The Buzz in the Blogosphere: Two Points to Bear in Mind
I know better than to respond to this kind of low-rent mudslinging. Really, I do.
I know better than to add my two cents' worth after Will Leitch, Orson Swindle, and MaconDawg, as well as SG Standard, Joel, and HornsFan (you know . . . some of those dastardly blog commenters we hear so much about!), already have said all that needed to be said.
I know better than to engage in debate with a grown man who answers to the name "Buzz" but who has not either walked on the moon or defended the galaxy from the threat of the evil Emperor Zurg as a member of the elite Space Ranger Corps.
Nevertheless, I will add my voice to the chorus for the purpose of making two points which bear enunciating and reiterating. These are they:
1. The blogger and the beat reporter, like the farmer and the cowman, should be friends. The traditional media are not the enemy. We in the blogosphere must take special care not to lump all professional journalists together; if we do so, we are guilty of the same bigotry as the Buzz Bissingers of the world.
Although some cracks are appearing in the perceived barrier between the two roles, it generally is the case that professional news outlets are getting interviews, breaking stories, and publishing box scores, fulfilling essential functions we in the blogosphere could not (and, typically, do not aspire to) replicate.
Likewise, the search for commentary and analysis increasingly is turning to the blogosphere, but this loss of readership is suffered not by full-time reporters, but by the punditocracy that knows its fifteen minutes of fame are on the verge of expiring. Bissinger is aware of this and he is reacting the way fans of The New Yorker did to Tom Wolfe's incisive and witty takedown of the moribund magazine a generation ago.
Bissinger knows full well, or ought to know if he is anything other than ignorant and wholly lacking in self-awareness (which certainly could be the case), that condescending pundits in the Stewart Mandel mode are every bit as self-appointed and lacking in valid credentials as the bloggers upon whom he heaps his disdain with such vitriol. Which brings me to my second point:
2. Buzz Bissinger has nothing to teach the blogosphere about good manners and insightful observations. If you're trying to convince me that you're the last noble Roman standing astride the bridge, bravely warding off the invading horde in a quixotic effort to save the last vestige of human decency, you may not want to go about it by unleashing a profanity-riddled tirade at a guy you're mad at for being several orders of magnitude more famous and more widely-read than you are, because you'll just come across as a crotchety Luddite fuddy-duddy . . . and I say that as someone who is himself a crotchety Luddite fuddy-duddy. (These kids today! With their iPods and their text messages and their TiVo!)
I'm proud of the community all of you, MaconDawg, and I have built here at Dawg Sports; I'm proud of the quality of the discourse that goes on here. It offends me to no end (see, Buzz? some of us can express ourselves using language that doesn't make others wonder whether we kiss our mother with that mouth; Bissinger used rather a more evocatively colorful phrase when voicing precisely that sentiment on Bob Costas's show) to have bloggers tarred with the brush of what their commenters write, particularly when any number of blogs---including, I am happy to say, this one---have made a concerted effort to keep the conversation at a high level and have found a readership---which, once again, most certainly includes the regular commenters at this site---that is responsive to, and respectful of, such standards.
When a guy is obnoxious enough long enough and is given a sufficient number of chances, he gets banned. When a guy offers an honest constructive criticism of the message this site sends, he gets results. The conversation around here sometimes gets heated, but the discussion typically is thoughtful, witty, and incisive. The same could be said for any number of other weblogs.
One thing Will Leitch said deserves special amplification: yes, anyone can blog, but not just anyone can blog well, and the cream rises to the top in the blogosphere as it does in few other walks of life. One of the reasons weblogging is so perfectly suited to analyzing sports is that both are meritocracies in which neither nepotism nor seniority nor even name recognition, good looks, and personal wealth are any substitute for quality.
The difference between Braylon Edwards and Will Leitch on the one hand, and Buzz Bissinger and Bob Costas on the other, is that, if the job performance of the former two were to decline sharply and consistently for a long enough period of time, they'd both have to go find another line of work. The latter two, evidently, need not bear such burdens, and this unfortunate condition has freed them to act like cheap hacks, to be as nasty as they want to be, and to suffer the fate of aging boxers who have fallen out of fighting shape and, sadly, feel the need to flail as wildly against the inexorable rush of fleeing time as against the younger, swifter challengers who are battering them into submission.
When Will Leitch appeared on ESPN Radio some months ago, I wrote:
Leitch showed admirable restraint in answering the questions put to him in a reasonable manner without bitterness or acrimony. How Van Pelt's employer treats the rising generation represented by Leitch in addressing our valid concerns will go a long way toward determining the way in which fan-centered sports commentators are able to interact with the monolith in Bristol.
While I do not presume that Buzz Bissinger speaks for anyone other than himself, Bob Costas's ostensible (and, if true, deplorable) complicity in this premeditated thuggery suggests that influential figures in the traditional media have opted to chart the "escalating war of words" course rather than take the "peaceful relations between established and novel forms of media" path Scott Van Pelt appeared to prefer.
That, I believe, is unfortunate, although it is not irreversible. I do not know Will Leitch, having never met or corresponded with him, and, to the best of my recollection, Deadspin has linked to Dawg Sports no more than twice (if that) in this site's existence. I have no reason to think ill of him, but neither do I have any vested interest in defending him, except for the not insignificant fact that he appears to have been cast in the role of front-line footsoldier and demonized synecdoche for the sports blogosphere.
If Buzz Bissinger and Bob Costas want to tar good, hardworking people for the sin of loving their sports teams because they didn't like four---count 'em, four---comments left at Deadspin, they lose all credibility with me and I not only will defend Will Leitch out of a sense of blogger solidarity, I will take quite personally their prejudiced broadsides against my readers, my co-author, and me.
I challenge Buzz Bissinger and Bob Costas to read Dawg Sports for a week. Give me a week . . . read every posting, every diary, and every comment for seven straight days, then tell me about the lack of quality in what is written in the blogosphere by bloggers and commenters alike. I stand by what we do here---what all of us do here---and I take the gravest possible exception to any ignorant insinuations to the contrary.
But, Buzz, if you do stop by and you want to leave a comment . . . watch your language. We run a family-friendly site around here, bub, and, in these parts, vulgarity is no substitute for argument.
Go 'Dawgs!
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Outstanding!
by Maize n Brew Dave on
May 1, 2008 8:05 AM EDT
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Once upon a time
Well, Buzz Bissinger, your Paradigms are Shifting. Better check your shorts. I didn't realize you had a monopoly on original thought.
As far as the Blogosphere goes, I think I'm educated enough to decide for myself where quality and quantity diverge.
As a consumer I am always looking for a bargain and in this realm, I have found it. It's all about choice and I choose to patronize this and similar, well written and though provoking blogs. I can only allow myself about a half-hour per week to select (the key word is select) what I choose to read.
If the traditional media choose to go to war over this, they will lose. In my opinion, the Blogosphere is about as democratic an idea as has been put forth in a long time. Buzz Bissinger comes off as a dictator. As we all go forward, I don't think this bodes well for anyone whose namesake reminds me of a certain rival's mascot.
by DavetheDawg on
May 1, 2008 10:12 AM EDT
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diary
by fotodog on
May 1, 2008 1:57 PM EDT
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This whole issue
Leitch basically runs the most popular tabloid of the sports world, so it bothers me some that he has become the public face of sports blogging. After all, gossip rags aren't the headliners of the print media world.
However if blogs really are The Future as everyone seems to think, there's no reason to spend more time on Bissinger or Costas. Just do your thing and let the rest take care of itself.
by Year2 on
May 1, 2008 7:39 PM EDT
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You make a good point, Year2 . . .
Bob Costas's criticism that weblogs are havens of vulgarity and cheap shots failed to take into account a great deal of relevant evidence. For instance, when offering his take on the Buzz Bissinger story, Mike of Black Shoe Diaries made passing mention of a previous posting here in which I also concentrated upon comments in a lengthy thread at his weblog---and upon one such comment in particular---in a way he found unfair.
While Mike did not equate me with Bissinger, I was somewhat troubled by his reference, so I wrote him an e-mail privately and told him so. Within a matter of mere hours, he had written me back and posted a public reply, prompting me to accept responsibility for my own misjudgments in the episode, as well. I will not hereafter attempt to use that lone comment (to which I referred not once, but twice) in order to prove a point, as it was unrepresentative of the character and decency either of the commenter or of the community or of the weblogger in question.
In genuine fan-centered communities, commentary is hallmarked by cordiality and courtesy even in the midst of controversy. Mike is a class act and his willingness to engage in honest, frank, yet respectful dialogue ought to shame the likes of Buzz Bissinger and ought to give Bob Costas pause. The evidence that traditional media types are less profane on shows like "Costas Now" than webloggers and commenters are on sites like this one and Black Shoe Diaries is thin, indeed.
For what it's worth, before I left for work this morning, I sent an e-mail to the folks at "Costas Now" containing the link to the above posting. It remains to be seen whether Bob Costas will rise to the challenge, but Mike has made it more than clear that the best webloggers are unsurpassed in any industry in their graciousness and reasonableness. Bloggers are setting the standard, it seems, in more ways than one.
by T Kyle King on
May 1, 2008 9:26 PM EDT
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I see your point
And for what its worth, Leitch did get a fair shake on Fox's BDSSP following the outcry over Costas's show.
The credibility that the high quality sports blogs have doesn't come from people like Costas or Bissinger, it comes from within. Guys like them may never accept blogs, and you know what? That's fine. The instinct at work here that's blasting full-barrel at those guys is summed up beautifully by this cartoon.
Maybe I don't feel as strongly about this because I have seen this fight played out in so many ways in so many areas. It's the conflict that grows out of traditional producers struggling to cope with the democratization of the means of production. Thomas Friedman's book The World is Flat does an excellent job of analyzing that topic.
The conflict between sports journalists and sports bloggers is not held in a vacuum. It is played out against the backdrop of culture as a whole still trying to feel out how the Internet has and still is changing it.
Also, and maybe this is because I read too much Slashdot, but I'm amazed no one has brought up Ghandi's famous quote:
First they ignore you.
Then they laugh at you.
Then they fight you.
Then you win.
by Year2 on
May 1, 2008 11:33 PM EDT
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Almost Forgot
by Year2 on
May 1, 2008 11:45 PM EDT
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I wonder...
by SG Standard on
May 2, 2008 9:45 AM EDT
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Excellent job as usual
by ad808 on
May 4, 2008 12:29 PM EDT
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Epilogue
Just as I sent an e-mail to "Costas Now," I yesterday wrote to Bissinger directly at the e-mail address he makes available on his website in an effort to open the lines of communication, in light of his subsequent reasonable efforts at meeting the blogosphere halfway.
Here is what I wrote, edited slightly to delete the real names of SB Nation colleagues and clean up the links (including removing the link I provided to the above article, since, well, you're there):
I hope you are doing well. A colleague of mine at SportsBlogs Nation let the rest of us know that you and he had engaged in a healthy exchange over e-mail, which may have led to your favorable mention of his Miami Dolphins weblog in your recent interview with Spencer Hall.
As someone who co-authors a sports weblog (when not meeting my other responsibilities as a husband, father, church member, and lawyer), I was pleased to see that, while you remain critical of this emerging new medium, you backed off somewhat from the more extreme portions of your position, as expressed by you on "Costas Now." I am a big believer that the singer matters as much as the song and that you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar, and, as I believe you now understand, any valid criticisms you had to offer were lost in the manner in which you presented them, and the entire discussion on Mr. Costas's show was the poorer for it.
I crafted my own response, which, in retrospect, probably was a bit more confrontational than it needed to be, but wild-eyed broadsides are not conducive to productive discussion, so I imagine you expected to receive a level of outrage equal and opposite to that which you put forth in your recent television appearance.
There are, of course, legitimate criticisms which are applicable to many, if not most, weblogs, but those of us who try to offer fan-focused analysis (you would call it "opinion," and I do not shrink from that label) and to do so in a family-friendly manner do not purport to be journalists; we recognize that, if every beat reporter in the world were to vanish tomorrow, we bloggers would not be able to take their place. Almost without exception, we lack their access; we typically (though not invariably) lack their training and experience; and, while we do not look down upon them, in most cases, we do not want their jobs.
I believe what we are seeing is a division of labor between the news-gathering and -reporting functions of print and broadcast journalists on the one hand and the commentary and analysis offered in the blogosphere on the other. This ongoing sea change, far from being frightening, merely represents the law of comparative advantage in action.
Columnists like Sports Illustrated's Stewart Mandel, who do precious little that any longer qualifies as reporting, and sports talk radio hosts like Colin Cowherd, who are no more qualified than the average blogger to offer unvarnished opinions (even if F.C.C. regulations limit their ability to swear on the air), are the ones gradually being supplanted by weblogs, not beat reporters and investigative journalists. Some news outlets, such as Sports Illustrated and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (to which you referred in the Spencer Hall interview) evidently agree, at least to the extent that both have provided their readers with links to my weblog with no evident misgivings that they are contributing to the "dumbing down" of their readership.
My point is simply that sportswriting featuring quality and intelligence is not limited to that produced by people who receive their paychecks from Gannett or the Tribune Co. Those of us who cover our teams primarily for the love of the game, and who sit in the bleachers rather than in the press box, do not have your credentials, but we do have a perspective that oftentimes extends beyond mere personal observations. My colleague Sunday Morning Quarterback offers a level of analysis of college football, for instance, that rivals, in form and in substance, that produced at any media outlet.
In any event, if nothing else, I wanted you to know that the blogosphere was not universally a vulgar, cruel, and stupid place lacking in good writing, keen insight, literary allusions, and basic civility. I know you're a busy man, so I will understand if you elect not to take up this challenge, but I would ask you to read my weblog---the posts and the comments---for a week, then tell me whether you think it is dumb, meanspirited, and profane. If you do, we shall simply have to agree to disagree. If you don't, well, maybe we will have reached a point at which each side is able to listen to reasonable constructive criticisms offered by the other in a tone that allows our words to be heard, rather than just our voices.
I am grateful for your time and, despite our differences upon this topic, I enjoy your work and I wish you and your family well.
Sincerely yours,
Kyle King
If I receive a reply from Bissinger, I will let you know, but I will not publish his reply here without first requesting and receiving his permission.
by T Kyle King on
May 7, 2008 8:35 PM EDT
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