(May 1, 2008) When the Humboldt Herald blog posted news that County Supervisor Roger Rodoni had died in a car accident, it got 51 responses, mostly people expressing condolences. One person posted an old Irish blessing.
It took a tragic death to unite our local blog commentators. Few of the comments you read on our various local blogs on any given day are as thoughtful. Some are downright nasty, and the nastiness seems to stretch across the political spectrum. Those on the left show no more restraint than those on the right.
People in the press have a hate-love relationship with bloggers. If you earn your keep as a writer, you tend to be leery of anyone who produces content for no pay. Many of our local reporters read the local blogs obsessively and many will admit that they troll the blogs for story ideas. Meanwhile, the local bloggers appear to read the local press with equal zeal; you know that because their chats revolve around items culled from the Eureka Reporter, the Times-Standard, the Journal and other papers.
It should be a symbiotic relationship, although sometimes it feels more parasitic. The amount of time people spend reading blogs takes from the time and effort they used to spend reading newspapers. There are many nails in the newspaper industry’s coffin. Blogs are just one.
But you have to wonder what everyone would chat so passionately about if both Rob Arkley and Dean Singleton pulled the plug on the two dailies. You tend to not know what’s not reported. It’s hard to have a passionate conversation about a topic few know anything about.
My relationship with chats and blogs goes back to 1998, when I reported online for a subscription-based site. The second my editor posted my stories to the Web, some neurotic Net chatterer would repost it so people could read it for free. (See tinyurl.com/63khgz). Usually the talk was half about the news I reported on and half about the idiocy of my analysis. Back then I loved the chats. I came from a decade of writing into a void, where for all I knew my stories served only to catch puppy pee. To know that people cared enough to cut and paste my story and comment on it thrilled me. My romance with Internet comments ended a year later when I did a live chat on Yahoo! and I saw chatterers on a side screen hitting each other up for dates even as I tried to answer questions about stock market scams. Back then few saw the danger blogs presented.
They are dangerous. Unfiltered blog comments take arguments off the dining table and put them onto the world’s desktop. Imagine the last time you had a passionate, inane argument with your family or friends. Now insert into that picture a transcriber, taking down every word everyone says. Only the transcriber publishes the transcription for all to see. That’s what is happening with some blog comments.
It’s a great thing for those rare times you have great thinkers at your table; you’d want to capture a back and forth between Cornel West and Mario Cuomo, for example or Carl Sagan and William Gibson. At its best, a blog can be a forum for great dialog; today’s version of the correspondence between great thinkers that existed in the old days, only now we don’t have to wait for the writers to die to read the letters.
Will Plaza Point put the kibosh on Arcata whippersnapper shenanigans?
meetings / 4 p.m. Sun Yi's Academy of Tae Kwon Do, 1215 Giuntoli Lane, Arcata. Help gather valid signatures to get the 'California Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act' on the 2012 ballot. E-mail northernhumboldtlabelgmos@hotmail.com. 223-0424.
music / 3 p.m. Cafe Veritas/Mosgo's, 180 Westwood Center, Arcata. Informal monthly gathering of musicians playing Irish and other Celtic music. Hosted by Seabury Gould. seaburygould.com. 845-8167.
etc. / 10 a.m. Chinmaya Mission near Piercy. Weekend-long direct action orientation features workshops, role playing, seminars, ceremonies and field trips. Bring food, bedding, warm clothes, signs, banners, bikes, drums, acoustic instruments. Pre-register. saverichardsongrove.org. 932-5898.
outdoors / 9 a.m. Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge, 1020 Ranch Road, Loleta. Meet at Refuge Visitor Center off Hookton Road. Leisurely, two- to three-hour trip intended for people wanting to learn birds of Humboldt Bay area. 822-3613.
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