Stories
Forza Azzurri!
Italy wins a fourth World Cup title
Out But Not Down
The team lost, but Germany emerges from the tournament as a winner
A Final Flourish
Germany deserves its runners-up place with a fine win against the Portuguese
Luring The Locals
Germany's out of the running. Who will pick up support for the final
Eliminating Scolari's Survivors
Can les Bleus learn the lessons of Portugal's progression to the semis?
Assessing Zizou's Legacy
France's greatest footballer lives to fight another day
The Crying Game
A cruel reminder for Asian teams: forging a soccer superpower takes time
Smiles and Sourpusses
Soccer bosses could learn a thing or two
Scores To Settle
A second round match comes complete with baggage
The Joy Of Kicks
U.S. out, Australia in, Ghana leading African pack and Central Europe losing fizz
Officially Wrong
Referee errors have marred an otherwise high-quality series
Full Time
Feedback
You have your say
Reports
France v Portugal
Germany v Italy
Germany v Argentina
Portugal v Netherlands
Argentina v Mexico
Saudi Arabia v Ukraine
France v South Korea
Italy v USA
Netherlands v Côte d'Ivoire
France v Switzerland
USA v Czech Republic
Blogs
Bruce Crumley
The Secret Of Winning World Cups
Jeff Israely
The Conflict Behind Itay's Win
Bill Saporito
The Best And Worst Of England
Andrew Purvis
Victory In Berlin
Simon Robinson
Australia Takes The Game Seriously
Matt Smith
The Thick Of It
Max Brockbank
Flagging Up Your Allegiances
Photos
Fields Of Dreams
A look back at the tournament
 
Seeing Red
Red card after red card
 
Win Or Lose
You can see it in their faces
 
Crowd Pleasers
Brazil has fans like no other team
 
Launch Party
Glamor, spectacle in Munich
 
Great Moments
Scenes from World Cup history
 
Fever Pitch
Fans soak up the atmosphere
Past Issues
Euro 2004
[06/21/2004]
World Cup 2002
[02/06/2006]
Web Links
Germany 2006
The official FIFA World Cup website
RoboCup
Aiming to develop a team of fully autonomous robots that can beat a champion human side
World Cup Blog
Commentary and blogs about all 32 teams
The Homeless World Cup
48 countries and 500 homeless players are on their way to Cape Town to kick off global poverty
Deutschland 2006
The German government's World Cup website
Wikipedia
The people's encyclopedia entry on the World Cup finals
World Cup Worm
News alert about a German-language e-mail which claims to offer World Cup tickets, but instead carries a Trojan horse.
offside4girls.com
The Offside Rule explained and much more of interest for girls ... and boys!
TIME is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
Email TIME
E-mail your letter to the editor
youtube.com
SING ALONG, YOU ALL KNOW THE WORDS >>>>
South Korea's World Cup anthem is wowing visitors to youtube.com
Web Exclusive | The World Cup | Fandom

What The Web Says About The World Cup

A TIME guide to the best — and barmiest — blogs, websites and podcasts for Germany 06


subscribe to TIME Printable Version email this story

Posted Wednesday, June 8, 2006: 17.02BST
Six years ago, sports on the net came of age at the Sydney Olympics. The major media networks poured millions at a fast growing web audience and the standard was set for online sports news — complete with audio and video streaming — that is standard today.

Tomorrow, the 2006 World Cup in Germany promises to provide the same coronation for "social media" — the catch-all term for the user-generated content produced in blogs, podcasts and online photodiaries. An estimated 185,000 new websites have been launched to cover this World Cup — an astonishing proliferation of online creative content that would have been unthinkable before the rise of blogs and podcasts. And it's not just small-fry blogs: Nike, Google, Yahoo, along with a host of major newspapers and broadcasters are creating blogs and podcasts to freshen up coverage of the world's biggest sporting event.

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

But the real power of social media is in the ability for anyone to publish their own World Cup coverage and create their own radio or video shows. So here is TIME.com's guide to the best and strangest World Cup media, created by the people for the people (links will open in a new window):

Blogs
The granddaddy of World Cup social media, WorldCupBlog.org was started by three fans to share thoughts on the 2002 Mundial. For Germany 06, the team has recruited bloggers from all the 32 participating nations to create blanket blogging coverage.

Harvard University's GlobalVoices.org might be better known for fostering blogging debate on human rights and social issues but it also serves up some cracking world insight on the World Cup, including this cri de coeur from Call Me James blog in Brazil: "And from now on, this blog is almost totally devoted to football and the World Cup. As it is the most important competition in the world. It is because it is the World Cup, godammit! And if you don't like football, the problem is yours. Who cares about you?"

For a dose of pure English football lunacy, look no further than Who Ate All the Bratwurst — a brand new blog packed full of England footie news, with honorable mentions to the other teams taking part, video clips of World Cups past and tips on how to buy your Wayne Rooney tribute "Ouch My Metatarsal" T-shirt.

Photos Communities
Yahoo's Flickr social photo sharing service is the must visit for keeping up with the latest user-generated World Cup photos. The site is just warming up at present with pre-tournament images but prepare yourselves for deluge of fan color starting tomorrow.

Podcasts and Videopodcasts
What Flickr is to photos, YouTube is to video. There are already 706 pieces of home video World Cup previews, tributes and mashups, including this look forward to kick-off, complete with a stirring militaryesque soundtrack, cut by Polish contributer Nasami, and a scarily amazing quick peek at South Korea's WC anthem performed by boy band Shinhwa and their legions of unhinged fans.

Not surprisingly, the Net is crawling with slickly produced World Cup audio updates. Frankly, we prefer the quiet desperation of SoccerShoutOut — a strictly amateur podcast offering where, in a recent episode, the producers begged their listeners to email the editor of a leading soccer website to start carrying their podcasts. "We want to make some money and we'd like to quit our day jobs because we like talking about football so much," the hosts explained. Who can argue with that?


BACK TO TOP Printable Version email this story



From the TIME archive

Search all issues of TIME Magazine

Indicates premium content

Get Four Issues Free!



The Matches
Sun, July 9 20:00*
FINAL: Berlin
Italy v France
1 (5) 1 (3)

*local time (CEST)

ADVERTISEMENT

My Team
Select a side to see all their matches
Your Say
Who's been the best tactical coach of this Cup?
Klinsmann
Pekerman
Scolari
Parreira
Erikson
Tell Us About It
E-mail your letter to the editor

Copyright © Time Inc. and Time Warner Publishing B.V. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe | Reprints & Permissions | TIME Opinion Panel | Customer Service | Time Education Program
Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Terms of Use | Media Kit | Press Releases

Try AOL UK for 1 month FREE | Try FOUR free issues of TIME | Give the Gift of TIME
TIME Global Adviser | TIME Next | TIME Archive 1923 to the Present | TIME Europe Covers Gallery
Search | Letters to the Editor | Contact Us

EDITIONS: TIME.com | TIME Asia | TIME Canada | TIME Pacific | TIME For Kids