Pajamas Media, briefly known as Open Source Media, is a startup company founded in 2004 by mystery writer and Huffington Post blogger Roger L. Simon and Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs "with the intention of... aggregating blogs to increase corporate advertising and creating our own professional news service," as well as "a new method of fact-checking." [http://rogerailes.blogspot.com/2005_11_13_rogerailes_archive.html#113206774093987333
Pajamas Media Board members include many prominent bloggers and journalists, including "Instapundit" Glenn Reynolds, CNBC's Larry Kudlow, Michael Barone of U.S. News & World Report, David Corn of The Nation and Claudia Rosett (who helped break the United Nations' "Oil for Food" controversy).
When the Open Source brand was launched, it claimed that the Open Source radio program had allowed it to use its name and an Internet subdomain, opensourcemedia.net, that wasn't in use at the time. Christopher Lydon, founder of the Open Source, said that wasn't true despite revised text on OSM's site. Further investigation revealed that the production company, Open Source Media, Inc., had in fact already applied for a trademark on the name. To avoid further conflict, OSM returned to the name Pajamas Media, on November 22, 2005.
The Pajamas Media logo was also criticized * for depicting what appears to be a bathrobe or dressing gown, rather than actual pajamas. It has also been criticized for lacking visual power and interest.
Another blogger, Jeff Jarvis, himself a principal in another blogging startup, questioned the demand for advertising on the sites of "mostly conservative political bloggers." * Defenders of Pajamas Media responded that Kelly is simply a bitter ex-partner who couldn't get his way, and Jarvis has associations with other media startups which might potentially compete with PJM.
When law blogger Ann Althouse also aired a public critique of the OSM business model, Johnson responded by directing his commenters to her post, provoking a vicious flame war which lasted the better part of a week and prompted one LGF loyalist to denounce Althouse as a "Berkeley house whore." That in turn led to a dispute between Althouse and feminist bloggers on the left when she complained that they were insufficiently attentive to the attacks on her.
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