Looking up (and down) at the blogosphere’s ivory tower

I spend a lot of time reading blogs. Part of the fun of that is sharing what I’ve learned and what I think via Google Reader shared items, FriendFeed, Twitter, and of course here at the old Online Media Cultist stomping grounds.

Living in Los Angeles and working as a web producer for 3jane IndieClick, I feel like I’m in a pretty interesting and lucky position. I help to manage the production of cutting edge websites and tech products. So I like to think that my experiences as a web producer and my blog consumption and general web cultery gives me a unique perspective on things.

And so I’m a little bit outside “the beltway” of the Bay Area and Silicon Valley, though I lived there circa 1998-2003. In addition I don’t have the time/resources to get to many tech events and conferences and such (and I feel like my days are packed wall-to-wall anyway!). So while some of the upper tier bloggers in the tech/web space may have a vague-ish idea of who I am, I have no illusions that conference cocktail parties are replete with lengthy and fascinating discussions of the latest OMC installment.

This is all prelude to saying that something I read this evening by a Mr. Robert Scoble pissed me off a little bit. Scoble is of course one of the better known tech bloggers out there. Here’s the thing: I know that Scoble didn’t mean anything by what pissed me off. But I tend to think it’s a little bit telling nonetheless.

In the midst of a very lengthy discussion of the supposed concern over the future of PR (my take: as long as there’s something to promote and people around who want to self-promote by means of promoting, the PR industry’s going to be just fine, kids), Scoble issues the following declaration:

…it’s hard to remember the last industry event where Brian [Solis] wasn’t holding court and if you’re a tech blogger and you haven’t yet met Brian you probably haven’t been blogging for more than a week or two…

My first reaction, uttered out loud: really dude?

Now, technically I’m not really a tech blogger; I’m more in the webby/Internet space. But it’s really interesting to see that from Scoble’s perspective, if you’re not attending insider-y tech events, you don’t really “count” in the blogospheric sense. And I have no doubt that Solis is a fascinating fellow to be around, but doesn’t it seem a little old-boy’s-club-ish to declare that to not have been well met with the gent implies a lack of credibility in writing about tech and the web?

Perhaps I’m taking this seemingly offhanded statement too far, but it does give an anecdotal sense of how the much debated “A List” bloggers think of themselves and the wider blogospheric and Internet proletariat/masses/rabble.

Or maybe I’m just being sensitive?

⊆ August 14th, 2008 by Eric Berlin | ˜
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Twitters of the Day: Starbucks, Han Solo, and Netscape

Lots of great stuff coming out of Twitter (the wunderkind short, simple, and snappy tool that lets you post 140-character maximum rants, pontifications, links, and random musings about personal peccadilloes to groups of “followers”), I may have to make Twitters of the Day a regular feature.

Jason Calacanis: correcting WSJ errors at my blog. uhhhh…. dont even work there anymore and i’m fighting the good fight. i guess i need to let it go huh?

Jason is referring to his spirited defense against a Wall Street Journal piece that claims that Netscape traffic is way down since the switch over to the “new” social news-driven platform (which I have declared, with its problems and all, is the future of news). Like many arguments, the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle on this one. That said, Netscape is a perfect choice to continue to lead out a broad-based general audience social news experiment. I just wish that their editors were a little less trigger happy on editing/yanking submissions and would more closely cooperate with submitters and publishers, without whom the site would have no content.

Bloggers Blog: Will newspapers/magazines make all the journalists Twitter like they made them blog?

There are a bunch of great and interesting and probing questions that sweep Twitter everyday. I think this one is a little bit tongue-and-cheek but I do think it likely that some journalists will get on board with Twitter before too long. We may see reporters in battle zones giving live on-the-ground snippets, anchors at the desk musing about life on the news set during commercial breaks, and solicitations for questions prior to interviews. Pretty cool stuff in other words, and it all lies ahead.

Bloggers Blog: Poor Han Solo. Darth Vader is crushing him in followers 1250 to 56

Bloggers Blog delivered the goods today! There are a bunch of fake Twitter profiles, which I see as a sign of the site’s health and popularity. I haven’t friended any of them yet, so if any of them are particularly funny, please let me know.

Robert Scoble: I told Dave to pop up some Starbucks ads on TwitterVision just to freak everyone out. http://twittermap.com/twittervision — I’m addicted.

Ah, that rascally Scobleizer. TwitterVision is a site to behold, a really easy and mesmerizing way to see how this simple little product is providing yet another short cut to instant and immersive (and even substantive, sometimes!) conversation between friends and followers and lurkers around the globe.

Drop me a line at my Twitter page. You’ll be hooked before long!

⊆ March 22nd, 2007 by Eric Berlin | ˜
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