Apocalypse 7: Stealing Barack’s Thunder
Posted: August 24th, 2008 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Apocalypse Series, Journalism, Politics, Technology | Tags: election, Joe Biden, Obama | 1 Comment »Unless you lived under a rock last week, you probably heard some chatter about the Obama campaign’s plan to announce a runningmate (it’s Biden, by the way) via text message The young faithful Obama-ites would be in the know before the media pundits; the news would be all over the blogs before it hit the evening broadcast.
It didn’t work out that way. Late on Friday night, CNN had enough material to break the Biden news on air, followed within minutes by the other networks and the websites of all the major newspapers. Panicked, the campaign sent out their text to supporters at about 3 am (AFTER the news was out for the general public) instead of the 8 am time they had planned. Oops.
Now my anecdotal reporting suggests a certain correlation between the Obamamaniacs and the free culture radicals who are waiting for blogs and citizen journalists–camera phones in hand–to obliterate the CNN’s of the world. Both groups are young, urban lefties, after all.
So fittingly, when the Obama cell phone campaign got scooped, the free culture argument lost out too: the threat of new technologies didn’t kill the old media hounds, it just made them work harder to get the story first.
By raising the bar, might the Internet actually be good for the news industry?
[…] week, I was all amused to watch CNN steal Barack’s thunder by breaking his veep choice before his so-so-cool text […]