Originally posted by TigerEducated
The media is not us...
Like it or not, radio has declined greatly since the advent of television and especially since the internet. There are more mediums through which to gather information, of that I can assure you, but we are not the media.
I can guarantee you that the media does use these sights as an incubator for stories. I can tell you that LSU's Sports Information Department uses this site and others to see what LSU fans are thinking (they also have to take it with a grain of salt, because they realize most LSU fans do nothing but read papers and occassionally listen to the radio-this is something that only fans who are REALLY into it do, from what I can understand...LOL)...
It's the same with political forums or non-topic forums. Reporters and talk show hosts regularly glean subject material from these forums, and I can provide proof, but it's from my time on another site, so I'll digress there....
Needless to say, I can remember having political discussions, and then having someone on WJBO in Baton Rouge on 1150AM discussing it the next morning at their first topic. Using my points almost word for word...and rebutting with my opposite in the argument's EXACT words, as well.
With the advent of mass media, you see places like Bruly's Oak Tree, or the local corner store, or the "strip" in Denham Springs or James' Drug Store in Downtown Denham becoming less and less important...
What I mean is, the Brusly Oak, the "strip" and the Drug Store were all latter day meeting places. On your way home, in the early afternoon, or during the day on the weekends, people from the surrounding areas would gather there and talk amongst themselves on any number of wide-ranging subjects.
With forums such as these becoming more prevalent, and those places becoming more historical landmarks and antiquing villages more than meeting places nowadays, you are merely seeing a replacement of what people have always craved.
Good discussion is what this place provides and facilitates. It's on a wider scale, and people from around the world can access it, you're right...But, it's just like hearing something at the Brusly Oak, then going home and calling your friend long distance. Only, your friend never got the call, and you never went to the Brusly Oak to hear it. You never left hom, and neither did they...The internet just takes out the middle man in the conversation...
Do I make any sense with this whatsoever?
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