May 1, 2008
MANOLO QUEZON CITES THE MOUNT BALATUCAN MONITOR
Posted by balatucan under Uncategorized | Tags: blog awards, blog rankings, blogging, blogging citations, Manolo quezon blog |First, Manolo Quezon cited this blog on the issue of the sudden withdrawal of Hanjin of its shipyard project in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental.
The Mount Balutacan Monitor points to a report that the provincial government in Misamis Oriental is in shock because a massive shipyard project has croaked.
The citation is timely because its really an issue that has shaken the province if not the whole Northern Mindanao region considering the enormity of the employment opportunities lost.
Then Manolo comment on the criteria of the search of the Top Ten Emerging Blogs in 2008 which cited the Mount Balatucan blog as one of the blogs he is reading. Although the citation is not an endorsement, nonetheless it was a great source of honor, joy and inspiration to be read by him and I thank him profusely for that. Here’s the excerpt of that entry.
“Often, in an arbitrary manner. For The Top 10 Emerging Influential Blogs in 2008, a thorough effort to define criteria’s been undertaken by Can Talk Tech but what is a solid criteria for him may differ from the way other people approach the same task.
Let me weigh in with my list. Let me begin with a caveat: there are quite a few blogs I’ve added to my reading list over the past year, but they’re not new enough (cut-off is a blog birthday after July 1, 2007) to qualify for the list. These blogs are in no particular order. They represent my biases as to what I consider significant and these choices aren’t necessarily endorsements of these blogs, their advocacies, etc. Though for many of these blogs, I do heartily sympathize with them, which is why I follow them -but not all.
1. Writer’s Block which is a fine example of intellectual efforts by a writer online.
2. The Mount Balatucan Monitor one of the regional blogs that makes inter-regional cross-pollination possible.
3. scaRRed_cat sadly not often updated, but a good example of a veteran journalist trying to adapt to sharing articles online.
4. Mon Casiple’s Weblog on Philippine Politics. The finest example of an old school pundit settling in on the interweb.
5. Brian Gorrell’s The Not So Talented Mr. Montano? If Malou Fernandez was the Affair of the Diamond Necklace (complete with a mystery: she flew coach), then the birth of this blog was the Bastille moment of the Philippine blogosphere.
6. New Philippine Revolution, an intriguing blog and one that I think has a covert following among the politically-inclined. Also, an example of how anonymous blogging can be effective.
7. Vera Files. Had a discussion on Twitter if this counts as a blog or not, but Juned Sonido opined it does. If so, it marks the emergence of what could comprise the Big Three in independent journalism online.
8. Ateneans ACT, which has become a forum for advocacy and debate among the alumni of one school, but which serves as a model for advocacy and inter-generational debate. This site marks the evolution and, to my mind, coming of age of the political advocacy blog.
9. Team RP, particularly because it’s on Multiply and there seems to be a lingering bias of sorts I can’t quite pin down, but it seems to be there, against Multiply/Friendster etc. blogs. This blog is significant because it’s wedded to an advocacy site, and it’s an advocacy led by, and targeted at, the youth, which conventional wisdom tagged as apathetic -but who proved the pundits wrong after NBN-ZTE broke. The kids were just waiting for an issue that really engrossed them.
10. I’m not sure if FilipinoVoices.com counts, because it’s composed of veteran bloggers and commenters, but, well, it’s new and is making ripples, if not waves.”
While Manolo Quezon III cites this blog, I have no illusions whatsoever of being chosen as one of the emerging influential blogs of this country. Aside from a number of really good and better blogs out there, Balatucan cannot qualify in the first place because of its anonymity. I chose to remain that way. Its not the messenger that is important, but the message.
Despite its anonymity though, Balatucan strives to adhere as humanly possible to the tenets of responsible blogging.
May 1, 2008 at 11:06 am
One of my favorites too! I like you intensity and passion.Pls Carry on the long tradition of fearless journalism in the South started by the “Ang Suga newspaper”!
May 2, 2008 at 12:24 am
thanks mavs. You’re one of my favorites too. Lets keep it up!
May 17, 2008 at 8:32 am
I’m in agreement, I have you on my feed reader, and is always something I read often.. Please do continue..