A BRIEF STATEMENT ON BLOGGING: WHO WE (I) ARE
Buzz Bissinger just ripped on bloggers, including Will Leitch, who had to sit there and take it because, once angered, no amount of reason would get through to the guy who wrote Friday Night Lights.
Bissinger has no idea what blogs are about, though he may claim to. So in short, for the record, we thought we might state for the record a.) who a blogger might be, and b.) what blogging does. Ready? We’ll keep this short.(For an epic poem or Supreme Court ruling–ed.)
A. Who a Blogger Might Be, or in this case, me.

My desk: taste the glamour.
DURR-HURR! GUY WHO LIVES IN MOM’S BASEMENT DURR!!! Untrue. We know of only one one blogger who lives in Mom’s basement, and that makes him just like Mike Lupica, doesn’t it? (Mom! Meatloaf and the Mets game on in five! MOM!) The bloggers we know best do the following;
1. Will Leitch. Full-time writer. Lots of people read him. Not mom’s basement on the address.
2. Matt Ufford. Ditto, and ditto. Has roommates, I think, but still. Oh, and COMMANDED A FUCKING TANK UNIT IN IRAQ. Buzz Bissinger went to Phillips Academy, a very dangerous place in its own right. They ride English saddles there! There’s not even a horn on it for stability!
3. Big Daddy Drew. Likewise, successful before becoming a sports blogger, and would be even if the medium didn’t come around.
4. The guys from Fire Joe Morgan. No idea what these men do, because they cover American Cricket, and I therefore don’t obsess enough about them to follow up. Fortunately, neither do mainstream journos, none of whom have inquired into blogger’s backgrounds before accusing them of living in Mom’s basement. I assume, judging from the brawny machinations of their writing, that they could presumably do other jobs quite successfully without going on the maternal dole.
5. Lawyers. Most post under pseudonyms, but these people make up the rank and file of the blogging world. Why? Because they are bored to tears by their jobs despite being creative, articulate, argumentative, and passionate people. Give a dam an outlet, and it’ll crack mountains into silt. That’s what lawyers are to the blogosphere. None of them live with their mothers, and many make more than the sportswriters who accuse them of living–yes–with Mom.
6. Me. Yep, I’ll go there. I’m not in the august company listed above, but I get paid to sit at home write while occasionally going somewhere else to write. I’ve been a vagabond professionally, and for a stint in late 1999 to June of 2000 I lived with my in-laws, but other than that horrific crash after post-collegiate backpacking I haven’t lived with my parents during that time. (Perhaps a sensible person would have given the often dire circumstances, but I didn’t.)
How does a person get to do this? And think this sick, perverted way about sports? Easy. I know sports doesn’t fucking matter. At. All. It’s dada, a delightful distraction, something not to be underestimated in its importance, but in the end the gravitas wasted on the Masters or the World Series or the BCS Championship game is just that: wasted, and deliberately so. If most people were to pay attention to the really, really important things in life, they’d spear their eyeballs out with cocktail forks and go stand over there in the tryout line for Equus.
Distraction is a necessity in life. I’m not questioning that. What I question is devoting such seriousness to it, as the Alboms, Bissingers, and other Brahmins of sportswriting would have it. (Back off, Kornheiser and Wilbon. You have no part in this fight, being normal people seemingly unwarped by access and privilege.)
I get ahead of myself. First, me.

Look, dorky-lookin’ 31 year old white guy. I took three pictures for this, and this is the worst one, which is exactly why I chose it: fat cheeks, slightly walleyed, hairline running for Canada, still in my prissy workout shirt especially made for working out and stuff.
But not behind a shroud, or hiding. In fact, my phone number is public record. Dial a common Atlanta area code, and then dial 668-5092. There’s my phone number, live and on the internet. If a mainstream journalist has a problem with anything, they may call it. I work with Matt Hayes at the Sporting News now, and I once called him a dick in print. He has no problem with what I do, because he emailed me, we exchanged virtual winks, and now it’s all kosher. Email Matt, too: he actually answers his, unlike some people.
I’m not good-looking, either: Rainn Wilson crossed with Jack Black is the best way to put it. I’m fifteen pounds overweight but not unfit. I ran a half-marathon in November of 07 before my right knee said “FUCK THIS SHIT” and went all runner’s knee on me. I’ll be married in ten years in June 2008. I make above the average American wage, which in and of itself is a bit of a crime. I have love handles even if I work out two hours a day, and I talk too quickly at all times. If drunk, I may have the slightest bit of an accent.
I grew up in Franklin, Tennessee and have one sister and one brother. Off and on, because Dad was in the restaurant business, we lived in Atlanta (four years total) Columbia, South Carolina (one yearish, too young to remember,) and Palm Harbor, Florida, remembered most fondly as “The Place Where Someone Let Us Have Sex With Them For the First Time. Thank you, Father Finnegan, for the favor!)
Religion/politics: I grew up Catholic and dropped it because religion, like some combinations of biochemistry and antibiotics, does not react with my system at all. It’s a big house where I wear uncomfortable sweaters and get bored to the point of anger: that’s church, and will always be church for me. No atheist evangelism, no rage: it just doesn’t catch, and never has. I’m a conservative Democrat, meaning my political decisions are easy: I hate everyone, and pay society to leave me the hell alone.
Education: bachelor’s at Florida, full ride because I scored well on the PSAT and turned in some paperwork. Magna cum laude in English with a focus in cultural studies because I loved to read beautifully written French literary theory in between drinking 12 packs of Miller High Life, lifting weights, and playing matches of Mario Kart lasting longer than some cricket matches. Master’s degree from Georgia Tech in International Affairs because I was in my mid-twenties, bored, and tired of working with refugees and breaking down in tears in the detergent aisle at Publix for no reason.
Career, or something like it: I got out of college and taught a year of ESL in Taiwan. In 1998. At the heart of the internet boom. Yes, all the money’s gone now, but at the time it was career suicide to miss out on the dot-com trough feed. I swallowed vocational cyanide in the name of adventure because a guy I worked in a warehouse with in college said it was good money, and because I left a stupid piece of paperwork out of my JET package to teach in Japan.
I thank Allah/Xenu/Matsu/Cthulu/Jesus for that, too, because I got to do things in Taiwan I’d never done: overdose on betel nut laced with methamphetamine, convince Taiwanese schoolchildren all foreigners were scary, huge-headed monsters with hangovers, and get into a motorcycle wreck and go through a 6.2 earthquake all in the same year. Have you ever been asked if your chest hair will interfere with an X-ray? Didn’t think so, Jay Mariotti. Suck it.
Then I traveled. I went to a lot of places, and smoked weed in all of them while getting horrendously drunk. All of it was an immensely good time. I learned nothing about humanity from this, though, lest you think I’ll get preachy backpackery on you. I do know this: foreigners think dorky-looking white guys want hookers, and on the fly like now, laowai. I’m married and was at the time, so I didn’t have the chance to contribute to the local economy in this fashion. But otherwise, I’m their target audience.
Oh, and Asia rules. It’s like having your head next to the engine casing of the world when you’re there. At first, the roar makes you nauseous and mad from lack of sleep. After a year, you start to crave it. When you leave it, everything else seems forever quiet and too devoid of neon, exhaust fumes, and people asking embarrassingly personal questions.
When I did learn something about humanity is working with refugees. That’s what I did in stints from 2001 to 2007 at two different agencies. I learned that people are mediocre, and that on the whole, the ones who survive ordeals like the Rwandan genocide, the Balkan conflict of the mid to late ’90s, and Iraq, Burma, Afghanistan, Somalia, and whatever other God-smote shithole you care to plug in here are the most annoying, the most sociopathic, or simply the most noble, hard-ass people you have ever met–or combinations thereof, really.
I started writing the blog as a hobby in 2005. It got out of hand when I couldn’t stop writing it.
So in short, that’s who a blogger can be. Not mom’s basement. Not a trustafarian peeling off posts from the house my inheritance bought for me, and not a lone hack who doesn’t answer a critical email. I answer about 80 percent of my emails, including the one from the guy three years ago who suggested I never put a word down again, because I was unfunny, untalented, and horrible. All three may be true, but you can’t stop a dog from licking its balls, and you can’t stop someone from writing about something he loves, even if it’s the kind of love a graffiti artist has for the train he tags.
(And remember: not living in Mom’s basement, professional journalists.)
Part two is coming up, and it will be shorter, we promise: what bloggers do. Then I’ll end the pedantry and get back to writing a mock-crime drama starring Tommy Tuberville.
140 Replies »
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75
VandyJ @ 73 - ha! To extend that metaphor, Orson is enhancing the blogging kernel under continuous CAT, and Bissinger is rather like a COBOL programmer attempting to apply patches to address SCR 2008.And.You.Suck - but the old code is leaking out the side of the mainframe.
Comment by DC Trojan — April 30, 2008 @ 11:45 am
74
Orson,
Thanks for once again showing me that though we are the same age, and though you are eleventybojilliion times funnier than I ever could try to be, now you had to go and outlive me too, w/ all your life experiences, intellect and achievements.
bra-fuking-vo, sir. more of these posts as well please!
Comment by Big Lund — April 30, 2008 @ 11:39 am
73
How about failed political science majors working as system administrators, reading blogs all day while waiting for the damn backup server to finish? Can I get a Group 5.0.1beta?
Comment by VandyJ — April 30, 2008 @ 11:32 am
72
This must be how scribes felt after the invention of the printing press. Any poor peasant could have access to the masses about their opinions on the latest jousting tournament! And you know, that silly Reformation.
Comment by dmbmeg — April 30, 2008 @ 11:30 am
71
Great post. I’m a quasi #5, as an MBA.
Comment by Harper — April 30, 2008 @ 11:27 am
70
2 Words: MAD PROPS
Comment by Snatch — April 30, 2008 @ 11:10 am
69
Boozy
Ditto 63
Comment by Der Schatten — April 30, 2008 @ 11:06 am
68
The answer to the age old questions is:
Buzz Bissinger pissed in Orson’s corn flakes.
And, yes, I admit to membership in group 5.
Comment by JeffAU — April 30, 2008 @ 11:05 am
67
/Group 5, UGA Class of ‘09.
Of course, that has precluded any actual writing over the last year and a half, but it hasn’t put a dent in the reading at all.
Comment by The Drizzle — April 30, 2008 @ 10:58 am
66
The MSM are cowards. When Nick Saban was in Miami downgrading reporters, pointing his finger, and shaking his head indignantly, nobody from the MSM had the guts to stand up to him. Nobody on radio, TV, or fishwrap. The moment he left, they all got real tough. And thats because they, the writers, stations, and personalities couldn’t exist without pitiful access. To keep that access, “you bow your head when Nick Saban screams at you, and be a good company man”
Nevermind that the MSM actually hangs out with, smokes weed with, and tips strippers with the very same subjects they are objectively covering. Now I gotta go blog about Donovan McNabbs Chin-goiter.
Comment by Oranse Taylor — April 30, 2008 @ 10:53 am
65
Don’t tell me I’m the only ivory-tower academic elite on a college sports blog? And the MSM sees blogs the same way that record companies view MP3’s.
Comment by jakldawg — April 30, 2008 @ 10:52 am
64
Sundawg-
Hell yes I was with him, through a year of teaching and then 6 more months of backpacking. My only regret is that we can’t go again tomorrow.
Comment by The Conscience of a Nation — April 30, 2008 @ 10:46 am
63
Boozy, you get your JD and I will hunt you down. Don’t do it.
Comment by Snowflake the Dog — April 30, 2008 @ 10:41 am
62
All of that is only a small step above mom’s basement. The sports journalist aristocracy wins again! GOD DAMMIT!
Comment by chum1 — April 30, 2008 @ 10:40 am
61
so, i get my BSME this weekend…
I should go back to school become a patent lawya?
i wanna join the club…
Comment by Boozy McHound — April 30, 2008 @ 10:39 am
60
Being a sports columnist isn’t like being a doctor - the population isn’t limited because of the stringent qualifications, it’s limited by the economics of supporting them at newspapers etc.
Correspondingly, changing the economics of publishing to “free” - as Kleph pointed out - is what makes it possible to open up the universe of published opinions, many of which are on niches that don’t get covered much elsewhere.
I mean, I have nothing against Tony Kornheiser or Michael Wilbon, but I don’t give a shit about any of the sports that they cover… and their forays beyond that can be laughable, c.f. Wilbon’s refusal to acknowledge that there is no evidence to show that publicly funded stadia pay for themselves in economic growth.
Plus, I like to laugh at words like “taintslap” and “equimount,” and there’s none of that in the WaPo.
Comment by DC Trojan — April 30, 2008 @ 10:35 am
59
#51: well put. While just about every blog has their in-jokes (and this one is no exception), it’s as if Deadspin’s comment threads have become little more than those in-jokes and a select group validating each other’s self-referential humor, which I am not part of and therefore should stay out of, because I’m not as Devoted To The True Cause as they are. Seriously, it’s as if some day, just before they enter ESPN’s offices and start putting heads on pikes, BDD or someone else will be like “Where were you on Feb. 1? Where were you when Ape got axed? Where were you…” when all this meaningless fighting happened.
I love Deadspin, but it seems it’s gotten to be a more hip, elite version of the Jim Rome Show sometimes.
Comment by El Hombre — April 30, 2008 @ 10:28 am
58
MSM types just fear/hate us because we are more interesting and plentiful than they are. A threat.
They are forced to play the institutional/political game of big business. We bloggers say whatever the fuck pops into our heads, and typically, that’s what people want to hear.
I don’t blame the MSM types anymore than I blame a boss who fears his underlings are more qualified for his job than he is.
Comment by Erik — April 30, 2008 @ 10:25 am
57
Let us not ignore the Steely Dan CD (from the box-set - Disc 1?) on Orson’s desk.
/Group 5, Gov’t Bureaucrat Battalion.
Comment by Rich — April 30, 2008 @ 10:25 am
56
Wow. Group 5 here as well.
0.1
And, fuck Auburn.
1.8
Comment by Tater Salad — April 30, 2008 @ 10:24 am
55
Play on, playa.
Comment by scoring@home — April 30, 2008 @ 10:22 am
54
@ 51-
You’re right that different blogs use their comments differently. Personally, I can’t stand deadspin comment threads, and enjoy the hell out of most cfb blog comment threads (though I rarely participate). My main point is that most sportswriters seem to be willfully ignorant of even the basics of blogging. If I ranted and raved about the opinion section, but didn’t understand the difference between the editorials and the letters to the editor, I’d lose most of my credibility immediately.
Back to billing hours. Group 5, what!
Comment by now_a_hoo — April 30, 2008 @ 10:16 am
53
Even though I don’t write a blog, I read many of the standard sports blogs to both get away from the stress of grad school for a few and to read takes on sports that aren’t straight from the cookie cutter, MSM journalism classes. It just seems so pathetic that these writers and journalists can’t even fathom embracing a new style of writing that’s out here on the internet. Writing, like culture and anything else, evolves over time and in this world of instant internet and total connected-ness, it’s time for everyone to embrace the fact that there is some evolution here.
The best newspaper writers and journalists will always have their jobs, just as much for their good writing as their established “tenure” they get when they become journalists. Maybe they should get off their laurels and realize that the American public is, in many many cases, very well educated and do not need fancy journo degrees to write this stuff up. Imagine if the newspapers and the bloggers could work in complete concert with each other? Wouldn’t that just make sports writing better for everyone? Just an idea.
But what do I know? I’m only going for a doctorate in physical chemistry.
Comment by Mike — April 30, 2008 @ 10:09 am
52
I usually take it easy on clients, but I’m definitely billing for reading the comments on this particular post. It’s about as legitimate as the “conference re: case” you can bill .3 hours for sitting in another attorney’s office and shooting the breeze, right?
Comment by rjsplow — April 30, 2008 @ 10:02 am
51
#38 - True, there’s a difference, but Deadspin likes to go on about how important their commenters are to the site. And they have an approval process and somebody monitoring the comments. I don’t give them a lot of slack for it.
Not that I think the Deadspin comments are terrible, but whenever I check them out, I don’t find anything that interests me there - so I don’t check them out much.
And Orson, great post. Although the guys who do live in their mom’s basement have as much right to be heard as anybody else.
Comment by Devin McCullen — April 30, 2008 @ 10:02 am