Meredith sent me a link to a Slate article, Must Read TV, about how the lives of your favorite TV characters are actually as interesting as the shows they’re on — in fact, some of the best programs and production companies are using blogs as co-narrative strategies, allowing hyper-fans access to spoiler information even before the shows they represent air — yes, the fictional character blogs are the sites that get the show exclusives.  How is that for postmodernism? I can hear French literary theorists such as Jean Baudrillard, Jacques Derrida, and Hélène Cixous standing in ovation to this absolutely normal intentional absurdity. I am no Derrida, but I love the implications here.

Characters from The Office, The Closer, Grey’s Anatomy, Nip/Tuck, How I Met Your Mother, Monk, the soap opera One Life To Live, and the kids’ show Postcards From Buster all have blogs (and, in some cases, MySpace pages). Even the banker from Deal or No Deal has a blog, in which he confesses his intense dislike of the program’s contestants. Via Slate

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I just found a reference to me over at Ad Your Comment Here:

I feel like there were a few others because I had this friend, Chris Abraham, who was researching blogging at the time and who basically requested my friendship in just about every place you could think of.

Well, I thought about how I spread the SNS love. Right now I am into Flugpo, but there has been Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, Flickr, Friendster, Jaiku, Pownce, and Tumblr. I heard this story where all the sexually-transmitted diseases in the world are propagated by truckers. They have these trucking routes. Well, I fancy myself the syphilitic trucker of the social networks. Oh, I am so proud. So proud!