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August 02, 2007
Why Americans Love The Blogs
Matt writes:
People -- lots of people -- want to hear Copps talk about telecommunications regulation and what they can do to help fight for a better regulatory environment. And the people aren't lobbyists for phone companies or cable companies or television networks or anything. They're ordinary citizens (relatively speaking) who've gotten interested in telecom regulation and doing public interest activism on that topic.
This is, in my view, one of the aspects of the netroots that gets most overlooked in the media coverage I tend to see. This nexus of issues is an area where until very recently the conversation was entirely dominated by interested corporations. There was no equivalent to labor unions or environmental groups to anything else in civil society to way in. And now there is! It gets much less attention than anti-war activism or sending mean emails to journalists, but these telecom and media regulation issues are a very big deal to the netroots. People didn't just show up to hear Copps speak (and he's not a very good speaker), but gave him a standing ovation when he took the podium and are laughing at his broadband policy jokes (which aren't, in my view, especially funny).
And it's wider than that. Forgetting that this is a Telecom panel, what you have here are dozens ad dozens of individuals who paid a fairly large amount of money to come to Chicago and listen to very technical, somewhat dull discussions of policy matters. That's, uh, not supposed to happen.
In his recently resuscitated article on Why Americans Hate the Media, James Fallows spends some time talking about the media's tendency to focus on the how, rather than the what, of politics:
In the 1992 presidential campaign candidates spent more time answering questions from "ordinary people"—citizens in town-hall forums, callers on radio and TV talk shows—than they had in previous years. The citizens asked overwhelmingly about the what of politics: What are you going to do about the health-care system? What can you do to reduce the cost of welfare? The reporters asked almost exclusively about the how: How are you going to try to take away Perot's constituency? How do you answer charges that you have flip-flopped?
I find the same thing in my writing. I got lots of e-mails asking me to comment on Rudy Giuliani's health care plan. I got very few asking me to comment on polls showing him dropping points to Thompson. Turns out that there's a fairly large number of people who like to hear about health care policy. Not enough to sustain a cable television show, maybe, but more than enough to sustain a blog, and possibly my career.
Indeed, it turns out there's a large number of people who like to hear about, and be involved in, all sorts of policies. Blogs have matched them up with the technical information, experts, and primary source documents that, previously, they couldn't easily access. And this allows them to mobilize, and gain a voice in, obscure policy areas where even a bit of citizen involvement can exert a surprising amount of influence. This is why concerns that blogs will destroy political discourse are so silly. Here I am at the center of blogofascism, and the discourse is more serious, and more substantive, than anything I've ever seen in the media. When's the last time Wolf Blitzer spent an hour on the 700 megahertz spectrum auction?
August 2, 2007 | Permalink
Comments
God bless you Mr. Gore for inventing the internets!
Posted by: yep | Aug 2, 2007 4:55:12 PM
I am a minor league policy wonk because of the blogs I read. I can rattle off facts about policy that leave my friends and family wondering how I know the things I know. Blogs are like Cliff Notes for policy, they make policy easier to digest for folks like myself.
Posted by: jbou | Aug 2, 2007 5:46:23 PM
Dozens and dozens! Wow! A mass movement! Power to the people! Up against the wall!
Posted by: ostap | Aug 2, 2007 5:55:02 PM
Are you kidding ostap? Dozens and dozens certainly _is_ a mass movement for a panel on obscure telecommunication policy.
Posted by: Quixote | Aug 2, 2007 6:14:07 PM
Not to get too carried away or anything here, but who's to say there isn't enough of a market for this sort of thing on some cable show? Could The Ezra and Matt Hour, or The Ezra and Ross Hour, top Glenn Beck?
The conventional wisdom has been that the mass market media needs to race to the bottom, and I'm sure it's backed up by some data. But it doesn't seem unimaginable that there's enough of a market for empirical, substantive discussion to sustain a network or at least a show.
Posted by: Elvis Elvisberg | Aug 2, 2007 6:50:55 PM
The reason this is important, is that it provides a very unique point of view that until this, was basically ignored.
Wonkdom was a game exclusivly for the rich, for the think tanks. People paid to see things from a top-down view. However, what you have with the blogs is wonkdom from the bottom up, or at least more so than what it was.
When you're looking at the systems that wonkdom deals with, if you're up close and personal with those systems, people tend to see different problems, and resolutions to said problems. For example, on health care, where in the past people would talk about GDP, and markets of scale and all that, as it stands right now, we have access to actual experts...people who work in billing offices, who can tell us what they spend their time doing and the inefficiencies in the system. And you add enough small things up it gets to be pretty large. The problem is that the top-down wonkdom are basically unable to see the small things.
In short, grassroots, or ground-up wonkdom threatens to make obsolete the old top-down elitist wonkdom.
Posted by: Karmakin | Aug 2, 2007 6:57:47 PM
the old boss media to be replaced by the new boss blogs -- who in turn will sweep up the corporate cash. comforting.
Posted by: christian | Aug 2, 2007 7:05:52 PM
Could The Ezra and Matt Hour, or The Ezra and Ross Hour, top Glenn Beck?
I went camping last weekend, and got a bunch of chigger bites. Footage of me scratching my ankles would top Glenn Beck.
If I promised to blame liberals for chiggers, maybe I could get my own show on CNN.
Posted by: Stephen | Aug 2, 2007 7:34:39 PM
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Posted by: judy | Oct 11, 2007 7:56:41 AM



