What’s a vlogger?

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A vlogger is someone who posts videos to their blog, often using a CMS like Joomla or WordPress. The first vlog was “The Journey” by Adam Kontras in 2000. Vlogging has become popular due to digital recording capabilities and viral videos. Vloggers may post on YouTube and use RSS feeds to distribute updates. The rise of vlogging has also raised questions about free speech rights for independent journalists and bloggers.

The term “vlogger” is a portmanteau of the words video and blogger. A vlogger is someone who regularly posts embedded videos to their blog, in addition to or instead of text and other content. Some vloggers post videos that feature themselves or were independently recorded, while others might post videos in a certain genre like humor, science, or sports. Distributing vlog (video blog) updates is often facilitated by a Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feed, also sometimes referred to as a vidcast or vodcast.

The first vlog is widely considered to be “The Journey”, by vlogger Adam Kontras. Launched in 2000, “The Journey” chronicled Kontras’ move to Los Angeles and subsequent attempt to break into show business. Kontras received widespread recognition for his innovative use of the medium, and later hosted a segment on The Early Show. Since then, vloggers have come together to host their own annual conference, Vloggercon, and their own vlogger awards, The Vloggies.

Many vloggers post videos directly to their vlogs via YouTube, which has become the most popular video hosting site with an audience of over 70 million unique users per month. Vlogs are typically created using Joomla, WordPress, Blogger, and other Web 2.0 tools that facilitate video posting and embedding through a content management system (CMS). The rise in popularity of vlogging has also been perpetuated by the development of digital recording capabilities on cell phones, which allow a vlogger to post videos recorded with their phones directly to the web.

In 2006, independent journalist and vlogger, Josh Wolf, made headlines when he was arrested for refusing to hand over to authorities a video he filmed during the Group of 8 (G8) protest, which included footage of a car of the police on fire in the San Francisco mission. Quarter. While incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) in Dublin, Wolf interviewed media outlets to discuss the disparity between the free speech rights of mainstream journalists versus those of independent or citizen journalists and bloggers.
The rise in popularity of viral videos has encouraged many bloggers and corporate websites to take up vlogging to drive traffic to their site. The simple act of posting a viral video before or at the peak of its popularity and ensuring it appears in a search engine could result in several thousand more visits to a site. Vloggers looking to drive traffic to their site sometimes also post their videos on other video sharing sites, like YouTube, and include a caption on the video directing viewers to visit their website “to see more videos like these” .




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