The Extra Cool Group! (of people Michael is experimenting on) discussion
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The Top Reviewers List: Are you a pandering vote whore?
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[deleted user]
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Nov 22, 2010 08:34PM
I know I am.
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Ur doing it rong, Mr. Not on the List.
Personally, yes.
Personally, yes.
Somebody should dig up David's treatise on How to Whore Votes and post in here for our edification.
Perhaps I should change the title to, "How are you a pandering vote whore?"

Yeah, kinda. I mean, I definitely (usually) (sometimes) write with votes in mind, wondering if what I'm saying is clever/funny enough for other goodreaders to read/like/vote on, but not all the time. The majority of my reviews don't get more than two or three votes, but then the majority of my reviews are short and boring, so it doesn't matter. It's some of the big ones--War and Peace, The Way of Kings, Les Miserables, The War of the Worlds, etc. (those four are the only ones with 20+ votes, and notice I wasn't vote-whorish enough to link, eh?)--that do get the most votes, but I've written a few shorter ones that people like, and...I dunno. I'm still a (fairly) little fish in this pond, and I haven't appeared on any of the lists, so there must be something I'm not doing.
How am I a pandering vote whore?
Well, I did once post a comment casually mentioning my W&P review on one of Ceridwen's book reviews, then quickly deleted it out of shame even though the self-promotion got a lot of votes...but I don't do that stuff very often. Usually I just post a review and hope people read it.

I like being on the top votes list and I expect anything I review by mykle hansen or david foster wallace to get a lot of votes, but generally I don't tailor content for votes since I think it doesn't help.
I do tailor content to avoid changing other people's opinions, such as putting pictures in my review of torn to block karen from getting sucked in by my opinion, and I have multiple reviews of books I don't like that specifically instruct people who like the book not to bother reading my review.
Dude, that was just fine. Your W&P review is Epic.
There is something about what you read though. If you go in the "top reviews" list, and toggle to the Best Reviews Evah!!!1!, it's all super popular stuff, like a shitton of Twilight Saga, various middlebrow tear-jerkers, Hunger Games*, etc. Popular fiction is searched most often; people are more likely to read the reviews of the popular books; people are thus more likely to vote. It eats its own tail at a point.
*Hunger Games rulz, just for the record.
There is something about what you read though. If you go in the "top reviews" list, and toggle to the Best Reviews Evah!!!1!, it's all super popular stuff, like a shitton of Twilight Saga, various middlebrow tear-jerkers, Hunger Games*, etc. Popular fiction is searched most often; people are more likely to read the reviews of the popular books; people are thus more likely to vote. It eats its own tail at a point.
*Hunger Games rulz, just for the record.

But I still feel baaaaaaddddd.
(But didja notice I recently revised it a bit? Didja? Go check it out!)

*Scoffs* in America, maybe!
**Hunger Games does totally rule.

Some how that unvalidates my ego and makes me cry a little inside.

Jasmine wrote: "okay I was seriously considering picking a new country so I could feel better about my self, no I really live in andorra I swear!"
Didn't Goodreads put a stop to moving virtually?
Esteban?
Didn't Goodreads put a stop to moving virtually?
Esteban?



I vote whored once when I had a really bad day and I posted in a group I'd feel better if people voted for my review. I got like 10 votes out of it.


But yes, I am a pandering vote whore.

Esteban?"
That was a temporary thing. By the time it was corrected, everyone knew I wasn't REALLY the dictator of Malta; so what was the use?
Oh, those lazy, crazy, halcyon days of my carefree Goodreads-youth...damn IP addresses, anyway! Long live the proxy server!


In general, I agree with Aerin in post #28.

(I'm lying. I'm hurt I've only had one troll ever. I'm a nobody.)

I'm searching my conscience. Was that a reference to my attempts to convince you that Houellebecq actually isn't so bad? Or to my possibly somewhat over-enthusiastic advocacy of Smolin?


I'm sorry. I just have a deep, passionate, unreasoning love for this book. I can't understand why the whole world doesn't share it.
I was only trying to save your soul. It's funny how often people don't actually want their souls saved.

Manny, I have Animal Farm right here and ready to read!
I have to say though that you are definitely a votewhore. Just one of those high-quality vote whores that get work with senators and gajillionaires.

Kat, this is the bestest book ever! It's even better than Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows. Though I know a lot of people disagree.
I have to say though that you are definitely a votewhore. Just one of those high-quality vote whores that get work with senators and gajillionaires.
Er... thank you! I think. Just for the record, I have never knowingly received a vote from Eliot Spitzer. Mind you, I wouldn't turn one down if it arrived.

I vote whored once when I had a really bad day and I posted in a group I'd feel better if people voted for my revi..."
that is for your benefit. my reviews are your lifeblood and you know it.

I agree with this response. When I started to add strangers to my goodreads network, I realized that a lot of people were putting effort into their reviews to get votes. So instead of writing "pretty good but not great" as a review, I would try to come up with a in-depth response.

Next discussion question could be "What strategies do you use to get votes."
As for picking unusual / popular books, I think Manny's reviews stand out because they're about string theory, chess techniques, and other techniques.

Other than this, crafting a proper review takes time and I'd rather get paid for the privilege (whenever I get any reviewing work, which is rare these days, damn economy).

he's lovely.

Used to enjoy a feature back in the old days of Goodreads, called "top profiles."
That list I worked very hard at being on, finding crazy, attention grabbing avatars.
But now that's all gone.
*weeps*
The reviews I write are usually misspelled, grammatically incorrect... nothing great. If it makes someone laugh and they vote for it, I'm happy.
If it challenges the way someone thinks, I'm happy.
If it starts a heated debate... good.
It is rare that I have the time to look at what the top reviews are. When I do, I'm often surprised at the dumb ones that get a ton of votes. And yet, there's some damn good writing on this site as well. I just don't think the cream rises to the top here as much as it should/could.

Sometimes I think that voting on Goodreads is a touchier, more emotionally-charged issue than abortion or Keri Russell's drastic haircut on Felicity. I have tried to delve into the psychology of voting on review threads, but often people take such discussions personally -- as if you are personally accusing them of being vote whorish or slutty in the disbursement of their votes.
When I first started on this website, votes were harder to come by. There wasn't a general assumption that you'd even reach double-digit vote counts because voters were more -- I won't say discriminating, but maybe reluctant is the righter word. My review of Emma Goldman's Autobiography maxed out at two whopping votes.
Since then, voting seems to have suffered from rampant inflation. A review that was once worth ten votes is now worth thirty. I speculate that the way votes are used has changed. It was once more meritocratic (to some extent), and now it's more like writing 'David was here' on the desk in homeroom underneath some obscene squiggles. It's also like signing the guestbook at a wake, I think. Morbid, yes, but there does seem as though there's something more ritualistic or ceremonial about voting than there used to be. This is not a value judgment, by the way, (i.e., it was better in Ye Olden Days), but an acknowledgement of perceived difference.
Votes do mean a great deal to people, however. I have had more than one or two Goodreads members confront me privately about why I do not vote for their reviews. No, unfortunately, I'm not joking. This strikes me as not only very sad, but entirely contradictory to the way in which I happen to use my vote. I've also noticed some trends wherein people only vote for your reviews if you vote for theirs. I'm not begrudging anyone his or her particular motives for voting, but I wish (for some reason) that people were more honest about it. You want your back patted. Fine. I'll pat it -- if you're fine with the pat losing its value by being requested...

That is fucking stupid.
and sad.
oh, please go vote for my reviews when you are done here.
Thanks!!

(in my defense, I started writing the Shakespeare reviews before Goodreads introduced the vote system)
But I definitely agree that the best way to get a ton of votes is to write a critically strong but funny review of some really popular, usually YA book - visit the Twilight page sometime and see how many votes some of those reviews get.
Based just on the numbers, my most popular review is my abridged Romeo and Juliet - I've gotten a few notifications about people voting for it lately, which means a lot of high school students are going to be tested on the play soon.


If I'm not fussed on the review, I might leave a polite comment just to acknowledge the reviewer. Or the review might not be the trigger, but the thread that follows, and I can't stop myself from adding my 2 piastres worth.