A few years back, I lived near Myrtle Beach and worked at Coastal Carolina University (they've got a good baseball team...if you've heard about the school, it's either because of the baseball team or the parties. Whatever). I taught a few communication classes and talked a little bit about organizational communication in some of them. It one class in particular, we had an assignment where everyone in class had to read and respond to a post on a blog titled "Advanced Organizational Communication".
I did this for a couple reasons. First, and I guess importantly from an educational standpoint, I wanted people in the class to get an idea of what other people - and in this case, students from a different university - were saying about a topic that was hopefully familiar. Second, and I'm not ashamed to admit this, I wanted to prank the administrator and/or authors of the blog in question.
Let me explain. When I first accessed the blog, it had been dormant for a few years. This meant, I assumed, that it had been used in conjunction with a class and as such, it wasn't meant for public consumption, at least in the way we were using it, completely at random and without context. Because of this, each blog post had, roughly, somewhere between zero and one comment attached to it. I thought it'd be funny, in its own way, for these posts to lie dormant for three years, only to be deluged with dozens of comments all in one day. If the author had it set up so that he or she would receive an e-mail after every comment was sent (an option for sites like Blogger), that person would, out of the blue, get e-mails like crazy within a 48-hour span. It's possible that person would think that his or her work was suddenly relevant and gaining widespread attention; perhaps that person would think that fame and recognition was surely to follow.
And then, after a couple days, no comments ever again. What happened? I guess fame is fleeting. This would be funny, I thought, in the sense that we'd be confusing complete strangers for apparently no reason.
I checked back a couple days ago, and apparently the site, which still hasn't been updated since 2006, has disabled the comment function. So I guess all of our mass commenting had some effect after all. The site still does have some interesting things to say about organizational communication, for what it's worth.
It would be pretty funny (at least to me, and that's all I'm really concerned with, honestly) if some random group decided to comment bomb this blog. Let's give it a good head start and have everyone in class (or, heck, all over the world) leave a comment on this post. It will let me know that everyone has at least some idea of how to navigate this site. Give it a try!