Father's Day 2012: 7 Dad Blogs Worth Reading

Dads have gotten into the blogging game.

ByABC News
June 16, 2012, 3:53 PM

June 17, 2012— -- Parents blogging about parenting isn't new.

It became an official "thing" the usual way: when the New York Times ran a trend piece.

That was in 2005, when, according to Catherine Connors of parenting site Babble, Technorati estimated that 8,500 moms and dads were blogging about parenting. By 2010 there were 4.2 million, Connors said. (Babble and ABC News are owned by Disney.)

Most of them are women, who, as we know, have healthier faculties of self-expression. "Mommy bloggers" have recently exploded in number, becoming a new "thing." But we Dads have gotten into the game.

According to a survey released Wednesday by Euro RSCG, 52 percent of "Digital Dads" – "those leading-edge influencers who are shaping trends and markets" (EURO RSCG is a marketing/PR firm) – and 20 percent of "Average Joes" have written about parenting online via a blog, Facebook or another site.

Dad blogs vary widely, from intimate, when-I-can-squeeze-it-into-my-schedule journals aimed at friends and family to slick, ad-filled sites that keep the family in juice and diapers.

Some increasingly engage in social activism.

In February, Doug French, blogger of Laid-Off Dad , helped spark a "shop-in" at JCPenney to support its partnering with Ellen DeGeneres after a conservative advocacy group slammed the retailer for having a gay spokesperson.

Here is a sampling of clickworthy Dad blogs.

Message With A Bottle is tersely funny in a lad-mag way. In 2010 Chris Illuminati quit his job and became a stay-at-home dad and freelance writer. His posts revolve around photographs of Post-It notes, which he used for work and began incorporating into taking care of his son.

"These are notes to remind myself what to do, and sometimes more importantly, what not to do when raising a child," he writes. "Also, there is random ranting."

A recent post muses on a milestone: his son's first "f-bomb." The boy is two. It involved a remote control.

Jason Good 365 introduces itself thus: "I'm a writer and stand-up comedian. I live in New Jersey with my wife and two small boys. Everything is difficult and awesome. You can read about it here." Difficult and awesome – in every sense of the word – is a good description of fatherhood, isn't it?

A lot of bloggers – dad and mommy – want to convey humor and wisdom in the day-to-day scramble of parenting in a way readers can connect to. Good's comic talent and good writing lift him above the mediocre horde.

"I can't request, suggest, command or order my son to pee — he simply denies the need and continues to wiggle about the room," Good writes. He goes on to extol his wife's solution: "She says, 'Everyone! Silas has to pee! Pause it!' and we immediately become motionless in an action pose as if we'd been working as fruit vendors in Pompei when Mt. Vesuvius erupted. We stay like that until he returns, and then all go back to drawing on a box, making Play Doh burritos or taking DVDs out of their cases and hiding them behind the sofa."