There's a little talk about Yearly Kos in the megamedia. Here are some links and an excerpt:
From Hendrik Hertzberg at The New Yorker in Acid Flashback
I admit that I was expecting this crowd to look weirder. Not hippie weirder, though I did expect a bit of that, but nerdy weirder. So I was surprised at how extraordinarily normal everyone looked. The left, if I may use that radioactive word, sure has changed since "my day," i.e., the nineteen-sixties and early seventies. The equivalent of the liberal blogosphere back then was the "underground press," the anarchic collection of weekly and irregularly published quasi-newspapers and para-magazines that served as bulletin boards and primal-scream outlets for the counterculture and the various antiwar and "liberation" movements. YearlyKos’s closest equivalent back then would be the ramshackle underground-press convocations that took place from time to time. I attended several of these. What a contrast! The stereotypical look then was rock roadie or medieval wizard for men, groupie or earth mother for women. Those of us who were on the more moderate, "reasonable" side of the left were at pains to point out that even then, most of us, say sixty per cent, were actually fairly normal. This was true, but the eyes of America and America’s cameras were understandably drawn to the forty per cent who were, shall we say, comparatively colorful. On my bathroom wall I have a photograph taken at one of these underground-press convocations. It shows a crowd of a hundred or so undergrounders in a discussion circle. I’m in the middle, in shaggy haircut, Lennonish eyeglasses, and turtleneck, earnestly making some point (probably about the need to avoid alienating the great mass of Americans). And, sure enough, if you make allowances for a certain number of extravagant mustaches and batik prints, the crowd does look kind of normal, most of it. Except that three of the young women listening (somewhat skeptically, I have to admit) are stark naked.
No one naked around here. No chaos at YearlyKos. No "sweet smell of marijuana," as the straight papers used to refer to it. No demands for revolution.
From Katherine Q. Seelye in The Caucus blog at The New York Times in More on Mother Teresa and Bloggers
From Chris Cillizza in The Fix blog at the Washington Post in At YearlyKos: Dems Set to Expand Congressional Majorities
From James Rainey at the Los Angeles Times in Liberals look ahead at Yearly Kos
From Chuck Plunkett at The Denver Post in Blog convention hails a political revolution
From John McCormick at The Chicago Tribune in Dems go where the blogs are
From Abdon M. Pallasch at the Chicago Sun-Times in 1,500 bloggers flex here
Anything in your hometown paper?
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