A very special survey
As part of the paper I’m co-authoring on the power and politics of blogs, I am making a humble request to those who are employed as journalists, columnists, commentators, producers, or editors for newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations. Please take two minutes and send me an e-mail* (be sure to include the media outlet ...
As part of the paper I'm co-authoring on the power and politics of blogs, I am making a humble request to those who are employed as journalists, columnists, commentators, producers, or editors for newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations. Please take two minutes and send me an e-mail* (be sure to include the media outlet you work for as well as your job title) at ddrezner@hotmail.com with answers to the following five questions [Oh, sure, then you'll broadcast their answers to your friends!--ed. All responses will be treated as confidential unless you give me permission to do otherwise in your e-mail]:
As part of the paper I’m co-authoring on the power and politics of blogs, I am making a humble request to those who are employed as journalists, columnists, commentators, producers, or editors for newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations. Please take two minutes and send me an e-mail* (be sure to include the media outlet you work for as well as your job title) at ddrezner@hotmail.com with answers to the following five questions [Oh, sure, then you’ll broadcast their answers to your friends!–ed. All responses will be treated as confidential unless you give me permission to do otherwise in your e-mail]:
1) How many blogs do you read a day? 2) Please name the three blogs you read most frequently. [What if they read less than three?–ed. Then just name the ones you do read.] 3) Why do you read the blogs you read? In other words, what makes those blogs worth checking out on a regular basis? 4) Have you ever read something on a blog that affected your decision-making on what to air/publish? If the answer is yes, can you give an example? 5) How much influence do you think blogs have on political discourse? A lot, a little, or none at all? Why?
Thank you!! UPDATE: In the first 24 hours, I’ve already received 50 relevant responses. Many thanks to everyone who linked to the request, particularly Glenn Reynolds, Kevin Drum, Cory Doctorow, Howard Bashman, James Joyner, Josh Chafetz, Scripting News, and Jim Romenesko. ANOTHER UPDATE: We’re almost at the 100 mark! If you fit the criteria and haven’t responded yet, please do so!! Pretty please!! *Do NOT post your answers in the comment box below. It’s been disabled for this post — because otherwise, your answers would be available for all the world to read!!
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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