left arrow BackNext right arrow
< BACK TO Fresh Intelligence

Blogging Can Cause Death, Just Like Soldiering in Iraq

blogdeaths_040708_FRESH.jpg
HAZARDOUS TO YOUR HEALTH Blogging, soldiering
In the world of 24/7 stress, writers blog until they drop. And also soldiers.

One front-page story in Sunday's New York Times once again chronicled the sad stories of soldiers, sailors, and Marines who are being cycled over and over through tours in Iraq—if they're not killed, they're coming back with permanent mental and emotional damage. In another A1 piece, members of the creative underclass, driven by their own egos and the assumption that the world will suffer irreparably if they don't blog 'round the clock, has seen its first casualties. And even those (well, most of them) who occasionally spend the weekend taking more than 15 minutes to read, digest, and form opinions and angles on other people's news felt compelled to logon and acknowledge being acknowledged. Radar took a day and came up with this comparison of where blogging falls among the deadliest occupations:

Coalition forces in Iraq: 4,015 (since 3/19/03)
Law enforcement: 186 (2007)
Construction: 1,192 (2005)
Transportation and warehousing: 885 (2005)
Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting: 715 (2005)
Commercial Fishing in Alaska: 641 (1990-2006)
Blogging: 2 (to date)

Comments

Be the first to respond. Post your comment below.

Advertisement


Post a comment

Your comment will not be visible for about a minute. If you don't see your comment when the page reloads, do not post it again. Reload the page in a minute, and you'll see it.

 


Happy Independence Day From Radar

One Last Bear Rub To Round Out The Week

Southampton's $27 Vodka Soda

The First-Ever Vagina Spa

WSJ Prepares For Fourth of July With Insanity!

Mario Lopez Remains Partially Clothed, For Now

Rate Cuts At Gawker Media

C-Rod and A-Rod No Mas

McCain Likely Furious About McCain Rage Stories

Zimbabwe: How The Torturers Live


EXECUTIVE EDITOR:


MANAGING EDITOR:


CONTRIBUTORS:
, , and others


Email us at:
tips@radaronline.com
or IM: TipRadar







Games of Chaunce
New York's biggest gossip source is just an average schmo from Jersey

Confronting the Douchebag Plague
A helpful guide from the forthcoming handbook Hot Chicks With Douchebags

Full Court Press
Charles Kaiser on standout journalism in the latest New Yorker and this week's winners and sinners

RadLibs: This American Life Edition
Create your own Ira Glass narration with Radar's This American Life story generator

I, 'Mobot
A brief history of gay androids





Those Are Some Large Mammaries
Here's to firecrackers, beer, hot dogs, and, um, breasts

IT Would Rather Slap You Upside the Head
Why? Because you're dumb, period

Pixar's Next Effort
A post-WALL-E masterpiece

Douchiest Phone Message Ever
Now we've heard it all

From the Notebook of a Disturbed Child
A tragic tale drawn simple