Bravo to the public relations staff
The hardworking PR team here at danieldrezner.com has had a good week: 1) Last Friday, Slate’s Jack Shafer managed to compliment me while simultaneously comparing me and other bloggers to low-wage Chinese labor: When it comes to opinion pieces, bloggers have an edge over the pros. I’m not saying that bloggers are necessarily better writers ...
The hardworking PR team here at danieldrezner.com has had a good week:
The hardworking PR team here at danieldrezner.com has had a good week:
1) Last Friday, Slate’s Jack Shafer managed to compliment me while simultaneously comparing me and other bloggers to low-wage Chinese labor:
When it comes to opinion pieces, bloggers have an edge over the pros. I’m not saying that bloggers are necessarily better writers than full-time members of the commentariat, but Daily Kos, Joshua Marshall, Daniel Drezner, Daily Howler, Volokh Conspiracy, Brad DeLong, et al., produce more immediate and succinct copy than their mainstream colleagues. To stretch a manufacturing analogy, unsalaried bloggers represent low-cost Chinese laborers, professional journalists the well-paid-with-benefits American workers. Given the right tools and infrastructure, low-cost Chinese labor can produce work that is every bit the equal of the high-price kind. What the Web has done is remove the barriers to entry from opinion journalism, much to the benefit of readers. If told that I had to forgo the editorial and op-ed pages of the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times or lose my blog bookmarks, I’d say hands off my browser!
2) Today I discovered that the John Bolton post got mentioned on the “Inside The Blogs” feature at CNN’s Inside Politics with Judy Woodruff — click here to see the video, and here to read the transcript (in which they misspell my last name). I’m grateful to CNN’s “blog correspondents” Jacki Schechner and Cal Chamberlain [Now there’s somehing to go on the old resume!–ed.] Seeing the clip, my one thought is that there has got to be a better way for CNN to show the blogs than just jamming a camera at the computer screen. 3) Finally, the Village Voice‘s education supplement discusses blogs and academia, or, as they put it, “Blogodemia.” In her brief guide to scholar bloggers, Geeta Dayal says about yours truly:
Politics blogosphere-wise, he’s one of the heaviest hitters.
She also has nice things to say about my colleague at the U of C, physicist Sean Carroll and his blog Preposterous Universe. Dayal’s main story about how the blogosphere is invading academia is worth checking out as well. This sounds awfully familiar:
[Larry] Lessig found that blogging opened up his sphere of interaction considerably. “I’ve published a bunch of articles in law reviews, and I think I’ve gotten maybe a total of 10 letters about them in the history of my career as an academic,” he says. “I publish stuff on the blog, I get literally hundreds of e-mails about things all the time.”
Being compared to cheap labor, getting my name misspelled at cnn.com, and a citation in the Village Voice — yes, it’s been a banner week for the PR staff!!
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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