in during their interview with Zephyr Teachout, director of the Sunlight Foundation. The Sunlight Foundation has been working with a lot of really interesting projects such as The Punch Clock Campaign, which is encouraging elected officials to post their daily schedule online, and Congresspedia. I’ve been told they are also helping fund ReadtheBill.
Key messages of the interview were about the importance of strengthening the relationship between citizens and their representatives and changing the behavior of citizens to get involved in political life in more ways than just voting.
I became friends with Zephyr back when she was working on Gov. Dean’s 2004 presidential bid. The idea of increasing citizen involvement has been a consistent through line in her work.
I was struck by the article that On the Media followed this with. The rise and fall of YouTube sensation, lonelygirl15 was discussed. They spoke of lonelygirl as participatory art and interviewed an expert in collaborative play. Complaints about the whole lonelygirl experiment were that it wasn’t transparent enough, it wasn’t authentic about its inauthenticity, and perhaps most interestingly, that it never gave the public a chance to fully and actively participate in the game.
When you bring the two articles together, they make particular sense. Our government hasn’t been giving the public a chance to actively participate in the game of politics. It has become too much of a big money, lobbyist, inside Washington incumbents’ game. It isn’t transparent enough. It isn’t authentic enough.
The Punch Clock Campaign is a great start, but is it enough? Back in May, Tom Watson wrote about Ned Lamont as the YouTube Senator, in part because of the great success of the Ned Lamont group there. Senator Edwards’ leadership PAC has a videoblog. Yet these are all campaigning, and not governance.
When I worked as Blogmaster for the John DeStefano campaign, people would ask him, and me, if he would have a blog if he gets elected Governor. We both said we hoped so. But perhaps, that isn’t enough anymore. Who will really be the first YouTube Senator? SenLamont? Not only putting his daily schedule online, but also posting a personal videoblog about what went on in the Senate? How about the first YouTube President? Prez44? Talking about what has gone on in the Rose Garden and the Oval Office the way lonelygirl15 talked about the hike she went on?
As a side note, I did write a blog post, Like Joe is so Emo, talking about the video Hope is Emo, and thinking about Sen. Lieberman in the context of YouTube culture.
Perhaps, if we get elected officials communicating with the electorate via something like YouTube, we can give the public a chance to actively participate in the game of our governance in a way that no one yet has imagined. I think this would be a wonderful thing.
Full disclosure: I was BlogMaster for the DeStefano campaign in 2005. During 2006, I have been working with the Lamont campaign as Technology coordinator. I have been in discussions with people close to Sen. Edwards about possibly working with his campaign in the event that Sen. Edwards decides to run for President in 2008, and I’ll be speaking on a panel with Zephyr on Oct 7th at the Action Coalition for Media Education conference in Burlington, VT.
Media Education
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 09/06/2006 - 12:20(Cross posted at One America.)
Today, Fiona started her final year of nursery school. Yesterday, Ned Lamont unveiled his education plan, and across the blogs, there are discussions about media education issues, so I thought this would be a good time to talk a bit about media education.
Over on MyLeftNutmeg, CTBlogger writes about how a local paper has started covering an important local story because of what was being written in blogs. On MyDD, Jerome Armstrong writes about critiquing political advertisements. Meanwhile, Act for Change is encouraging people to contact ABC about their planned ‘docudrama’ about 9/11 which Editor and Publisher reports, “at least two real-life figures portrayed in the movie, Richard Clarke and Sandy Berger, have raised factual objections.”
There is a famous quote attributed to Thomas Jefferson, "An informed citizenry is the bulwark of a democracy". To have a better-informed citizenry, we need better journalism and people who better understand the media. That is why the Citizen Journalism efforts, such as those at the One America Committee blog are so important.
For those who have a strong interest in media education, I want to recommend the Action Coalition on Media Education conference that will be happening Oct 6-8 in Burlington, VT. Jerome Armstrong will be speaking there. I will be on a panel, and a lot of other prominent media educators and citizen/activists will be speaking. I hope some of you will be able to attend.
Andre Agassi and Joe Lieberman
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 09/03/2006 - 21:19(Cross posted at DailyKos)
Smart lad, to slip betimes away
From fields where glory does not stay
And early though the laurel grows
It withers quicker than the rose.
I’ve been thinking a lot about this stanza from A.E. Housman’s great poem, “To an Athlete Dying Young” recently. Andre Agassi’s tearful farewell brought it into sharp focus. I sat in my father-in-law’s living room, with the extended family as we watched his last set, cheering him on each painful step of the way. It is sad to see him go. He has brought so much grace and excitement to the U.S. Open, and it will not be the same without him. Yet he knew it was time to step aside for a new generation of tennis stars, and he has done it incredibly gracefully.
This marks a profound contrast to Sen. Lieberman. Voters in Connecticut no long see Sen. Lieberman as a champion of the causes of the people of Connecticut. Some people question whether he ever was such a champion, others defend him to this day, but still call on him to recognize and acknowledge his defeat last month, when a record number of voters in a Connecticut primary voted for his opponent.
Andre Agassi leaves the field, with his head held high and people wishing it wasn’t time for him to go. Sen. Lieberman sticks around as people wish he would just leave.
Dave Mooney Press Release
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 09/03/2006 - 08:12Last night, I was contacted by Dave Mooney, who is running for State Representative in the 120th Assembly District, which covers part of Stratford. He was building a list of bloggers to send his press releases out to.
Later in the evening, I received Mooney State Rep Campaign Energized for November Election. Dave has been running a very energetic campaign for several months and it is great to see him reaching out to bloggers.