Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Are Bloggers Just a Bunch of Know Nothings Sitting Around in Their Pajamas?

Last night in another GSPM class, Political Communication Strategies, we had three guest speakers who came to speak in front of our class. They were reporters from the Washington Post, the Hill and CNN. Mostly they spoke about their jobs, their relationships with press secretaries, and the protocol they follow each day. We discussed what news is and how they find their scoops.

As the discussion evolved the issue of blogs came up and one student posed the question of whether the reporters had ever used a blog to write a story and whether or not they thought blogging was a force for the traditional news media to reckon with.

Answering the question, the representative from the Washington Post admitted that he had actually once formulated a story with the help of a blogger, who he did give credit to in his story, but he did not really look to bloggers to make news. Instead he felt bloggers simply opine about the news that the traditional news media reports. In essence he said he does not believe that bloggers will out scoop traditional news venues.

When the representative from CNN answered the same question he basically said that he thought that bloggers do not hold such an important place as some people are speculating they do, but he also doesn't think that bloggers are just a bunch of guys sitting in front of their computers at home in their pajamas.

Even if bloggers are a bunch of guys sitting in their pajamas I believe that blogging is beginning to find its own place in the world. Some people do believe what they read in the blogs is the news and we all need to come to terms with that.

The three reporters even said while they do not agree with Drudge's views on everything he writes he does have a good pulse on everything that is in the news because he reads from the same wires and reports from them. Whether Drudge gets the story 100% right or not, we all need to accept the fact that blogging is a new form of communication and should not just be pushed to wayside because it is not a traditional form of reporting.