BATTALK ■om page! [ Iraq in liis(j y address, i the credibilm 1 leaders hesii> n Bush’s spft President Hi m still readiD| n leaders sku entirely inisters instea; Aggielife The Battalion A blog’s life Page 3 • Wednesday, September 22, 2004 PACE BY JULIE BONE 2 Inline personal journals agrowing trendy despite potential for causing trouble By Carrie Pierce THE BATTALION me Minister ' Zapatero- ■ by criticizing unpopular sufl People are changing the way r — saidheagley keep diaries and express defending liMeir innermost thoughts as the but disagreaBtemet continues to change le way people communicate, en Bush’s Jecently, keeping an online he United Na« uma l l 1as become a popular 11, 2001 Mgbby. These interactive Web d his speedl urnals arc commonly known , the “great |vM“hl°g s 2 short for “Web logs.” ke fighting ares P aces online where one poverty tliel n wr '^ cm ries on an ongoing ' co ftsis of whatever he chooses. i cloning I Accordin g U) Weblogs.com V , 1C , lews, the first blog was the first " , “SI* *e, http: mto.cem.cl, . . . .»site built by Tim Berners- he chaos ^t talCERN .T his pace, set up ic more poll J u ,' ;l || thc '^rronsm.satBgbsites as they eame online, we suicide ■ g| 0 g S | 1avc bec 0me Web sites tilled ... And® ^6 world. Some are collec-i | •eliets. HetBjHj 0 p nicm oirs. some daily ets, includin« ron j c | eSi some political rants klren earlier collections of deep thoughts. According to an essay by Mallory sian school, fcson of the Columbia Journalism Review, the most popular blogging -hikirendidixe teisBlogger.com. which was launched in August 1999 and quickly 44 Even though a lot of people I know read (my blog), I feel a sense of anonymity be cause I'm telling it on the Web, and not to someone's face. — Chris Schock senior industrial engineering major aw ful sufleniL ' the president i: ledU.N.menr ivnjournals. Iraq, saying.' member m: e noticed all of his friends' blogs were serious. o Prime Mil st and do mor raq that is s« lend and free. ;nt said an terrorist g ' the main gn ocent in Irao eame the largest and best known of its kind. Many Aggies have jumped on the blog bandwagon and begun their Vince Mejia, a junior finance major, started his blog as a joke after Mejia said he likes to goof around a lot on his blog, once even post- ig a picture of‘Lil John, joking that he was running for Yell Leader, lejia said his blog is more of a comic outlet and used to promote his arties, Mejia said. “I also make up random stories and put funny pictures," he said. Mejia said that on his blog he also makes fun of other people’s fogs and records funny Internet conversations. Chris Schock, a senior industrial engineering major, started his blog g a campaigi 'May 2001, after he graduated from high school, nst civilians i| a * ot friends from high school doing that,” Schock said, of bound n;;'f 0 * a g 0 °d wa y vve could keep in touch.” J Schock said his blog is mostly about his daily life and issues that he wants to work out on his own by not discussing in person, d. ,, I “Ifsgreat to be able to express myself in the way that it allows me ling to appear, ontrast, s killing was lour of the: ning he was to, and to keep up with friends from back home,” he said. Ashley Cooper, a freshman environmental design major, started her blog five months ago because her friends said blogging was popular. “(In it) I can put my feelings into words,” Cooper said. Mejia said because strangers read it, he doesn’t keep his blog too seri ous. Blogging can be strange when you look on the list of people who have read your blog, he said, and strangers are on the list. “Some people read it that 1 don't even know,” Mejia said. “I IM-ed a girl who read it, and she’s from Tech. I don’t even know her. She said she was bored and looking through blogs. It was kind of creepy.” Schock said the same thing has happened to him and that at first it was weird, but after having a blog for three years, he has gotten used to it. “That’s just how the Internet is,” Schock said. According to a Perseus Development Corporation survey, blogs have increased from 136,000 blogs in 2000, to 10,300,000 in 2004. Thirty-nine percent of bloggers are between the ages of 20 and 29, and 56 percent of the bloggers are women. Mejia thinks the blog ging trend is due to the fact that blogs are like diaries, but more fun because users can include pictures and links. “Blogging is so popular because people always want to read about what other people are doing,” Mejia said. “People will leave com ments or come up to me and say it was funny.” Cooper said she finds it easier to keep up with an online journal rather than a written one. “I’m on the Internet anyway, and typing is a lot easier,” Cooper said. Some students think blogging can become danger ous with the honesty the forum provides. Mejia said he rarely talks about other people on his blog because he thinks it is stu pid to talk about someone on the Internet, where ev eryone can read it. “I have a lot of friends whose blogs are really person al,” Mejia said. “I feel like the Internet isn't the right place to get personal.” Cooper said she was once confronted by an ex boyfriend after posting something about him, which re sulted in a bad situation. “Now my parents even read my blog, so I have to be careful,” Cooper said. Schock has also experienced some of the consequences of post ing personal thoughts on his blog. “When I broke up with my ex-girlfriend. I’d write things,” Schock said. “It caused a lot of trouble.” Schock said sometimes he’d use her name, sometimes he wouldn’t. ft but both would get him in trouble. “1 figure those things are going to happen,” Schock said, “but 1 don’t have it for others’ sake. I don’t let it bother me too much.” Schock said his blog, however, is a skewed view of who he is, and one cannot get a really good view of his true self. He doesn’t divulge his whole personality, he said. “It helps out that even though a lot of people 1 know read it, I feel a sense of anonymity because I’m still telling it on the Web, not to someone’s face,” Schock said. Schock said his blog is also a good archive of how he has grown in the past three years. “I’ve gone back and read posts. It’s obvious that I’ve changed,” he said. Dr. Brian Doss, an assistant professor in the clinical psychology de partment, said some people might start blogs for self-disclosure and to gain attention. If the need for attention gets to an extreme, it is called histrionic personality disorder, Doss said. “Not everyone who has a blog has that,” Doss said, “but if someone has histrionic personality disorder, they might be attracted to blogging.” Blogs aren’t limited to just students. Amy Earhart, the coordinator of professional writing and instructional technology in the English Department, is interested in blogs. She is researching them, looking into their rhetoric as well as knitting blogs, ones that are devoted to the art and patterns of knitting. Earhart started her blog out of curios ity and convenience. “1 wanted to start a space to share with friends and family who are not local,” Earhart said. Blogs are even making their way into the class room. “Some professors use blogs for classes,” Earhart said. These blogs are cre- I! ated to have a running f discussion of class that students can contribute to as well, Earhart said. Earhart belongs to a blog t community of knitters, which she said is k a great link because it breaks down the ? divides between ages and draws connec tions between people. Earhart warned that anyone who has a blog needs to be able to balance between personal and pri vate. “I think it's growing because it’s very easy to use,” Earhart said. “My mother even started a blog. If she can do it, anyone can.” GRAPHIC BY CHRISTOPHER JONES — Tut Battalion *•*. \-V'- 7 The People Have Spoken! The Foreigners a Hilarious Hit! “Best show I’ve seen since A Chorus Line!" Charlene, Tuna, Texas I swear...even our sheep were laughing!” Aunt Pearl, Tuna, Texas “I laughed so hard, I dropped my cigarette.” Didi Snavely, Tuna,Texas iT- St l| »ES see will i have opying signs ?tfi -8; CONGRATULATIONS! Join the Celebration at the Clayton W. Williams, Jr. Alumni Center SEPTEMBER 23RD RING DELIVERY Tickets distributed throughout the day, beginning at 7:15 a.m. You must have a numbered ticket to get your Aggie Ring. Festivities begin at 2:30 p.m. Ring distribution starts at 3 p.m. and ends at 6 p.m. We encourage you to utilize the “Aggie Ring Shuttle”, which will run from 2:00-6:00 to transport guests to and from PA 100 lots E and F (Tom Chandler Dr., South of Reed Arena) and The Association. You must bring your receipt and drivers license to pick up your Aggie Ring. If you do not have your receipt, please bring your student ID and drivers license. Buy Your Tickets Now! Call 845-1234. www.MSCOPAS.org $20 ticket* A MSC 0PAS enlighten \ entertain \ inspire | ee those hilarious Tuna guys as you have never seen them before! Jaston Williams and Joe Sears, joined by a full cast, will open the 2004-2005 OPAS season with Larry Shue’s hit comedy THE FOREIGNER. If Sears and Williams kept you in stitches as the outrageous characters of Tuna, you won’t believe the side-splitting hilarity brought on when joined by five other comedic actors! THE FOREIGNER Starring Jaston Wiliams & Joe Sears (stars of the Tuna Trilogy) joined by five other comedic actors! Friday & Saturday, September 24 & 25 7:30 PM in Rudder Auditorium * Available in balcony seating only. Limited number of tickets available for each performance. Discount valid at MSC Box Office only. TAMU student ID required. Limit two tickets per student per performance. No t valid for tickets already purchased. Offer expires September 25,2004.