Mindsay blog writers always present a variety of youth-centric content (blogs are largely populated by the young and the restless with time to spare, followed by a few business-centric blog sites), but on Mindsay, there seems to be a trend to choose a tag to identify a gaggle of friends and their posts as opposed to identifying content within a blog. The agenda expectation of tag purpose to identify matching content is secondary. Tags often crop up as coded entry to group "say-for-the-day".
Similar to the over-run vegitation in website metatag keywords that has caused a devaluation of metatags in the search engines, this code-word phenom does pose a slightly different version of confusion for some until they begin to look around. Those who capitalize on capturing audience based on face-value or traditional meanings for tags (keywords) may need to look deeper, as not all tags mean what they say.
Still, Mindsay top tags are interesting, even if tags clearly say what they mean or interpret to code. Take a look at about 7 random days worth of top-tags:
batcave | blah | blog | bored | day dreams | family | friends | fun | god | guys |
art | batcave | bitch | bored | college | depression | drugs | family | finals | friends |
batcave | birthday | bitch | blog | bored | college | death | dreams | friends | f$^# |
blogging | bored | college | death | depressed | depression | drugs | family | food | friends |
art | band | batcave | blog | blogging | bored | college | comments | day | death |
batcave | bible | blog | book | bored | day | death | dont look@ my pants | dreams | episode iii |
batcave | books | death | dont look@ my pants | dreams | family | friends | fun | god | graduation |
mindsay