Virginia Heffernan* takes the ScienceBlogs/Pepsi blowup as the subject of her New York Times Magazine column this week. Before commenting I'll make three disclosures up top:
I have written and plan on continuing to write for the same magazine, though I think this does not seriously constrain me here;
I've enjoyed many of Hefferman Heffernan's columns, but do not know her;
I appreciate her nice nod to my blog and my writing on PepsiGate.
That said, I found the column problemmatic. I'd love to explain why at at least moderate length — but seeing as I was quite literally fixing to unplug my iMac for my move to London next Tuesday when someone alerted me to her column, I must limit myself for now to a couple brief comments and some context via links. The US Air baggage handlers and UK Border Agency are both quite particular, and I must properly prepare.
Comments
Heffernan makes two main points.
1. She found the science blogosphere, esp as represented by ScienceBlogs is cacaphonous and of uneven quality.
My comment: This is neither novel nor surprising.
2. She was "nonplussed by the high dudgeon of the so-called SciBlings" in their reaction to what has become known, more or less tongue-in-cheek, as PepsiGate.
My comment: Obviously I differ with her on this, as I felt strongly enough about Seed's blunder to leave immediately, before almost anyone else had, and before it was clear the reaction would be both broad and deep. You can read both my quick initial post announcing my departure — A food blog I can’t digest — and a more considered explanation at Why I’m Staying Gone from ScienceBlogs. And as you can read below, I'm not the only one, even among "legacy media," types (I write for the same sorts of outfits Heffernan does, including the New York Times Magazine), who thought the transgression was serious enough to warrant leaving.
Context
The best single source of context on the ScienceBlogs-Pepsi fracas is probably BoraZ's A Blog Around the Clock, both because he comments well and because he has amassed a mess of links to commentary about the whole mess.
See esp:
His exit post: A Farewell to Scienceblogs: the Changing Science Blogging Ecosystem
His PepsiGate linkfest, which appears to be the most exhaustive.
His website, well worth tracking, is
Meanwhile, if you want my own short list, see the particularly sharp commentaries or roundups on the meltdown that came from Martin Robbins, Paul Raeburn at Knight Science Journalism Tracker, the Guardian, and two "legacy media" heavyweights — Carl Zimmer, he of well-deserved NY Times fame, and former Scientific American editor John Rennie — neither of whom seem to share Heffernan casual reaction to ad-ed wall violations.
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PS: I hope readers understand that just because the science blogosphere is uneven and chaotic and cacophonous, it does not mean that it lacks high-quality material. The MSM is also uneven and cacophonous, but the best of it is good indeed. So it is outside legacy media. This should be obvious ... but sometimes the obvious is worth pointing out.
PPS I truly won't have much time to monitor this thread, much less respond to it. So if you've a perspective to bring to bear in the comments, please do.
PPPS. Two things:
1. As I note below in a comment, Heffernan has some legit points.
2. But as I also note, I think she tosses out too much and overgeneralizes etc. In that sense I share some of the complaints that NeuroDojo just posted at his blog:
That's more or less the baby/bathwater problem I refer to.
YET LATER: See too Scott Rosenberg's (of "Say Everything") sharp take on Heffernan's post and PepsiFizz.
And later still: I just fixed my earlier misspellings of Heffernan. My apologies to Ms. Heffernan for the error. I'd always read the name that way and so replicated my error. Some lessons in behavioral science right there.