For Ask Roger Anything, Arthur the AmeriNZ asks a couple meta questions on blogging:
I sense that (like me) you also believe that writing has intrinsic value for the writer, even without any financial reward. What’s your take on those who dismiss blogging (for example) done without any pay? Similarly, why do some people also have to belittle bloggers who DO make money from their blogs? Is there any validity to those criticisms in your opinion?
Some people dismiss those who write without pay as fools. But there are very many well-known folk who blog either for nothing or for PayPal tips. Initially, I blogged to write about the Daughter and JEOPARDY! But it was also a sense of addressing my feeling of powerlessness in the midst of a Republican administration engaging in a war of choice that I thought was unjustifiable. I wasn’t sure I would actually write about it, but I COULD. I could also get Fast WordPress Hosting.
Now I blog because I pretty much have to. It’s therapy. All the crap going on and I can vent a little. At the same time, I have found it a useful reference tool for my own existence that I’M likely to forget. AND it is my vehicle to have dialogue, in a way Facebook simply cannot be for me. Something I wrote about my grandfather or Spaulding Krullers I can find again. Moreover, OTHER people find it and comment on them, occasionally years after I wrote the pieces. This gives the exercise a sense of being less ephemeral.
Bloggers who get money are considered as not “pure” by some, not of the “tortured artist”. But in that piece you linked to about New Zealand, it mentions a professional travel blogger with thousands of hits. Do I wish I had thousands of followers? Some days, yes.
But my reach blogging on the Times Union newspaper site was far greater than it is here; guess which one I all but gave up? It was too much grief, too many schmucks; it wasn’t worth it.
I’ve gotten offers to do advertisements, and I’ve resisted, so far. If something is really in my wheelhouse, I might change my mind, but I’m not cashing the check just yet.
Why do you provide links to YouTube videos, but not embed the videos themselves?
Initially, I was afraid that it might be taking up too much bandwidth and would load too slowly. But mostly, it’s pure aesthetics.
This is an odd phenomenon I’ve only seen on Blogspot/Blogger blogs (yours, Mark Evanier’s), sometimes, the videos appear to be under the wrong description. If I reload, it rectifies the situation, but it’s distracting.
Also, the videos make the posts appear too long for my taste. And when a video, almost inevitably, goes offline, it leaves that pale gray box that I always find looks slightly sad.
Incidentally, I was looking at a post on SamuraiFrog’s Blogspot website on my tablet, and a post for which he merely provided the link, rather than the embedded video, the video showed up anyway. Doesn’t always happen, but it interested me.
Thanks! My attitude toward the writing is pretty much the same as yours, as you know, but I do wonder if the people who criticise paid bloggers as not being “pure” are maybe just secretly (or not so secretly) jealous. I’ve done blog posts, podcast episodes and YouTube videos, and I’ve never received a single cent (in any currency) for doing them—but I’ve also never even tried to be paid. So, why on earth should I resent or belittle anyone who works for and gets sponsorships?! I don’t understand that. As long as they’re upfront about it (and US law requires that bloggers disclose monetary arrangements), I don’t have a problem with it at all. I’m absolutely not above accepting sponsorship, it’s just not something I’m seeking. To each their own, and all that. That was basically what was behind my question.
As for those pale gray boxes you mentioned, many of my older posts have those, and you have no idea how much time I’ve spent searching for replacement videos. Actually, I bet you probably DO have an idea how much time that can take.