The April issue of Wired has a lengthy piece on gadget blogs. Most of the focus is on Gizmodo (disclosure: Valleywag is owned by Gawker Media, parent company to Gizmodo) and the rise of the gadget blogs in influence and reach. It's worth a read, but if you're too busy frantically reloading Engadget and Gizmodo to read the whole thing, we've tagged the high points below.
- "This is a business where every minute counts," Lam wrote.
- Like a couple of rival hometown newspapers, Engadget and Gizmodo have seen their competition develop into a full-blown feud, complete with charges of malfeasance and sabotage. Gizmodo's publisher, blogging impresario Nick Denton, has accused Engadget of being "amateurish" and "gullible."
- [Engadget editor] Ryan Block, for his part, offered only minimal comment for this story: Lam is a former Wired contributor and assistant editor, and Block said he was concerned that Lam's relationship with the magazine would prevent Engadget from getting a "fair shake." He even forbade Engadget employees from talking to me at CES.
- "They have audience, and they have influence. They are right up there with Walt Mossberg." As a Samsung spokesperson puts it: "Gadget blogs are the future of the world for us."
- "They have to figure out what they want to be when they grow up," says David Pogue, who reviews technology for The New York Times and reads both blogs regularly. "And they are going to continue to stub their toes along the way."
- Despite the heated competition, neither site appears to be damaging the other's popularity. Most business battles revolve around a scarce resource — audience or customers or money. But in this case, the battle for readers is not a zero-sum game. "Nothing stops people from going to both," says Jeff Jarvis, media blogger and director of the interactive journalism program at the City University of New York's Graduate School of Journalism. "This is a natural state of media. It's good for everyone."
- Victories and bragging rights are won in seconds. Lam talks about renting a different apartment so he can be on a FedEx route that receives deliveries before Block.
- Engadget is cool and straitlaced. (One typically direct headline: "Sprint Announces Massive Layoffs, Store Closings Amid Subscriber Defection.") Gizmodo revels in cheap jokes and hedonism. Its writers regularly proclaim their love of alcohol, marijuana, and Jessica Alba. Las Vegas would seem to be a very dangerous place for them.
- Around 5 pm, Jason Calacanis — who cofounded Engadget's parent, Weblogs, Inc., and sold it to AOL in October 2005 — inadvertently wanders into Gizmodo territory. Calacanis immediately spouts off: "Fuck Gizmodo. Engadget rules." Then he throws up three fingers twisted into the shape of an E, the Engadget gang sign.
Calacanis' outburst is a reminder of what really motivates both sites — more than money or prestige, it comes down to a frat-like rivalry, driven by boyish egos and measured in pageviews.
- Richard Blakeley, a cameraman for Gawker Media and Gizmodo, was armed with a little device called TV-B-Gone. He prowled the floor, extinguishing the demos and displays that are CES' lifeblood. Four days later, however, Lam posted a story titled "Confessions: The Meanest Thing Gizmodo Did at CES," which included a video documenting the escapade.
Four days after he uploaded the clip, he posted a response to his many critics: "Bloggers and trade journalists, so desperate for a seat at the table with big mainstream publications, have it completely backward ... No matter how much access the companies give us, we won't ever stop being irreverent."
Not as long as it pays off. The TV-B-Gone video received some 679,000 views by February 22, making it Gizmodo's most popular CES story.








Comments
how much are they paid in comparison to you guys? are they on the traffic payscale too? wouldn't it be unfair considering most of their stories get 100k+ views?
Jason Calcanis says that bloggers that aren't willing to work for free should be shipped to Gitmo.
@Alaska Miller: The pay rates are definitely adjusted between the sites, but writers can make a good living on either site.
Pogue comes off jealous, and he should be.
Both sites' audiences are several orders of magnatude larger than Pogue's...
THE FUNNIEST PART IS THAT EMPLOYEES OF BOTH WERE NEVER COOL ENOUGH IN COLLEGE TO GET INTO A FRAT. JUST LIKE VALLEYWAG.
@matto:
whats your problem, every comment about jason, mancrush much?
Don't you mean the 624-word version?
@BEAVERTON_HUSTLA: Burnnnnn! :|
@BEAVERTON_HUSTLA: Fuck being a member of a frat -- who wants that? I just befriended frat guys.
Thus I did not have to clean up afterwards. Work smarter not harder, that's my motto.
AND IT SHOWS.
@Jordan Golson: After school, the frat brothers hooked each other up with sweet cushy gigs at magazines like Business 2.0, while you were left out in the cold, forced to find work on that new inter-web thing.
@BEAVERTON_HUSTLA: DRINK! YEAH BOY YEAH DRINK IT. DRINK IT. YEAH GULP IT DOWN. Yeah. just like that. yeah, that's good baby.
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