Say Everything: How Blogging Began, What It's Becoming, and Why It Matters by Scott Rosenberg

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: July 2009
  • 416pp
  • Sales Rank: 139,915
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 2009
    • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 416pp
    • Sales Rank: 139,915

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    Queen Victoria would not have been amused. We live in a confessional age in which authenticity demands saying everything about oneself. From politicians to celebrities to ordinary people, mainstream culture is increasingly self-revelatory. Reality television, call-in radio, and millions of self-published personal electronic diaries known as "blogs," have become the most popular vehicles of this confessional culture. Why is this? In Say Everything Scott Rosenberg quotes Nick Denton, the founder of the New York City–based blog Gawker who, in explaining the value of 9/11 blogs said, "Only through the human stories of escape or loss have I really felt the disaster." The point of media, Denton implies, is to "feel" rather than "explain." The old industrial model of professional journalists handing down coldly objective information is being shoved aside by a hyper-democratic experiential model in which everyone publishes their feelings about everything. And the most experiential of all modern media confessionals is the Internet blog -- of which there were 64 million in 2008. Rosenberg, a cofounder of the Internet magazine Salon, really does say almost everything (even a little too much) about the blogging revolution. With patience and not a little love, Rosenberg introduces us to the crazy panoply of blogging founding fathers: virulent anti-Semite John Barger, a brilliant yet prickly software programmer with a Socratic obsession about truth called Dave Winer, and the first blogger, Justin Hall, who, in celebrating the new year in 2005, blogged: "I really enjoy urinating." But blogs aren't just the refuge of the mentally ill. Over the last ten years, more and more writers have embraced the blog: Rosenberg explains that in everything from politics to sex to "mommy" blogs, the experiential self-published Internet diary has gone mainstream, turning blogging's "great outpouring of human expression" into the future of all media. Rosenberg criticizes mogul Barry Diller for suggesting that talent remains the one scarcity in today's media. But this book is a glitteringly subversive argument against Rosenberg's own thesis. It's a beautifully written and meticulously fair narrative about the past, present, and future of the blog. Only somebody with Rosenberg's incomparable ability could have written Say Everything. We are lucky to have his unique talent. --Andrew Keen

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    Synopsis

    Blogs are everywhere. They have exposed truths and spread rumors. Made and lost fortunes. Brought couples together and torn them apart. Toppled cabinet members and sparked grassroots movements. Immediate, intimate, and influential, they have put the power of personal publishing into everyone’s hands. Regularly dismissed as trivial and ephemeral, they have proved that they are here to stay.

    In Say Everything, Scott Rosenberg chronicles blogging’s unplanned rise and improbable triumph, tracing its impact on politics, business, the media, and our personal lives. He offers close-ups of innovators such as Blogger founder Evan Williams, investigative journalist Josh Marshall, exhibitionist diarist Justin Hall, software visionary Dave Winer, "mommyblogger" Heather Armstrong, and many others.

    These blogging pioneers were the first to face new dilemmas that have become common in the era of Google and Facebook, and their stories offer vital insights and warnings as we navigate the future. How much of our lives should we reveal on the Web? Is anonymity a boon or a curse? Which voices can we trust? What does authenticity look like on a stage where millions are fighting for attention, yet most only write for a handful? And what happens to our culture now that everyone can say everything?

    Before blogs, it was easy to believe that the Web would grow up to be a clickable TV–slick, passive, mass-market. Instead, blogging brought the Web’s native character into focus–convivial, expressive, democratic. Far from being pajama-clad loners, bloggers have become the curators of our collective experience, testing out their ideas in front of acrowd and linking people in ways that broadcasts can’t match. Blogs have created a new kind of public sphere–one in which we can think out loud together. And now that we have begun, Rosenberg writes, it is impossible to imagine us stopping.

    In his first book, Dreaming in Code, Scott Rosenberg brilliantly explored the art of creating software ("the first true successor to The Soul of a New Machine," wrote James Fallows in The Atlantic). In Say Everything, Rosenberg brings the same perceptive eye to the blogosphere, capturing as no one else has the birth of a new medium.

    From the Hardcover edition.

    Kirkus Reviews

    Salon co-founder Rosenberg (Dreaming in Code: Two Dozen Programmers, Three Years, 4,732 Bugs, and One Quest for Transcendent Software, 2007) offers an elegantly accessible history and defense of a now-ubiquitous Internet phenomenon-the blogosphere. In 2003 there were 100,000 blogs worldwide; today there are approximately 184 million. Such phenomenal growth of blogging, which the author defines as "a hybrid of traditional publishing and casual electronic messaging," was initially due to adventurous, and at times decidedly odd, men and women who both saw the potential in the totally free expression blogging allows and developed the software that made it simple and easy. Rosenberg energetically chronicles these '90s pioneers, including Justin Hall, who obsessively posted a real-time archive of his life in the early '90s; Evan Williams and Meg Hourihan, who developed a simple program-subsequently sold to Google-that made blogging accessible to anyone (Williams would later develop Twitter); Robert Scoble and others, who showed, for better or worse, that blogging could be profitable; and Josh Marshall, who made blogging a true journalistic endeavor. As more people have discovered the joys of blogging, what has been created, Rosenberg claims, is nothing less than "a new kind of public sphere, at once ephemeral and timeless, sharing the characteristics of conversation and deliberation." Blogging allows for new possibilities in form and content and the blossoming of new talent; it's also fun. Yet Rosenberg also acknowledges the critiques of such an unbridled flood of verbiage. With patient detail-and for the most part jargon-free language-he addresses the concern that the blogosphere is nothingmore than a mindless morass of trivia-that it may be creating an "echo chamber effect" where we talk to only those who agree with us, and may lead to cultural disintegration as millions of monologues replace a common discourse. Though he never dismisses them out of hand, the author concludes that these complaints are mostly baseless or overwrought. Rosenberg suggests that blogging's "outpouring of human expression" should "delight us." This fair and fascinating account should delight as well. Author events out of San Francisco and Seattle

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    Biography

    SCOTT ROSENBERG is an award-winning journalist who left the San Francisco Examiner in 1995 with a group of like-minded colleagues to found Salon.com, where he served first as technology editor, later as managing editor, and finally as vice president for new projects, leaving in 2007 to write Say Everything. For much of that time he wrote a blog covering the world of computers and the web, explaining complex issues in a lively voice for a non-technical readership. His coverage of the Microsoft trial, the Napster controversy, and the Internet bubble earned him a regular following. Rosenberg's writing has appeared in the New York Times, Wired, the San Francisco Examiner, and other publications. His previous books include Dreaming In Code. Visit his website at www.wordyard.com.

    From the Hardcover edition.

    Customer Reviews

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    unbiased review of how blogging came to beby Anonymous

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    September 05, 2009: The unvarnished history of who began the first blogs. Leaves out the I did it first you find in wikipedia.

    If you want to know what blogging is all about. And want to start a blog you need this book.

    Does not go far into the rss 2.0 vs atom as a format issue but thats the underlying part of blogging not the content.

    And as we know content is king.