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Inside the Cult of Kos
Time magazine ^ | June 5, 2006 | ANA MARIE COX

Posted on 06/06/2006 10:36:00 AM PDT by Peach

"If I cared what commenters said, I'd kill myself." In the high-octane non-stop flame war that is the political blogosphere, Markos Moulitsas Zuniga knows how to get attention. He's kidding, of course. We're talking about the rhetorical excesses that can spill out of the impassioned debate that takes place on his creation, DailyKos.com, the world's most popular political blog.

Compact and wiry, Moulitsas, 34, exudes quivering intensity. He speaks in staccato paragraphs, punctuated by intense stares and a raised eyebrow. His eyes bulge slightly outward, as if reacting to the pressure of all the ideas inside his head. Many of those ideas find a home on Daily Kos. A clearinghouse for liberal screeds and progressive perspective on the news, the site claims to get more than 500,000 unique visitors daily and more than 10,000 members maintain their own sub-blogs (called "diaries") within its reaches. On Thursday, almost a thousand of these loyal readers and contributors — along with Wesley Clark, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and former Virginia governor and potential '08 contender Mark Warner — will gather in Las Vegas for a pep rally-cum-political conference, "Yearly Kos."

And those comments that push Moulitsas into suicidal hyperbole? They tumble in at the rate of about 12,000 a day. You don't generate that kind of following by responding to rhetorical excess with equanimity and reason. You get that kind of following by responding to rhetorical excess with more rhetorical excess. Or, as Moulitsas puts it later, "You can't take pen into a battle with someone who's wielding a machine gun."

Moulitsas’s rhetoric and passion have made him a posterboy bomb-thrower. He's the left's own Kurt Cobain and Che Guevera rolled into one, dripping sex appeal for progressives for whom debate has become synonymous with losing, who need a muscular liberal answer to the cowboy swagger adopted by the Bush Administration and its fans.

His fiery phrasing naturally makes Moulitsas an inviting target for the right. Among bloggers, he is probably most famous for his tactless response to the June 2003 video images of the corpses of American military contractors being dragged through the streets of Fallujah, about which he wrote, "I feel nothing... Screw them." While conservatives — and many liberals — criticized Moulitsas's intemperance, the controversy did nothing to slow the site's skyrocketing readership. Indeed, the incident gave him his trademark.

Moulitsas will cop to setting the unabashedly belligerent tone of Daily Kos, right down to the design, which he calls "combative." Its logo is a silhouette of someone charging with a flag, and "the whole military theme of the site is very on purpose." Moulitsas spent part of his childhood in El Salvador during the country's civil war and was an Army artilleryman in Germany for three years, a background that, he says, makes him comfortable with throwing verbal bombs as well. "I'm not The Nation," he says. "I'm not afraid to use swear words. If people want calm, high-minded debate, this is not the site for it." Called in to mediate disputes among community members, Moulitsas has all the patience of a drill sergeant. "I get it all the time: 'Such-and-such was mean to me,'" he says in a mock whine. "I feel like I'm in high school. Suck it up, this is politics." More to the point, "This is war."

The latest salvo in Moulitsas’s war on the right is Crashing the Gate: Netroots, Grassroots, and the Rise of People-Powered Politics,(www.crashingthegate.com) a primer co-written with Jerome Armstrong on wresting control of the Democratic party away from consultants and D.C .power brokers, a group that Moulitsas refers to as "that clubby elite club." Many of Moulitsas’ colleagues in the blog world wonder if Moulitsas isn’t a member of that club himself. He claims to have used the site to funnel over $1 million to Democratic candidates across the country and is enough of a power broker to have pull as a recruiter for the party machinery he so wants to overhaul. One Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee staffer told the Washington Monthly last spring that potential candidates "get calls from, like, John Edwards, and maybe Tom Vilsack, and, always, Markos."

As impressive as his influence is his compensation. Moulitsas started the site in May 2002 after becoming a prolific commentator on another lefty blog, Armstrong's MyDD.com. It was clunky and amateurish; today, back-of-the-envelope calculations about how much money Moulitsas makes off of Daily Kos based on ad rates put the figure well into the six-figure range. He told the New York Times in April that it was closer to $80,000 but admitted to me later that the figure was probably higher. It’s tough to say, Moulitsas argues, because so much of the profits of the site get poured back into it. Whatever his take-home pay is, it’s enough to generate respect from unlikely quarters. "Most would argue and it’s self-evident that he’s the most well compensated blogger on the planet," says Mike Krempasky, co-founder of the virulently conservative RedState.com "I don’t say that in a pejorative way. I think that’s great!" Moulitsas’s enterprise was in fact the inspiration for Red State, right down to identical software and a spirit of embattled community. A much smaller, less profitable community, Krempasky admits. This does not dampen his admiration for Moulitsas’s success. "Maybe it’s a lesson that the left is learning," says Krempasky, "One of the best measures of success in any venture is profit and loss. If you can create a business model that can fund things that you care about, all the better."

Glenn Reynolds, the man behind the phenomenally popular — but not as popular — Instapundit.com, says Moulitsas has managed to combine activism and entrepreneurialism in a recipe the bloggers respond to, though not always positively. "Those pictures of the Mercedes with the Kos license plates weren’t real, but people had a lot of fun with them," he says of a fake photo that circulated on the net for awhile. Reynolds points to Moulitsas’s lesser-known network of baseball blogs as proof that the liberal firebrand is also a red-hot marketer. "The sports blogs underscore the fact that he is an entrepreneur," says Reynolds. "An entrepreneur gets ahead by figuring out what people want and giving it to them, and taking a cut… a manager just tries to get people to do what they want. He’s not a manager."

The book tour for Crashing the Gate kicked off in Los Angeles with a cocktail party co-hosted by liberal luminary Norman Lear and bloggeress to the stars Arianna Huffington — a preview of the landscape inside the gate, perhaps. Boston is his second-to-last stop, and the bar where Moulitsas and Armstrong will speak is filled to capacity — at least a hundred people are there, an organizer tells me. Even Moulitsas can't get in. He and Armstrong stand on the sidewalk while admirers push copies of the book at him and ask him to pose for snapshots. Moulitsas has an open, young face, so it's hard to tell if he's kidding or not when he looks up from the book he's signing and asks, "Why would anyone want to write about me?"

He may intend such modesty to be disarming, but the runaway scale of the Kos phenomenon can make it seem disingenuous. Not only are the site and the upcoming convention named after him, but many of the individual contributors have also sought to launch their own blogs using the Kos moniker. Moulitsas is now attempting to protect his identity with a trademark. "Would you call a site ‘Texas Michael Moore’? ‘Boston Chomsky’? That’s MY NAME." Variations on it — not protected legally, one assumes — abound. Yearly Kos participants raised funds by selling a book about the "Kosmos," and contributors to the site gleefully call themselves "Kossacks." Yet they resist the idea that the community of Daily Kos is a cult of personality. Susan Gardener, one of the elect contributors who can post to the blog's front page, says Moulitsas simply "created a huge town hall and then stood back and let it happen." Yet the cell phone pictures snapped and the rapt audiences tell another story. Moulitsas says that the consultants whom he originally planned to excoriate in his book "now are asking for autographs. ...The same with some reporters." Adam Nagourney, a political reporter for the New York Times who's traveled with Moulitsas and follows the blog, admits to being beguiled, "I like the guy, even though his site called me and Elisabeth Bumiller the two worst reporters in America," says Nagourney. "I know I should hate him, but I can't." Nagourney praises Moulitsas's political insight but notes that the Daily Kos phenomenon is a product of charisma: "He's got it and he knows it."

Moulitsas does know he has become the face of the netroots, though he insists that it's a position he has inherited only by default. The left lacks many telegenic spokespeople, he says, "It's the difference between the Fox News anchors — you know, blond, put-together — and our people. It's like, 'You know, lady, put on a bra. Would it kill you to put on a bra?'" Moulistas is sponsoring a media training session at Yearly Kos; one can only hope that Maidenform is on the agenda.

Watch Time.com for dispatches this week from Ana Marie Cox at the Yearly Kos convention in Las Vegas.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: barkingmoonbats; blog; bloggers; blogs; cheguevera; dailykos; doublestandard; interent; ivorytower; kos; koskidz; kurtcobain; markosmoulitsas; mediabias; pajamapeople; wonkette
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To: TonyRo76

That's how I know her name; I couldn't place her.


41 posted on 06/06/2006 10:53:46 AM PDT by Peach (If you can't stand behind our military, stand in front of them.)
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To: philsfan24

Interesting graph. I imagine what spiked the traffic on the Kos blog in May was the illegal aliens activity, but what happened in February to make that big spike (no doubt a big spike of rage) on that blog?


42 posted on 06/06/2006 10:53:49 AM PDT by hsalaw
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To: Moose4
every single candidate that he has funneled money toward has LOST their election.

One might consider him an ally of the Republicans. His brand of politics is the kiss of death for the candidates he supports.

43 posted on 06/06/2006 10:53:50 AM PDT by siunevada (If we learn nothing from history, what's the point of having one? - Peggy Hill)
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To: Peach
DailyKos.com, the world's most popular political blog.

I don't know the stats for FR visitors and posts, but find it difficult to believe Daily Kos is the most popular political web site in the world.

FR doesn't qualify because FR isn't a blog. :^)

44 posted on 06/06/2006 10:53:59 AM PDT by The_Victor (If all I want is a warm feeling, I should just wet my pants.)
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Comment #45 Removed by Moderator

To: 91B

He's the guy she says is quivering with intensity? Ooookay.


46 posted on 06/06/2006 10:54:37 AM PDT by Peach (If you can't stand behind our military, stand in front of them.)
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To: The_Victor

Well, I know we're not a blog but the media considers nearly everything that isn't connected to a mainstream media organization a blog. They do NOT get it.


47 posted on 06/06/2006 10:55:33 AM PDT by Peach (If you can't stand behind our military, stand in front of them.)
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To: TonyRo76

From her blog:

ANA MARIE COX had a long, disastrous career in mainstream media before being forced into the shallow waters of the blogosphere. While an editor at Mother Jones, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and The American Prospect, her poor people skills made her unpopular, while her sarcasm drove people away. Internet journalism, with its higher tolerance for misfits, provided an early home—she is a survivor of Suck.com, Feedmag.com and Inside.com. She was discovered at a drugstore by Nick Denton, who made her Wonkette. She is now a columnist for TIME and time.com and is at work on her next book, an anthropological study of young conservatives. Her husband Chris Lehmann is remarkably well-liked and an editor at CQ Weekly.


48 posted on 06/06/2006 10:55:52 AM PDT by CreviceTool
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To: TonyRo76
"Aren't we up to about 200,000 on FR?"

Somewhere just over 248,944 at the moment.

49 posted on 06/06/2006 10:56:19 AM PDT by avg_freeper (Gunga galunga. Gunga, gunga galunga)
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To: Peach
Ana Marie Cox is writing for TIME now? Isn't she also WONKETTE?
50 posted on 06/06/2006 10:56:28 AM PDT by Rummyfan
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To: P-40
"punctuated by intense stares and a raised eyebrow."


51 posted on 06/06/2006 10:56:31 AM PDT by jdm
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To: Antoninus
"Perfect descripiton of a quivering lunatic if you ask me."

Yep. He's insane alright.
The only people Time is interested in.
52 posted on 06/06/2006 10:56:35 AM PDT by Jameison
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To: hsalaw

i think the spike in may was related to porter goss retiring and them throwing around the conspiracy theories for the reason. the beginning of feb could be related to bush's state of the union speech.


53 posted on 06/06/2006 10:57:00 AM PDT by philsfan24
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To: Rummyfan

Yes - she's also wonkette and after reading upthread about her professional background (I use the term loosely), I guess I shouldn't be surprised that Time hired her, but I am.


54 posted on 06/06/2006 10:57:25 AM PDT by Peach (If you can't stand behind our military, stand in front of them.)
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Comment #55 Removed by Moderator

To: Peach
Please see this link and watch the video link for Kos' TV ad debut.

Good background on what kind of fruit loop we are dealing with.

56 posted on 06/06/2006 10:58:04 AM PDT by 91B (God made man, Sam Colt made men equal)
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To: 91B

Yikes!
No surprise he spews out such rubbish.
He sure looks stupid.


57 posted on 06/06/2006 10:58:22 AM PDT by Jameison
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To: IncPen

Good point...seems our clout is not covered as much
as the liberals...how they easily get the money and
our sight...seems to be plugging day to day,..how did
Moveon..sight generate so damn much money during the
'04 campaign??..did Soros and his ilk..put in the big
bucks..? guess so. Freepers just do their thing...
but ..they are monitoring us...you can bet your sweet
bippy...Jake


58 posted on 06/06/2006 10:58:35 AM PDT by sanjacjake
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To: TonyRo76

I swear, leftist women don't even LOOK at he men; for them, if a guy doesn't have his eyebrows waxed and his nails manicured, ala John Kerry, they just aren't worth spit.

The feminization of men over the last 20 years is very discouraging.


59 posted on 06/06/2006 10:59:09 AM PDT by Peach (If you can't stand behind our military, stand in front of them.)
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To: siunevada

I'd love to see that "I feel nothing -- screw them" quote along with pictures of some of those Dems attending his rally. A nice little ad campaign there.


60 posted on 06/06/2006 10:59:27 AM PDT by XJarhead
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