Monday, July 20, 2009

Tabbloid Reading

Have trouble keeping up with all your favorite blogs? Do you run out of time or forget to visit some of them? This is a great resource!

Visit http://www.tabbloid.com/ to set up your own daily paper. You simply enter the urls, set the schedule and let the website do the work. They'll send you a daily paper that includes all the recent posts from your favorite blogs.

Check it out! No need to spend your entire morning clicking from site to site...

Monday, July 13, 2009

Bloggers on the Bus

This looks like an interesting presentation- To stream this event live, click here

A Conversation About Media and Politics in the Digital Age
July 16, 2009, 5:00pm – 6:30pm

Last November’s elections broke barriers and made history on a number of fronts, making it one of the most transformative elections our nation has ever seen. One of the most groundbreaking changes was in the way Americans received and processed vital information about the most pressing issues—for the first time in American history, blogs, social networking sites, and other web-based media were the primary sources of information for many voters. They helped shape individual opinions and the public discourse at large.

While the Internet has proven to be instrumental in disseminating intelligent, well-developed information on public policy, it has unfortunately also been a medium for disseminating hateful rhetoric and promoting the politics of fear. The progressive movement’s challenge moving forward is to not only help curtail the spread of this inaccurate information, but also seize this new media’s benefits to help promote a factual, intelligent, and broad progressive policy agenda.

Please join us for the Internet Advocacy Roundtable on Thursday, July 16 from 5:00-6:30 p.m. This month’s discussion will moderated by Media Matters founder and CEO David Brock and feature Media Matters Senior Fellow Eric Boehlert and ThinkProgress.org Editor-in-Chief Faiz Shakir. They will discuss blogs and other new media’s impact on the public discourse, and how the progressive movement can use new media to help promote a broad policy agenda in 2009.