Where You’re From

Helaine started it with a couch conversation Sunday evening. She wondered, as I had in the past, where were you while you were reading this blog? The numbers are in, and I’m a little surprised.

About 100 of you have left a note on my website over the past few days, telling me where you are. Since I average over 1,000 page reads a day, it’s a significant, though not overpowering percentage of my readers. 59 of that group are reading in Connecticut.

That Connecticut number is a stunner, because website stat programs paint a very different picture. I tried to address this a few days ago and was a little confusing. Two of you responded, though it seems my poor choice of words let you miss the point.

Most ‘regular’ readers come in through the home page (or read my most recent entries through my RSS feed using Yahoo!, Google or an installed feed reader). Most out-of-state readers are probably here after following a search engine link which brought them to an older entry. They never saw my home page or my request.

Most of you (not all of you) know me from my job on TV. I’m not sure how that will affect my writing going forward… if it affects it at all. I already parse my words, remaining ever alert that what I say on my private website can reflect on my very public life.

A number of the respondents left their web address. That gave me a chance to take a peek at them.

Marko in Dayton, Ohio also has a blog – though no entries since April. He has built some pretty cool Pinewood Derby race cars with his son, referred to as “#2.”

Doug Harris is also a blogger and also stopped blogging in April. Did something happen in April I didn’t hear about?

Mike, in Arlington, VA has a website with a cool name: RadioMojo. His home page explains he’ll no longer be doing whatever it was RadioMojo did. Its date: April 25th.

You can’t make this stuff up.

A reader name Mumbles linked to his photos on Flickr. There’s a lot to like here. I enjoy looking at other photographers work, trying to find ways to improve mine.

I wonder if Mumbles knew I’d look at his work… or guessed I’d tell you to look? He probably wanted me to look at them. Mission accomplished.

Chuck Schultz sent his photo link too. He’s into racing cars and dogs. You can tell a lot about a person by their photos. Dogs are very photogenic. They never mind posing nor care if you take too many photos.

I wonder if there was a downside to growing up as Charles Schultz… but not ‘the’ Charles Schultz.

Chuck is a ham operator. There are a bunch of them here. I wrote an article recently in the national ham radio magazine, QST. I’m sure that brought some of them to my site.

Jeff in Muncie, Indiana is a ham too, with a blog and a podcast. That’s an undertaking. I listened to some of his latest entry about Hiram Percy Maxim, in many ways the father of ham radio. The podcast sounds like the kind of first class radio production you often hear on NPR.

Jeff has links on his blog… though none to me. I like links.

Am I boring you? You don’t have to read this if I’m boring you.

My father left a message. My sister left a message. My cousin left a message.

Meredith has put much of her life online in a free form way. That’s how this website started, but I found it too difficult to be free form on the web, which cries out for structure.

John, from “The new and exciting Bridgeport, CT” linked to his family’s website. I like this idea a lot, but I like reading “Christmas letters”.

My friend Kevin’s family just put up a family blog with my help. With four girls out in the world, often away from their Connecticut roots, their blog promises to keep the family closer.

Adam left a link for his blog. It is the antithesis of this one in that I have long entries while Adam is often satisfied with a few words or a sentence.

I like his reference to your worst hair decision ever.

When I was a kid, a new barber-in-training cut my hair so short that even pre-teen Geoff knew he was in trouble. I’m still cringing over that. The guy who owned the shop told me to come back in a few days and the hair would have grown back enough to repair the damage.

More recently, a news director sent me to her hair stylist, who proceeded to make me look like Lyle Lovett. Even Lyle Lovett doesn’t want to look like Lyle Lovett. And, I still had to wear the hair on-the-air. Mortifying!

Damon Scott checked in from Lubbock, TX. I’ve written about Lubbock a lot recently, because of the TV Guide Channel reality show about a Lubbock newsroom. They seem to be in reruns, because the DVR hasn’t recorded anything the last two weeks.

Damon is a jock, doing afternoon drive on Mix100. His photo is nowhere to be found on the station’s website. I looked. I always look for disk jockey photos.

When I was a disk jockey, I used to answer the ‘hitline’ trying to pick up girls who were calling to request songs. My first day in radio (really) I got a call from Jeanine, who told me about the sexual failings of a station’s newsman.

There is a medical term to describe his unfortunate haste. Jeanine was a little more blunt.

Damon – don’t pick up hitline chicks.

Actually, maybe they email photos first now? Damon, use your best judgment.

McD is another blogger who wrote back. His home page has a very nice line drawing of him (I think) in the upper left corner.

There’s something very folksy about the sketch. If it’s possible to make a web page folksy, it’s mission accomplished by virtue of this little sketch.

You told me where you were and you told me from all over the United States. Most responses came from people I don’t know, though there are many readers who I count in my extended group of friends.

Seamus. Ireland. Cool. Thanks. I even know how to properly pronounce it! You are are token foreigner,

As long as you’ve read this far, I’ll let you in on something. I really enjoy knowing you read this.

Though smaller, by far, than the audience I reach on television, this is a much more personal medium. I try to speak my mind and hope you will still think kindly of me even as I reveal myself as a guy lots of faults and insecurities.

I worry you’ll tire of me, or I’ll become boring to you. I want to stay fresh and write meaningful things, but is that possible when you force yourself to compose at the keyboard every single day? I don’t know.

More than one a friend in LA has picked up on something trivial I’ve written about and said, “no one wants to know you ate corn last night.” We depend on our friends for life’s true wisdom.

At the bottom of this screen and on every computer I use on a regular basis, there is a counter. Every 15 or 20 minutes it tallies the page hits to my website. I look at it all the time.

At 3:00 AM EDT it resets to zero. I don’t like that part.

9 thoughts on “Where You’re From”

  1. Geoff,

    an afternoon jock named Damon Scott?? Seems odd that we have an afternoon jock at TIC-FM by the same name! Unless our Damon is playing with you.

    Bob

  2. Geoff –

    I had the exact opposite reaction to your numbers, Im thought your CT audience would have been higher, being that you’ve become one of the most recognizable celebrities here.

    I never placed much faith in the stats programs, in regards to an IP’s geographical origination. Based on my own experiences, I’ve discoved that IP accuracy is only as good as your ISP. I’m with Comcast, and I am usually identified correctly as being from Branford, but with my former ISP I was sometimes identified as being from Atlanta, San Diego, or New York, depending on how traffic was routed through their network.

    Years ago, I used to get alot of hits from Falls Church, VA. This is a jump point for AOL traffic getting onto thre backbone. This doesn’t occur anymore.

    btw, you’re a good enough writer that you probably COULD write about having corn for dinner and make it an interesting read.

  3. I missed your entry the other day.

    We are from CT. I try to read your blog everyday but don’t always get a chance.

    We met you at the CTFSMA walk. My daughter Emma loves you! I think she wants your job. She will look up and see dark clouds and announce that there are storm clouds coming and we need to go inside before it rains!

    Emma’s website is: http://www.emmahopeworld.net

  4. I can’t speak for Marko or Mike, but this April my job just got very busy (in a good way). I’ve got a bunch of links and ideas in my mental queue for blogging, but I haven’t found or made the time to post.

    I also enjoy reading your blog even when you write about corn. I read the summaries via bloglines and click through to read the full entries about once every 3-5 posts.

    Although I’ve been racking my brain, I cannot recall how I originally found your site. I’m not from Connecticut and didn’t know you were a weatherman beforehand. After I had been reading for a while, I referred your site to my cousin-in-law who shares your interest in poker. He posted a comment to your “where are you from” query — he’s Dan from Annandale, Virginia.

  5. I missed your post as I was out of the Country and only logged in to check email. I am in Las Vegas and started reading when I found a link from a Vegas-based forum and a story about a hot air balloon trip that never happened.

    I check in on a regular basis, I don’t have a blog but I have a couple of retail websites.

  6. “Adam left a link for his blog. It is the antithesis of this one in that I have long entries while Adam is often satisfied with a few words or a sentence.”

    I’m good at the short and sweet posts… It comes from having to write up discrep reports when I was an MCO.

    If you really want to see short, look at my Jaiku or Pownce. Both are accessible from my blog.

    -A

  7. GEOFF i HAVE BEEN READING YOUR bLOG ALMOST FROM DAY 1. I ALSO WATCHED YOU FROM DAY 1 UNTILL OCT 05 WHEN I RELOCXATED TO THE SPACE COAST OF FLA.

    THANK GOD TNH IS STREAMING LIVE VIDEO

  8. GEOFF i HAVE BEEN READING YOUR bLOG ALMOST FROM DAY 1. I ALSO WATCHED YOU FROM DAY 1 UNTILL OCT 05 WHEN I RELOCXATED TO THE SPACE COAST OF FLA.

    THANK GOD TNH IS STREAMING LIVE VIDEO

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