"Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast" -Oscar Wilde |
"The liberal soul shall be made fat, and he that watereth, shall be watered also himself." -- Proverbs 11:25 |
The survey reveals that blogs, as interesting as they may be to journalists, have yet to capture the imagination -- or the eyeballs -- of the general public.
"I just think it's kind of a waste of time," said Peter Hoytema, the pastor at Midland Park Christian Reformed Church in Ridgewood. "I don't find a whole lot of productive discussion coming out of them."
...interviews with people in North Jersey confirm that blogs aren't really registering. Even if they know what blogs are, they don't usually read them. And if they do, it's generally the blog of someone they know.
[snip]
So is it all a bunch of hype? A bit, says Jay Rosen, the journalism department chairman at New York University and a blogger himself.
Let the fence-mending begin. According to a Broadcasting & Cable source in Washington, D.C., CBS News president Andrew Heyward, along with Washington bureau chief Janet Leissner, recently met with White House communications director Dan Bartlett, in part to repair chilly relations with the Bush administration.
CBS News’ popularity at the White House—never high to begin with—plunged further in the wake of Dan Rather’s discredited 60 Minutes story on George Bush’s National Guard service.
An incentive for making nice is the impending report from the two-member panel investigating CBS's use of now-infamous documents for the 60 Minutes piece.
Heyward was “working overtime to convince Bartlett that neither CBS News nor Rather had a vendetta against the White House,” our source says, “and from here on out would do everything it could to be fair and balanced.” CBS declined to comment.