blogging

What You People Come Here For (September Ed.)

Each month I collect the interesting searches that bring people to my blog and share them with you unedited.  They are simply cut-and-pasted exactly as they appeared.  Whatever you see in parenthesis is my commentary.  Enjoy

  • sick tattoo fingers
  • constitution tattoo
  • turtle foot tattoos (You think this means tattoos on a turtle's foot, or tattoos of turtles on feet, or a tattoo of a turtle foot somewhere else)
  • sick jesus tattoos (I know sick is a synonym for cool, but all I can envision is a tattoo of Jesus getting sick)
  • awesome video about everything (I would like to see this video because I doubt it could, indeed, be awesome)
  • trampoline funny
  • william shakespeare funny pics
  • bell's palsy teeth teeth
  • trampoline funny
  • d.o.pt. govt of india (I have no idea what this might refer to)
  • wood tattoos
  • cod funny (are cods funny?)

The Death of Local News?

Yesterday’s post was about the future.  Specifically about the media formats that are dying because of technological advancement.  My argument was that there will always be quality material out there and there will be money for those people who are skilled to earn a living at their craft.  But there is one area that I am afraid will be lost to technology and, at least at this time, I do not see a replacement for it.

This scene is gone forever

So what is this one thing that I worry will be truly destroyed by technology?  Local news by actual journalists.  As I see it, there will always be outlets of national and world news that are profitable enough to continue on with real journalists.  Those things will have a bias, but that is okay.  Newspapers and magazines today are biased as are all people.  At least when you read Huffington Post or the Drudge Report you know what you are getting when you read.  As I see it, this as a push.

However for local news I envision a very

hard road.  It is no secret that newspapers are struggling now and many of them are shutting down.  Soon we will be hearing the same stories about network affiliates. When this happens, there will really be no source for local news.

I happen to believe that local news is more significant to my life than national news, and I know that whoever is my mayor will have a greater effect on my life than the president.  So I believe that local news is quite important.  I care what goes on at my city council and I want to know how high school football turns out.

I live in a mid-sized city.  It’s huge compared to my home town but tiny compared to New York or Houston.  In greater Fayetteville NC there are about 300,000 people.  Unless things change seriously, even a city this size will have a difficult time employing reporters with only ad revenues from a website.

As things stand currently, the Fayetteville Observer is a respectable paper and I get headlines via RSS.  I click on ads occasionally because I want them to get the revenues.  But I simply have no interest in having the paper delivered.

Imagine that I was back in my hometown, roughly one tenth the size of Fayetteville.  I would still care about the city council and the mayor, there would be only a few less stories for them to cover.  There would be fewer local schools to follow and fewer crimes to report, but still a similar low-end cost.  (And I don't think the local paper even offers headlines by RSS now.  )

What are the options I see?

First, an [online] subscription model.  I know this is what the papers plan to do.  It makes sense right?  People paid for the delivered version, they will pay for the online version.  The only problem is that it’s nearly to make people see something that was free as having value.  And as far as I know, except for the Wall-Street Journal, this model seems to have failed for every newspaper that has tried it.

Another option is user contributed local news.  The problem with that is reliability.  My concern is with good local news  I guess there could be a digg-like system for rating stories or authors by veracity, but that seems like a bit of a stretch.

There is my irrational fear of technology.  Feel free to call me stupid in the comments and tell me how you get your local news.

Again...I ask for your help

I’m working on a blog post for Wednesday later in the week and I would like your help.  In the comments, add to this list as you feel the need. Stuff Technology is going to kill in the foreseeable future

  • Newspapers
  • Local TV
  • Books (the dead-tree kind)
  • Analog telephones
  • Snail Mail
  • Bank branches

Keep this list to things you believe are already on the way out.  You may deeply believe that technology will make roads obsolete like in the Jetsons, but that is a very long way off.

My best blog posts

I'm planning to put up a new tab at the top of my blog a sort of introduction to my blog and what it's about.  I thought I'd add links to my all-time best posts. There are a year and a half worth of posts (321) on this blog, so it's a bit of a daunting task to decide on what are the 10 or 12 best across categories.

Here's where you come in.  Many of you read my blog regularly and surely there are some posts that you remember well or that you particularly enjoyed.  Please take the time to suggest something in the comments.  It could be a post that you particularly enjoyed, one that made you angry or just one that you thought was good.  Nobody really comments here very much anymore, so I don't have the feedback I once did.

Here are a few of my nominees

Silent

Has the World Gone Crazy

Stuff to do Before I die

My night in the Emergency Room

What You People Come Here For (August Ed)

Kind of a boring month when it comes to searches.  This is my monthly list of interesting searches that brought people to my blog.  They are just cut and pasted, not edited in any way.  the stuff in parentheses is my commentary.

  • kath and jeremy mathis family (Not married, and probably not gonna marry the only Kathy I know, My next-door neighbor)
  • best rant blogs (I'm proud this brought someone in)
  • what sort are red ants
  • team rider jerm corrupt rebel (I have no idea what this could be)
  • baptist fantasy football
  • close right eye and feel twinge in botto

Some Research

Would you just take a second to actually answer this one-question survey.  I am going to use the answer to assist me with tomorrow's blog post.  I promise you will not be spammed all you have to do is chose an answer and click vote.  Please take the 2 seconds necessary. [polldaddy poll=1867698] [polldaddy poll=1867710]

No need to comment but feel free if you have something to say.

What you people come here for (July Edition)

Each month I like to save up the more entertaining things that bring people to my blog.  I just copy and paste them here with no editing.  The stuff in parentheses is my commentary

  • facial palsy spicy
  • barack obama is heathcliff huxtable
  • southeastern baptist convention (This almost sounds like something)
  • southern eastern baptist conference
  • "jeremy mathis" +insurance (Should it creep me out that someone was searching for this?)
  • jar net tv
  • ryan vs sbc
  • van cliburn is homo
  • crawling ant that drink blood
  • what ifgraphic southern baptist conventi
  • drew farr mlb
  • how much does an sbc pastor with a phd e (I'd like to know the answer to this myself)
  • comic+disturbing
  • twitters on the bodysnake
  • "jeremy mathis" texas (I've never even been to Texas)
  • "log into or log in to?" (or login to? I'm glad I'm not the only one wanting to know the correct grammatical construction of this.)
  • peachtree boar

Some Odds and Ends

This post is just a stray thought and a bit of news about what is coming. I'll start here.  Last week in a conversation with my step-mom I made the following comment.  The problem in church is not that we use the word "sanctified" but that we are not sanctified.  I thought it sounded terribly clever and erudite when I said it, so in my arrogance I'm sharing it with you.  Then I read this really great article today which contains the word sanctified.  I thought I'd recommend it to you.  So go read it now.

Next week I will be at youth camp, but there will be a Tuesday post on this blog.  There may also be a Thursday post, but it hasn't been written yet.  There will probably not be a "best web junk" for next week though, since I won't be surfing the web.

There will also be a rare Satruday post here for the 4th of July

What you people come here for (June Ed)

This is my (usually) monthly list of interesting searches that brought people to my blog.  It's a short list this month because you people have become boring.  The vast majority of searches are something SBC or Bell's palsy related.   These are just cut and pasted with no corrections so they appear exactly as they were searched for.  (the stuff in parentheses is my own commentary) "log into or log in to"  (seriously - which is it?) cirtificate warehouse fun jimmy fallon-zach morris (wonder who Jimmy Fallon-Zach is?)

Tomorrow

Tomorrow I have a post coming that is a followup to what I think is the best post I've ever written.   Essentially I am interacting with that post and a recent news headline from my local paper. If you would like to read that post, here it is.  Today, however, I will simply outline my argument from that post.  Let me know if you agree or disagree, but think on it, because I really want the opinions of my readers tomorrow.

The argument I am articulating goes like this:

-  Christians often say, "We have all these problems because Christians have been silent for too long." I have never heard this statement questioned.

-  What people mean when they say this is that Christians don't make their voice heard on social issues facing our country.

-  I say - we do make our voice heard, and we do it very well.  Every American knows the predominant evangelical view of nearly every social issue.

-  I say - this does not fix the problem because it is only treating the symptoms.  It's as if the doctor diagnosed you with Swine Flu but only gave you aspirin to get rid of the aches and pains.

-  I say - we have been silent too long...with the gospel message.  If people's hearts are changed, their political views will change.  Otherwise, lost people will behave like lost people.

Tomorrow I plan to demonstrate my point with a recent headline from our local paper and some context.

What You People Come Here For (April Edition)

This is your monthly installment of the interesting searches that brought people to my blog.  They are simply cut & pasted, there is no editing done on my part.  I have put some commentary in parenthesis.  The same theme pretty much continues from month to month.  Things from different posts get combined into searches, sadly none of these people found what they were looking here.

  • canadian geese under the tree images
  • fiching (I had to look this one up on urban dictionary to be sure it isn't secretly something dirty)
  • what a peach tree looks like pictures
  • when i was twelve
  • life stages of a canadian goose
  • why do geese mate for life
  • geese mate (I just love how I've become a goose expert)
  • story on pastor allowing phone use at ch
  • things to do when jeromy is bored
  • benefits from twitter at church (don't be twittering at church, people)
  • twitter and churce
  • what the baby using  (For some reason the bad grammar of this one reminded me of how is babby formed)
  • in these difficult financial times (I just put this one here because of the BOL drinking game.  It's not really funny)
  • "jeremy s" fishing blog (excellent use of apostrophe)
  • homologomen (I have no idea what this could mean)
  • what is a verb for a platypus? (Let's try something.  Man, he really platypused that dude.)

Add your own verb for platypus in the comments

What you people come here for (March Edition)

This is your monthly list of the interesting the searches that bring people to my blog. As usual I become a temporary go-to source for certain questions.  I am clearly a wealth of information on Bell's palsy.  There are searches every day on that topic.  But this month I also became fluent on Baptists and Lent as well as churches and Twitter.  There were searches daily on those combinations.  Also, as spring arrives I see the leaning peach tree searches returning

Here is a partial list.  As always, just cut and pasted, not edited in any way  The parts in parenthesis are my own notes:

  • why don't baptists observe lent
  • give up facebook +"great lent"
  • bell's palsy + bell's palsy: + bells pal (this one might be a bit of overkill)
  • books by john mclamb (To my knowledge he hasn't written a book, but I'd buy it if he did.  Especially if it contained lots of stories like this one)
  • full paralysis bell's palsy
  • lent and the southern baptist
  • "mid continent university"
  • why are kentucky fans the best (easily my favorite search of the month)
  • worst fear for bell's palsy
  • peach tree leaning

What You People Come Here For (February Edition)

[Usually] I like to highlight the most interesting and odd search terms that brought people to my blog in the last month.  There are certain trends that become obvious from these searches.  One is that I am currently a very popular source of Bell's Palsy information.  Also, there is a mixing of things from posts so that they are combined in sometimes very interesting ways. Here are the best ones from February.  They are not edited in any way, simply cut and pasted from my stats page.  Oddly, this month one search was vulgar.  I am disturbed that that search lead someone to my blog

  • christians drinking beer
  • things to do before i die on a budget (that search lets you know the economy is bad)

Bell's Palsy related searches

  • noise in my ear when i close my eye afte
  • bell palsy headache
  • bell end sore to the touch means
  • is sore tongue related to bells palsy?
  • where can i leave a blog about my bells
  • worst cases of bells palsy

Lent related searches

  • southern baptist, lent
  • lent and the baptist church
  • lent & southern baptist
  • fasting lent baptist
  • is lent a southern baptist practice

Collaborative Story Ends: The World Rejoices

Mercifully, the collaborative story has ended.  It was fun, but nothing really happened.    We may try it again next year, maybe I'll have a larger readership and folks won't be afraid to comment. Here it is in its final form: William woke up on a train.  It seemed like he was in a rut, but today was different.  Leaving his hometown for the first time in months, he was excited about what the future had in store for him.  He got ready for his day in the tiny train lavatory and opened his luggage.

Inside his luggage was a surprise, a note in handwriting he didn't recognize.  He opened it and it read simply,

"Meet me in the diner car at 10."

“Crap,” he thought. “It’s already 11:30.” He crammed the note back into his bag and hurried to the diner car.

The car was empty save for a very old man who appeared to be leaning against the window in a deep sleep. William walked over to him and, after staring for a few seconds in confusion, pounded the table as hard as he could. The old man quickly sat up with a terrified gasp. “What’s your deal, sonny?!” he asked, catching his breath.

William pulled out the note and asked, “Did you write this?”

The old man said, “No, son. I never learnt to read or write.”

William, having already missed his mysterious meeting and nothing to do, offered to teach the old man.

The old man replied defiantly, “No sir, I ain’t never had the notion to learn to read, and I ain’t never gonna. Now, if ya ’scuse me, I was in the middle of a dream where my missus was bakin’ me an apple pie!”

William decided it was best to just let the old man be.  He exited the diner car and made his way back to his room. When he arrived another note was awaiting him.

It read, "I was going to warn you.  GET OFF THE TRAIN AS SOON AS POSSIBLE."

Before he finished reading the note, the door to his very small room opened, and a giant man in an unfamiliar uniform tackled him, put him in handcuffs with a gag in his mouth and made it very clear that if he tried to escape he would be sorry.

"That was much easier than I expected," said the man in the uniform in a thick accent that was unrecognizable to William as well.  "When we arrive I expect you will be just as cooperative."

The man in the uniform was former New York Giants’ defensive end Michael Strahan. The “accent” was caused by a piece of peanut stuck in the giant gap between his front teeth.

The peanut’s having been lodged in there for years, the smell was unimaginable.

“Geez,” William said. “You should get that taken care of.” Of course, with the gag in his mouth, it came out, “Gov, yo shih gid da ta’engaruv.”

“What’s that, boy? Some kinda foreigner talk? Just keep your mouth shut ’til we arrive.”

It was dark by the time the train pulled into the station. William was tired and hungry, but he cooperated with Strahan and was guided into an old, dusty building. A Cambodian child who smelt of mothballs followed the two men, carrying William’s luggage.

Strahan, William, and the Cambodian kid began down a dark hallway. At the end of the hallway, Strahan led William into a room. Once inside, William realized that he had been taken to an illegal gambling facility. Strahan forced William to sit down. The Cambodian child left William’s bags behind him and headed over to a table in the corner for some Beenie Weenies and Big K cola.

William was forced to play poker for three and a half hours. Then he got drunk on cheap vodka and passed out.

When he woke up, he was back on a train. But he was wearing lady clothes.

“Whaaa?” he mumbled. Catching a whiff of his vodka/morning breath, he decided to brush his teeth. On his way to the bathroom, he noticed that several other men were waking up to find themselves in dresses and fancy pantsuits.

He turned to one of the men and said, "I thought all that Michael Strahan stuff was a dream.  What happened to us?"

"Idunno." Said the man, "I just woke up, and I didn't even know they made dresses in this size."  The man was way over 400 pounds.

Baffled by the mystery, William set out to find anything that he could make sense of.  No one had any luggage, (only a small bag of toiletries) no one had any wallet or identifiables, and no one knew what was going on.  He sat down  and looked out at the passing scenery.  As the train rolled through a small village he noticed that all the signs were in some foreign language.  He didn't even recognize the characters in the alphabet.

"Where are we?" said a very timid voice from a seat behind him.

It appeared that the question was not to be answered for the scenery of the village faded behind them and what laid ahead only reflected the desolation of the situation. There was nothing beyond the window but snow and ice. Not a glimmer of mountain peaks on the horizon, nor a bird in the clear blue sky.

For some time, William stared out the window, reviewing the recent events in his mind…looking for clues to answer the questions running through his mind. It was absurd. Things like this simply did not happen.

William, now lost within himself, was shaken alert again by the change in speed. The train was now slowing to a stop. Curious as to the destination, William raced to the front of the car to see what he could.

On his way to the front of the car, he fell through a hole in the floor. Unable to call out for help because of the debilitating cold, he was terrified when the train started back up and rolled on without him. After a couple of minutes, he froze to death.

And that’s why you don’t leave your hometown.

Webhick, Roland, Geneva, Ryan, Caroline, Jeremy

Twitter For the Masses

In predictions for 2009 I said that I thought Twitter would catch on and finally become popular with "the kids".  What I mean is that non-geeks will begin seeing it for the incredible tool that it is.  Later when listening to the Buzz Out Loud prediction show, I heard Tom Merritt make the same prediction. I know a lot of my regular readers read my twitters (they are supposed to be called tweets, but that is just so stupid that I refuse to) because I can see when you click on the links from my feed in the sidebar.  So my goal today is to get you to try out Twitter, and explain what it is exactly.  Next week I will post about different ways of using it, cool apps and stats, and some ways not to use it.

Twitter is microblogging, for lack of a better term.  You get 140 characters to say whatever you want.  Here's how it works.  You sign up, choose people to follow, then participate.  Your page will automatically show you all the updates of the people you follow.  Likewise, everyone who follows you will see all your updates.

You can update it from the web or by text message.  You can also post pics to twitter using twitpic.com.  It allows people to see into the lives of those you follow.  And in turn your followers can see what you are up to.  You can use it for prayer requests, to send out information or to keep up with old friends.  I follow people I know from college and from seminary.  And if you sign up, let me know and I'll follow you as well.

You can keep track of your twitter feed on the twitter.com website, but  the best way to use twitter on your computer is http://www.twhirl.org/ Twhirl works with Mac & PC and is a very handy tool.  (You will also need to install adobe air)

Here's a list of a few cool people to follow to get you started.  (I don't follow the last few)

me - https://twitter.com/jmmath Ed Stetzer - https://twitter.com/edstetzer Mark Hall (from Casting Crowns) - https://twitter.com/markhallCC Tom Rainer (Pres. of Lifeway) - https://twitter.com/ThomRainer Alvin Reid - https://twitter.com/docreid7 Darth Vader - https://twitter.com/darthvader Natalie Grant - https://twitter.com/NatalieGrant MC Hammer (Can't touch this) - https://twitter.com/mchammer Shaquille O'Neil - http://twitter.com/THE_REAL_SHAQ Greg Grunberg (Weiss from Alias) - http://twitter.com/greggrunberg

You can always just sign up and try it out. Let me know how you feel about it in the comments.

What you people come here for (December Edition)

This is my list of interesting searches for the month.  The trend is still that posts get mixed up.  And I have now become an expert in Bell's palsy.  All this list is, is searches copied & pasted directly, typos and all.

  • bells palsy before later
  • three geese on ground
  • pastor appreciation qoutes
  • catchy vw commercial basketball
  • how fast do jermy go around the track (This is easily my favorite ever)
  • bells palsy headache blog
  • internet gambling comic
  • master tom merritt
  • jeremy story kentucky (I think he was a football player)
  • story of my christmas party
  • jeremy east bound