Why do people blog?
In the ancient times, when dinosaurs ruled the earth, before the existence of iMovie, Adobe or (if you are particularly traditional) Windows Movie Maker, movies were edited by physically cutting up pieces of film and sticking them together. Obviously, film making has developed since what can only be described as the dark ages of media, and nowadays we can all edit movies (although quality is still down to the editor - and the editor can still be crap at a professional level as I am yet to watch one Friends episode without a continuity error, it's as though the progression of time does not apply to the six Americans with faultlessly interesting yet sadly fictional lives) from the comforts of your own PC (or mac, if you swing that way). YouTube has meant that amateur films can be globally shared in seconds. Now Tabs, what are you talking about with this media studies analogy, your exams are over silly - you don't need to revise this - STOP NOW. Well, hypothetical reader, it is because I am using this film analogy to continue on to describe how journalism has evolved. God damn it hypothetical reader, you're feeling impatient today. So, just as film has been adapted to suit the common man, we will call the common man Andy, journalism has become more accessible. Andy wants to be a journalist, and thanks to the simplest of modern day technology (the internet), he can practice writing on a topic, for the world's toughest critics, the general public of the world. Andy can provide the world with his insight on topics in a particular field, or can just ramble in a topical blog on whatever comes into his mind when he has a spare moment. But I suppose journalism isn't the only reason people blog. If Andy was particularly hating of the Irish (don't ask me why, Andy's a complex man), he could start a blog detailing their faults and flaws. If Andy wanted to advertise his cake decorating company, he could blog about the trials and tribulations of being a young cake decorator, and describe the company's development. Andy might even start a blog to get back at Arnie, his old friend, but that's a dispute not fit for description, and doesn't have much to do with the reasons people blog.
The bottom line is blogging has made it easier for the common man (Andy) to make his views heard to the world, and in my opinion this is the main reason people blog. People blog for themselves primarily, but with the desire to be heard globally (Andy doesn't, he just wanted the cash from Ad-sense because he lost his job to a bear selling weed, but that's another tale).
BYE
Andy is so you. I'm sorry about your job.
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