Words from another yard
Scott Rosenberg
- Location
- California,
- Bio
- Salon cofounder and former managing editor, author of "Say Everything" and "Dreaming in Code." Also blogging at wordyard.com.
MY RECENT COMMENTS
- “I think I've avoided,
somehow, both the fawning and
the
name-calling. Don't
know…”
September 02, 2009 02:03PM - “Lainey, in my view OSers
are bloggers, sure. (Unless
a
particular one feels
he/sh…”
August 19, 2009 12:16AM - “A "jourggler"! I like
it!
This particular
conversation has been
happeni…”
August 18, 2009 06:11PM - “Thanks, Stellaa. The
embed code doesn't seem to
work properly
here in Open
(it's…”
August 03, 2009 12:57PM - “Thanks, Silkstone. I
share that preference for
basic spelling
and grammar as
at l…”
July 30, 2009 01:54AM
Rick Edmonds at Poynter offers a summary of a white paper that the American Press Institute provided to attendees of the recent newspaper execs’ conclave. (The paper doesn’t seem to be available on the API site. UPDATE: Nieman JLab has it.)
The overall thrust seems to be: time to make the… Read full post »
Before I built a wall I’d ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offence.
Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,
That wants it down!
– Robert Frost, “Mending
Wall”
This week… Read full post »
“Everyone’s a critic” used to be a joke; now it’s a fact. You may take populist pride in the Web’s profusion of user-contributed reviews; you may wish Yelp had never been invented. Either way, if you create stuff or sell things, you’re going to get written about.
At the end of an otherwise reasonable column about the Iranian uprising Peggy Noonan went off the deep end again yesterday. First she unleashed her inner Edmund Burke, dialing the Wayback Machine to the 1790s to try to reimagine the excesses of the French Revolution ricocheting around the world via T… Read full post »
As a young man in love with the nuts and bolts of publishing, beginning in high school in the 1970s, I spent a lot of time in print shops. The industry had just undergone a wrenching transition from “hot type” to “cold type” — abandoning a venerable technology involving… Read full post »
Last Sunday the NY Times mag ran a photo feature on abandoned, half-built real estate projects — casualties of the big bust. The pictures were stunningly otherwordly — eerily lit, human-free canvases of financial devastation. Dayna, my wife, handed me the magazine and asked, “Are th… Read full post »
Simon Dumenco of Advertising Age interviewed David Carr of the New York Times. They’re friends, so the interview has a little bit of a smarmy feel. But it’s worth reading for a couple of passages. Carr recently came out with a book of autobiographical reporting on his own violent, addicti… Read full post »
A new study examines the interplay of mainstream news outlets and blogs in forming the news cycle. One of its findings is that, as a report by Steve Lohr in today’s Times puts it, “For the most part, the traditional news outlets lead and the blogs follow, typically by 2.5… Read full post »
Has the word “blogger” become meaningless?
Consider this item (from Mediabistro’s Fishbowl LA):
We asked [Jay] Rosen what he thought of the term “blogger” and how there is not a word to distinguish a journalist who blogs and a numbnut who blogs.
“Blogger will beco
… Read full post »
Blogs privilege the “now.” New stuff always goes on top. But they also create a durable record of “then” — as I have learned in spending the last couple of years digging through the back catalog of blogging. One of the great contributions of blogging software is to orga… Read full post »
During the runup to Obama’s announcement of his pick for the Supreme Court, Jeffrey Rosen wrote a piece for the New Republic’s website, passing on anonymous slurs against Sonia Sotomayor, amounting to a characterization of her as a cartoonish loose cannon: “not that smart and kind… Read full post »
Ten years ago today, Salon.com, the website I helped found in 1995 along with a group of colleagues from the San Francisco Examiner under the leadership of David Talbot, went public. We raised $25 million in an IPO that, from the vantage of a decade later, looks mirage-like in its improbability.… Read full post »
There’s a chorus on the right, including some GOP leaders, complaining that President Obama ought to be saying more or doing more to support the Iranian protesters. It is unclear what, exactly, they wish him to do about Iran. Now, perhaps, is not the time for bombing, although that was, until… Read full post »
Saying everything on KQED Forum
Last Thursday I had the pleasure of talking about Say Everything with Michael Krasny on KQED’s Forum. I don’t think I fully infected Michael with my enthusiasm for bloggers and their place in our culture, but I was grateful for the rare opportunity this show (and host) provides to dig rea… Read full post »
MediaBugs: a Knight News Challenge winner
This qualifies as “woohoo!” level news: my entry in the Knight News Challenge is one of the winners this year (announced today).
The project is called MediaBugs. The plan is to build a Web service that’s like an open-source project’s bug tracker, but aimed at correcting error… Read full post »
Probably the single question I’m most often asked as I talk to people about Say Everything is: How has Twitter changed blogging? Twitter’s rapid growth — along with the preference of some users for sharing on Facebook and the rise of all sorts of other “microblogging” to… Read full post »
The story of the rise of Blogger from the ashes of a dotcom startup to the largest blogging service in the world takes up a whole chapter in Say Everything. So when Rick Klau of Google’s Blogger team invited me to participate in a panel as part of Blogger’s 10th birthday… Read full post »

I was away with my family for a spring break retreat up the coast all last week, hanging out with the seals, when this project slipped from alpha to beta, so I missed the excitement.
Since I'm about a month behind my personal writing schedule on the… Read full post »
Why people blog — and why journalists keep missing the point
There is a shortsighted misunderstanding of the motivation of most bloggers that I keep encountering as I’m out there talking about Say Everything. The people asking me questions are naturally, for the most part, journalists; and as I write in the book, journalists as a class have a particularl… Read full post »
Another Say Everything excerpt: Journalists vs. Bloggers
Today: a second full-chapter excerpt from Say Everything for your consideration. This time, it’s Chapter Nine: Journalists vs. Bloggers. (Previously I’ve posted the introduction and Chapter One, the story of Justin Hall.)
I have been writing about the tormented relationship between journ… Read full post »
A lot of people have flagged Benedict Carey’s piece in yesterday’s Times, “In Battle, Hunches Prove to Be Valuable,” and with good reason: it’s a fascinating report on research into the way the brain combines visual data and emotional responses to shape the sort of insta… Read full post »
Besides Ecco, Quicken is really the last app that I still need Windows for. (Quicken for the Mac is way inferior.) So I thought I’d finally figure out which of the Mac personal-finance contenders would best suit my needs: simple budget and expense tracking on several checking accounts and a cre… Read full post »
Drupal designer needed
For a project I’m working on (not MediaBugs but another effort in the media realm that’s a collaboration with Dan Gillmor and Bill Gannon):
We have some work for a designer who’s got lots of experience with Drupal to help us finish up a partially implemented design. This is a short-… Read full post »
From book cover to pillowcase
Designing a good book cover is not easy. I was very pleased with the arresting one we came up with for Say Everything. It takes off from the popular icon for subscribing to a blog’s RSS feed, but turns it into something more evocative of a person’s voice sent out into… Read full post »
When I set out to chronicle the rise of blogging in book form, I knew there was no way my work could hope to be comprehensive. This story simply has too many strands and facets. The ones I chose to focus on are, I believe, among the most significant. But there… Read full post »
Scott Rosenberg's Favorites
Updates
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Not how I expected to get on Jeopardy!
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Bad sign: Don't forget!
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What are you going to be for Halloween?
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Obama's lonely peace prize
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E. Nesbit and A.S. Byatt
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Use the cataclysm as a catalyst: Send your work out on 9/11
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Gawker steps up as GQ cowers
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Appreciating people who reach out: influencers revisited

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