In your face, Milwaukee!!

In the Boston Globe, Chris Reidy reports that Boston is a good fit for your humble blogger: Boston has long been viewed as the land of the bean and the cod — and now the Hub may also be the land of the blog. According to OutsideIn.com, a website that tracks neighborhood blogging, Boston was ...

By , 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.

In the Boston Globe, Chris Reidy reports that Boston is a good fit for your humble blogger: Boston has long been viewed as the land of the bean and the cod -- and now the Hub may also be the land of the blog. According to OutsideIn.com, a website that tracks neighborhood blogging, Boston was the "bloggiest city" in America for the two-month period it examined, March and April. Behind Boston were Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Washington, D.C. OutsideIn.com said it tracks blogging activity in about 60 urban areas. It based its rankings on a "blogging quotient" that factored in a metropolitan area's population with the number of blog posts tied to specific locations. By that measure, Greater Boston had 89 posts per 100,000 residents, edging out Greater Philadelphia, which had 88 posts. Surprisingly, perhaps, such well-wired places as San Francisco and Seattle were farther down the list. Why was Greater Boston number one? Outsidein.com's chief executive, Steven Berlin Johnson, offered this theory: Blogs thrive where locals are wired, well-educated, and obsessed with politics, a topic that inspires bloggers to vent their opinions.Another possibility: east coast cities like Boston and Philly have more people who find time to blog while goofing off at their place of work. [Which is something you never do, right?--ed. Uh... right!!]

In the Boston Globe, Chris Reidy reports that Boston is a good fit for your humble blogger:

Boston has long been viewed as the land of the bean and the cod — and now the Hub may also be the land of the blog. According to OutsideIn.com, a website that tracks neighborhood blogging, Boston was the “bloggiest city” in America for the two-month period it examined, March and April. Behind Boston were Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Washington, D.C. OutsideIn.com said it tracks blogging activity in about 60 urban areas. It based its rankings on a “blogging quotient” that factored in a metropolitan area’s population with the number of blog posts tied to specific locations. By that measure, Greater Boston had 89 posts per 100,000 residents, edging out Greater Philadelphia, which had 88 posts. Surprisingly, perhaps, such well-wired places as San Francisco and Seattle were farther down the list. Why was Greater Boston number one? Outsidein.com’s chief executive, Steven Berlin Johnson, offered this theory: Blogs thrive where locals are wired, well-educated, and obsessed with politics, a topic that inspires bloggers to vent their opinions.

Another possibility: east coast cities like Boston and Philly have more people who find time to blog while goofing off at their place of work. [Which is something you never do, right?–ed. Uh… right!!]

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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