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By Arianna Huffington
The confirmation of the tragedy in West Virginia was also
a confirmation of the expiration date on the mainstream
media's finger-wagging at the blogosphere. Through my years
toiling in the MSM, I've personally sat on at least half
a dozen panels on "Why the People Hate the Media." For
the next one, I suggest just rolling the news coverage
of how, within hours, the West Virginia story went from
tragedy to triumph to tragedy.
And the problem here wasn't those amateur bloggers, operating "without
editors" and "with no fact-checking." It
was as mainstream as the mainstream media gets.
At this afternoon's press conference, the whole thing is
still being blamed on a "miscommunication" of
cell phone calls. The miners had simply been found by the
rescuers -- but their condition hadn't been checked
yet, let alone verified. But that didn't matter.
Not only did the Washington Post report the miners had
been found alive, it added a few details: "The miners
had apparently done what they had been taught to do: barricaded
themselves in a pocket with breathable air and awaited
rescue."
Over on MSNBC, Rita Cosby was so breathless with the reports
of "a miracle" and her interviews of family members
that I began to fear for her health.
Throughout the entire story, however, no outlet was quoting
any official source from the actual rescue team. By the
middle of the night, they literally had to stop the presses.
Greg Mitchell, at Editor and Publisher, has collected
the progression of AP headlines:
Families Say 12 W.Va. Miners Found Alive (11:59 p.m.)
12 Trapped W.Va. Miners Found Alive (12:34 a.m.)
Singing Erupts After Miners Found Alive (2:49 a.m.)
Families Say 11 of 12 W.Va. Miners Dead (3:06 a.m.)
Miners Reported Alive After Blast Are Dead (4:08 a.m.)
12 Confirmed Dead in W.Va. Mine Blast (5:26 a.m.)
Feds Vow Full Probe of W.Va. Mine Blast (6:58 a.m.)
Jubiliation [sic] Turns to Anger, Outrage (7:20 a.m.)
And now, of course, the story moves into the blame phase
in which the TV anchors berate the officials and the officials
berate the cell phones and their reluctance to put an end
to the celebrations!
The irony is that the way these "news stories" get
played out by TV news outlets is actually more rushed than
blogging. It takes longer to sit and think and type 500
words than it does to rush a "big scoop" on the
air.
A former cable TV news staffer e-mailed me about "how
often and easily mistakes are made that result in untruths
being blasted all over the world. It's a room of adrenaline-pumped
producers who are salivating for anything to nudge up ratings."
That's a good image to remember the next time you hear
some pundit lecturing us about the "recklessness" of
bloggers.
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