warblogger
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]warblogger (plural warbloggers)
- (Internet) The writer of a warblog.
- 2005, Graeme Turner, Ending the Affair: The Decline of Television Current Affairs in Australia[1], page 138:
- Possibly the most famous warblogger was the Baghad architect, Salam Pax, who logged on regularly to provide eyewitness reports on the bombing of his city.
- 2005, Hugh Hewitt, Blog: Understanding the Information Reformation That's Changing Your World[2], page 106:
- And when Lileks turned into a warblogger, he made his bones. His audience swelled as Lileks turned tremendous writing skills to the issues of the war and a post-9/11 world.
- 2009, Melissa Wall, “The Taming of the Warblogs: Citizen Journalism and the War in Iraq”, in Stuart Allan, Einar Thorsen, editors, Citizen Journalism: A Global Perspective[3], page 33:
- Another notable difference is that warbloggers eventually made themselves heard on their own terms by the mainstream media, which had initially scorned them.