
Picture by hermanusbackpackers on Flickr published under a Creative Commons license
Very nice piece over on my mate Steve Pike's Wavescape site which looks at the eyewitness effect of Twitter during Tuesday's shark attack at Fish Hoek in Cape Town. Write Steve aka Spike:
When National Sea Rescue Institute Station Commander Darren Zimmerman was telling journalists just after the attack, which occurred at around 3.15pm, that he was unable to provide more information, Facebook and Twitter were being flooded with eye witness accounts.
"I am with the patient right now and will provide more details later," he told the media. However, numerous accounts of the attack appeared almost immediately on Twitter and Facebook.
"Holy shit, we just saw a GIGANTIC shark eat what looked like a person right in front of our house in fishhoek. Unbelievable," wrote False Bay surfer and K Bay local Gregg Coppen in the first of a flurry of tweets from his home overloooking Fish Hoek main beach.
I went and had a look at Gregg's feed and you can see how that tweet took off like wildfire, being retweeted, picked up by mainstream media and eventually making its way into news reports. Rapidly a #sharkattack hashtag was adopted on twitter as more accounts and commentary developed. Quite interesting to note also on this hashtag search how rapidly bad taste jokes starting flying around too with references being made to the attack being xenophobic and possibly linked to 2010!
The power of Twitter as an eyewitness tool is highlighted in this tragedy. Was this the munch-vaunted citizen journalism that we hear of so often? No, I don't think so. These tweets and other accounts moving on Facebook and elsewhere were really only eyewitness observations of what had occured. There was no journalistic reportage from these eyewitnesses.
But I do think what was interesting was how rapidly professional journalists were able to access primary sources on this story thanks to social networking. You start to see the sense in the
The phenomenon highlights the power of social media and shows the wisdom of, for example, the recent decision by Sky News to order all their reporters to start using the Twitter application Tweetdeck on their work PCs. Clearly, as a news alert service Twitter is beating the wires hands down.
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Followers of the Dispatch on Twitter (@dispatchnow) may have noticed our experiment in following the murder trial of Wendy Manthe using this micro-blogging service over the last two days.
Manthe is an East London mother who starngled her two young daughters to death and it is a trial which has gripped our community. You can catch the stories on this trial here.
We tried it earlier during the pleading stage of the trial which I wrote about on this blog at the time. I believe this was a first for SA journalism and now we are at the sentencing stage of the trial and DispatchOnline news editor Jan Hennop has been trying it again - this time really pushing the limits of what micro-blogging can do.
During Monday's testimony when Manthe took the stand Jan gave a blow-by-blow account of the unfolding court drama which I personally found riveting. It was far more comprehensive than the earlier attempt and I felt as if I was in court hearing the evidence as it unfolded.
Here is a small sample. It obviously runs in reverse chronological order like a blog.
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I'm very pleased with our newspaper and online offering today even though our coverage is centred on a ghastly story, the murder trial of Wendy Manthe who pleaded guilty yesterday to strangling her two children.
But this post is not so much about the story but about how we covered it. We are working hard to try and change our newsroom culture from a single deadline news cycle as our traditional print offering operates, to a rolling 24/7 news culture where we are breaking news constantly using the different platforms available to us.
This is what we did yesterday:
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