Jogalism
BY Jed Miller | Thursday, July 14 2005
The Karl Rove kontroversy is not blog-born or blog-driven, but I think Farhad Manjoo's Salon article shows the influence of instapunditry.
The article lays out the story so far in a relatively straight-ahead way, but then it handicaps possible outcomes in a rhetorical Q&A addressing the questions an impatient, outcome-hungry audience might have. That's the audience fueling the instant-news engine of the blogosphere.
Technology also plays a more direct role in the unfolding (unraveling?) Rove story, with an email between Matt Cooper and his TIME bureau chief appearing to document Rove's outing of Valerie Plame as a CIA operative -- though he didn't utter her name, he and his lawyer hasten to add in a jarringly Clintonian disclaimer.
(The Newseek story goes on to mention parenthetically that "(Cooper later included the essence of what Rove told him in an online story.))" A story doesn't need to unfold via blogs for blogs and blog culture to influence how it unfolds.
Google seems to have its own opinion about this coinage.