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Posts Tagged ‘Andrew Bartlett’

Crikey snags some top bloggers.

Posted by jason on 17 September 2008

Just a quick one, but I thought it worth noting that Crikey has snagged some of Australia’s best, and some of my favourite bloggers. You can see the line-up on the Crikey blogs page. The great psephs, Possum Comitatus and William Bowe, have now gone full time over to Crikey from their respectiveformer haunts. Andrew Bartlett seems to be there at least part-time, and other bloggers represented include Crikey editor Jonathan Green, Charlie Happel (on sport) and Crikey’s incomparable cartoonist First Dog on the Moon.

It seems like the psephs have successfully taken their audiences with them. I don’t know the details, but I’d wager there might be a retainer in it for the head-counters, and rightly so. Possum has been very productive since arriving at the new site, pumping out more posts than usual, and the Poll Bludger’s comments threads are still in the hundreds.

I posted a little while back about a possible “tipping-point”, where bloggers were perhaps starting to turn over enough dough to make at least part of a living. Obviously Crikey has seen the potential for monetising these bloggers’ audiences, and they have done a great job of putting them on the Crikey site, using Wordpress for a blogging platform.

It’s a much more sympathetic use of blogging than we’ve had so far from any of the big media organisations. It figures. Crikey are much closer to the groundswell of expert political blogging, and have had Possum and William Bowe writing in the newsletter over a long period. They also have more to gain by getting this right. While sometimes its easy to feel like big media are attempting to co-opt bloggers, Crikey has every reason to promote these voices, to develop their audience, and associate them with the Crikey brand.

Anyhow - good luck to all concerned. To one observer at least, it seems a positive, and potentially important development in Australia’s political blogosphere.

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Reflections on impermanance: packing the office

Posted by jason on 27 June 2008

I’m packing up my cubicle at Gatewatching HQ today, getting ready for the big move to Sydney for the new job at GetUp!

I’m excited about the new challenge, but it’s a sad moment, and the conference that Axel’s been liveblogging here has been, for me, an occasion to catch up with the colleagues who have made this job such a valuable and fascinating experience. My Gatewatching comrades Axel and Barry are included in this, but there’s also Terry Flew (who’s been a valued mentor and friend for many years), and OLO’s Graham Young who’s also become a good mate as a result of this job. I have active collaborations with all these folks that I’m looking forward to delivering over coming months.

Perhaps it’s ironic that my last act in the job before coming onto campus to pack up was attending an excellent plenary by Mark Deuze on the accelerating impermanence of life and work in contemporary culture. Mark’s presentation is part of ongoing research that extends the arguments offered in his book, Media Work. In the presentation, he was thinking through the mobility and liquidity of modern life. It was food for thought for me personally - after less than a year here, and a little over two years in a previous job in the UK, I’ll now have had more employers in half a decade than my father has in his whole career, which he’s spent happily in the city he was born in. What’s gained and lost in the move towards contant mobility?

Other people will be packing their offices today, and thinking about impermanence, including the outgoing Senators of the Australian Democrats. The Democrats have been an important part of Australian political history, but in particular bloggers and blog-watchers will be wishing Andrew Bartlett all the best in post-political life. It’s a great shame that the boldest experiment in Australian political blogging is now coming to an end. Lots of stuff about this around the blogs - I’ll leave it at linking to Andrew’s own post detailing the last question asked by a Democrat in the Senate, on child protection.

It’s also worth noting that Andrew was representing Queensland in the senate, the state in which I’ve lived my entire life (apart from the sojourn in Britain). Suddenly, there is a brace of Queenslanders at the highest echelons of public life, but people like Andrew have been central in incrementally changing the image of the State in the minds of other Australians. I think many of my friends and colleagues have been helping out there, too. I’ll be leaving the State for an extended period now, and I’ll miss it terribly, but I expect to be amazed each time I return at the rapidity of the changes happening Statewide, not least to the landscape of Brisbane.

I guess nothing lasts forever any more.

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