Another sort of confession.


Joel Achenbach, a columnist for the Washington Post, tells us that he'd rather be writing something else, but that his blog seems to continually demand more and more of his attention:
The blog is hungry. The blog will not be ignored. It is an insatiable little beast, a creature still unclassified by science -- hairy, warty, slobbering, with its own fiendish agenda. I often fantasize about killing the blog, but I worry that it will respond just like the crazed computer in "2001: A Space Odyssey": It will try to kill me first.
The picture Achenbach paints suggests that he's displeased with the way his blog has developed, though I'm sure that most bloggers can only feel jealous:
The blog originated in January as a catch basin for mental detritus, for the kind of stuff not good enough for print, but too good to waste on casual conversation or, worse, mere thinking. But this spring I began allowing "comments," and the blog suddenly mutated. America, it turns out, is full of smart, clever, creative people who happen to have no interest in working and whose employers have unwisely given them Internet access. Thus every day, on my blog, these strangers show up, just to shoot the breeze, flirt, kvetch, veer off topic and, most of all, pay zero attention to what I have written.
But though it's a fun read, it's hard to take his confessions seriously. Achenbach's blog doesn't have to be "discovered" - it's advertised within the Washington Post web site, which is the sort of promotion that most bloggers would kill for. As long as he writes even semi-witty musings, he's pretty much assured of having an audience.



Go to: This one demands some mulling over, or
Go to: Why a month?, or
Go to: When is clicking on a link like choosing a breakfast cereal, or
Go to: It's a wonder we find time to write at all, or
Go to: Participating/Observing?, or
Go to: Who's going to watch?, or
Go to: How many prosumers can fit on the head of cyberspace?