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This made me spit out pop when I read it last night.
I'd like to think he's been in some press box, where a bunch of his grouchy peers gave him some "Attaboys" for taking on that punk blogger.
"Picking a random blog comment and wielding it as a club to bash "blogs" is like picking a random romance novel off an airport bookstore shelf and saying, "This book sucks. #### you, Tolstoy -- your medium is worthless!"
April 27, 1908: i'm so sleepy today
April 28, 1908: is the ferment of the peoples of the west at the end of the 18th century and their drive eastward explained by the activity of louis 14, 15, and 16, their mistresses and ministers, and by the lives of napoleon, diderot, beaumarchais and others? is the movement of the russian people eastward to kazan and siberia expressed by details of the morbid character of ivan the terrible and by his correspondence with kurbski? or what?
April 29, 1908: cubs lose again that chance is a freaking idiot TOTALLY lucked his way into the ws win last year small sample size if you ask me
I was imagining the same thing. I'm sure there are people that thought he masterfully won the debate and exposed Leitch for an idiot.
This was hilarious:
"Corbinating" is officially entering my lexicon.
I really don't see what he could accomplish here beyond releasing some spleen.
It should be noted that with subscription feeds, it's easier for people publish irregularly to get read than it used to be. You just read something new when it eventually pops up. You don't need to keep visiting the site hoping for new content.
You team up with other writers to have a source where there's constant product, but individuals write at different paces.
Leitch should have asked if Buzz had read Pos (or someone else if you prefer). Good writing is good writing. If you're not discerning enough to cull the good from the bad, that's your fault, hombre.
Yeah, me too. I'm almost sorry I pointed it out, because he'll probably get swamped now. I was just too surprised to really think about consequences.
Idiocy happened.
that's not fair - they invited Rhodes scholar and noted academic Braylon Edwards to the panel!
For me, there were 3 losers in that segment, with Braylon Edwards being a winner for simply staying out of the whole thing.
There are already examples of popular sites where this is going on today, such as The Hardball Times, or even BBTF. Between sites that are composed of multiple writers, and content aggregating sites, there will always be a place for writers who don't update constantly, provided their output is of sufficient quality.
And as far as Buzz Bissinger goes, he's a perfect example of how the ability to turn a phrase is completely unrelated to the ability to provide cogent analysis.
Deadspin, in some ways is like the Newslbog here or the old Clutch Hits.
I guess that when I think of a blog, I think of a one person site that's more idiosyncratic, like the stuff they have at Baseball Toaster or Dave Pinto's Baseball Musings.
This just made no sense to me. Heck why would Bissinger be vehemently against bloggers to begin with? I mean they aren't intruding on his turf, I know that Bissinger is trying to set himself up as the anti-Michael Lewis, but this is ridiculous. Joe Morgan has more of a right to comment on bloggers than Buzz.
of course it's Deadspin and I think I've read one thing I've liked from them over the years.
I stopped bookmarking Deadspin after a few months of reading it every day, just because it was frequently inane and either so micro or so meta that I really stopped caring. However, two small points: Leitch himself is an excellent writer (his novel Catch is very good indeed), and he sometimes gets excellent writers to write for Deadspin (Pat Jordan's Chasing Jose is terrific stuff; I wonder if Bissinger thinks that Pat Jordan is beneath his notice).
And, for the record, Friday Night Lights is an exceptionally good book too. And Costas isn't a bad writer himself. I don't understand why so many talented people are at each others' throats. But there still seems to be a huge gulf between Internet and print writing cultures, which is hard to figure: you'd think text would just be text, but people see an enormous apparent distinction.
Status and money. Some people believe that making money off of your writing and having a company believe that you can help them generate a profit makes you a better writer than someone who gets set up on a site and just starts writing. If I'm writing on a blog on blogspot, and I'm not making money, I would therefore be below people like Bissinger, and it probably angers him that people well below him in his opinion mock him for being stupid or being a terrible writer.
And it's really not that different from any field. I doubt that someone with a PhD in biology wants me to talk about how much of an idiot he is because my high school experiment showed something different from his study.
Now there have been some print writers who had little interference from editors. Bill James and Hunter Thompson come to mind. But most writing benefits from having a fresh set of eyes look at it. Lord knows that mine does.
Given so many writers' contentious relationship with editors, you'd think they'd be all over the direct-to-reader aspect of blogs. As Bob D. said, it's text, take it for what it is, don't blame the medium.
I wondered the same thing cfb. Buzz seemed like an odd choice to be the voice of the mainstream, since his particular position is not one shared by many others. Of course, if the objective was to find a hysterical anti-internet voice, they obviously hit the mark. I thought HBO and Costas would have been above that.
Which is why this is a strawman/fake story created by the show. If there is a divide, I would think it is not too wide; and would only be smaller if each sides "best" shared or communicate in a better situation.
Particularly if he's, y'know, wrong.
I thought it was interesting listening to Bissinger flame-out on that sports talk show where he called a guy a "slimeball", that he was actually arguing for pitchers to remain in the minors, and for organizations to watch their pitch counts, to protect their arms. That's something the sabermetric crowd has been saying for year (the pitch counts at least, not sure about the time in the minors). His critical error however, was assuming that pitchers these days are rushed to the big leagues, unlike the "good ol days" because that's what Tony LaRussa told him, instead of, you know, doing what journalists are supposed to do and researching whether that's factual.
So you are a print writer. Devoted 25 years to the profession. You've won some local awards, you have written a few articles in your past that are pure gold, phrases dancing in the air like nervous hummingbirds. You know Jim Rice belongs in the HOF because you saw how feared he was and his numbers match some HOF entrants. You looked at some Bill James book a years ago but thought he was a guy just trying to back door into your profession.
Slowly, there starts appearing some new kind of writing. You look at a couple examples sent you by your buddies and conclude these new people are idiots, or at best, wannabes who couldn't get into J-school. But they keep popping up -- suddenly your expertise, your reputation so carefully honed, is up for question, indeed up for ridicule. Maybe you should have taken that Intro to Statistics back in J-school, but dammit, you're a writer, not a math geek. You know what a good ball player is and what one isn't.
These on-line people, uh bloggers?, are everywhere, like a thousand annoying little brothers. They are allowed to fight any way they want, they're everywhere and you don't know where another incarnation is going to pop up. They are held to no journalistic standards and you, as MSM, cry foul. So much of the writing is juvenile, sarcastic, personal, hateful and overbearing. Lashing out is understandable as a first reaction.
But after the first wave of reaction, there is no excuse for Costas and others, bright people I believe, for deliberately misrepresenting the current environment and setting up false scenarios. If they are the enemy, shouldn't you know them and what makes them tick? This is competition on very different terms than you bargained for. It has happened for many occupations. You know, keep your friends close and your enemies closer should be what you are doing. Figure out the key differences and learn them and incorporate them in your work.
You know, I read the daily newspaper, including all the baseball writers. The Philly Inquirer baseball writers are pretty average on a whole, I think. They now know Prospectus and I think Pinto's gotten a reference once or twice. (Conlin writes for the Daily News, so my only contact with his eminence is through here).
For example, if someone gets promoted from the minors, I have no faith that the Inq. writers can tell me about what to expect from the promotee. I will jump immediately to the Transaction Analysis and see what Symbronski (ASIDE: Nipplerent, he never complains when his name is mispelled) and ZIPS have to say and hope that Mike Emeigh (sp? again) drops a line. And I dig out Prospectus and look at the writeup and stats so I can get a sense of the player. I don't expect that Sam Carchidi design his own ZIPS, but why not talk to some projections like I can get on-line? Adding that ability to use the plethora of new tools to expand one's skills seems to be lost on most of the traditional media. You know, I'm in the age range of many of these guys and I've always taken the meaning of the message of the The Who to heart: "I hope I die before I get old."
EDIT: Cleaned up spelling and formatting.
Particularly if he's, y'know, wrong.
Well, its not quite like that. That would be the case only if your high school experiment was attracting nearly as much attention, if not more, than the work of the biology PhD. I can kind of understand why a biology PhD would be miffed at that.
I guess I just don't see why everyone views Deadspin as some competition for newspapers and tv. I don't even view it as "sports", I view it as a comedy website. It's not meant to be serious journalism.
Status and money. Some people believe that making money off of your writing and having a company believe that you can help them generate a profit makes you a better writer than someone who gets set up on a site and just starts writing. If I'm writing on a blog on blogspot, and I'm not making money, I would therefore be below people like Bissinger, and it probably angers him that people well below him in his opinion mock him for being stupid or being a terrible writer.
That, and before the blogs, the "common man" didn't have a voice. No matter what, the writers could write what they wanted, the tv guys could do what they wanted, and people had to listen. I believe there's a big part that these guys don't like being criticized (who does), don't like being taken to task, and don't like that their viewers and readers have a way of voicing their displeasure.
You mean like when a patent office worker turned the entire physics world on its head?
On the other hand, in the print medium, a writer wouldn't or couldn't draw attention to the articles in a competing publication, and certainly couldn't do it on the day of their publishing. And drawing attention to other writers in your own paper would be useless, since your readers obviously had access to them in the first place. Print writers tend to draw their material from observation of an event, or discussion with a player, as opposed to drawing from the writing of another writer.
I think this may be part of what causes the great "divide". It's not to say there aren't blog writers who are talking about what they've seen or what they've heard, and it's not that there aren't print articles discussing something that was written, but that there's a willingness and ability to share in the online media that's not present in print. In some ways, it takes the place of the editor, because you know what you write is going to be critiqued and discussed by other online writers. But it's different from what you see in print, and it's definitely one of the big differences between print sportswriting and online sportswriting.
ALSO: while Joe Posnanski is the usual go-to reference for a sportswriter who "gets it" (and make no mistake, I love Joe P), it's worth noting that there are many out there who do. At ShysterBall I get hits, emails, and approving comments from guys at newspapers almost every day. These guys don't see blogs as a threat. If anything, they read the stuff bloggers write and use it as inspiration. In other words, they work off of us just like we work off of them, and everyone manages to get along. Imagine.
Willful ignorance among some in the MSM towards the tools available to them so they are getting out-analyzed by the bloggers?
EDIT: Ugh, made comment coherent (I think).
Heh. Most of my work for BioProject has ended up nothing like my original drafts. This is mainly a good thing, but sometimes the stuff that gets cut out was material that I really liked. For instance, the fact that Billy Southworth's brother killed the last passenger pigeon probably wound up getting scrapped from my Southworth bio due to space constraints.
They do quite a bit initially, until it became clear how effective blogs were at spreading message and raising money.
I tend to think the producers picked Leitsch just so they could turn the "debate" into this bloggers as adolescent rumor-slingers strawman they wound up with. Still, Bissinger seems like an odd choice, based on the points everyone made already. One of the more frequent columnist targets, like Conlin or Mariotti, would've made more sense.
Or how about this: a panel with Joe Morgan and the guy from FJM. It would have been a more interesting trainwreck than the trainwreck they wound up with, anyway.
He actually wrote this in the Tony LaRussa book? That's just an insult. What, does he think that today's baseball front-office drones are all in it for the big big money? The fame?
And in the service of idolizing such love-filled, jolly old-timers as Tony LaRussa, no less.
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