rise above

[audio:RiseAbove.mp3]

so i had this long post all ready to run based on some stuff i discovered through clicking around a certain blogger’s twitter feed.  it became the fictionalized story of two like-minded neophyte bloggers who came to the blogging world from an altogether different online world — the online porn industry.  they both had similar stories of how they shared their names with notorious porn stars and somehow both found twitter rocket.  (all the above is actually true, the story that i wove from those details was fictional, albeit not entirely unlikely.)  needless to say, i didn’t run that story or  you’d be reading it now.  and i’m not gonna.

i decided i don’t care.  so what if a couple of former porn stars are using twitter rocket — that’s not the part that bugs me.  the part that bugs me is people being deliberately deceptive as a marketing technique.  sure, i get that marketing is all about little white lies, but being associated with it leaves a foul taste in my mouth.  i, too, am using a product that people are promoting by being deceptive.

it’s like, oh i don’t know, going to someone else’s blog and using it as a forum to make yourself look good and genuine and discredit the blog author.  going to someone’s blog for the sole purpose of discrediting them, and doing so repeatedly, is distasteful.  doing so deliberately to drive traffic back to your site or link is even more so.  but that’s exactly what @blogginghannah did.  she got her start by going to popular pro-blogger darren rowse‘s site and deliberately posting inflammatory comments to get attention.  sure it works.  it did exactly what she intended it to do — drove traffic to her site, where she posted a long article about how problogger was a swindle.  it’s distasteful.  but then, i come from the old school days of the net where you’d go to alt.topic.whatever and read 90% flame war and 10% real content.  i got myself flamed on alt.society.gothic by asking the incredibly controversial question (for a research paper) “what is goth?”  (the word kindergoth was flung at me.)

what’s worse is people who do the same thing — target a blog and then post inflammatory comments to drive traffic back to your link — but they don’t post their own website, they use an affiliate link.  it’s worse because you aren’t even giving people the benefit of judging you by your opinions, what else you have to say, you’re just throwing an ad in their face.  i don’t like junk mail, i don’t like rick rolls, and that, to me, seems likes the two things combined.  call it a junk roll.  it’s rubbish. it might work, but it’s lame.  especially when the blog you’re commenting on has no real value for generating traffic to your link.

it reminded me of this song by black flag.  i am chosing to rise above that level of name-calling and attention-grabbing, not adding to the misrepresentation.  it’s easy for me to get drawn into that, and i am guilty of being baited, but the best thing to do is to ignore it and it will go away, and remember what henry rollins said:

Jealous cowards try to control
Rise above
We’re gonna rise above
They distort what we say
Rise above
We’re gonna rise above
Try and stop what we do
Rise above
When they can’t do it themselves

We are tired of your abuse
Try to stop us it’s no use

what can’t they do? provide content of any real value.  rise above, we’re gonna rise above.

Comments

4 responses to “rise above”

  1. Blog Header Guy Avatar

    Great site and excellent post…junk roll is perfect.

    As an old punker, I always like to hear something I haven't heard in a long time. West coast punks were on a different path.

    Anyway, I know your post isn't about Black Flag, except to tie in the lyrics, it was a great boost to push past my morning grind.

    1. jazzs3quence Avatar

      in some ways, 80s hardcore punk seems really low-brow. certainly henry rollins' later stuff reveals that what he lacks in smarts he makes up in intensity. but some things are so serendipitous and poignant and perfect they can be applied anywhere. rollins was probably ranting about the cops, or critics of the band, but his words can apply almost anywhere, which is why i used it. just because it's punk, doesn't mean it can't be inspirational.

      my favorite thing about punk is the diversity. between the stooges through the rise of punk into the mainstream with bad religion and rancid there was a lot of good stuff in there that ranged a variety of styles but was still labeled "punk." talking heads, blondie, the clash, the buzzcocks, x, patti smith — some of these artists couldn't be more disparate, but they all had similar ideals. punk was more about the movement than the music. it's the thing that's missing from what's called punk these days.

  2. Blog Header Guy Avatar

    Great site and excellent post…junk roll is perfect.

    As an old punker, I always like to hear something I haven't heard in a long time. West coast punks were on a different path.

    Anyway, I know your post isn't about Black Flag, except to tie in the lyrics, it was a great boost to push past my morning grind.

    1. jazzs3quence Avatar

      in some ways, 80s hardcore punk seems really low-brow. certainly henry rollins' later stuff reveals that what he lacks in smarts he makes up in intensity. but some things are so serendipitous and poignant and perfect they can be applied anywhere. rollins was probably ranting about the cops, or critics of the band, but his words can apply almost anywhere, which is why i used it. just because it's punk, doesn't mean it can't be inspirational.

      my favorite thing about punk is the diversity. between the stooges through the rise of punk into the mainstream with bad religion and rancid there was a lot of good stuff in there that ranged a variety of styles but was still labeled "punk." talking heads, blondie, the clash, the buzzcocks, x, patti smith — some of these artists couldn't be more disparate, but they all had similar ideals. punk was more about the movement than the music. it's the thing that's missing from what's called punk these days.

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