Citations:pajamahadeen

Noun: "bloggers whose aim is to fact check and challenge the mainstream media establishment"

 * 2004 — Andrew Sullivan, "Campaign '04: A Blogger's Creed", Time, 27 September 2004:
 * Well, last week, the insurrectionary pajama people--dubbed "pajamahadeen" by some Web nuts--successfully scaled one more citadel of the mainstream media, CBS News.
 * 2005 — Brian C. Anderson, South Park Conservatives: The Revolt Against Liberal Media Bias, Regnery Publishing, Inc. (2005), ISBN 0895260190, pages xi-xii:
 * (Klein's comment inspired Jim Geraghty of NRO's campaign blog the KerrySpot to dub the agents of the blogosphere the "pajamahadeen.")
 * 2007 — Frank Luntz, Words That Work: It's Not What You Say, It's What People Hear, Hyperion (2007), ISBN 9781401302597, page 66:
 * References to "pajamas" or the "pajamahadeen" signify right-wing bloggers, and a new group of centrist and conservative bloggers led by Roger L. Simon and Charles Johnson named their new blog Pajamas Media.
 * 2008 — Arthur S. Hayes, Press Critics Are the Fifth Estate: Media Watchdogs in America, Praeger (2008), ISBN 9780275999100, page 35:
 * It was a pivotal moment that would determine the credibility of the president, CBS, and the pajamahadeen.
 * 2011 — Ronald N. Jacobs & Eleanor Townsley, The Space of Opinion: Media Intellectuals and the Public Sphere, Oxford University Press (2011), ISBN 9780199797929, page 8:
 * And recent scholarship on media criticism points to the importance of the "'pajamahadeen' bloggers who targeted CBS, CNN, and the Asscociated Press during 2004 and 2005" in Internet campaigns that effectively challenged the mainstream media's claims of fairness and accuracy in reporting

Noun: "bloggers collectively"

 * 2012 — John Biggs & Charlie White, Bloggers Boot Camp: Learning How to Build, Write, and Run a Successful Blog, Focal Press (2012), ISBN 9780240819174, page 188:
 * Stay home in your pajamas, oh fellow member of the pajamahadeen.