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AOL Reinvents Itself as Anti-America Online 

Sunday, 13 February 2011 07:23 Daniel Greenfield 

 
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AOL's purchase of Huffington Post is not the beginning of a liberal new
media monopoly, rather it's the prolonged death rattle of a company that has
money, but no reason for existing. AOL started out as the country's biggest
service provider, and is now nothing more than a third rate imitation of
Yahoo, which is also struggling to survive.

High profile white elephant purchases by desperate dot coms are nothing new.
AOL has been doing that for years. It bought Bebo for 850 million dollars
and then sold it for 10 million dollars. It bought Xdrive for 30 million and
then tried to sell it for 5 million a few years later. Now Huffington Post
joins the ranks of Bebo and Xdrive. Another acquisition by a troubled
company that has lost its customer base and can't figure out how to get a
new one, except by buying up companies tapped into the business model of two
years ago.thenewaol

AOL has tried to sell subscription services. It even tried to give away its
services for free. People not only won't pay for AOL, they won't even take
it for free. So now it's investing big in content, in paid blogging and
content farm spam-- at exactly the time when social media is eclipsing
search. But that fits with every stupid decision AOL has ever made. Right
back to the AOL-Time Warner merger where AOL's CEO somehow convinced Time
Warner's CEO that an ISP dependent on dial up customers in the age of
broadband was the perfect company to take over a media empire. There wasn't
a worse possible time to buy Huffington Post then during a downturn in
liberal popularity and the rise of social media driven sharing.

The Huffington Post business model has worked out great for Arianna
Huffington. AOL bought a company that was on track to becoming a white
elephant left behind by a changing internet. But what worked for HuffPo
isn't going to save AOL. The Huffington Post is a business disguised as
political activism, which means that like Ralph Nader, it can rely on a lot
of unpaid labor. AOL is still a business, just not a very good one. In the
short term, AOL will pick up pageviews. In the long term, it makes Rupert
Murdoch's purchase of MySpace look like sheer genius. A year from now, AOL
will have new executives and will be frantically chasing after the latest
already obsolete business model, whether it be micropayments or collective
shopping. And the Huffington Post will either be rolled into whatever
remains of AOL's content farms, or get sold off for a few million to some
low end liberal outfit, maybe Current TV or the TV end of MSNBC.

Will this slant AOL's coverage to the left? No doubt. But most of the media
is already slanting well to the left and leaning further and further by the
day. Craziness from Democratic Underground, the Huffington Post and Daily
Kos, melds together with talking points from Think Progress, the Atlantic
and Media Matters into a goulash that the mainstream media eats up with a
spoon. How much difference is there really between Time Magazine and the
Huffington Post? The answer is surprisingly little. HuffPo just dispenses
with the window dressing and cuts to the chase.

The Huffington Post is powered by three elements, self-promotion, spam and
liberal rage. Arianna Huffington's genius was in channeling the former so
well, in bringing on board so many famous people who wanted a chance to
deliver their "important thoughts" to the world and aspiring famous people
looking for a platform that would make them famous. And as a woman who went
from conservative to liberal, from a gay republican's beard to an absurd
icon for lefty mouthbreathers in pursuit of fame and fortune-- she had a
perfect understanding of the mindset of her unpaid bloggers. And how to
exploit it.

HuffPo is to politics what American Idol is to entertainment. It's not the
product, but the process. The politics of politics. The entertainment of
entertainment. It's how the sausage gets made behind the scenes. It's
shameless and it's pointless. It doesn't exist to promote left wing ideas,
so much as to feed off them at both ends. It gives you access to the vapid
chatter of left wing celebs and the unhinged ravings of the nutroots in one
single place.

For Arianna, this is the stepping stone to the next phase of her career. She
has done everything possible to stay famous and to keep getting invited to
all the right dinner parties, from working both sides of the aisle to
jumping on everything from alternative energy to talk shows to playing the
serious intellectual. Now she founded and sold a successful dot com, which
means she's finally caught up to the late 90's. The future beckons. And
whatever it holds will make her famous and rich, at the expense of liberals
yet again. Every HuffPo blogger and commenter was another brick in the
building that got her this far.

Arianna Huffington is really an older version of Paris Hilton, determined to
be famous, for no reason than that she can't do or be anything else. And her
Huffington Post was a slightly more upscale version of TMZ, for people
equally interested in the military-industrial complex, cats doing cute
things on YouTube and runway models. It was aimed squarely at a lefty base
that might have liked to pretend it was smarter than conservatives, but was
actually much dumber. For people who might have every essay Noam Chomsky has
ever written on their Kindle, but would really rather read about celebrity
scandals and then take people shouting angrily in print about the damned
Republicans as dessert.

The Huffington Post is a mark of contempt for its liberal audience. It
smirks and it panders to the lowest common denominator and yet has become
the leading voice of a progressive movement that claims to be smarter and
better than the rest of the country. Its success marks the intellectual
failure and unseriousness of the progs. The AOL buyout isn't a mark of
respect for the Huffington Post's ideas, no matter how much Armstrong might
pretend that it is. The Huffington Post has only one tantalizing quality,
traffic. And that traffic isn't made up of people coming to read and share
ideas, but to see scandals and trending searches. For all that liberals have
ridiculed the Drudge Report, HuffPo is a more comprehensive and more cynical
version of the same thing.

There's something ironic about the company once best known for dumping its
multicolored CD's on every person in America, pursuing a content farm
strategy that looks a lot like it. AOL has always been relentless and so has
Arianna. There is something fitting about a corporate marriage between the
two of them. They are both unforgivably tacky, annoying, have nothing to
offer and are impossible to get rid of. But while Arianna is on the way up,
AOL is on the way down. For all her faults, Arianna Huffington has a cannier
understanding of human nature than AOL does of business strategy. A few
years from now AOL will be worse off, but Arianna will be better off. That
is the difference between betting on human weaknesses over betting on an
ephemeral digital strategy that doesn't stand up to the first market shift..

These are difficult times for the progs. Winning power means losing
momentum. It's hard to manage radical chic without being in the opposition.
And it's even harder when the radical chic is co-opted by an unexpectedly
conservative protest movement. It's enough to send even the most solid
establishment prog off to a shrink or an image consultant.

huffingtonaolFrom No Labels, to the Coffee Party to Jon Stewart, there is
the pretense of a Third Way movement that on closer examination turns out to
be just liberals in disguise. And then there are the implosions. Keith
Olbermann's split with MSNBC, Ted Rall pushing armed revolt and Alan
Grayson's departure from congress. But this is more like the restructuring.
The AOL buyout will enable Arianna Huffington to transition to a more
mainstream role if she needs to. She can't go back to being on the right,
but being on the left may be temporarily tapped out. Picking up some
credibility by playing Silicon Valley executive may help recharge her image.
Or she can always jump on some charitable cause. Haiti is always good.

Much like at HuffPo, the details don't really matter. Only the image does.
Or the image of the image. The melange of emotion and outrage, titillation
and talking down to, that exercise the reptile brain but leave nothing
inside it. The Huffington Post's success marks the failure of the consumers
of its content. Selling it to AOL does more than turn the former America
Online into Anti-America Online, it puts a price tag on the prime commodity
of the progressive movement, unpaid labor repaid in betrayal. It's a
commodity that everyone from Ralph Nader to Obama has made great use of,
harnessing the outrage and enthusiasm of the base for their own profit. For
Arianna and AOL, the pricetag was a mere few hundred million. For Obama it
was in the hundreds of billions.

 



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