As I listlessly click the “next blog” button on my blogger dashboard, I encounter blog upon dull blog that hasn’t been updated since 2011 or late 2009. I wonder why blogs have been on the decline for years—no one I know actively follows bloggers and religiously reads their posts every week. As a website manager myself, I am interested in the number of people who actually keep up with blogs anymore (I am always looking for more views). According to Learner Weblog, “Fifty percent of the 2010 Inc. 500 had a corporate blog, up from 45% in 2009 and 39% in 2008. In this new 2011 study, the use of blogging dropped to 37%.” Although my website is personal/informational (not for a business), I am sure personal blogs are plummeting as well. Here are three reasons why I theorize blogs are on the decline.
First, social media (i.e. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Tumblr) has supplanted the “coolness” of blogs. How is it that people on Twitter get 100 followers a day, but I only manage to scrape 50 views? The reason is that the new social media outlets are easy and uncomplicated to use---one just has to press “retweet,” and 100 people instantly know he/she is online and chic. Instagram has appealed to the visual learner in all of us—the filters make us prettier than we really are, black-and-white settings make pictures “old fashioned” and “hipster,” and Facebook…..do people still use that? Maybe this post should be more about the slow death of Facebook rather than that of blogging…..One trend I have noticed is that more businesses and companies use Wordpress instead of Blogger. Is Wordpress perceived as more professional while Blogger is viewed as a platform for crazy hermit activists and stay at home moms? However, businesses are also abandoning Wordpress, or at least using it less frequently because it is much easier to maintain a conventional social media account such as Twitter. As I was reading Wordslikesilver blog, the author commented, “A lot of blogs have been fading away. A few of my blogging friends have stopped entirely, others restraining themselves only to Twitter.” It is a shame that people, especially lazy teenagers, are abandoning blogs just because they actually have to spend time reading some else’s writing. The issue of declining blogs lends itself to another societal problem: the youngest generation is only concerned with tweeting, being involved in the “here and now,” and performing easy, mindless tasks that have some social goal in the end.
Finally, blogs have declined because of YouTube, the site where anyone can become famous and nothing is too weird or perverse to upload. How is it that quotidian high schoolers have become one million view sensations just by making makeup tutorials or witty skits involving iMovie effects? The answer is because everyone likes to be visually entertained and perplexed, and conventional written blogs just do not offer that real-life or three dimensional experience. Reading, or least being actively involved while reading, takes precious time and effort; with the increasingly fast pace of the global world, nobody has the time (or doesn't make time) to read a few well worded sentences. According to the Huffington Post, “32 million adults in the U.S. can't read. That's 14 percent of the population. 21 percent of adults in the U.S. read below a 5th grade level, and 19 percent of high school graduates can't read.” What? So while I am emotionally and intellectually attached to fictional characters that don’t exist in a 10,000 word novel, some 25 year old is struggling to read a government pamphlet or restaurant menu? Maybe the reason blogs are declining is because people cannot read, and would therefore never take the time to peruse words they can’t comprehend. However, everyone (at least those who are not blind) can see and absorb visual information (i.e. the portal sculptures in Gothic Cathedrals that told the stories of the Bible in stone to a mostly illiterate, bucolic society) in videos. Besides, YouTube is entertaining; I am not proposing that everyone abandon their favorite YouTube gurus (i.e. I enjoy watching Michelle Phan, FleurdeForce, NigaHiga, and Vlogbrothers)and follow writers instead, but reading and writing would certainly help the raise the intelligence of the population of the United States. This issue relates to the broader problem of low test scores in American schools compared to Asian and European countries. After reading Freakonomics, I discovered that teachers cheat as well to have a pay raise or promotion in the school system. What does this say about the American society? Am I being punished by not having an adequate education simply because I was born in the USA? I am trying to change this attitude of complacency and the widespread outbreak of cheating by writing and absorbing as much information as I can, often times through blogs, my own website, or National Geographic.
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