Women Are Half of All Bloggers–But Media Aren’t Noticing
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Posted by Jennifer L Pozner August 1st, 2007 |
Check out my latest article about media coverage (and marginalization) of women who blog, published today at the Women’s Media Center and based on some of the issues I’ve been writing about over the past month in this space.
The following is an excerpt of the article — visit the Women’s Media Center to read the complete piece.
Women Are Half of All Bloggers—But Media Aren’t Noticing
by Jennifer L. Pozner
Aug. 1, 2007
If you get your news from, well, the news media, you can be forgiven if you didn’t know that nearly 800 women gathered in Chicago last weekend for the third annual convention of BlogHer, an online community of more than 13,000 blogging women diverse in age, ethnicity and political persuasion. According to a search of the Nexis news database, only three Chicago newspapers covered the conference, as if this national assemblage of women writers and videographers were simply a local story. Not one national network or cable news broadcast deigned to mention it.
Compare that to the glut of coverage bestowed on YearlyKos, a conference for left-leaning bloggers made popular by the blustering A-list boys of the “netroots.” In the month leading up to Kos’s gathering this coming weekend, also in Chicago, the conference’s perceived political power has been discussed in print and broadcast outlets from regional newspapers such as the Chattanooga Times Free Press and the Austin American Statesman to major dailies such as the Washington Post and the San Francisco Chronicle, and debated on MSNBC, ABC, Fox News, PBS and, for the satirically inclined, The Colbert Report on Comedy Central.
Despite Pew research reporting that women are actually 50% of all people who blog, corporate journalists and independent bloggers alike often prefer to fall back on the hand-wringing question, “Where are the women bloggers?” They’d know the answer if they took the time to seek us out as news sources, read our commentaries or cover events such as BlogHer.
If many believe that blogging is a primarily male sport, it is partially because old-school gender disparities in resource allocation, power and popularity long entrenched in traditional news media are replicating themselves online. In the blogosphere, young men—mostly white and mostly economically comfortable—link to, write about, promote and fund their buddies’ blogs; and corporate media play star-makers, quoting, profiling and featuring the punditry of this New Boys Network. As is hardly surprising to those of us who monitor media representations of women, women who blog (especially those who write about feminist issues) are off the radar.
Yet, in massive numbers, women are using new media tools including blogs, podcasts, vlogs (video blogs), and other information communication technologies (ICTs) as a means of self-expression (craft bloggers), connection to community (mommy bloggers), political organizing (the “netroots”), and citizen journalism. They’re also going online to monitor the media, as dozens of women do every day on WIMN’s Voices, the group blog of Women In Media & News, the media analysis, education and advocacy organization I direct.
At BlogHer 2007, young anti-corporate activists and suburban grandmothers, GOP operatives and Democratic pollsters, DIY purse-makers and tenured academics learned new tech skills, built professional and social networks and, of course, partied together. By the end of the weekend, they chose Global Health as a focal point for collective organizing as part of the BlogHers Act initiative, designed to leverage the power of women’s blogs to make a positive impact on one major issue each year.
As a speaker in a workshop about strategies to make politicians and the press address women voters’ questions throughout Election ’08, I offered the recent CNN/YouTube Democratic Presidential Debate as a case study of the possibilities—and the pitfalls—of using new media to alter standard corporate media scripts. The partnership, hyped as a revolutionary collaboration between traditional and citizen journalism, offered a unique opportunity for individual Americans to shape media dialog, but also exemplified the limitations of such engagement as corporate media remain the gatekeepers of public debate.
[snip]
…the Internet will not “liberate us” from sexist, racist or otherwise commercially compromised media. After all, the top 10 most popular news websites include most of the same corporate outlets that have marginalized and misrepresented women for decades: NYTimes.com, CNN.com, FoxNews.com, and their competitors. This is why, as I told BlogHer conference participants, we still need to invest time, energy and resources into long-term strategies for improving mainstream media content, production and policy. There is no simple, “five minutes a day” way, no Improving Election Coverage for Dummies booklet, to transforming the media. But as bloggers and as activists, we can use the Internet and ICTs as key components of a larger, multi-layered strategy for media justice. To preserve our democracy and to advance women’s rights, our agenda must include…

August 1st, 2007 12:15
Similarly, there was virtually no MSM coverage of the 3rd International Women’s Peace Conf. in Dallas that was attended by 1000 women.
August 1st, 2007 12:34
Jennifer, thanks for this…great points all.
One thing I’m increasingly curious about–particularly in terms of blogging–is how women bloggers can systematically support and help each other in raising each other’s voices and issues, as well as if there are ways to collaborate that would bolster the likelihood of the mainstream media taking women bloggers, journalists, etc. more seriously?
If men are getting linked to more and profiled more, what is our answer to that in terms of ways that individual women bloggers can come together as a network and latch onto and support each other in an organized way?
WIMN’s voices and Feministing are great avenues for this, and I’m wondering if there are others that you’d recommend, whether formal or informal?
August 1st, 2007 23:38
Terrific commentary, well supported and passionately stated. I’ve just sent it to a blog I write for that is dominated by old white guys and asked for it to be posted to a conference on journalism they are hosting at the moment. I’ve already been excoriated by Michael Crichton for suggesting that there is gender bias in the media…
August 2nd, 2007 01:17
[…] Yesterday, I pointed you to an article I wrote comparing the media invisibility of the third annual BlogHer conference for women who blog, with the glut of attention bestowed on the YearlyKos, which I called: “a conference for left-leaning bloggers made popular by the blustering A-list boys of the “netroots.” […]
August 5th, 2007 14:21
Great point, Jenn. BlogHer seemed rather historic to me–and didn’t Lisa Stone mention in her welcome that it was the largest conference of bloggers (male or female) nationwide? Did I get that right? -Deborah Siegel (www.girlwithpen.blogspot.com)
August 5th, 2007 14:50
Hi Deb — BlogHer is the largest conference of female bloggers. There were 800 women attending.
There were about 1500 or so attendees at the YearlyKos conference (more with press and staffers/colunteers).