Saturday, November 6, 2010

Vlogging: An Evolution



This week we talked about vlogging. Vlogging seems to be the natural progression of regular blogging since it provides a visual component to the ideas and opinions that are normally seen in blogs. Vlogs have the same general focus of blogs and even use such conventions as linking to other websites and incorporating outside video clips. But being able to see the vlogger adds a different component to the mix. On the one hand it makes the vlog more unique since you're able to match a face with the vlog. On the other I feel it kind of seperates the audience from the vlog itself because with blogs it was the individual audience member's voice that narrated the blog. In this sense vlogging adds a degree of separation between the audience and the vlog but vloggs also increase audience interactivity by having the audience respond not only with text comments but with video comments as well. Many vloggers have a closing thought or question for their audience and typically ask the audience to respond via a video clip comment. It seems like vlogs are the natural evolution of blogs but if history is any indicator text cannot be easily replaced, just like we still have newspapers, magazines (even if they're online), etc, co-existing in a world with television and online video, we will have vlogs and blogs. I will end this post with a clip of a current commercial that uses vlogging as a way to advertise their product; I find it interesting how the mainstream views vloggers.


2 comments:

  1. I agree that vlogging increases the separation between the the person and the audience, and also that it will never replace text. It will definitely be interesting to see how the medium progresses.

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  2. I feel like vlogging with be the future of blogging now that you can skype on your phones and ipads people will be vlogging everywhere

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