District Sports Page: Blogging the Caps: Where did all the blogs go?
http://districtsport...-blogs-go/20511
I think the proliferation of Twitter and other microblogs have given even more people a voice to share their opinion, albeit 140 characters at a time. Instantaneous feedback can be exciting and intriguing, but it can also be quite distracting — not to mention confusing and sometimes misleading.
This was an interesting article. I think there's many reasons behind it. I do think the rise of social media outlets like Facebook (remember that time it was only limited to college students?) and Twitter are a large reason why you've seen less blogs like Dave points out. It's easier and less work to go on these mediums than it is to write a well written "report" on a game or subject.
Maintaining a blog is almost like a second job and almost always pro bono. Some of the more established ones have revenue sources, but that's after they've grown.
We've seen this with the Orioles blogs and I'm sure other teams ones as well. It will start out as a hobby but "life" gets in the way so to speak. People get married, have kids, don't feel like updating it as frequently. Eventually, I suspect it becomes less fun than it was intended to be.
I saw one person on Twitter say in reaction to this article, shouldn't the younger generation(people now their early 20s) be taking up blogging to replace the "older" bloggers(early 30s and older). I think with outlets already established, you don't see as much of this.
And let's be honest, many of these bloggers have aspirations of doing this professionally like Dave mentioned. So the "best" ones will be hired by *real* media organizations.
Interesting how the number in about half-a-decade has gone from 80 exclusive Caps blogs to now just over a dozen. I guess this is just the way it is, but I don't like it -- competition makes everyone better and I don't look at blogs as directly competing with one another as much as other businesses -- as I don't think it's an either or kind of thing.