Ideas for Online Publications
Lessons From Blogs, Other Signposts


DAN-FROOMKIN


The Washington Post’s Dan Froomkin publishes a thought-provoking article in the latest issue of the Online Journalism review, titled Ideas for Online Publications: Lessons From Blogs, Other Signposts. The author of washingtonpost.com’s White House Briefing column ruminates on how new media — and the blogging phenomena — must continue to evolve.

The most successful blogs all have something in common. Their authors are unashamedly enthusiastic about the topic at hand. (Often, of course, they’re outraged.) The lesson: There is no virtue in sounding bored online.

Froomkin argues for risk-taking online journalism — defined by voice, vision, passion, personality and outrage. Even so, he suggests, “we shouldn’t be so damn serious … the truth is, fun things click on the Web.”

Shrek 2 Still On Top: Disaster Befalls ‘Day’ In Plunge To 2nd Place


DAY-AFTER-TOMORROW

The Day After Tomorrow ad satire

Perhaps satirical ads, such as the one to the right — not to mention, some pretty savage reviews — hurt the opening box office for this weekend’s summer blockbuster, The Day After Tomorrow, but as far as VanRamblings is concerned, Roland Emmerich’s film has proved to be the most entertaining of the summer blockbusters thus far in 2004, even if the story and dialogue are a tad clichéd.
Seems the movie-going public didn’t agree, though. Now, let’s get real for a moment: taking in a three-day box office total of $70, in its first weekend, can’t be considered small change, but with no spike in the Saturday box office over Friday, salutary box office in the days to come hardly holds out much hope of turning the disaster epic into a summer blockbuster smash. Oh well. Still, Monday is a holiday in the U.S., and final figures will probably spike some.
With The Day After Tomorrow in second, Shrek once again emerged as the box office winner, taking in a gross of $73.1 million, for a record-setting $238,800,000 12-day total. Troy ran a distant third at $11.5 million, while Touchstone’s Kate Hudson-starring domestic comedy, Raising Helen, took in a modest $11.2 million in its opening weekend. The only other newcomer this week, Snoop Dogg’s Soul Plane, crashed on take-off.
When Memorial Day figures are published on Monday — this is a long weekend in the U.S., after all — VanRamblings will update this story, with links to various sites which provide perspective on the weekend box office.

Rock The Vote: 2004 Federal Election Blog Links, and More


CANADA-FEDERAL-LEADERS

l-r: Paul Martin, Liberal; Stephen Harper, Conservative; Jack Layton, NDP; Gilles Duceppe, BQ



A federal election is going on in Canada, although you’d hardly know it.
Even so, the election that’ll take place in less than a month — on June 28th — ranks as one of the most important Canadian elections in more than 30 years (because of the fact the possibility exists that the right-wing Conservative party might gain power, and do to Canada that which Bush has done to the United States, Gordon Campbell has visited upon British Columbia, and Mike Harris did to harm good government in Ontario).
Today, VanRamblings offers a few blog links to provide some perspective on the events that will take place over the course of the next month.

  • Macleans writer Paul Wells is keeping a regularly updated online diary that, in recent days, has proved invaluable reading.
  • Terminal City writer Ian King’s Vancouver Scrum is must reading.
  • The Globe and Mail have teamed up with the McGill University Observatory on Media and Public Policy to provide statistics on how the leaders and parties are faring in terms of positive or negative coverage. The links and informative commentary provide worthwhile reading.
  • CBC’s Peter Kavanagh provides a a daily analysis of cross-Canada newspaper election coverage.
  • Jim Elve’s E-Group Elections Blog continues as a must visit blog for perspective on the election. Don’t forget to click on the links to the left.
  • Ian Welsh and Kevin Brennan’s Tilting at Windmills blog has emerged as a favourite, although I don’t always agree with them.
  • Don, at Revolutionary Moderation, is updating political commentary daily.
  • The folks at Politics Canada suggest that they provide a ‘balanced perspective’, as if anything such things exists. Still, worth a look.
  • The Montreal Gazette’s E-File has joined the campaign blogsphere, while The Globe and Mail’s blog Globe reporters unwired offers pithy commentary from Campbell Clark, Brian Laghi, Steven Chase and Daniel LeBlanc.
  • Then there’s Canada 2004, an independent site, “owned and operated by David MacDonald, a political science student and J. P. McCarthy Scholarship winner attending St. Francis Xavier University.” As Tom at Trail Spotter says of David’s site, “Good, basic info on ridings, candidates, historical and house stats, and a rolling newsfeed.”
  • And while we’re at it, Trail Spotter has a pretty damn good election blog.
  • Longtime Liberal apparatchik Warren Kinsella’s Politics Watch, which he humbly calls ‘Canada’s Political Portal’, is well worth a look.
  • Torontonian Andrew Spicer believes there’ll be a Liberal minority government.
  • And, in all fairness, I suppose, on the right I should include Norman Spector’s Norman’s Spectator — not a terrifically good looking site (but the links work). Spector is a regular commentator on Victoria’s new VI.

If you’ve got more links to bloggers — or online journalists — who are providing daily coverage of the federal election, that you’d like to see added to the list above, either write to VanRamblings, or click on Comments below. VanRamblings will update the listings as more links become available.