NYTimes Matt Bai on "Flash Movements" of the Left and Right
BY Micah L. Sifry | Tuesday, February 14 2012
According to Matt Bai, the chief political correspondent for the New York Times Magazine, the progressive netroots upsurge of the mid-2000s and the rise of the Tea Party from 2009 to present are two variations on a common theme: they are "flash movements" born of online connections, cathartic urges and the devaluation of expertise. And unlike the big social movements of the past, he said both movements were merely oppositional and "ephemeral," unlikely to bring big changes to government. Read More
In Search of a New American Vision at Netroots Nation and Right Online
BY Micah L. Sifry | Monday, June 20 2011
The Right knows what it wants, but its base needs to learn how to better use technology. The Left knows how to use tech, but its base needs to figure out what it wants. Both can't help but be reactive to each other. And ... Read More
Daou, Boyce to Sue Over HuffPo's Birth
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, November 16 2010
So who dreamt up the Huffington Post? Arianna Huffington has said that that she and a few friends, including eventually HuffPo partner Ken Lerer, gathered in her house and kicked around ideas in those heady days after ... Read More
Obama's Afternoon Among the Bloggers
BY Nancy Scola | Thursday, October 28 2010
A quintet of progessive, activist-minded, bloggers sat down with President Obama yesterday, an intriguing use of a planned three-quarters of an hour of the President's time less than a week before election day. Read More
Oppo-Clicking
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, October 13 2010
A follow-up to that Daily Kos "grassroots SEO" campaign -- Chris Bowers tells progressives they can help determine the Google/Yahoo/Bing that other Americans see by clicking unflattering links: Read More
Obama vs. Bloggers: The Battle Over Who Gets to Name a Thing
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, October 1 2010
FireDogLake's Jane Hamsher jumps into the debate over just what a questioning blogger class means for the Obama presidency. Read More
Obama and the Bloggers
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, September 29 2010
Politico's Keach Hagey takes a most Politico angle on Peter Daou's "Liberal Bloggers are Bringing Down the Obama Presidency" post by scoring the nature of the relationship between both liberal bloggers and ... Read More
Whose Online Base is Bigger, Contd.
BY Micah L. Sifry | Tuesday, September 28 2010
I'm glad to see my friends Mindy Finn and Patrick Ruffini responding to my post yesterday "Tea Party vs Netroots; Rs vs Ds: Whose Online Base is Bigger?" And I don't mind at all that they're disagreeing with my questions ... Read More
Tea Party vs Netroots; Rs vs Ds: Whose Online Base is Bigger?
BY Micah L. Sifry | Saturday, September 25 2010
Two stories published in the last few days make the claim that in this cycle, the online Right is whomping the online Left. First, in Investor's Business Daily, reporter Brian Deagon's story is headlined: "Tea Party ... Read More
Last Night as a Triumph of the New Institutions of the Netroots
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, May 19 2010
The name of the game this morning is, of course, to find some big-picture meaning from last night's primary results. Here's one structural aspect that seems to be getting underplayed a bit. There's a case to be made for ... Read More