May.
25, 2005 12:00 AM
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- You
don't know Michael Zhang, but do a little pointing and
clicking and you'll find out he's a student at Davis Senior
High School in Sacramento, plays tennis and bought an ostrich
burger and chips for $6 two months ago.
It's all there
for the world to see on this 17-year-old's photoblog where he
chronicles everything, including how he felt the first time he
ate a Quiznos sandwich.
"Quiznos is awesome. Very
awesome. Awesome and good," he wrote.
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Zhang
is part of the future of Weblogging, going beyond simply
sharing thoughts in cyberspace to allow strangers a very
visual look into his private life.
He sometimes takes
100 photos in a day, ranging from shots of his friends to
pictures of food. He picks up to 20 and uploads them daily to
his blog, an online diary of sorts
(http://blog.michaelzhang.com).
The majority of blogs
today include some photography, said Caterina Fake, cofounder
of Flickr, an online photo-sharing community launched last
year and growing by 30 percent a month.
While the
152,000 members range from active participants to the
once-in-a-few weeks uploaders, they have already posted 14.7
million pictures, she said.
Since the end of 2003, it
has become easier to put photos online because Internet
connections are faster, digital cameras cheaper and camera
phones are readily available.
"It's taking photography
to a whole new level," said Larry Pryor, an associate
professor of journalism at the University of Southern
California's Annenberg School for Communication. "Every person
can be a photojournalist."
While Zhang won't take
pictures of the exterior of his home and rarely posts
photographs of his parents, no one else is spared from his
shutter. There are photos of store clerks, teachers,
classmates and paramedics. There are scenes from church
services, concerts, movies and restaurants.
He doesn't
ask permission to take anyone's photo and, surprisingly, most
people don't wonder why he's taking their picture. "Some
people give me looks and they think I'm weird," he
said.
Andrew DeVigal, who teaches online journalism at
San Francisco State University, sees Zhang's Web site as a
product of the human desire to leave a mark on the
world.
"In some ways, it's an opportunity to say, 'Hey,
here I am and I'm relevant,' regardless if anybody's
listening," DeVigal said.
DeVigal, who keeps his own
photoblog, doesn't worry about strangers seeing into his life,
even though an online counter shows that people look most at
the pictures of his wife and dog.
"I don't feel like
I'm revealing anything that would jeopardize who I am or the
well-being of my wife," he said. "Most people who do look at
my stuff are going to be my friends."
Zhang began
taking photos about three years ago. He realized that while he
documented trips to China or amusement parks, routine days
seemed to blur together.
He decided to ingrain those
into his memory by regularly shooting candid shots, organizing
them by date, and posting them on the Web site.
"(Days)
kind of disappeared and faded from my memory," recalled Zhang,
who will be attending the University of California, Davis,
this fall. "But now I can remember them clearly because all of
them have a title and pictures."
Since Dec. 16, when he
put his first post on the blog, Zhang has been chronicling
what he eats, who he sees and pretty much everything else he
does.
He's never far from his digital camera, which
weighs 7.1 ounces.
Every once in awhile, Zhang will get
home and realize he's forgotten to take pictures. So he'll run
around the house, looking for something interesting to shoot
or make his younger brother practice slam dunks.
"It's
really interesting to look back on any day and remember what
you did that day, to have memories in the future to share,"
Zhang said.
"I'm sure people are looking back and they
hoped or wished they took more pictures at some time in their
lives."
While Zhang doesn't keep track of how many
people visit his site, comments are mainly posted by friends
and every once in a while by a stranger.
A daily
visitor to the photoblog is Zhang's mother, Joy Tian, who
doesn't have to ask her son how his day went.
While she
sometimes gets miffed about the junk food consumed or rowdy
behavior, for the most part, the blog reaffirms what she
already knows about her son - he's a good kid surrounded by
good friends.
And she especially likes it when he pays
attention to even the smallest details, whether a snail on a
calla lily or caterpillar on a leaf.
"He really enjoys
life," said Tian, who works as research associate at the
University of California, Davis. "That's what I'm really proud
of."