This year, the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada decided to recognize bloggers by giving some well known blogs access to the show much like they’ve given access to the press for years. This was a great step forward for bloggers. Now let’s take a step back. No really… Let’s let Gizmodo do it for us.

What happened?
Gizmodo staff, treated like responsible reporters by CES, decided to “give bloggers a black eye” as John Chow put it, by playing a childish prank with a nifty little tool called TV-B-Gone. Gizmodo proudly provided details, received a boat load of backlash, and then tried to downplay it with a story about a dumb teen who derailed trains with an IR device. Personally, it makes me sad to see a large, known blog cop out like this.
Why did they do it?
Let’s be fair. You don’t have to be a twelve year old to think a prank with someone’s TV is funny. I still plan on buying one of these to mess with friends. According to Gizmodo, the initial intent was just to mess with a couple people. Too bad they have no self-restraint.
Way too far
There’s two problems with this prank. First and foremost, it affected much more than just a couple buddies. Instead, their fun and games affected convention-goers looking for the latest demonstrations of products and the companies trying to give those demonstrations. Not only did their prank inconvenience many people, it also may have cost companies sales and credibility. The second problem with their prank is much more devastating, in my opinion. Gizmodo was supposed to be at CES in a professional capacity, and whether they like it or not, their actions reflect on the blogging community as a whole. It’s hard enough for a blogger to get event organizers to recognize us as legitimate media outlets. Now, Gizmodo has made us all look like a bunch of kids joy-riding on the internet.
What Gizmodo should have done
As I mentioned above, Gizmodo bragged about the event, offered an incredibly weak apology, and then tried to brush it off as nothing when they were called out around the blogosphere. Apologies are great, but they don’t excuse actions, and theirs didn’t seem very genuine, anyway. I would have liked to see an open letter to CES, Motorola, any other companies affected, CES visitors affected, and the bloggers of the world. That open letter would have included an admission that they did something they really shouldn’t have and that it was very thoughtless of them, an apology for having been so incredibly thoughtless, and a plea to CES and any other event organizers to note that the actions of Gizmodo should, in no way, reflect other bloggers in the world who seek to be seen as responsible media outlets. Of course, if there was a surplus of intelligent thought at Gizmodo, perhaps there wouldn’t have been anything to apologize for in the first place.
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Joe on the January 13th, 2008
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on January 14th, 2008 at 4:10 am
The adults in the room should have grabbed by their ears and escorted them out. I think their blog needs some time out in the corner.
on January 14th, 2008 at 8:19 am
I was pretty dismayed by this whole ordeal as well, and really surprised at the sheer display of immaturity and lack of professionalism.
Excellent post.
SB
on January 14th, 2008 at 9:42 am
Colin: Now THERE’S video I would have liked to see.
on January 14th, 2008 at 9:44 am
Scott: Thanks. I actually heard about it on KTAR talk radio’s Saturday tech show on my drive up north to a cabin, so I didn’t have a chance to read up on it or write about it until I got home yesterday. Luckily, the relaxing atmosphere of Sedona had me forgetting about the whole thing until I got home.
on January 14th, 2008 at 11:25 am
Hopefully the folks in charge at CES will recognize that Gizmodo represents no one but themselves.
on January 14th, 2008 at 12:39 pm
Jason: As a tech blogger, CES is the show I would most like credentials for next year, so I’m also hoping they see it that way.
on January 14th, 2008 at 4:17 pm
WOW, the video was funny, however if I was the one doing the presentation I would have been pissed I could not show off new technology and its features by the way of those pranksters
Daily Impressions’s last blog post..Laser Ray Gun
on January 14th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
Daily: Congrats on being the first to experience the new Comment Love plugin that finds your latest post and adds a link to it at the bottom of your comment.
It is a bit funny to watch, but it’s about as funny as watching the light saber jedi kid viral video. While a lot of people got a little chuckle out of it, it was a mean prank that caused harm and was performed without any forethought.