
Many of the 15 million rather discerning readers of Guardian.online each month are prone to airing their views via the comment page.  Whew. There was a collective nose-holding at a faux-amateurish and possibly nepotistic blog written by  the spawn of a professional travel writer and PR buff who often files for the esteemed Guardian. The response to the Valentine's Day initial 
post by this North London wanna-be traveller shocked the editors with 
its vitriol. And presumably this, more than the prospect of seeing scary India on his own before hitting the beaches of Goa,set Max "kinda shitting himself".  Oh dear. Many of the more poisonous barbs were deleted,and his dear Dad weighed in for the family honour,  but it's instructive to see the backlash against this privileged young chap.
 It's not that bloggers aren't journos. But they are expected to have something worthwhile and preferably original to say. After all, the presigious George Polk prize was 
just awarded to Josh Marshall, a blogger, for his Talking Points Memo!
Many regulars accused the Guardian of indulging in a  thinly-veiled attempt to get more free copy when the editor invited more backpackers to send in their own blogs.
After thousands of comments, Max's blog took a hike. According to the Guardian: 
The message was transmitted swiftly, sometimes eloquently, sometimes wittily. His travel diary was extinguished. As an expression of mob will, it was very efficient. But that does not mean it was fair.
 The skilled journalist Hilary Macaskill trawled through the comments and assembled some that touched on old media vs new media misperceptions.  
Here is a post from 'traveleditor' on the day the blog came out:
Some of you have mentioned that you'd like to be given the chance to  
write about your travels. We're always looking for good writers, so  
feel free to drop us a line at travel@guardian.co.uk
The next day the final paragraph of his response read:
One thing that came out of yesterday's posts was that you want to  
hear a lot more from real people rather than journalists, so I'm  
going to be putting up a lot more readers' recommendations and  
writing. I hope you like it. I'm sure you'll let me know.
Here are some of the things people said in response to that:
February 15 11:44
Surely the one thing to come out of yesterday's posts is that  
'citizen journalism' and 'user-generated content' is generally  
bollocks, and people much prefer things done by professionals, rather  
than well-connected amateurs?
So the opposite of what you're saying.
February 15 12:28
And no, sod "real people". I want to read people who can write and  
have something to say.
February 15 13:16
I'm a little confused by the definition of "real people" as compared  
to "journalists". Surely if Max was paid for the piece then surely  
that makes him a "journalist" as well, albeit one that is just  
starting out on his career.
Indeed, even if Max's piece was bad - which is was - I hope that he  
was paid. As a travel writer and editor myself, I know how hard it is  
to get a foothold in the "industry" with or without connections, and  
to make a living from it. If national newspapers start making use of  
"real people's" writing without paying for it, then it will become  
even harder for those of us struggling to pay the rent from our  
scribblings.
I also think that most of the complaints not so much aimed at Max  
himself, but the Guardian's travel editors who chose to commission  
such a poorly written piece. It seems to me that with the ever  
increasing "blog" nature of the Guardian website as a whole quality  
is becoming secondary to quantity. For most of us I think it is fair  
to say that we would rather a travel section - indeed the Guardian  
website in general - that features fewer articles, well written and  
paid for at a fair rate that reflects the talent of the writers and  
that has something genuinely interesting to say, as opposed to the  
"will this do?" nature of many of the pieces that can be found within  
the blog sections.
February 15 12:47
It's just saturating the industry with mediocrity when we should be  
encouraging the best.
February 15 12:51
RE: people wanting to read articles by "real people" rather than  
journalists.
This comment confused me, on several points.
1) Is Max, then, a "journalist"? He's a "real person" surely (if you  
insist on these two categories for people). I think it's pretty clear  
wherever Max falls - that is not what people want to read. I  
personally am all for reading about the experiences and  
recommendations and laughs and disasters and drunken, debauched  
adventures of Joe Average (or Joe Trustfund, even) but only on merit.  
Only if they can actually write an interesting, informative and  
captivating article. I'd sooner read fifty well-written and  
appropriate articles by the same journalist than one badly-written,  
grossly-inappropriate article by a civilian (arf arf) such as the one  
we were gifted with yesterday.
2) That is, of course, unless the logic behind welcoming more 'real  
people' pieces is so you can whitewash over this gargantuan fuck up  
by publishing yet more articles of this calibre. Quality is relative,  
of course. If so, I beseech you once more to stick to journalists who  
have credibility and talent. Forget about "keepin' it real" which  
seems to be The Guardian's mission statement of late. I think your  
readers would be more appreciative of "keepin' it high quality and  
insightful".
February 15 13:10
"One thing that came out of yesterday's posts was that you want to  
hear a lot more from real people rather than journalists"
No, I want to read more good journalism, not middle class kids on  
work experience writing about their holidays,
February 15 13:50
Could the Guardian please pay a little more attention to quality and  
a little less to filling up the interweb?
February 15 14:05
Hell no, the last thing we need is more "real" people writing  
articles. Reality television has been the worst thing to hit  
entertainment since TV was invented. Let's not lead journalism down  
the same path.
I want balanced, insightful, fully researched & well written  
commentary by experienced, professional journalists. I don't want to  
hear opinions from a teenage trustafarian or a middle-aged housewife  
from Hull and if I did, there are millions of blogs that I could  
trawl for such a waste of bandwidth.
February 15 14:20
On to more serious matters. Look, Mr Grauniad editor. You run a  
newspaper. Newspapers should be written by journalists, who are by  
the way, "real people."
The difference is that journos' job is to write, and to find  
something to write about.
Do you think Shakespeare's plays would have benefited from any Tom,  
Dick or Hamlet chipping in from amidst the groundlings with a scene  
or two? Would Catch 22 be any better if it was penned by my postie in  
his lunch hour?...
Really. What *are* standards coming to? Any pretence that this  
"citizen journalism" scam is anything more than attempts to undermine  
writers' pay and job security for cost-cutting reasons is DEEPLY  
disingenuous.
God save us from newspapers trying to be all things to all people. If  
we want to read boring tripe by unexceptional people, we have the  
internet now. Not to mention the comments section of the Guardian.
February 15 14:21
Going on funded gap year, getting trashed and having a lot of fun -  
Acceptable.
Writing about it online so friends and family can read about it -  
Acceptable.
One of the most reputable newspapers of this century posting it on  
their website - Completely Unacceptable.
February 15 15:21
The real question is - would the Guardian dare publish this in  
newspaper format? It's rhetorical. I don't think the website should  
become a resting place for sub-standard writing and writers. Nor do I  
think it should serve as a training ground for (as far as I can tell)  
fairly talentless writers to hone their "skills".
Not good enough, basically... that applies to both the standard of  
journalism (I use the word loosely) and editorial standard.
I suppose I'm in the target age range for this type of article (20).  
The logic behind my Guardian readership is that I will be well- 
informed, inspired and engaged by what is written. It's precisely why  
I advoid weblogs dripping with teenage cliches. I'm very  
disappointed, to say the least.
February 15 15:21
"One thing that came out of yesterday's posts was that you want to  
hear a lot more from real people rather than journalists, .."
Can you quote please? I don't remember anyone saying that. The  
implication here is that Max is a journalist and we would rather hear  
from someone who is out-there, living-life. Quite the opposite. We  
would rather hear from someone who writes for a living, because there  
is a greater chance that it won't damage our eyes just to read it.
Lastly, can I just point out that there is no conspiracy here to  
decide to gang up on a random "writer" for no reason. The comments  
Max's article (and this one) have received have been posted by  
genuinely angry, disgusted readers who didn't expect to be assaulted  
by such rubbish on The Guardian's website. You appear to be sitting  
in the corner with your fingers in your ears proclaiming that you're  
right and we're wrong. Maybe you should consider the possibility that  
the massive volume of independent, unconnected, impartial opinions on  
this article actually have a point.
February 15 16:05
Dear Andy
Here is a response to your intensely patronising final statement, as  
taken from some chap on one of the sure-to-be-many Max-loathing  
Facebook groups:
''The response from the travel editor is interesting. Rather than  
reflecting on why people found Max's column so horrible, he seems to  
think that the criticism is due to people wanting to read stories by  
"real people", not "journalists". So, that means he's going to try  
and take the paper even further down the road of user-generated  
content, citizen journalism, and other utterly fucking meaningless  
buzzwords that only serve to produce terrible, terrible journalism.  
The exact system that produced Max.''
Read. Take notes. Learn.
February 15 16:43
What a can of worms and poor journalistic judgement this has been.  
Having read the original blog and comments my main question is:
Travel editor: Do you think the content of the website should be far  
below that of the newspaper?
Surely that can be the only reason you'd let Max's blog slip through  
the editorial net.
February 15 18:06
"One thing that came out of yesterday's posts was that you want to  
hear a lot more from real people rather than journalists, so I'm  
going to be putting up a lot more readers' recommendations and writing."
It seems to me that, if anything, what people have been objecting to  
is the arbitrary choice of one "real person" over any of the other  
several hundred thousand candidates. Surely the nature of the  
complaint makes clear that competent journalists have one great  
advantage over "real people", viz, they write reliably interesting  
and entertaining copy which will not provoke the derision of the  
entire internet community. What this site should be providing is  
quality writing, not the gormless witterings of its readers.
February 15 18:08
What's simultaneously so marvellous and so awful about this story is  
what a paradigm it is for so much. For how the interweb can explode a  
little story so quickly. For how much hatred there towards a  
perceived middle class London coterie who run the media. For how un- 
selfaware that coterie is about their own status. For how much  
funnier cruel stuff is than all that serious nonsense. For how easy  
it is to be vitriolic when blogging. And so on and so on....
....
The real issue here, as others have pointed out, is with the travel  
eds. I don't think it honestly occurs to you - and when I say 'you',  
I mean London based journos on the nationals - just how often, how  
incessantly and how forcefully we are fed the stories of the lives of  
a small subsection of London society, how we can't open a paper or  
magazine without hearing their bleating, self-important voices  
complaining about their nannies, discussing whether it's OK to wear a  
mini skirt round the Portobello Road if you're over 40, and yes, just  
what their kids did on their gap years. It's so dispiriting and  
depressing to find that there is LESS of a cross section of a society  
represented in the acres of newsprint that there were 30 years ago.  
Like university education, the clock is turning back from the brave  
years of working class kids taking a step up. Unis are more middle  
class than ever and so are newspapers....
....
Sure, it's not his fault he's a painful archetype, but by god,  
Guardian, didn't any of you recognise this as an article that was  
going to get SLAUGHTERED by us mere provincial mortals? No, you  
didn't, because you too, stuffed to the gills with your Marinas and  
Cartner-Morleys, you just took it as read that he'd be accepted as  
the voice of youth. That's how out of touch you are.
Yes, this whole thing has gone OTT, but don't blame your readership  
for biting back for being so consistently and systematically excluded  
from your version of who the world consists of - and giving an  
article like that space instead. You got found out. Good.
February 15 18:08
This is yet another failure of this type of internet-based newspaper.  
It's either got to be ultra high quality, or it's 'let a thousand  
flowers bloom'. There's no middle ground. The failure of the latter  
approach is there for all to see, and while there are a good few  
thousand of us sat here at work passing the time, it's going to leapt  
on, hard.