After being hounded out of town by uppity bloggers like David Dobbs, PepsiCo wisely started their own blog at http://foodfrontiers.pepsicoblogs.com/ . (Though unwisely they have not updated it in at least a week. Bad blogging, guys.)
What egregious corporate propaganda have they put up?
None that I can see. They even admitted that excess sodium is not a healthy choice!
I assume that David Dobbs undertook multiple back fllips at that point, which accounts for his lack of response.
In fact, as far as I can tell Dobb's hasn't paid PepsiCo's new blog any attention whatsoever, even though he was sure they would be the voice of the devil.
Funny. Where are all his objections. Or Rebecca Skloot's?
I mean, PepsiCo's posts must be crawling with compromises, right? Yet not one of these high-handed bloggers can find their way to even reading PepsiCo's science blog, it seems.
Which is exactly what I was talking about -- Dobbs et al are all talk and no action.
To be fair, Pepsi will have to stay on their best behavior for a while. We shall see.
ReplyDeleteDavid Dobbs wrote:
ReplyDelete> I've stated several times
> in several spots that the
> problem was not Pepsi, or
> anything Pepsi's scientists
> would say or write on the blog, but > the fact that Seed sold them the
> spot to write it in.
OK.
And Seed sold your spot to you.
What is the difference? From PepsiCo's blog, I can't see any.
You are presenting your POV as best you can. So are they, no?
David Dobbs wrote:
ReplyDelete> My problem isn't and wasn't
> with Pepsi. It was with Seed
> for selling them the spot.
You never, ever gave PepsiCo a change to earn their spot.
You simply assumed that, because they paid Seed a certain amount to have a blog, that their blogging would be worthless.
Why? You prejudged them: pre-pay must mean their words are worthless. You never even gave them a chance.
But more than that: Are you really so naive as to think that Seed would commission you to write a blog for them if it didn't make them some money? Perhaps it wasn't as blatant as PepsiCo's up-front payment. But Seed certainly expected you to make them money.
What's the real difference?