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- title: All My Blogs Are Dead
- url: http://www.theawl.com/2015/02/all-my-blogs-are-dead
- hash_url: 5e06ee2c484fe8856d1500c372d2371e
-
- <p>A couple of months ago, I pitched a feature on the music
- industry that I was totally qualified to write. But the editor
- questioned my experience: What exactly had I published about the
- music industry? By my count, over two thousand blogposts since
- 2009. But the links to my author pages bounced back because the
- websites had disappeared. Five of years work apparently evaporated
- from server racks somewhere in New Jersey, as if I had never
- written anything at all. Come to think of it, had I?</p>
- <p>Despite the pervasive assumption that everything online lasts
- forever, the internet is inherently unstable. Jill Lepore’s
- <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/01/26/cobweb">recent
- <i>New Yorker</i> story</a> on archive.org’s Wayback Machine notes
- the average lifespan of a website is “about a hundred days.” Sites
- vanish with no explanation, or get overwritten without any
- traceable history. Media outlets, even those with salaried
- employees and editorial budgets can and do suffer the same
- fate.</p>
- <p>When a website dies, it’s usually the editorial that goes first:
- writers, both freelance and staff, then editors. Marketing and ad
- sales go next. Unlike print, where archive editions get filed away
- or become recycling, a website can be scrubbed out of existence
- because a company pulls it down or simply stops paying for hosting
- or domain rights. <i>Modern Farmer</i> went from National Magazine
- Award to pasture in a year. (Despite some <a href="http://www.capitalnewyork.com/article/media/2015/01/8561264/emmodern-farmerem-lives">
- assurances</a> it will still be around, check back in six months.)
- Hipster Runoff owner Carles, rather than pull his dormant site
- down, just <a href="https://flippa.com/3477214-famous-niche-hipster-pr-5-site-w-168-648-uniques-mo-making-1-300-mo-w-no-work">
- sold it</a> to an Australian investor for over twenty thousand
- dollars. Remember The Daily? <a href="http://thedaily.com/">The
- internet doesn’t</a>.</p>
- <p>Most of the media outlets I’ve written for have folded and then
- were flat-out deleted. In 2009, I had started blogging for AOL
- Music’s Spinner and The BoomBox, averaging three posts per day
- about indie rock and hip-hop. By 2010, I was writing approximately
- two print features and twenty blogposts per month on local music
- acts for New York <i>Press</i>. After that, in 2011, I joined the
- boutique MP3 blog RCRD LBL as the site’s lead editor/writer,
- publishing five posts per day. None of these outlets exist in 2014
- beyond stray citations, rotten links and Facebook apparitions.</p>
- <p>
- <span id="more-208257"/>
- </p>
- <p>Freelance writing for AOL Music in 2009 felt like a con. For two
- hundred words of music blogging, I earned fifty dollars per post.
- It was my only job, even though I was self-employed. I pitched my
- posts at Spinner, AOL Music’s rock and indie vertical, and The
- BoomBox; interviewed Ghostface a few times; and earned a relatively
- decent living without ever going to the office. In February 2011,
- AOL purchased The Huffington Post, which already had its own
- successful music section. Budgets were slashed and, in April,
- almost every <a href="http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/im-permalance-no-more-%25E2%2580%259Cthank-you-very-much-for-your-contributions-to-aol%25E2%2580%259D">
- permalancer writing for AOL Music</a>, including myself, was laid
- off and replaced by in-house editors who were tasked with
- publishing five to ten stories per day. The salaried model, despite
- hitting twenty-five million monthly visitors in 2012 and apparently
- costing less than paying dozens of freelancers on a per-post basis,
- did not generate enough ad revenue, and a 2013 hiring freeze
- foreshadowed the ultimate closure of all AOL Music properties on
- April 26, 2013. Spinner was its most-read music blog. But after
- shuttering AOL Music, the site, which averaged six million monthly
- visitors, was deleted entirely in August 2013. Spinner.com now
- redirects you to an AOL Radio homepage that won’t even load in my
- browser. And its Twitter account had been silent for so long enough
- that, in 2014, it was reset and claimed by a Japanese person named
- Sora, who has six followers.</p>
- <p>When I talked to Dan Reilly, former editor of Spinner, about the
- disappearance, he told me, âI assume that Spinner’s archives exist
- somewhere, but they’re definitely not readily accessible online
- anymore. AOL never gave us any explanation, but it seems obvious
- that they wanted to wash away any trace of AOL Music and promote
- AOL Radio instead. I’m not sure what the pros and cons are, but
- it’s definitely a shame that all that content is lost, even just
- for reference purposes. There have been times when I’ve needed to
- find a quote or information from one of our pieces, but they’re
- just not there anymore. “AOL continues to” <a href="http://www.theverge.com/2015/1/30/7949485/aol-shutting-down-tuaw-apple">simplify
- its portfolio of brands</a>. “Tomorrow, it will shut down both
- TUAW, the well-known Apple site and Joystiq, its pioneering
- videogame blog. For now, the company says it will archive the sites
- as channels under its Engadget umbrella” one of AOL’s few remaining
- flagship properties, but arguably its most precarious.</p>
- <p>As my AOL income evaporated in early 2011, I focused on
- freelance work for New York <i>Press</i>, which, in turn, suffered
- the fate of most alt-weeklies: Shrinking ad revenue lead to a
- smaller paper with smaller budgets and eventually, total collapse.
- With no meaningful online footprint, Manhattan Media, its
- publisher, had started focusing on growing its under-read blogs.
- I’d been writing sporadic music features for the paper since 2008,
- but this new online focus earned me and a few freelance writers
- promotions to associate editors and a weekly paycheck of a hundred
- dollars. I interviewed local bands and wrote about homophobia in
- rap. In July 2011, my longtime editor took a better job and they
- stopped paying me for months. Six weeks later, a new
- twenty-two-year-old “executive” was hired. She offered me a hundred
- dollars per month for the same amount of work.</p>
- <p>The paper, whose circulation peaked at a hundred thousand in
- 2006, published its last edition in September 2011 to a circulation
- just twenty thousand. That’s when I quit. The online archive stayed
- up until a redesign went live in February 2012. Developers must
- have forgotten about the blogs, as all of New York <i>Press</i>’s
- online articles disappeared and large swaths of the paper’s history
- either got lost or were migrated into the new CMS with broken copy
- and unreadable line breaks. Somehow, in January 2013, Nypress.com
- was sold to Straus News. The URL now redirects to Straus’s
- community newspaper site, which has nothing to do with the storied
- alt-weekly besides owning its domain name. The music blog, along
- with over three hundred posts from my nine months on the job, is
- offline.</p>
- <p>In June 2011, as I sensed the New York <i>Press</i> was
- crashing, RCRD LBL offered me a full-time editor position
- publishing blog posts that featured MP3 downloads and a few
- sentences of copy. I was tasked with leading a staff of four
- freelance writers. RCRD LBLâand MP3 blogs generallyâbegan
- shriveling that same year as fans transitioned from downloading
- tracks to streaming them. Why deal with downloading and managing
- files when you can just click a link to play nearly any song in
- existence? Why bother wading through wordy recommendations from a
- dude who secretly just wants to listen to Pavement all day when
- your real friends constantly share music you actually like on
- Spotify and Soundcloud? With operating costs around three hundred
- thousand dollars per year on top of hosting for fifty thousand
- songs, RCRD LBL’s business model quickly became untenable. In
- September 2012, freelance budgets were cut, and in October, the
- entire staff, other than me, was laid off. I reduced the posting
- schedule to one piece per day, and revenue from the site’s ad
- network, SpinMedia, flatlined.</p>
- <p>On May 14, 2013, I published an interview with Austin, TX
- haze-rock trio Pure X and an MP3 by French post-punkers Le Femme,
- knowing those would be the blog’s final posts. They stayed at the
- top of the site for five months. Even though I felt an obligation
- to the readers, funding had dried up, so I just stopped. Hardly
- anyone noticed until October 2013, when the entire six-year
- archive, including my roughly eleven hundred posts, disappeared
- from the internet altogether. Facebook and Twitter provide the last
- evidence of blogs like RCRD LBL. Like profiles of dead friends, fan
- pages and reader messages sometimes float into my feed as ghostly
- reminders that my work once existed.</p>
- <p>We assume everything we publish online will be preserved. But
- websites that pay for writing are businesses. They get sold,
- forgotten and broken. Eventually, someone flips the switch and
- pulls it all down. Hosting charges are eliminated, and domain names
- slip quietly back into the pool. What’s left behind once the cache
- clears? As I found with that pitch at the end of 2014, my writing
- resume is now oddly incomplete and unverifiable. Ex-editors can
- provide references, but I have surprisingly few examples of
- published work to show beyond scanned print features from my early
- days, so I’ve started backing up my work.</p>
- <p>For media companies deleting their sites, legacy doesn’t matter;
- the work carries no intrinsic value if there is no business
- remaining to capitalize on it. I asked if RCRD LBL still existed on
- a server somewhere. It apparently does; I was invited to purchase
- it for next to nothing. I could pay for the hosting, flip the
- switch on, and all my work would return. But I’d never really look
- at it. Then, eventually, I would stop paying the bills, too.</p>
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