The Awl http://www.theawl.com/ Be Less Stupid Wed, 20 May 2009 15:50:11 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.2 Keep Your Judgmental Crypto-Feminism Off My Facebook Page http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/keep-your-judgmental-crypto-feminism-off-my-facebook-page http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/keep-your-judgmental-crypto-feminism-off-my-facebook-page#comments Wed, 20 May 2009 15:50:11 +0000 Alex Balk http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/keep-your-judgmental-crypto-feminism-off-my-facebook-page "Last week Double X published Katie Roiphe's desperate cry for relevance, 'Get Your Kid Off Your Facebook Page.' Roiphe, you might remember, is a little famous for a book about how college girls shouldn't let themselves get raped so much." I do remember that! Impossible as it sounds, this gets even better.

---

See more posts by Alex Balk

11 comments

]]>
"Last week Double X published Katie Roiphe's desperate cry for relevance, 'Get Your Kid Off Your Facebook Page.' Roiphe, you might remember, is a little famous for a book about how college girls shouldn't let themselves get raped so much." I do remember that! Impossible as it sounds, this gets even better.

---

See more posts by Alex Balk

11 comments

]]>
http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/keep-your-judgmental-crypto-feminism-off-my-facebook-page/feed 11
Jezebel Slaps Back http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/jezebel-slaps-back http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/jezebel-slaps-back#comments Tue, 19 May 2009 10:16:06 +0000 Alex Balk http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/jezebel-slaps-back She will claw your eyes out. Verbally.Anna Holmes, proprietress of ladysite Jezebel, goes balls out (can we say that?) against the recent spate of self-promoting, fact-averse detractors. Here's a small sample.
If I'm starting to sound pissed, it's because I'm starting to GET pissed. These adventures in unhelpful, self-righteous semi-hysteria (yes, I went there) completely overlook the dozens of thoughtful, passionate, courageous and engaging women on self-described feminist blogs who actually deserve to be featured in fancy Sunday newspaper editions and on the pages of ambitious new websites, women who are grappling with and debating issues of a whole host of issues, including the wage gap, women of color, the ongoing epidemic of violence against women, the continued attacks on abortion rights...I could go on.
And she does. Do read it.

---

See more posts by Alex Balk

17 comments

]]>
She will claw your eyes out. Verbally.Anna Holmes, proprietress of ladysite Jezebel, goes balls out (can we say that?) against the recent spate of self-promoting, fact-averse detractors. Here's a small sample.
If I'm starting to sound pissed, it's because I'm starting to GET pissed. These adventures in unhelpful, self-righteous semi-hysteria (yes, I went there) completely overlook the dozens of thoughtful, passionate, courageous and engaging women on self-described feminist blogs who actually deserve to be featured in fancy Sunday newspaper editions and on the pages of ambitious new websites, women who are grappling with and debating issues of a whole host of issues, including the wage gap, women of color, the ongoing epidemic of violence against women, the continued attacks on abortion rights...I could go on.
And she does. Do read it.

---

See more posts by Alex Balk

17 comments

]]>
http://www.theawl.com/2009/05/jezebel-slaps-back/feed 17
Do Something, Jeff Jarvis! http://www.theawl.com/2009/04/332 http://www.theawl.com/2009/04/332#comments Tue, 07 Apr 2009 12:23:57 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2009/04/332 catfightsTrevor Butterworth, of STATS, and Damien Cave, of the Times, today have suggested that full-time media consultant (including to the dangerously ill Newhouse Newspapers) and Google enthusiast Jeff Jarvis stop complaining and start doing, on the occasion of Jarvis' latest very angry rant about, yes, newspapers. This is Butterworth: "Enough blowing; Jarvis, come up with a business plan. You know, one of those things were money comes in to replace the money going out. The endless bloviating over who 'blew it' without actual solutions is beginning to sound like an oral fixation; I realize this must be very gratifying, but it's time to fix the problem, not the blame."

And this is Cave:

Surely this need not be the zero sum game that you, Jeff, and many others seem to harp on. We shouldn't have to choose between Google and The Washington Post or The New York Times. It's not a question of win or lose, one or the other – it's a question of pricing. What I hope is that there is a willingness in both camps to make a good faith effort to understand that their interests are aligned, and that it's time to come up with a more formal pricing model. Our bosses shouldn't expect Google or any other aggregator to make up for their mistakes, or cover the industry's entire shortfall – but a little give does not seem unreasonable. At the very least, the precedent of payment needs to be re-established.
This is what mature businesses do. At the startup phase, no one gets paid. Once success arrives, the checks go out. The Web just tends to push the day of reckoning – the day of figuring out how much everything is worth – down the road. Yet, this is a communication revolution, a brave new world, but just as the dot-com entrepreneurs of 1999 (who I once covered) exaggerated the Net's power to re-write the rules – internet dog food sales, anyone? – so too are today's blogging boosters ignoring the fact that even here, in a world of links, there are some basic business fundamentals that still apply.

---

See more posts by Choire Sicha

0 comments

]]>
catfightsTrevor Butterworth, of STATS, and Damien Cave, of the Times, today have suggested that full-time media consultant (including to the dangerously ill Newhouse Newspapers) and Google enthusiast Jeff Jarvis stop complaining and start doing, on the occasion of Jarvis' latest very angry rant about, yes, newspapers. This is Butterworth: "Enough blowing; Jarvis, come up with a business plan. You know, one of those things were money comes in to replace the money going out. The endless bloviating over who 'blew it' without actual solutions is beginning to sound like an oral fixation; I realize this must be very gratifying, but it's time to fix the problem, not the blame."

And this is Cave:

Surely this need not be the zero sum game that you, Jeff, and many others seem to harp on. We shouldn't have to choose between Google and The Washington Post or The New York Times. It's not a question of win or lose, one or the other – it's a question of pricing. What I hope is that there is a willingness in both camps to make a good faith effort to understand that their interests are aligned, and that it's time to come up with a more formal pricing model. Our bosses shouldn't expect Google or any other aggregator to make up for their mistakes, or cover the industry's entire shortfall – but a little give does not seem unreasonable. At the very least, the precedent of payment needs to be re-established.
This is what mature businesses do. At the startup phase, no one gets paid. Once success arrives, the checks go out. The Web just tends to push the day of reckoning – the day of figuring out how much everything is worth – down the road. Yet, this is a communication revolution, a brave new world, but just as the dot-com entrepreneurs of 1999 (who I once covered) exaggerated the Net's power to re-write the rules – internet dog food sales, anyone? – so too are today's blogging boosters ignoring the fact that even here, in a world of links, there are some basic business fundamentals that still apply.

---

See more posts by Choire Sicha

0 comments

]]>
http://www.theawl.com/2009/04/332/feed 0