Bord Ded, Bin Gud.

Back in the early-2000s glory days of Upstate Wasted and Upstate Ether, the cast of characters would occasionally get so out of hand that The Overlords would have to declare a meltdown, wipe the whole board, and remove the ability for new posts to be added for some undefined cooling-off period. (Note: strong language and content warnings for all four of the links in this paragraph).

When meltdowns happened, a trio of little skeletons known collectively as the Bloorp-Bloorp Uh-Ohs (yeah, yeah, I know, you had to be there) would often appear to let the readers know that the board had melted down, though it had sure been fun up until that point. Ultimately, this sentiment got truncated down to the simpler “Bord Ded, Bin Gud.”

Bord ded. Bin gud.

Bord ded. Bin gud.

25 months after I launched this collaborative blog in a fit of pique, I’ve decided that it’s time for me to say “Bord Ded, Bin Gud” to Indie Albany. After a year in Iowa, I’m finding that I don’t have the time to serve as motive force and moderator for both Indie Albany and its Des Moines-based heir, Indie Moines, and I don’t like seeing the writers remaining here functioning in an unsupported capacity.

The group model worked best when we were all riffing off of each other with a high volume of posts, and that has dissipated significantly since my attention has been focused elsewhere. That’s my fault, not the fault of the writers. I didn’t envision a move to Iowa at the time when I launched the site, and once I got out here, I stopped enforcing the original guiding parameters about frequency of publication that kept the place hopping through its first 18 months or so. Again, my fault, and I own it.

That being said, I think we wrote some amazing stuff here over the past two years, and I think we proved the concepts that I wanted to prove: namely, that you don’t have to whore your writing out to advertisers that you despise in order to have a place to write online for a wide audience, and you don’t have to give up rights to your intellectual property just because you put it on a public website. I continue to hoe that row on Indie Moines, and that site is growing even faster than Indie Albany did. For now, it’s just me writing there, though I may go to a multi-contributor platform there, too, at some point. We’ll see how it pans out.

I want to thank all of the writers, readers, and folks who cross-promoted this site so well for us (without asking us to pay you) over the past two years, with particular thanks to Nippertown for getting on board early and staying with us to the end. Hell, even the Deputy Assistant Editorial Subminion for Bitterness at Metroland did us a favor for deeming us worth of his scorn when he dismissed us for “bloviating in commercial-free quiet” last year. Have you gotten paid for that piece yet, Sparky? Didn’t think so.

Thanks again to everybody who was involved here. I’m pleased that my initial fit of pique produced a model where good writing gets read by interested readers with no commercial interests being served. I look forward to continuing to offer you that model, if you want it, at Indie Moines.

Until this domain expires (or someone in Albany buys in from me), I’m going to keep a few Albany-specific things (e.g. the last Hidden in Suburbia series) here, as well as forwarding links to some of the older, more popular posts that appeared here over the past couple of years. And as long as the Times Union keeps the work I did on their blog in the public domain, despite my requests that it be removed, I will also leave the story of how and why I started this blog in the public domain as well.

Bye Bye to You, T.U.

I’m still seeing a variety of paid political advertisements swirling on my personal, unpaid, community Times Union blog page this morning, which I consider more and more inexcusable every time I view them.

And not only am I seeing them here, but I’m also seeing them on a wide variety of other community blogger pages as well, not to mention the ostensibly independent and non-partisan Capitol Confidential.

That’s just wrong, and it should have been immediately recognized as wrong and corrected when the point was raised, if editorial integrity was the guiding principle here.

But it’s not, which isn’t really news to any of us, I suppose.

I’ve never particularly liked having advertisements on my blog here, but I tolerated it all these years because, in the grand scheme of things, I don’t really care, and I don’t think it really matters, where you buy your tires, or where you send your kids to school, or where you get your prescriptions filled, or where you do your banking. So I didn’t really mind my words being used to pimp those products.

But I do care passionately about the political process, and I do care passionately about who we elect to serve us, and I will not allow my words to be co-opted for partisan political purposes. Period.

So it is with no small amount of regret that I announce that I will be taking my blog elsewhere and no longer posting new content here at the Times Union.

Wherever I end up, I’ll point my own domain there, so all you have to do to find me is just my name with a dot com behind it:
http://www.jericsmith.com

While I’m not a rallying kind of person, I’d ask all of my fellow community bloggers to consider the most odious political candidate you can imagine, and then imagine how you will feel when that candidate places an advertisement on your blog. Are you willing to stay here and risk that? Are you willing to allow your words to be a magnet that might expose your readers to vile politicians?

Food for thought. But if you reach the same conclusion I did, I can tell you that it’s pretty easy to migrate a blog, and I’ll be happy to help you do it.

Ignore My Times Union Blog, Please

I just logged in quickly to my Times Union blog this afternoon to check for blog comments that needed approving, and was absolutely appalled and dismayed to discover that my page was filled with scrolling advertisements for a particular political candidate, top banner, right block, the whole shooting match.

Regardless of whether or not I intend to vote for this particular candidate, I want no part of unintentionally being put in a position of supporting any political candidacy, while I’m providing content in an unpaid capacity to the Times Union.

(For the record, I’m registered in the primary this candidate is contesting, so please understand that this isn’t me having a meltdown about seeing advertisements for an opposing political position on my blog. But the candidate’s campaign certainly didn’t help its cause with me, because I despise pushy and inappropriately-placed political advertisements, and the candidates who allow them to occur. I do not offer this as advice or endorsement to anyone reading this post. Make your own decisions, please).

I am the Executive Director of a nonprofit corporation that works under contract to a State-funded University, need you be reminded, and I do not wish, even indirectly, to be perceived as personally violating the Legislative and Political Activities Test that my organization itself must pass. I will not allow my personal blog to be used as a political platform. For anyone.

No, I’m not a chump, and I understood that when I signed up to be a Times Union blogger, I accepted the gift of media exposure and promotion, at the expense of having advertising associated with my writing, often for commercial organizations that I do not personally support, or favor, or even like.

But this is the first time I’ve ever seen a paid political advertisement here, and I am hopping, fuming, boiling mad about it. Business is business, but politics is personal.

I consider this to be an unethical advertising placement, Times Union advertising department, that turns my willfully apolitical and centrist blog into a tool of someone’s campaign, and I want no part of that.

So I won’t be posting here again until eyou remove the offending advertisement, and commit not to putting any further political advertisements on my blog.

So please ignore my blog, regular readers, and any advertisements placed here, until you see another topic showing up in the portal page. There won’t be anything new here from me until then, and I’d prefer you not be exposed to paid political advertising here.

Thanks for making my 10th anniversary of blogging so very special, Times Union advertising department, by reminding me how commerce can so readily crush creativity, without a thought.

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