Poynter Online, the website for the 25-plus year old Poynter Institute and home to a wealth of articles and analysis of media and journalism, has taken notice of the fast-growing blogging trend among both expatriates and Japanese alike here in Japan. The notice was in the form of a post made to E-Media Tidbits, Poynter’s “group weblog by the sharpest minds in online media/journalism/publishing,” so it says. I have to say I feel a bit humbled to find this site mentioned on Poynter.org, like perhaps I should clear away the dirty underwear! (I found Poynter.org in the days after September 11th, and as a one-time journalist wannabee and son of a newspaper reporter, not to mention a media junkie, love the site, especially Romenesko’s column).
I was tipped off about the above piece by the good ol’ referral logs, which indicated quite a spike of traffic on Thursday (with residual hits yesterday). However, the biggest reason for the spike was not the Poynter piece, but that this site was mentioned on the German magazine site published by Heise called Telepolis, which I am not familiar with but appears to be some sort of Wired-style publication (its tagline is “Magazine of Net Culture,” and the first article linked on the English site is an interview with John Perry Barlow). My site was linked in an article I think translates to “Vehement anti-war protests in Japan,” which seems to be about recent protests against the the U.S. invasion of Iraq in Tokyo and other Japan cities, and about the role of the traditional Japanese media outlets in covering these protests (or perhaps, not covering them. (This is all via a threadbare translation of the article by FreeTranslation so take it with a grain of salt. If any of my readers would like to offer a better summary of this article than I’m providing, as well as more background on Telepolis magazine and its publisher Heise, please do so by leaving a comment).
Weblogs are mentioned as part of the alternative means Japanese can use to find out information, but the article takes a critical view of them, claiming that most just publish links to traditional media articles, and positing the interesting question (which forms the subtitle of the piece), “Are Japanese too shy to blog?” Hmmn…
Let me finish up this piece of “meta-blogging” by mentioning the latest additions to my Japan blogroll that seems to be gaining such attention recently (I can only hope folks are actually clicking through to the sites listed on the right when they get here!):
blogMagic
Canadian Expat@Tokyo
economist
fatblueman
Gary’s Boring Blog
Japanamac
Mike’s Meditations
Mint Dandy
oli.boblet.net
Random Rants and Ramblings from Japan
As I mentioned to one of the new bloggers the other day in his comments, welcome to the party guys and gals. ninzuu ga ooi hodo tanoshiku naru! (“the more the merrier”)
UPDATE: Found one more Japan-based blog, courtesy of Gary’s Boring Blog mentioned above:

I think you got the article just about right. Your site seems to be listed because of the large blogroll of Japan-based blogs.