Posted on 04/17/2005 11:37:40 AM PDT by Pikamax
The world is his laptop Matt Drudge, internet gossip millionaire, tells Cosmo Landesman about life on the wire
Matt Drudges panama hat is the kind that cigar-sucking American newspaper men wore in the 1940s. Seeing him without it is like seeing the Statue of Liberty without her torch or Tom Wolfe without his white suit.
The internet has spawned a million sites but has created few real legends one of whom is Drudge. That hat is part of the legend, a bit of style in the void of cyberspace.
Drudge runs one of the most influential and discussed websites in the world: the Drudge Report. It is a tabloid newspaper that you can read on the net offering up-to-the-minute news, gossip, sport and celebrity stories. It was Drudge who in 1998 published the story of Bill Clintons affair with Monica Lewinsky and became famous overnight.
I expected a fast talking, in-your-face, liberal-baiting American. But after two minutes in his company you realise that Drudge is a loner. He says he has come to London to find a good Indian restaurant. At first I thought he was being flippant but he was not: I dont have any friends in London. Im here for dinner. I like to travel. I spend 30% of my time travelling.
Whether Drudge goes to London or Budapest he spends his time doing exactly what he does back in America: sitting alone in his room before computer screens: My home, my hotel room, my car theyre all like a mobile news room.
As the city sleeps Drudge works late, tracking down stories, searching dozens of news agencies, web-sites, newspapers, radio broadcasts, television channels and tip-offs in the hope that he will be the first to bag tomorrows headlines. I was first to break the news about the death of Lady Diana, he boasts. The CNN team couldnt get into make-up fast enough.
It is a gruelling schedule. Yesterday I spent 13 hours in my hotel room looking for news. Ive done seven hours already and will do another seven tonight. For Drudge, news is not a job its love.
When a volcano erupts or an impeachment is formed theres a drama there. I look for action, motion, friction. Theres nothing more exciting than to watch a story break and grow and to be the first one to present it to the world.
What would be the perfect Drudge story? An earthquake hitting a hospital with Bill Clinton having surgery and President Bush in the waiting room and an asteroid coming its way. He laughs.
What does Drudge do when he is not plugged into cyberspace? Thats a very good question and Im not going to discuss it, he replies.
Hold on, Matt, I say, youre always exposing the private lives of public figures. You cant go all coy now.
Im not very social. I live on an island in Miami, Florida, and I do my own shopping and pay my taxes, he says. And Im not mean.
That is not the way that Drudges critics see it. David Brock, a former right-wing journalist, claimed in his book Blinded by the Right that Drudge was gay, yet supported a party that these critics see as homophobic.
So are you a gay right-wing Republican? I ask.
No, Im not gay. I was nearly married a few years ago. And no, Im not a right-wing Republican, he replies without batting an eye. Im a conservative and want to pay less taxes. And I did vote Republican at the last election. But Im more of a populist.
Actually I dont think he has an ideological bone in his body. He is a news junkie who wants the buzz of the story and leaves the battle of ideas to others. At the moment Drudge is excited by the Michael Jackson trial. When I say it does not seem to have caught the public imagination like the O J Simpson case did, Drudge is bemused. This is much bigger than O J, he says. Nobody in Budapest ever heard of O J Simpson. When I drove into London from the airport the cabbie wasnt discussing Michael Howard, he was talking about Michael Jackson.
Born in the city of Takoma Park in Maryland, Drudge was a child who got terrible grades in school: Im self-taught, self-educated, self-made. I didnt go to a fancy journalism school, I had to learn about computers and the net by myself.
He set up an e-mail version of the Drudge Report in 1994. Since then it has grown into a business estimated to earn about £650,000 a year, although it still has a staff of one: Drudge.
When he first appeared in the 1990s he was part of a new group of outsiders challenging the political elite and the big media corporations. Has he now become part of the Establishment? No. Because I have success it doesnt mean that Im part of the mainstream. Im still an outsider.
Then in the next breath he is talking about having a drink with Harvey Weinstein, the former Miramax boss, and hoping to meet George Bushs twin daughters at the White House correspondents dinner this week. Look, meet them once and youre innocent, meet them twice and youre not. So if you see me having drinks again with Harvey Weinstein then, okay, youve got me, he says.
Back in the 1990s Drudge was a believer in the empowering potential of the internet. In a speech he said, We have entered an era vibrating with the din of small voices. Every citizen can be a reporter, can take on the powers that be.
Now he sounds disillusioned and says that the din is growing into a cacophony: Theres a danger of the internet just becoming loud, ugly and boring with a thousand voices screaming for attention. He is no fan of the blogging phenomenon (weblogs linking sites): I dont read them. I like to create waves and not surf them. And who are these influential bloggers? You cant name one because they dont exist.
He loves The Sun the best newspaper in England and BBC Radio 5. He even loves Michael Moore, the Bush-baiting documentary maker: Hes genius. And he does not believe that the internet will be the end of newspapers: The internet feeds off the main press and the main press feeds off the internet. Theyre working in tandem. I think what will happen is that newspapers will be printed throughout the day so you get different editions like in the old days.
What is the future? I never think too far into the future, he says. Im too busy thinking about tomorrows news.
6 billion people screaming for attention. My challenge lies with discerning those with valuable information to share. Your challenge is your business.
The internet feeds off the main press and the main press feeds off the internet.
Who needs the main press with 6 billion people screaming for attention?
Matt Drudge, wanna get married?
Love this guy, great sense of humor, wit, style, he's adorable....
Yes, I'll calm down now until my divorce is final.....
drudge ping
I seem to recall he's dodged the question in the past.
Hope he's telling the truth.
IMHO, New Media similar to Wikinews (the free news source (BETA) that you can write!) offers a much more compelling news experience. Olde Media may soon fade into oblivion as people discover craigslist and other alternatives to Olde Media's classified ads.
"I look for action, motion, friction"
Put that to a good beat and guitar and you've got yourself a song Drudge.
woo hoo!
Thanks for the ping. I've been out all weekend doin' stuff & missed this entirely. Wonder what he'll be up to tonight.
It's not the first time he was quoted saying he's not.
http://www.miaminewtimes.com/issues/2001-06-28/feature.html
The only reason it means anything to me is that I hit the Drudge site first thing with coffee, and h-moes are so f-ed up mentally that they're not worth paying attention to.
Like it or not, sexuality is at the root of our being, right next to (or part of) the lizard brain, and I don't trust anything that's so bleeped up with their fundamental wiring that they don't know who they're supposed to reproduce with.
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