mommy-bloggers
Mommy Blogger Found Guilty of Murder in Poisoning Death of Her Son
Jay Hathaway · 03/02/15 02:55PMLacey Spears, the Chestnut Ridge, N.Y. mom accused of slowly poisoning her son to death while she blogged about his illness, was found guilty Monday of second degree murder, the Lower Hudson Journal News reported. Prosecutors argued that Spears killed her 5-year-old, Garnett, by putting salt in his feeding tube while he was at the hospital.
Mom Accused of Slowly Poisoning Her Son to Death to Spice Up Her Blog
Jay Hathaway · 06/18/14 03:45PMWhat Is Mary Romney Dressed Up as in This Picture?
Maureen O'Connor · 02/21/12 10:43AMAs the Romney clan scrambles to clean up its social media presence, Buzzfeed reporter and Mormon whisperer McKay Coppins highlights the "Mormon mommy blog" of Mary Romney, daughter-in-law of Mitt and wife of Craig. Mary made her blog private when Coppins came asking questions, which is really too bad, because now we don't the context of this 2007 Halloween photo. Apparently Craig is "dressed as his dad," but what the hell is Mary?
News Corp. Will Make You Regret Ever Buying an iPad
Hamilton Nolan · 06/20/11 01:57PMMillions of Mommy Bloggers Are For Sale, Cheap
Hamilton Nolan · 03/15/11 10:38AMAcross America, millions upon millions of despondent mothers (3.9 million, specifically!) have started blogs to share their feelings of anomie, their existential despair at the trap that their lives have become, and cleaning tips. Many of them aspire to one day be used as a small cog in a vast corporate marketing machine. They work cheap!
Unilever Is Listening to You Talk About Your Skin Problems
Hamilton Nolan · 11/09/10 11:10AMNew York Observer Mommy-Mag Editor in Dental-Editorial Favor Trading Scandal
Hamilton Nolan · 10/25/10 03:01PMWorld's Keenest Business Minds All Dedicated to Baby Poop
Hamilton Nolan · 06/15/10 09:02AMFamily Blogger Struggles With Privacy Concerns, Posts Family Photos to Internet
Pareene · 07/01/08 01:02PMYes it's fine to post a photo of your adorable child on Flickr, why not? The dangers are: a) perverts will get off on these photos, b) predators will, who knows, decide to kidnap your adorable child because she is soooo cute on the internet, or c) your child will be targeted for online abuse by bloggers somewhere, for some reason. The first two are bullshit. Perverts will masturbate to everything, who cares. You are more likely to abuse your child than a stranger. And finally, as we've tried to explain, all this online abuse of innocent kids is actually directed at their over-sharing parents. So rest easy, Wall Street Journal mommyblogger! Or, like, make the pictures friends-only, as your friends have suggested. Either one. Christ. [WSJ]
You Enable Us to Hate Your Kids
Pareene · 06/05/08 01:46PMSlate's family correspondent Emily Bazelon was relieved recently to learn that her 8-year-old son has no hits on Google. Not for lack of trying! She writes about her young son, Eli, occasionally, but obviously she doesn't want her child to be an Internet Persona, Fair Game for bloggers and commenters. But then, she's writing about him in Slate. And her husband's name, which is presumably her son's last name, is readily available on Wikipedia. She's dangerously close to crossing into the territory of the chronic familial oversharers whose crimes against their children she ponders in her essay. Like remember Neal Pollack? "His young son Elijah's bathroom habits are fair game for Pollack's blog, but his son's discovery of his sexuality, Pollack says, is not." Jesus, Neal, you just did it again. Dear internet: blogging about your children is child abuse.