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Is Personal Blogging Fast-Fading?

By Rob Peters, The Tyee. Posted June 26, 2008.


The golden age of the digital diarist may be over. Have we realized blogging isn't as fun as it sounds? Or that we're not so interesting after all?
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Remember when people used to blog for fun? When you could type in a friend's clever web address and be instantly delighted with the goings-on of their daily lives?

I recall a not-too-distant blogging golden age when just about everyone's dog kept an online journal. The daily musings of friends and neighbors seemed to be a big part of the common online diet.

Lately, however, I'm hard (word) pressed to find a (live) journaler to save my iBook (sorry). Gone are the days when "I already read that on your blog" was a common conversation killer. So what's happened?

Technorati founder David Sifry, who compiles extensive blogosphere stats from time to time, released numbers last spring that showed a potential plateau of blogging growth. While the number of blogs was still increasing at an impressive clip, the stats showed more and more people weren't updating the old ones, thus keeping the number of active blogs stalled at about 15.5 million. Blogging activity appeared to have peaked.

Of course there continues to be a flurry of new business and commercial blogs these days, but I'm talking about the more personal variety -- the ones with that elusive stamp of authenticity that says, hey, I'm a diary that's been made public for some reason. Or as my girlfriend calls them, pleasure blogs. Where have all the pleasure bloggers gone?

Musing fatigue

Perhaps we've realized that blogging every day isn't as fun as it sounds. A happened-upon red swirl of autumn leaves before a backdrop of unusually artful East Vancouver graffiti may very well be a blog-worthy topic. Life's minor muses are perhaps what inspire the pleasure blogger to pick up a keyboard in the first place, but it actually takes work to develop new material on a regular basis. No, writing never becomes easy no matter how long you do it.

Some difficult truths have been brought to light by the personal blogging blitz of the last few years. One such revelation is that most of us aren't as interesting as we think. Waking up every day and jotting down some deep thoughts about breakfast is a difficult way to sustain any kind of readership. A creative writing teacher once told me that everyone has lived one novel-worthy story. One being the operative word, I think.

It's as if we've gone through a few generations of blogging natural selection. The ones left are the big alpha bloggers, well suited to the harsh -- and fickle -- web environment. Said alphas have learned how to make money from their wordslinging, transforming what was once a very grassroots medium into something much more commercial. The pleasure bloggers just didn't have the genes, nor the capitalistic instincts, to survive.

Now, even big newspapers have "bloggers" writing for them. Hmmm... so you have someone writing about current events for a newspaper and getting paid for it. Is that person still a blogger?

Relax! Microblog!

Blogging malaise might be due to the myriad of options now available to the traditional pleasure blogger. A yen for self-expression can be fulfilled online in any number of ways -- social networking, participatory news reporting, Flickring, YouTubing -- you name it. The blog has stiff competition.

Even so, there does appear to be a more realistic version of the blog coming down the fibre optic trunk line. If filling an entire blank page is a little daunting, how does a 200-character text box sound? Enter the microblog.

Twitter and Jaiku are the front-runners in this arena, though Facebook and MySpace have status updates that function much the same way. You write a line or two of text enlightening your friends about what you're up to, and voilĂ , you've microblogged.

To be honest, I don't know anyone using Twitter or Jaiku other than my geek techie friends, but microblogs are quickly gaining momentum beyond early adopters.

Twitter played a large role in the reporting of the recent earthquake in China, and the company reportedly just secured millions in new funding. Meanwhile, Google acquired Jaiku in the fall, likely a smart investment.

The move from big blogs to smaller ones says a lot about our cultural attention span. One or two lines of text are about as much writing as we can handle -- either creating or consuming it. Which begs the question, why did I write a bloated 750-word blog exposé? I could have just Twittered it in a line or two.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: blog, blogging, micro-blogging, twitter, social networking

Rob Peters writes for The Tyee.

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View:
I was the first blogger
Posted by: strahlungsamt on Jun 26, 2008 1:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not really. But back in the mid 90s, at the start of the dot-bomb era, I was experimenting with html with fonts, colors and images. All the "Cool Kids" had websites and each site was different from the others in some way. Then I started experimenting with perl/cgi, sql (that's programming and database stuff), eventually graduating to php, and suddenly I was making my sites come alive and dynamically generating content. I wrote a photo catalog to document my hobby and had an online form where I could update the text every day. I was the coolest kid on the block.

Back then, people would publish links to their "websites". Creativity was king and every idea was fresh.

Then came blogs and the creativity was over. Suddenly everybody's site became the same cookie-cutter blogger/wordpress/whatever preloaded program and go. Suddenly every schmuck had a boring life story he/she had to tell. Just as MTV killed my interest in music and film, MySpace and Facebook killed my interest in the Internet.

I have never owned a blog and I never will. Unless, of course, I design it from the bottom up myself. And Google invents a "Blog Block" feature in it's search engine to separate blogs from real websites.

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» RE: I was the first blogger Posted by: QCao009
It's a numbers thing.
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Jun 26, 2008 3:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A while ago, the idea of having your own blog sounded neat. You could put all your thoughts out there for everyone to read, without setting up your own website and other technical obstacles.

The trouble was that everyone else was too busy writing their own blog to read yours. So now everybody has a blog, but nobody is reading them.

And while some people actually put some thought into them and wrote some interesting things, 99% got the wrong idea: that you're just supposed to ramble on about your summer vacation, how little Christopher said "Ga-gaaa" for the first time today, and other personal trivia. Who really cares about that stuff, except maybe your mother and your grandma?...who you should really be calling or visiting, and not expecting them to read about you in your blog. Shame on you!

Having said all of that, I think it's still a cool thing, because people can talk about politics and other stuff they might not be comfortable talking about on a street corner. And the average person can tap into the underground/alternative/counterculture without having to go to San Francisco and put flowers in your hair.

Good topic. Good article.

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» Very Good Point Posted by: gigantor21
» RE: Very Good Point Posted by: HoboHomo
Somebody please listen to me!
Posted by: rugger on Jun 26, 2008 4:26 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've always thought that blogs were a pathetic attempt people used to get some attention. Like anything else, there's too many people trying to say something without a base of knowledge to be meaningful. In case no one has noticed, there are alot of morons out there. The last thing we need is to give them attention.

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YES It is like Chating
Posted by: flymulla on Jun 26, 2008 5:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree that this is no longer the norm of the day. People are getting busier and oil is going higher. The chatting that was had the time. We look for the bread, chat, or blog. The personal blog is kaput. Many use this to their own advantages and make money out of this and do not inform you that your blog gave them little cash. The blog as is a think tank. Some pick up the best ones, use these to cerate the wealth, and forget the bloggers.
I thank you
Firozali A. Mulla MBA PhD
P.O.Box 6044
Dar-Es-Salaam
Tanzania
East Africa

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blog and be damned
Posted by: John Orford on Jun 26, 2008 5:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does anyone really want to spend their time reading blogs? Do the writers have anything fresh to say? Most of them cannot even express themselves clearly. Who wants to read vicarious gossip about tawdry lives?

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» RE: blog and be damned Posted by: donl51
It's A Process
Posted by: craigandrew on Jun 26, 2008 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think blogging has become a part of a larger therapeutic process and the first wave of bloggers have come to the end of the blogging part of that process.

When we wish to make changes in our life we first think about the change and maybe write about it to ourselves in private journals, but then we have to make the huge step to share it with friends and family. Many people have a hard time with that third step of initially sharing things and blogging has shown itself to be an excellent intermediary step. In blogland we can share with strangers as a test ground before sharing with friends and family.

C:)

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Uhm
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Jun 26, 2008 6:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a society where hardly anyone actually reads or keeps up with current events very well and so few are doing much more with their lives than work/tv/sleep/work/tv/sleep/work why would you expect anyone to want to read what they have to write in a blog????

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This has nothing to do w/our subject at hand,but had to tell it
Posted by: donl51 on Jun 26, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A free pc game just came out that allows a player to torture others,using from a chainsaw to a razor blade!!,Isn't that great? and it was said that bugs bunny cartoons were too violent for our youth!!....gotta love it![just now heard this on news,

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Lots to say, lots to learn
Posted by: Sunfell on Jun 26, 2008 7:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been blogging since '01. And I've been reading blogs since then, too. I like the interesting and eclectic bloggers- and the specialty subject ones, too- I learn a lot from them.

Blogs are what you make them- they reflect the person who writes them. Yes, the vast majority of them are only fit for family and friends (babies are only interesting to their families, not me), or have stuff in them that would have been scribbled into a spiral bound notebook- then burned a decade later.

But if you dig a little- you'll find some real gems. It takes effort, and time- but I learn something every day from blogs- and consider some bloggers extensions of myself- with many similar interests and tastes. They find things I find interesting, and in turn, I do the same thing. We all benefit from this larger group mind.

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» RE: Lots to say, lots to learn Posted by: helenwheels
Blogs are boring!
Posted by: soundman on Jun 26, 2008 7:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find endless amusement on the web, and 75% of my news, and over 80% of professional information for my work. But I try to avoid blogs - I see journalism and information resources as valuable, but Blogs are usually self indulgent idiocy now worth the bandwidth and the time it takes to try reading them.

Alternet is one good source of news, opinion, and ideas, but the blogging level is a turn-off for me, and there seems to be no way to subscribe to Alternet and NOT get the blogs included.

There is a huge difference between a reporter or columnist sharing opinion pieces, and the blatherings of someone who has no training in constructing language, and has too much to say with no content or personal interest to me!

I'll stop right now so as to avoid the appearance of doing my own "blog" (stupid word, too!).

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» RE: You can turn off the comments Posted by: helenwheels
» RE: Blogs are boring! Posted by: pomes
This is a ten year old story!
Posted by: simon on Jun 26, 2008 9:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or perhaps it's just that the phenomenon is cyclical.

How do I know? Because I wrote essentially the same story for Salon in 1998: linked text

Read the piece and you'll see that, even then, 'the golden age of the digital diarist,' to quote today's AlterNet headline, was widely being lamented as lost to history.

Shortly after that date, of course, the form got new life with the advent of Blogs (which allowed people to create diaries without knowing HTML).

So, maybe we'll see a new technology come along soon that will set diaries/blogs off on a third wave of popularity.

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» ... you mean, like the VLOG? Posted by: stellabloo
blogging = old and busted
Posted by: cyr3n on Jun 26, 2008 10:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
vidcasting = new hotness.

I think that the risks of blogging daily have outweighed the benefits. People have used other people's blogs against them and that reality has really put a creative damper on what's put out there. What are the benefits exactly? Peer recognition, monetary sponsorship, spreading ideas.. But as sponsors look towards vidcasts (which require more entry-level investment towards equipment and editing skills) it diminishes the returns for a blogger to go about exposing themselves on a daily basis.

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Simplistic and Misleading Article
Posted by: Libertine on Jun 26, 2008 10:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article would make a person who knew nothing about blogs believe that all blogs are either badly-written accounts of people's mundane daily lives or commercially driven generic blogs for the purposes of making money.

Both types of blogs exist in spades, of course, but people blog for a wide variety of reasons.

I've been blogging successfully for four years. The original blog was started as a theme blog; a platform to discuss my decidedly alternative approach to sexual ethics. It branched out into an eclectic mix of topics added to the original theme. This blog also has an extensive list of links for those interested in various types of non-monogamous sexual orientations.

I do not often write about the mundane details of my everyday life. My blog is primarily my personal op-ed page where I give my personal take on a wide variety of topics; mainly cultural and social issues, politics, religion, rants, and sex.

My goal is to make people think; to consider things in ways they might not have considered before. Whether or not they end up agreeing with me is beside the point; if they've stepped outside the box, even if just for a moment, then I've done my job.

I know I've done my job when I get emails from people who are struggling with their own non-monogamous leanings who say that my blog has helped them make better sense of things.

I've met lots of like-minded people while blogging, while also making friends with and gaining understanding of those who have a different view of the world.

A couple of blog posts about why I blog:

Making People Think

Blogging Is Its Own Reward

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» The Fad is Over Posted by: Artkansas
» RE: The Fad is Over Posted by: pomes
Doesn't matter
Posted by: PandaBear on Jun 26, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love writing in my myspace blog. I've made some friends that way, and I try to do a nice job. Sometimes it's just weird musings about everyday life, but other times I'll pick a topic and develop it. I enjoy looking for interesting graphics and videos to incorporate into my entries too.

I've tried blogspot, but had trouble attracting readers or getting my friends to read it. Everyone has a myspace page pretty much in my circle of friends, and so, instant readership, and it's easy to advertise when I have a new blog entry.

I view these so-called micro-blogs as something different completely. Nice to check in on people.

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Doesn't matter
Posted by: PandaBear on Jun 26, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love writing in my myspace blog. I've made some friends that way, and I try to do a nice job. Sometimes it's just weird musings about everyday life, but other times I'll pick a topic and develop it. I enjoy looking for interesting graphics and videos to incorporate into my entries too.

I've tried blogspot, but had trouble attracting readers or getting my friends to read it. Everyone has a myspace page pretty much in my circle of friends, and so, instant readership, and it's easy to advertise when I have a new blog entry.

I view these so-called micro-blogs as something different completely. Nice to check in on people.

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Tumblelogging
Posted by: c3o on Jun 26, 2008 5:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with the premise of the article, but it's too bad there's no mention of tumblelogging.

In my opinion those are the clearest successors to "pleasure blogs": Dead-simple multimedia blogs whose style fits right in the middle between lengthy, article-style blog posts and the chatty text messages of microblogs. Unlike Facebook/Twitter/FriendFeed/whichever other of dozens of services you might use to share short messages, tumblelogs retain the crucial personalization/identification aspect of blogging, letting you use a layout of choice and your own domain name, while still making it a lot easier and more fun to share stuff with the world (whether it's your own creations/thoughts, or something you found elsewhere and liked).

Check out the Wikipedia article, some examples at Tumblr or give it a try for yourself (without even having to sign up) at Soup.io.

And here comes the disclosure: Soup.io is my own project, so I might be a little biased. But I truly believe in this medium, so please take a look and judge for yourself (and give feedback, if you have some).

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We've moved on to bigger issues
Posted by: pomes on Jun 27, 2008 10:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The generation of bloggers who cut their teeth on writing about their day to day lives are now growing up and using those tools to communicate about more important issues. The blog space is not just being commercialized, it's become an activist and pamphleteer platform like no other.

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hehe
Posted by: xmvince on Jun 27, 2008 5:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
now we have twitter, super blogging! what a waste of time, anyone that uses something like that is looking for enjoyment in all the wrong places.

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it was somebody's blog which changed my life
Posted by: cherylsass123 on Jun 28, 2008 2:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it was somebody's blog, or online diary which changed my life; that of a san jose california transsexual woman named stephanie erin thomas. she posted her transition diary in TG forum.com, and day after day, I would read this and see how much she and I had in common from childhood and high school ,on. I now keep an online blog , myself , as I often feel like I reside here in southbury CT, but do NOT really live. anyway, here I was , this miserable misfit of a pathetic attempt at trying to live my life as I was taught from childhood; that was as the supposed " man" thing my mom and the doctors told me I was. meanwhile, I never could really grasp the competitiveness of the male world; where, on one hand, that gender goes about its dairy life of " dog eat dog" in the workplace. yet on the other hand, I could not even make relationships work out with those I was attracted to, as in women. I was never any good at playing the role of " patriarchial prom king", and all I had to live for was my pot, my best and only real friend in life. after getting brutally assaulted by some teenage drug dealers in a pot deal gone bad/hate crime due to them seeing me as " faggot girly man"; leaving me with 3 broken teeth. I strongly began to question if I was really that " gender" bestowed upon me by birth sex alone. I never could fight, and well, I often expressed my desire how I'd much rather be a WOMAN- something I sure felt like I was more of from age 6-7 on; often, like stephanie, I'd sit down to pee in unisex restrooms just to see what being female was like. and then I began to read stephanie's online diary; which I found after typing into ask.com " what does a woman sound like when she pees in the toilet?" [ A: "tinkle"- by stephanie erin thomas- story about TS "coming out" at work] a few years back, I learned my curiousity was not a " fetish", but that I was TRANSGENDER. but reading stephanie's blog really put me in touch with the girl hidden inside my soul. I had much anger toward women- especially the high feminine ones whom I saw as " bitches. yet I "used the ladies room"[ unisex] every chance I got. she seems to have much the same anger throughtout her life as myself, including misogynistic thoughts toward women; with two exceptions. 1. she grew up, had a career, spouse,family; 2. she enlisted in the army to serve in vietnam- hoping uncle sam would make her[ as "him"] a "real man"! needless to say, when she explained how liberating crossdressing was for her with that dress: I said, " maybe the reason I'm so angry at women in dresses is because I want to wear one?" needless to say, a year later, I donned that cute denim mini-skirt/sleeveless top; and my life CHANGED for the better! three years later, I am legally female, legally changing both name and gender; and on hormones for over two years now! I'm no longer angry at women- rather being still sexually attracted to women- I now can relate to women much better emotionally, this as transsexual lesbian! and so, somebody's blog , I'll say, NOT only changed my life, but probably SAVED it as well from despair and suicide!

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Quality, not quantity
Posted by: tomkara on Jun 28, 2008 6:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While the article discusses the usual fixation on "the numbers - going up or going down?", who really cares about that except as a function of some arcane sociological analysis? I find most blogs by chance - doing a search on a subject that interests me. Perhaps that will lead me to read other blog entries by that person, and thus I will have found someone I might want to correspond with - which I think is one of the most vital features of the web: allowing people to connect who would never find each other otherwise. Good writing is indeed often difficult, and finding an intelligent person who can communicate in depth about something worthwhile is much more meaningful that the brief outbursts of bland expression that more and more people seem limited to, such as in 'microblogging'.

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» RE: Quality, not quantity Posted by: MysticPaige
If it weren't for blogs...
Posted by: YogiBear on Jun 28, 2008 9:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...we would have never learned half the lies told about Iraq. Not that it made much of a difference, but it's nice to know when you're getting screwed.

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blogging bad for business
Posted by: veevee on Jul 2, 2008 12:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think it is as much a problem with lack of interest, but more a forced cutback by employers who have put the fear of job loss in the minds of the employee over the last few years. I know a lot of people that had been blogging for years about every minute of their lives but chose to stop blogging because of pressures from new company policies about Myspace usage etc. You see articles here and there about people being sued and losing their jobs because of what they have in their blog or on their Myspace page. What is fun about having to edit how you really feel about your anal retentive boss or your smelly co-worker, or how that drunk night out with your guy pals REALLY went down? Not fun if you could potentially lose your job over it. I blame frivolous lawsuits and those uptight jerks in Human Resources who are starting online "pre-hire" searches for your name and judging you on what they find, not a lack of interest.

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