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Monday, May 14, 2007


Chatter at the Salon Shop

Today’s Salon piece gets credit for everything but the paranoid subheading and citing Alexa statistics.  “History belongs to the people who write it,” Drudge once said in a 2003 interview.  “I would hate to read my obituary in Salon.”

But a Matt Drudge primary?  Okay with me…a summit in Miami Beach sure beats New Hampshire any day!

Salon        

  by RegoPark - 8:35 pm        Comments (6) »


Sunday, May 13, 2007


About Last Post…What Human Resources Are Necessary to Run the Drudge Report?

Just to make sure everyone’s clear on my M.O., let me elaborate on last post’s comment discussion. 

While, yes, it is Matt Drudge I blog about in this space, I don’t necessarily share his philosophy on what constitutes a legitimate source.  Most of my research is a by-product of a book project that’s recently been completed. With few exceptions, I have all of the procurable archive of Matt Drudge’s press coverage in my possession — along with those of individuals whose careers or lives have been touched by him (e.g. Michael Isikoff, David Brock, Jeannette Walls, Ann Coulter, Dan Mathews, Lucianne Goldberg).  I’ve copied them all onto a Word document in which his actual quotes are highlighted.  Because in my opinion, you can tell the most about an individual by what he or she volunteers to the press.  I generally compare and contrast different reporters’ accounts of the same incidents and put very little stock in paraphrasing of quotes or subjective assessments of a subject’s apartment layout or physical appearance. (As you can surmise, I’m a big fan of raw interviews and glean much of my notes from Drudge’s radio comments.)

For the purpose of this particular blog, I myself do not post anonymous tips on here or statements based solely on unconfirmed gossip. 

That said, Andrew Breitbart is the only person who has ever worked for the Drudge Report. In the early years of the site, outsourcing or hiring staff wasn’t an option. Aside from the original subscription revenue and money from a column with Wired and AOL, Drudge didn’t make serious money until around 1999 when the website began to carry advertising. Today, he has the time and the technology he didn’t have in the lean years when he was filing reports from pay phones. 

As far as Drudge paying or otherwise reimbursing sources: that’s within the realm of possibility. He stated in a 1998 Playboy interview that “checkbook journalism has broken some great stories” and that he’d theoretically be willing to pay a source, though he never had at that time).  It’s also outside the realm of probability.  Not only are his special reports infrequent now, but he given the massive amount of contact attempts daily and sources perfectly willing to leak something for free.

In any case, it will be interesting to see the ramifications Breitbart’s career will have on the Drudge Report.  Will we see links to Breitbart TV, and if so, how frequently? How great will be the proportion of Breitbart links — or new media links in general — to the rest of the daily news aggregate on Drudge? The two men have assumed two very different business models: Breitbart TV is affiliated with a parent company and employs staff.  The Drudge Report is a self-contained news aggregate that remains simple enough to be manageable.  More on this later. 

As I’ve said before, Breitbart left Matt’s employ for a few months in 2005 work for the newly launched Huffington Post — returning to Arianna Huffington, for whom he had previously worked as a researcher.  Now that he is well on his way to extend his brand (having co-authored a book, et al) his departure wouldn’t be surprising. There will come a point when going out on his own will be the logical stepping stone. It’s therefore natural that people would speculate about Andrew’s leaving, so that kind of insider gossip, if it’s intrinsically worth anything, carries little value in that context.  It’s more like “anticipatory hearsay”. Either he hasn’t said anything about leaving, or he’s already gone. 

What I know, right now, is that neither Drudge nor Breitbart is linking permanently to the other’s site (though a Breitbart story is currently on the Drudge page). But I’m not reading anything notable into that right now.  In my mind, the soap opera’s not so much the drama that may or may not be transpiring behind the scenes, but its impact on a simple site with the revenue and influence of a large media outlet.  Pay attention to the man behind the curtain!

  by RegoPark - 9:51 pm        Comments (7) »


Thursday, May 10, 2007


Drudge’s Right Hand Man Tries His Hand at….

http://www.breitbart.tv/index.php

Since he returned to Drudge in 2005 after a few months’ absence, there’s been a clearer demarcation between Andrew Breitbart’s contribution to Drudge Report and Matt’s.  First breitbart.com, now the new new media.  Whatever’s in store for the one and only Drudge employee ever, it should get interesting…

(P.S. I’ll get to the radio comment I alluded to last post…this week I’ve only a few minutes of online time and I really need to listen to the archives carefully before shooting my mouth off.)

  by RegoPark - 5:53 pm        Comments (3) »


Monday, May 7, 2007


Choices of the Mouth

On last night’s radio show, Drudge made an arguably controversial statement or two to which I need to listen again before addressing.  I think of it as more of a badly timed word choice than anything else, but the press could have a field day over it.  Check out Drudge Radio Archives as soon as the May 6 footage is up.

  by RegoPark - 2:50 pm        Comments (1) »


Tuesday, May 1, 2007


Science Fiction Double Feature…

Sci-fi not being my genre, I fall short of offering the most astute review this work deserves. but a recent novel gives a nod to the impact of the big D on the Information Age (and, to my enormous relief, bears no resemblance to the fiction project I just completed.)

David Louis Edelman’s debut depicts a news world where reporters and pundits (a.k.a. “drudges” are not beholden to colossal news corporations.  Infoquake makes the media the sole domain of independent journalists “with their own larger-than-life personalities and political agendas”.

“I wanted to tip my hat to Drudge in the novel,” Edelman states in last year’s press release. “When I wrote the first drafts…the Clinton impeachment scandal was in full bloom. Here was a private citizen armed with little more than a personal computer, and yet his inside reporting echoed to the highest levels of government…”

Barnes & Noble billed Infoquake the “Best Science Fiction Novel of 2006″. 

  by RegoPark - 9:02 pm        Comments (0) »


Monday, April 16, 2007


Life-Imitating-Drudge?

Those who love to scream and yell about Matt Drudge’s utter unimportance unwittingly extend the life of his brand better than I ever could or would want to.  I’ve found that the people who want to discuss him seriously take him far less seriously than those who just want him to disappear.  Maybe because I’ve grown weary of the conspiracy theories, maybe because my research/analysis of Drudge was for a specific purpose (my book), maybe because I’ve just spent so much time observing how Drudge reads and reacts to news, I think I’ve developed a sixth sense for how seriously he really takes a story and interprets it.

Undoubtedly, someone will have a Drudgelike reaction about the “possible” story Matt D. thinks will emerge within the next few months regarding Rufus Wainwright’s release of a song about “leaving America”. 

Before we all get up in arms about Drudge going after Wainwright, I maintain the same philosophy I’ve had since my early days of studying his career.  I simply don’t think that he deliberately distorts context.  I think he doesn’t understand it in the first place and gets caught up in his own emotional theater.  Rather than an alarmist, I find him more of an occasionally annoying drama king.

But while much of his comments are throwaway, I won’t refute their impact.  An insignificant story or comment often becomes significant when it appears in the Drudge Report…and someone offers as strong, or stronger, a reaction than Matt did in the first place.  In that sense our Drudge is a bit of a bull in a china shop — and like a three hundred pound bull, he can do almost anything he wants to.  Or perhaps he’s more of a big, clunky cow mooing through the primrose patterned Royal Doulton with a cumbersome bell that makes as much noise as the earthenware crashing around him…while the people left in his wake record the damage and examine the pathogens in the cow pat materials he left behind. 

It’s the detractors who not only helped make Drudge what he is, but also keep him relevant now that citizen journalism has lost its novelty and gained a modicum of respectability.  “The more they slime me,” he told Playboy last decade, “the more they make of me.”  The man who once stated in his tell-all biography that “no serious thought seemed to have entered (Drudge’s) head” now bases a career on documenting his crimes against humanity and journalism on Media Matters.  If you want him to stop jerking your pigtails — stop reacting to him!

(P.S. Matt Drudge is more likely, by the way, to leave the U.S. than Wainwright.  He has stated on-air that he’d go elsewhere were Hillary elected President because she would “tax the hell out of (his) bracket”.) 

  by RegoPark - 2:05 pm        Comments (0) »


Friday, April 6, 2007


A statement from Drudge’s publicist concerning Matt’s permanent post hosting “The View”

April Fools. (You DID read that last sentence of the previous entry, didn’t you?)

 

  by RegoPark - 3:13 pm        Comments (0) »


Wednesday, March 28, 2007


Matt Drudge to join The View next fall!

Just as I was getting over Drudge buying out Huffington Post, comes this from Women’s Weir Daily News Online:

(Four paragraphs down):

…Drudge will become the show’s first permanent male host after this summer’s broadcast hiatus.  View representatives declined comment on whether he will replace a current cast member or become a fifth regular.

The change will restore a balanced harmony to the Emmy Award-winning series, which has been littered with controversy and personality conflicts amongst the evolving host lineup.  Drudge offers media acumen to counter the “laywoman” perspective, as well as a more aggressive presence to match wits with O’Donnell and serve as a fatherly buffer between her and the sensitive Hasselbeck.

“The historic model (of four female hosts) has proven too volatile, and something needs to be done to restore brand equity,” Poisson-D’Avril added.

An insider tells WWDN that the hiring choice may stem from a favor from Walters to Arianna Huffington, who announced Monday that she would merge her Huffington Post with Drudge Report Omnimedia.

The Drudge camp confirms only that “Matt has agreed to be the guinea pig in the henhouse.”

“He looks forward to bonding with the ladies. It’s a forum where great minds can kick back, relax, and watch hell freeze over together,” said April Fools, Drudge spokesperson.  WWDN 

  by RegoPark - 11:34 pm        Comments (1) »




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