How Media Responded To Lightfoot Death Rumor

by Kathy Gill on 19 February 2010

in Examples

The latest “cele­brity death” to make the rounds on Twit­ter hap­pe­ned mid-day Thurs­day and was fue­led by mains­tream Cana­dian press. The “Drudge-ification” of North Ame­ri­can news seems complete.

What’s more inte­res­ting than the Twit­ters­tream is how the media trea­ted their sto­ries after the false report (AKA rumor) was outed.

Tren­dis­tic

The Gor­don Light­foot story was rela­ti­vely short-lived and did not reach stra­tosphe­ric num­bers on Twit­ter (about 0.25% of all tweets). Some have used the short-life as an exam­ple of Twitter’s abi­lity to self-correct. I don’t think that’s really the case; peo­ple were still making “he’s dead” ret­weets that con­tai­ned links to the upda­ted CANWEST story. That’s twee­ting before thin­king, a beha­vior that we need to haze.

Gordon Lightfoot Trendistic
Tren­dis­tic Analy­sis Reveals The Short-Life Of The Meme

Case Num­ber 1: Keep the link, update the story

CANWEST was widely cri­ti­ci­zed for run­ning the ini­tial story repor­ting that Gor­don Light­foot had died. But rather than kill the link to the story, the media orga­ni­za­tion con­ti­nued to update the story.

And the URL remai­ned the same.

This is a key best prac­tice. The revi­sed story appea­red on all CANWEST web­si­tes, so if someone clic­ked a link in a tweet that said ‘Gor­don Light­foot is dead’ — the result would be the news that the singer/songwriter was very much alive. Unfor­tu­na­tely, lots of peo­ple ret­weet without chec­king out the link that’s in the tweet.

Gordon Lightfoot - CANWEST
CANWEST con­ti­nued to revise the same story, main­tai­ned the ini­tial URL. This is a best prac­tice and is borro­wed from the blog­ging community.

Case Num­ber 2: Kill the link, pre­tend it never happened

The con­verse hap­pend at CBC Radio3. Maybe their soft­ware doesn’t allow revi­sions; if that’s the case, it’s time for appli­ca­tion sur­gery (or burial).

Gordon Lightfoot - CBC3
CBC3 Pulled Their Story Rather Than Issue Correction

An Incom­plete Paper (erh, elec­tro­nic) Trail

These tweets were har­ves­ted using Twitter’s advan­ced search. I searched for “Light­foot and dead” as well as “Light­foot and not dead.” I searched for “Light­foot and died” as well as “Light­foot and not died.” I also have what I think is a com­prehen­sive archive of tweets with links that go back to 11.23 AM, the ear­liest Tweet that I found.

Gordon Lightfoot - CNS Politics
11.23 AM — CNS Poli­tics, the Can­west News Ser­vice natio­nal bureau
Gordon Lightfoot Search
11.25 AM Is Ear­liest Search Result For Light­foot + Died that con­tains a link; the link is to a Face­book sta­tus update for the UNB Cam­pus radio sta­tion. The Other Two Tweets Are TimeS­tam­ped 11.26 am appear to be the first that link to the Cal­gary Herald news story; both are Can­west Publishing Inc. properties.
11.41 AM — Mon­treal Gazette
Gordon Lightfoot may not be dead
11.42 AM — Wait!
Gordon Lightfoot - Chronicle Herald
11.42 AM — Chro­nicle Herald In Res­ponse To Their 11.37 AM Tweet Announ­cing His Death

This post first appea­red at Wired­Pen

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