News Blog

Read all 'Freakonomics' posts in News Blog
August 9, 2007 2:11 PM PDT

'Freakonomics' moves to prime time

by Candace Lombardi
  • Post a comment

The New York Times seems to have figured out one way to deal with news blogs: treat them as a column--sort of.

As of Wednesday, NYTimes.com became the exclusive host of Freakonomics, the social-economics blog based on the best-selling book of the same name, placing it under its Opinions section.

The blogs' authors, Stephen Dubner and Steven Levitt, however, do not appear alongside esteemed New York Times columnists, but floating above the paper's daily podcast. It's an undefined space left of the Letters section that doesn't list any other specific blogs.

Freakonomics logo (Credit: NYTimes.com)

While the placement may be strange, the move is not entirely surprising. Dubner has long contributed to The New York Times Magazine and the book Freakonomics grew from a profile piece Dubner did for the magazine on Levitt.

What is unusual is the strange hodgepodge of content that makes up what is now a NYTimes.com blog.

In addition to blog postings, Freakonomics hosts what it calls the "Freakonomics Quorum," a forum for celebrity guests to post opinions on an assigned topic. The latest one includes responses from Barbara Ehrenreich of Nickel and Dimed fame and entrepreneur turned Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who gave a one-line answer. It hosts user-generated Q&As with famous guests. Mad Money host Jim Cramer is the most recent contributor and makes sense for a social economics blog.

Apparently, the first day was a little bumpy.

Regulars to the blog posted complaints that they no longer received their full-text RSS feeds. Levitt, meanwhile, received the most hate mail he has ever gotten, save the time he wrote about the correlation between crime and abortion statistics 10 years ago. It was in response to a post on the topic of terrorism, according to Levitt.

  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

15 sites that went kaput in 2009

Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.

Top 10 news stories of the decade

Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader



advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right