September 21, 2005

crappy wine

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“Socia­li­sed Media” appa­rachik, BBC emplo­yee Ben Met­calfe calls Stormhoek “crappy”.

I just think it pollu­tes the blo­gosphere as you are giving one brand an a dis­pro­por­tio­nate advan­tage over its rivals 

51 Responses to “crappy wine”

  1. Scott Reynen says:

    Looks to me like Ben was making a rea­so­na­ble cri­ti­cism about the impli­ca­tion that the “free” wine should be paid for in good reviews, and rather than address that, you’re spin­ning it into a big busi­ness vs. little busi­ness issue and pain­ting the BBC as some sort of tota­li­ta­rian regime. If this is how you res­pond to peo­ple who don’t like the wine, I think you’re just pro­ving Ben’s point.

  2. Peter Cooper says:

    I disa­gree with his com­ment that the mar­ke­ting is crappy. I think you guys have done a great job.
    That said, my girl­friend and I actually didn’t like the wine either (we found it a little harsh/sharp, we’re more used to mellow tip­ples). I didn’t blog about it as I con­si­der it rude to com­plain about things you get for free. Hasn’t stop­ped me suc­cee­ding into strong-arming com­pa­nies I’ve paid into sub­mis­sion via my blog though, but I sup­port the Stormhoek cam­paign and wish it every suc­cess, even if their wine made my girl­friend feel ill (admit­tedly, polishing off the bottle when she didn’t like it was not a good idea!), so didn’t want to post on my blog about it.
    So, perhaps Ben is right in that peo­ple would not feel inc­li­ned to com­plain about the wine. In any case, wine is highly sub­jec­tive and rela­ted to per­so­nal opi­nion, as oppo­sed to, say, cus­to­mer ser­vice.. so any com­plaints are merely worth­less opinion.

  3. zeek says:

    Hea­ven for­bid someone doesn’t fawn and drool all over everything mighty HMc touches. Hugh, you were much more inte­res­ting when you tal­ked ideas rather than having become your own num­ber one evangelist/apologist/bulldog.
    Yes, I know a blog is one’s self and what they are doing out there in the ether, but man, reign it in.
    The sha­me­less self-promotion you hate big adver­ti­sing for so much seems to reflect more than a little self-loathing on your part. Until then, my friend, I know you could care less, but you’ve been boo­ted from my daily rea­ding list, so save the eru­dite ‘last word’ for someone who’ll be back.

  4. I think this high­lights a fun­da­men­tal divide within the blo­gosphere, namely whether it is ok to use blogs for mar­ke­ting pur­po­ses (and WOM etc IS mar­ke­ting) or not.
    Blogs, when used inte­lli­gently and honestly, level the mar­ke­ting pla­ying field, giving the little guy a fair chance. I per­so­nally can’t see anything bad about this.

  5. hugh macleod says:

    Scott, if you can find one, sin­gle impli­ca­tion like the one you or Ben sug­ges­ted, made by me or Stormhoek, I would love to see it.
    I have no issue with Ben not liking the wine. There’s plenty of good wine I’m not fond of either, same as anyone else.
    I just thought it was interesting/amusing seeing the reac­tion from a mem­ber of the big media esta­blish­ment. Like I said, Social Media and Socia­li­sed Media are not com­pa­ta­ble.
    Sorry you didn’t like the wine, Peter. (Visua­li­sing a new wave of “I hated the Stormhoek” blog posts…).
    PS: I’ve met Ben before and con­si­der him a nice guy. Not to men­tion, very cle­ver. I just hap­pen to disa­gree with him on this one.

  6. i was very honest about it. and thats the gam­ble hugh takes.
    but hugh — why the fuck are you attac­king the BBC because someone that wor­ked there called Stormhoek crappy? A bit dis­pro­por­tio­nate no? By all means push back against the author of the com­ment, but surely not his emplo­yer. or did you have a BBC rant in mind and deci­ded to drop it now?

  7. Lee Bryant says:

    I think you’re being a bit unfair here Hugh, espe­cially to label Ban as some kind of Big Media Apa­rachik, which is patently absurd in the con­text of his work.
    Another pos­ter has already said they felt it would be impo­lite to give a nega­tive review to a free gift, so it’s not like his point is enti­rely without merit.
    I still think you are onto something cle­ver here, but I am not sure how well your mes­sage stands up when you engage in ad homi­nem attacks on those who don’t agree.
    Disc­lo­sure: I got a bottle and I drank it but didn’t blog it. I also enjo­yed (too much of the) the Rosé at Our Social World ;-)

  8. Thomas says:

    Funny Peter, I would have expec­ted you to defi­na­tely blog that you didn’t care for the wine, even if you did like the mar­ke­ting. But perhaps that’s just the Ame­ri­can in me shi­ning through. :-)
    In one of Cory Doctrow’s talks he pos­ted, he men­tio­ned spe­ci­fi­cally that peo­ple were using exact quo­tes and refe­ren­ces to his “free” web book when they were revie­wing it on Ama­zon. These were by peo­ple didn’t like it and he was tic­kled because even though the guy didn’t enjoy it was adver­ti­sing for the book.
    If I were asso­cia­ted with Stormhoek, I sus­pect I’d feel the same as Cory did about any reference.

  9. Scott Reynen says:

    An impli­ca­tion, by defi­ni­tion, can’t be seen. It’s implied. Are you being inten­tio­nally obtuse? I thought Ben made it clear that the impli­ca­tion that posi­tive res­pon­ses are expec­ted comes with any free give away. Peter repea­ted the same thing. Per­so­nally, I find the “big busi­ness is out to get me” inc­re­dibly boring. But that’s not really the point. You sitll haven’t addres­sed Ben’s cri­ti­cism. How can you expect to get honest feed­back on the wine when the act of giving it away com­ple­tely chan­ges the con­text? How is this any dif­fe­rent from giving free tooth­paste to den­tists and then saying “4 out of 5 den­tists recom­mend our toothpaste”?

  10. RichW says:

    As a mar­ke­ter I find what you’re doing is fas­ci­na­ting. What’s not a level pla­ying field? If anything I don’t unders­tand why more mar­ke­ters aren’t doing it.
    Like your now-former rea­der I pass over a lot of the English Cut posts because I’m not in the mar­ket for a $4K suit so I don’t need the details. But I am VERY inte­res­ted in the mar­ke­ting model. Same with Stormhoek (and I hope to be on the list when the sam­pling hits the US, *hint*).
    That said, I agree that perhaps you were a bit too defen­sive in your reply. After all, Ben said he doesn’t even drink wine, which makes his com­ments on the pro­duct qua­lity null and void as far as your tar­get mar­ket is con­cer­ned.
    Had he said, “I don’t even like wine, but I like this,” then I’d be concerned.

  11. Wow! You are moving right along.
    Ben’s cri­ti­sism is right in line with my favo­rite blog­ging for dollars you nasty whore
    Jason Cala­ca­nis.
    The idea of not having the Chi­nese Wall, or wait for it…No clothes on the empe­ror, is dri­ving these guys nuts..
    keep it up!

  12. Hey, kudos to Ben for saying he thought the wine was crappy. That seems fair game to me, if that’s his view.
    But “pollu­ting the blo­gosphere”? Puh-lease. Isn’t that a bit OTT? The sort of thing Mary Whi­tehouse would have said about the sex being refe­rred to on tele­vi­sion.
    Let’s not get all puri­ta­ni­cal about this. The blo­gosphere is not all purity. Purity is boring.

  13. hugh macleod says:

    John­nie, the “Purity Wars” were fought and won a long time ago. And Thank God for that.

  14. matt gough says:

    After get­ting my free bottle i have been buying Stormhoek on a regu­lar basis. i have almost made my way through the entire range (can’t track down the Caber­net Sau­vig­non in the shops (two towns and one city)) and have given it as gifts and recom­men­ded it to my friends.
    like you said, if i had hated it i could have slam­med it. ok so it’s get­ting lots of cove­rage because it’s the only blog­ged wine. but i guess that as soon as others peo­ple start trying to copy the idea he will call them crappy for not being ori­gi­nal.
    the Stormhoek meme works because the pro­duct works.

  15. Blo­gosphere — what? mino­rity sport. More like blo­go­circ­les. There is no proof this works  — don’t get me wrong, Hugh is unques­tio­nably a great change agent and I like the ideas — but unfor­tu­na­tely Hiugh’s approach is tin­ged with the kind arro­gance that pis­ses Big Money off.

  16. Ben Metcalfe says:

    Oh boy where do I start.
    I guess the first thing I should do is thank you Hugh for gene­ra­ting so much pro­mo­tion for my blog. I only had 9 com­ments to the ori­gi­nal post on my website

  17. Music, book, and movie revie­wers nearly always get their sam­ples for free, but that never stop­ped anyone from trashing a bad movie. Blog­gers are peo­ple, not pro­fes­sio­nal cri­tics. I have a hard time belie­ving Stormhoek’s advan­tage is somehow dis­pro­por­tio­nate – com­pa­red to what? And was it “given” to them, or did they earn it? To paraph­rase Roseanne Barr, advan­tage is like power, no one gives it to you – you just take it.
    I think Ben has valid points about per­so­nal sta­te­ments, but I disa­gree with him that the Stormhoek mar­ke­ting cam­paign works for the wrong rea­sons. As I said, most blog­gers aren’t pro­fes­sio­nal cri­tics. Real peo­ple blog­ging has a dif­fe­rent kind of cre­di­bi­lity a pro­fes­sio­nal cri­tic could never have. That some blog­gers would choose not to say anything nega­tive does say a lot about this kind of mar­ke­ting – just nothing bad, as Ben feels.
    What says the most about this kind of mar­ke­ting is the reac­tion to it. The cam­paign is obviously suc­cess­ful and some folks feel threatened.

  18. Jessi Webb says:

    Hello,
    I just read you awe ins­pi­ring article on a coming to terms with a crea­tive exis­tence in Lens­work maga­zine. Fabu­lous!!!
    Why, it simply reaf­fir­med that I am on the right track! Now I just need to air mail it to every art uni foyer in the nation…
    I appre­ciate the work you are doing on the cards as well, it reminds me of the type of work the love child of Bukowski and Saint-Exupery might create! Yes! Just ignore the highly dis­tur­bing visual aspect of the ana­logy and I think one may see my point!
    Thank You,
    Jessi Webb
    P.S. I would rather be a lonely wolf.

  19. Jason says:

    Funny, I grew up in New York and up the road was a Bas­kin and Rob­bins ice cream store. Bas­kin and Rob­bins was known as “31 Fla­vors”, but ulti­ma­tely grew to 131 fla­vors. So, when you ente­red the store there was a little bas­ket of pink spoons, and if you wan­ted a sam­ple, all you had to do was pick up a spoon and ask. If you liked it, you said yum, bought a cone and maybe told a friend. BTW– 31 fla­vors grew into a big busi­ness.
    What is the dif­fe­rence here? There are some free sam­ples and the new way to say “yum” is through a blog, ins­tead of telling your friends by word of mouth.(and of course, next weeks word of mouth semi­nar in NY will be alot about blog­ging)
    Does anyone remem­ber the P&G deter­gent and soap sam­ples thru the mail? What about Mrs. Fields coo­kies sam­ples in malls?
    The sam­pling device is as old a mar­ke­ting, but the dif­fe­rence here is that it is never done for wine and most pro­du­cers are too sca­red to let the public post their views.
    Kudos to Stormhoek for having the faith in their pro­duct to under­take this very public route to market.

  20. hugh macleod says:

    Den­nis, no worries– I’m being paid to piss Big Money off.
    Ben, right back atcha. Will hap­pily buy you a drink the next time we see each other.

  21. Hugh,
    Ben vali­da­ted your mar­ke­ting of Stormhoek in the most inte­res­ting way pos­si­ble.
    His sta­te­ment: “… you are giving one brand an a dis­pro­por­tio­nate advan­tage over its rivals

  22. TimK says:

    Not in accor­dance with the ‘Values of the Medium’ says Ben.
    I defend his right to diss’ the wine. Under­weight and under­fruit from my sam­pling…
    But get real. There’s nothing sac­ro­sanct about per­so­nal publishing. Stop trying to prosc­ribe people’s beha­viour!
    I applaud Hugh’s expe­ri­men­ta­tion in this early stage of blog evo­lu­tion. Soon ever­yone will be com­mu­ni­ca­ting like this.
    Never for­get, we have freewill.

  23. Jack Yan says:

    Hear, hear, Tim! And good on folks for being honest about their Stormh

  24. TimK says:

    Jack
    In the words of Tom Petty, we’re…
    ‘Free…free fallin’
    Just think this shows how exer­ci­sed peo­ple can get about things they care about…however reduc­tio­nist.
    THAT is the power of mar­ke­ting (aka conversation).

  25. Jack Yan says:

    Abso­lu­tely!

  26. Spit­ting the Stormhoek

    I’m enjo­ying the blog-spat bet­ween Hugh Mac­Leod of Gaping Void and Ben Met­calfe. I read Hugh’s blog every mor­ning because it hits so many of my inte­rests: humour, bes­poke suits, mar­ke­ting evo­lu­tion, the inter­net, the blo­gosphere. I don’t agree with

  27. Urban Phi­lo­sophy

    Let’s start the day with an hom­mage to the man brin­ging us “Car­toons on Busi­ness­cards”! (If you recog­nize the guy on the right, you know whom I am tal­king about. If not, klick here.)
    And now for the regu­lar Shtikl-Cartoon!

  28. “Music, book, and movie revie­wers nearly always get their sam­ples for free, but that never stop­ped anyone from trashing a bad movie.”
    Which world are you living in? Most of the big movie review mags would never trash a big Holly­wood movie, even if it stinks, because the stu­dios give them access to the stars and the sets, allo­wing them to publish glossy front covers which boost the cir­cu­la­tion.
    As Ben says, these kinds of rela­tionships bet­ween mar­ke­teer and media pro­du­cer are well esta­blished in the offline world, from the record industry wor­king with the radio industry, to PR agents wor­king with TV chat shows. Every cele­brity inter­view on every mains­tream media out­let has a kick­back gene­ra­ting posi­tive PR for a pro­duct.
    It’s not at all supri­sing that this kind of thing has cros­sed over into the blo­gosphere, but one thing thing that the blo­goshere has is mas­sive choice. And I for one will stop rea­ding par­ti­cu­lar blogs if I think that the author is just pim­ping products…

  29. did you cen­sor my post yes­ter­day? if so why? it surely can’t be because i said “phuc­king”. i repeat why in the pluck are you attac­king the bbc because an emplo­yee made a comment?

  30. Tom Coates says:

    I’m pretty stun­ned by the broad­side on the BBC here and don’t really see what it has to do with the wine thing. So I’m going to ignore those.
    Ben’s com­ments on the wine mar­ke­ting were fairly blunt and I’d pro­bably not be so aggres­sive, but I don’t think it’s an unrea­so­na­ble com­ment to ques­tion it as a mar­ke­ting move. You and I had simi­lar con­ver­sa­tions about whether it was cyni­cal or exploi­ta­tive at Our Social World, and I have to say I’m still not totally con­vin­ced.
    As Fran­kie says, if you’re a weblog­ger, all you really have is your name and if peo­ple get the sense that you’re dis­tor­ting the mes­sage for your peers because you get free stuff then they’ll be less inc­li­ned to believe you (and will think less of you as a per­son).
    The pro­blem is that being given free stuff is always going to be attrac­tive to peo­ple, and although you say that peo­ple are free to be nega­tive about the pro­duct con­cer­ned, it’s always going to be in the back of people’s minds that if they are nega­tive then the free­bies will dry up. So there is a pres­sure — howe­ver slight — towards being posi­tive about the pro­duct. It is a form of bri­bery.
    And that means that any posi­tive com­ment about it will have to be con­si­de­red dubious by the wider com­mu­nity (“X is a whore, and would sell their name for a free X”), which even­tually impacts back on the brand. So it seems to me it pro­bably has an unfor­tu­nate effect on the weblog com­mu­nity, and pro­bably — in the lon­ger term, doesn’t do the mar­ke­ted brands much good. Much bet­ter just to get the peo­ple who make the wine to write their own weblog, get trus­ted as indi­vi­duals and give away bott­les of wine to the first X rea­ders of that weblog who e-mail in.

  31. I’d echo Tom’s com­ments, really — I don’t see what Ben’s job has to do with his abi­lity to com­ment, one way or another.
    Now had you said “Ben’s a tee­tot­ler — what the hell does he know about wine?” I’d have agreed with you!

  32. LSF says:

    What the hell do Ben’s views have to do with the BBC?

  33. hugh macleod says:

    Hey, Tom Coats. Thanks for the input. I enjo­yed our talk at Our Social World, I have to say.
    I think it may be a cul­tu­ral dif­fe­rence. If I ope­ned a store selling the coo­kies, or if I was hired by one, the first thing I’d do is be outside on the side­walk, han­ding out free coo­kies to passers-by. As a way to start a con­ver­sa­tion. Mar­kets are con­ver­sa­tions ;-)
    And yeah, where I grew up (Edin­burgh), that approach would have been con­si­de­red offen­sive by lot of peo­ple (At least, 20 years ago it would have. “Who does he think he is, trying to foist that crap on us?” etc.
    But then I went to uni­ver­sity in Texas, where that kind of beha­vior is admi­red. To call it “bri­bery” would just get you laughed at.
    I see a simi­lar cul­tu­ral clash hap­pe­ning here, perhaps.
    But hey, not my pro­blem. Entre­pre­neu­rally, I’m more alig­ned with the “Texan” side of the coin. And so are millions of other blog­gers.
    See you next time, whe­ne­ver ;-)

  34. Llan says:

    “It’s not natu­ral selec­tion”
    I find that very funny. How can a human selec­tion be not natu­ral, as we are part of nature when we select something? Ok, that soun­ded more green­peace than it should have, but I guess what he means “This is not a selec­tive mecha­nism I approve of” and abu­sed Dar­win on the way in…

  35. Fran­kie, the kind of revie­wer you’re desc­ri­bing is anything but. Those maga­zi­nes are nothing more than prin­ted movie trai­lers. Com­ple­tely worth­less who­ring and not what I’m tal­king about at all. You help me prove my point even more, because this illus­tra­tes why blog­gers are pre­fe­ra­ble to shills – I mean, cri­tics. Authen­ti­city and inde­pen­dence.
    What will hap­pen more and more is that com­pa­nies will be paying blog­gers to do this, but the blog­gers will not be allo­wed to dis­lose this to their audience as part of the terms of the deal. Blog­gers will do this to make money, of course. But they pro­bably won’t make much, and when what they’re doing is dis­co­ve­red, they will lose all trust from their rea­dership, but they’ll do it any­way. When this beco­mes more wides­pread, folks will be rea­ding blog­gers’ “reviews” a little more guar­dedly. Sad but inevitable.

  36. k says:

    Mar­kets are con­ver­sa­tions… con­duc­ted through the medium of little green pie­ces of paper with some old bird’s head on.
    Wha­te­ver hap­pens, Hugh, you wouldn’t be having this con­ver­sa­tion if it wasn’t pro­vi­ding ROI for your spon­so­ring com­pany, or for your­self.
    Giving away free sam­ples just means there’s a mate­rial bene­fit to res­pon­ding to the ini­tial conversational/fiscal approach…
    The phrase ‘you don’t get something for nothing’ cuts both ways.
    The pro­blem is one of mani­pu­la­tion; peo­ple dis­like fee­ling mani­pu­la­ted. The his­tory of adver­ti­sing is one of ever-more-subtle ways of snea­king pro­ducts into the cons­cious­ness of con­su­mers, and crea­ting ‘desire’ where pre­viously there was none.
    Desire may even­tually trans­mute into Profit.If you miss the mark and peo­ple feel pres­su­red by a pro­duct, or threa­te­ned by its repre­sen­ta­tive, you’ve fai­led to create desire, and thus pro­fit.
    As your poten­tial cus­to­mers get more aware of mar­ke­ting tech­ni­ques, and more jaded, you need to change your tac­tics to reach them, in order to create that desire and make your pro­fit; the mark gets har­der and har­der to hit. Mar­ke­ting via Blogs is just a further deve­lop­ment in the slow change of adver­ti­sing from mass broad­cast to a more and more focu­sed — and hence sma­ller — tar­get group of peo­ple.
    Now… is piggy­bac­king the crea­tion of desire into exis­ting social dyna­mics and con­ver­sa­tions going to pro­duce a long term ROI? Well, that’s enti­rely depen­dant on main­tai­ning your good stan­ding as a rea­so­na­ble peer and a char­ming con­ver­sa­tio­na­list… Your pro­fit depends on your poli­te­ness.
    Oh… and… erm, just a heads up… how long before Stormhoek beco­mes the first goo­gle result for a phrase like “crappy wine” or “suc­kass job”? And will that be of bene­fit to their brand?
    I think what I’m trying to say is that you can’t expect social net­work adver­ti­sing to work if you behave like a tit. Your abi­lity to sell a pro­duct is now based upon your per­so­nal stan­ding in the group you are selling to. And I’d say that insul­ting mem­bers of that group is pro­bably not the most posi­tive of stra­te­gies.
    Just a hunch.

  37. I wor­ked with Ben and he’s cer­tainly no appa­ratchik. He’s no one’s stooge, he’s a fires­tar­ter!
    For what it’s worth I think Tom Coa­tes gets to the nub of the issue. If Stormheok were to run a blog about this [well they do!] then fine — tell us about the pro­ve­nance of the pro­duct, it’s story and allow peo­ple to buy into it or not. But to use your visi­bi­lity as a *trus­ted* blog­ger, albeit a mar­ke­ting one :-) , is to under­mine your posi­tion of trust in a medium that values trans­pa­rency and pre­fe­rably non-commercial trans­pa­rency. A libe­ral, per­so­nal, non-commercial dis­course with it’s own set of values is beco­ming very power­ful in the blo­gosphere. It’s a nice coun­ter­point to inc­rea­sing State power and govern­ment neo-con dis­course don’t you think?
    As far as the BBC not being able to accept that social media doesn’t need it [socia­li­sed media] — I think that’s wrong. The BBC isn’t inse­cure about bloggers/social media — from my own expe­rience there they were trying hard to find ways to plug into social media more as a way to repre­sent inte­rest in and a range of opi­nions around a subject/issue/event. Social and socia­li­sed media can and do exist together quite well.

  38. A res­ponse to the rhe­to­ric of weblog marketing…

    The story so far… Ben Met­calfe takes a vague swipe at the Stormhoek wine that Hugh Mac­Leod is mar­ke­ting through the blo­gosphere. The approach Hugh is taking is to offer free bott­les of the wine to weblog­gers on the understanding…

  39. Tom Coates says:

    Can I just check what Hugh means by socia­li­sed media too? Is it just a pun on Socia­lism or something more inte­res­ting? If it’s the for­mer, then really it’s a bit disap­poin­ting — every major wes­tern power how some form of publi­cally owned or sup­por­ted tele­vi­sion. Most have some health­care and state edu­ca­tion sys­tems as well. We’re pas­sed a point — surely — where the mere exis­tence of government-supported agen­cies cons­ti­tu­tes socialism?

  40. Tom F says:

    What a galac­tic waste of time.

  41. The clue­train sta­tes mar­kets are con­ver­sa­tions, the hugh­train appears to be use the clue­train but viciously attack someone that disa­grees with you. Going for the jfor Ben’s jugu­lar and trying to explain away his opi­nions because of who employs him is quite ama­teur.
    Tom Coa­tes’ analy­sis is spot on.

  42. Wine Free­bie Pro­mo­tion lea­ves Sour Taste

    Oh come on, it was too hard not to use such a tabloi­des­que post title. Any­way, so someone called the wine that Hugh Mac­leod pimps “crappy” and Hugh went off and shred­ded the guy and even drew a nasty­card about…

  43. nick says:

    I think Hugh might have hit on something by noting his own expe­rience on oppo­site sides of the pond. There’s a too-often-run advert on Ame­ri­can tele­vi­sion for some pill or other, fea­tu­ring a woman saying ‘They’re giving it away for free? It must be good!’ As a Brit, I find that sta­te­ment totally biza­rre and counter-intuitive.
    But. Any­way. I don’t think free­bies are a good conversation-starter. They can have a part to play in exis­ting con­ver­sa­tions — for ins­tance, if TiVo were to pro­vide Matt Haughey and the com­mu­nity at PVR­blog with access to beta fea­tu­res or even new kit — but even then, free­bies need to demons­trate their worth in the blog­ging envi­ron­ment without rel­ying solely on the word of the blog­ger.
    Com­pare the non-bloggy approach by my per­so­nal favou­rite wine­ma­ker, Sean Thac­krey (www.wine-maker.net). He doesn’t update often, but he has put online a fine collec­tion of clas­si­cal and medie­val texts on wine-making that you won’t find anywhere else. If he were to blog a little about the pro­cess, it’d be per­fect. And Thac­krey doesn’t need to mar­ket his wine: in fact, his site is valua­ble because it lists the limi­ted num­ber of peo­ple who stock it. It’s a clas­sic word-of-mouth success.

  44. Sadly I have to agree with the ‘Hugh cri­ti­que’ bri­gade. While I applaud his approach to mar­ke­ting his inc­rea­singly vicious and per­so­nal attacks do him no cre­dit. Which is a shame.
    If he’s not care­ful, I sus­pect he’ll fall into the Benet­ton trap of crea­ting ever more outra­geous pho­toshoots that even­tually get pan­ned and can­ned.
    There has to be a point where crea­ti­vity in using this medium is balan­ced by com­mer­cial rea­lity. It is only fair that, for ins­tance, when Hugh makes com­mer­cial claims, that he sup­ports his thin­king. But no — ins­tead, we’re trea­ted to an expla­na­tion why the world is wrong. He may be right but empi­res don’t fall in a day. Neither do they collapse over­night. It takes time. They have to see that things can be dif­fe­rent. But it gets worse.
    Get­ting tal­ked about in an envi­ron­ment that is inc­rea­singly loo­king like a mutual mas­tur­ba­tion society doesn’t spread any word. It beco­mes blog por­no­graphy. Blo­go­circ­les perhaps.
    Attac­king the very peo­ple who espouse this medium isn’t a con­ver­sa­tion it is an annihi­la­tion. Intro­du­cing their emplo­yer into the frame isn’t on.
    Be crea­tive by all means. Be con­tro­ver­sial. But please stop trea­ting like imbe­ci­les those that seek to cri­ti­que or who have a dif­fe­rent take.

  45. “Fran­kie, the kind of revie­wer you’re desc­ri­bing is anything but.”
    I agree with you. Unfor­tu­na­tely, it’s all too com­mon in the mains­tream media, and is one of the rea­sons that blog­gers have more cre­di­bi­lity. And, as you seem to agree, if blog­gers under­mine this trust then rea­ders will become more scep­ti­cal.
    In light of this, where do you disa­gree with Ben exactly?

  46. Sam Sugar says:

    Hugh,
    Labe­ling the BBC as a socia­list orga­ni­za­tion — as you did by impli­ca­tion, seems coun­ter to your point. In effect you’re saying ‘blogging’s online capitalism’ — I think that’s an enor­mous leap.
    Everything else you said I agree with.
    I’d guess from your posts that you’re not a Grau­niad rea­der but am sur­pri­sed to see your poli­tics in your posts so clearly.
    (N.B — Den­nis How­lett — please stop using por­no­graphy as an exam­ple of the most base comer­cia­lism or phi­lo­sophy. I sus­pect you know little about it.)

  47. hugh macleod says:

    Sam, I said they were “Socia­li­sed” Media”, not “Socia­list”.
    “Socia­li­sed” as in an organ of State social control/social cohe­sion.
    It’s not always a bad thing– socie­ties that can’t cohere tend to fall apart. So it beho­ves the State to set up cohe­sion mecha­nisms. The BBC is one exam­ple.
    To be fair on them, they have a tough job… they have to com­pete with both govern­ment agen­cies and pri­vate media com­pa­nies in order to jus­tify their exis­tence. It would drive me nuts.

  48. Snip­pets

    Follo­wing up on my Rude Bri­tain post, Yes­But­No­But­Yes actually finds pic­tu­res of some of the place as well as poin­ting to the full list. The Bri­tish Library pro­ject Tur­ning the Pages™. Is just won­der­ful. Works are fil­med, tur­ned into 3D…

  49. Tom Coates says:

    Well I don’t think that you can really desc­ribe the BBC as an organ of State social con­trol, although I guess you might have a case for social cohe­sion. The BBC is edi­to­rially inde­pen­dent from govern­ment, mostly more trus­ted than govern­ment and is regu­larly accu­sed by every sin­gle poli­ti­cal party as being bia­sed against them in one way or another. It has a com­mitt­ment to be inde­pen­dent, and the sup­port of the public to do so. It’s as much of a con­sen­sual hallu­ci­na­tion as govern­ment, but that doesn’t make it an agent of government.

  50. hugh macleod says:

    I know what you mean, Tom. The Beeb is a real paradox.