2. Entertainment
•Follows the trials and tribulations of movie and TV stars.
•Buy pictures from reputable sites to include with “news” item.
•Normally accompanied by smart-aleck commentary or observation, also called
“snark.”
•Many celebrities have tried to sue these sites, somewhat unsuccessfully, for
defamation
•Celebrities have issued cease and desist orders to certain bloggers and their
host, demanding that certain content deemed offensive above and beyond the
bounds of civil discourse are removed.
3. Blogger Byron Crawford was asked to remove a blog post where he fantasized
about killing singer/celebrity Ray J. When he did not, his host pulled down his
site until he complied.
4. Mario Armando Lavandeira, Jr. , AKA Perez Hilton, has been sued for his usage
of images, music and videos without authorization.
5. Political
•Political blogs most often post about national politics, or the way
some local politics can reverberate nationally.
•The commentary section becomes like its own town hall, where
anyone and everyone chimes in.
•They host discussions about public policies and elected officials.
•Mainly trafficked by civic-minded people with a keen interest, who
want to participate in forums about politics but don’t neccessarilly
want to leave home.
•Politicians eve read blog to get a sense of what the electorate may
be thinking.
•Political blogs move people to activism and mobilization in real life.
•Each blog has it’s own political leanings.
9. Protest Blogs
•Blogs that are formed by one individual or several individuals intent
on bringing light to an issue or a set of issues by highlighting news
events and commenting on them with an agenda.
•Often, the ask readers to take action of some sort i.e. write letters,
email, boycott a product or event, place calls to office of elected
officials
•Protest blogs can be highly effective for disemenating information,
coalescing and organizing
•They can also be over-zealous and repositories of misinformation.
• Let’s examine two protest blogs campaigns and their effectiveness.
11. Gina MacCauley of “WhatAboutOurDaughters.com” launched a protest against
entertainment channel BET because of their online feature called “B-Girls.”
BET removed the feature from their website within a week of her protest.
12. The Jena 6 March, to protest the arrest and conviction of 6 young black men for
the beating of a student was largely driven by various protest bloggers. Jena 6
represents why this type of advocacy can be problematic
13. Mainstream Media Blogs
•Blogs backed by mainstream news organizations, which gives them
credibility.
•Provide a way for people to interact about the content.
•PRO: they help build community and reader base for the publication
and the blog.
•Often, commentors have to register, and these questionaires help the
marketing departments sell ads.
•CON: Blogs are free-wheeling and hard to contain.
•They are hard to monitor and police.
•Bring out a lot of extremist eager to spew their views in large arena.
17. Blog Collectives
•Feature more than just one blogger.
•They share a common worldveiw or opinion.
•The share the same blogspace.
•They may have blogs of their own.
18. Racialicious.com is a coalition of bloggers who write about diversity issues
specifically for women of color.
21. Vanity Blogs
•One person’s opinion about virtually everything.
•Probably the purest form of the blog, as it serves no aim or agenda.
•Often frivolous, free-wheeling and fanciful.
•People with similar worldveiws are drawn in by that commonality.