Tracks: “Saints” by Army Navy

army_navy_cover Artist: Army Navy

Track: Saints

Album: Army Navy

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KEXP Song of the Day

The Twouble with Twitter

A pretty accurate portrayal of Twitter from a preview of SuperNews! on CurrentTV. I’m guessing they got most of the dialog from actual Tweets.  Sure, there’s lots of networking functionality in Twitter, but the vast majority of tweets are self-affirmation for people with nobody listening.

For those whose worlds just got crushed by this video, a word of advice: if you’re following 100,000 people, and those 100,000 people are following you back, then nobody’s actually reading what you say.  Stick to your own friends and follow a few influencers.

Jon Stewart serves CNBC their due (full unedited interview)

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Part 3:

The recession backlash has been particularly articulate and harsh from the desk of the Daily Show, from which Jon Stewart has assumed his regular role of the people’s prosecutor. Here’s a bit of background on the event.

Over the last week, the Daily Show staff has brilliantly manifested a controversy between Stewart and Jim Cramer, host of CNBC’s Mad Money. The initial attack wasn’t anything unique to the Daily Show – Stewart just called out an offensive statement by CNBC’s Rick Santelli, who from the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange basically said “to hell with homeowners, Wall Street doesn’t give a shit about you losing everything by investing with us.” That’s not an exact quote – you can see the original footage here. Santelli was invited to the Daily Show, but cancelled his appearance following the controversial statements. And then Stewart went off.

Stewart accused financial news networks, CNBC particularly, of kowtowing to the financial industry instead of responsibly reporting on its vast abuses of the people’s hard-earned money, which drove the entire globe into recession and may have wiped out the American dream for millions. Jim Cramer’s wild antics on Mad Money were obvious ammunition for Stewart, and so Jim Cramer became the personification of all that was wrong with the news networks that average American consumers go to for daily financial advice.

Always hungry for controversy, CNN, Fox News, and the entire NBC family – from the Today Show to MSNBC to CNBC itself – leaped at the story head-first, without really looking toward the end-game. And we all know the networks don’t have the wits to stand up to Stewart, his writing staff, and their massive underground bunker of TiVos. Cramer defended himself on all of the NBC networks, calling Jon Stewart the host of a “variety show,” which just fed Stewart more material. What a bunch of predictable suckers. The Daily Show carried the “feud” on every episode for the next week, until it finally came to a head last night, as CNBC got its due via Jim Cramer himself.

So will it change anything? I’m hoping to catch Cramer’s Mad Money tonight at 3 PM PST on CNBC, to see if he makes any statements, or even apologies on behalf of the show and his network.

Jimmy Fallon attempts Twistory with the Bryan Brinkman Experiment

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Ya, I quoted my own joke for this post. That’s my privilege. Suck it.

This could practically be a twitterverse blog for all of the Twitter-related posts, but damn this thing is exploding. At this rate, I’ll be telling my kids about being an early adopter of Twitter almost a year before today, in April 2008.

As if prophetic, last Friday Jeff Cannata, (@jeffcannata) co-host of the Totally Rad Show, made the following comment during his review of Watchmen: “We won. We as geeks have officially inherited the earth.”

Now to find out whether that will lead to our savior or our doom. Cannata’s co-host Alex Albrecht guested on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on Wednesday, with co-host of this other show, Kevin Rose, of Diggnation. Alex, Kevin and Jimmy decided to do a little experiment while taping the show at around 6:15 EST. They instructed their followers, of whom they have many hundreds of thousands between them, to follow @bryanbrinkman, an animator living in New York. At first sight, after their announcement, he had 196 followers. Within an hour he had over 8,600. It’s still climbing, and the show hasn’t even aired yet. That’s a small fraction of any of the experimenters’ numbers, but certainly one of the fastest rates in Twistory. Colbert Bump, eatcherheartout.

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Everybody in their circle, from the show’s writers, to Quest of the Roots, to Evan Williams, founder of Twitter, were RT’ing the instructions to follow Bryan within minutes. My favorite quote of the night was Quest’s tweet during the taping: “Russ Brand needs jesus.” Jeff Cannata was collecting evidence of who bought bryanbrinkman.com. They may have just launched Bryan’s career instantly, before the show was even broadcast. That remains to be seen, yet it demonstrates yet another unforeseen use of Twitter that Evan Williams and Biz Stone and Jack Dorsey hadn’t expected.

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So what happens when Twitter starts mutating out of the founders’ control? Spammers, hackers, phishers and the like have all hit Twitter, but to little success. It would appear that Twitter as a service has such clarity of purpose and simplicity of architecture that its only weakness is the server crush of its popularity.

Kevin, Alex and Jimmy’s hype power proved finite, at least, as they still couldn’t break the trend that penalties had caused in Europe during an Arsenal futbol game. That could probably change when the show actually airs on the east coast, followed by the west and the remainder of the world online, but it’s still just late night – Jimmy’s ratings are doing well but the numbers for late night aren’t all that great. Still, it’s an ideal audience for Kevin, Alex and all of Revision3 to promote Diggnation, especially by piggy-backing the Twitter explosion. I’m more interested in seeing how mainstream the Rev3 stars will become after Late Night airs.

I’ll update this post after watching the show air tonight at 12:30 AM PST.

[UPDATE]

Well it wasn’t quite as wildly hilarious as I’d hoped, but it was still the highlight of the whole show. Catch a clip:

The rest is on Hulu. The Wall Street Journal picked up on the trend with an article titled “Diggnation and Jimmy Fallon: The New Conversion.” Crazy. There was no wiser decision ever made than to pair these two brands up to promote each other. Brilliance in promotion and marketing at hand.

For breaking news on plane crashes, nothing’s faster than Twitter

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Most users have known Twitter’s breaking-news capability is almost immediate, ever since the Mumbai attacks of November ‘08, but mainstream media is slowly catching on. Proven again tonight, Twitter is the first on the scene for breaking news, at least in first-world countries. But in the latest major Twitter-trending incident of a plane crash in the Netherlands, was it a Twitter user who actually broke the story? Did it complement the accurate reporting of the incident or hinder/compete with it?

Just minutes after the crash of Turkish Air Flight 1951 at Amsterdam’s Schiphol International Airport, @nipp was… tweeting, from the scene. (There really should be a more serious term for that when the event might involve numerous deaths) It was 10:39 AM local time.

One of the earliest tweets I can find on the incident was at 10:32 AM local time, from user @M0rrighan, simply: “airline incident at Schipol airport.” (As roughly translated from Dutch) No info on where she heard it – although I can try to ask when the dust around her settles. User @lrs later posted one of the first photos by @diederikm as he was driving by. @nipp, who I’m assuming was living, driving or working nearby when the crash happened, was within “a few hundred meters” of the downed plane. First reactions were that the plane looked “shredded” and in “very bad condition.” Ambulances didn’t arrive until minutes later, and clearly nobody could’ve gathered any details before the initial tweets started rolling in. @nipp claimed he could see nothing from his viewpoint, and called bullshit on channels like CNN for reporting any figures on casualties.

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But sure enough, as is the inaccurate nature of any breaking news, seemingly sourceless figures were streaming in. Initial reports from @BreakingNewsOn, which appears to be an independent start-up, claimed “dozens dead and injured.”

The claims from other users later narrowed to 7 deaths. Nearly an hour later, the figure fluctuated from 7 to 9, to none.  Media outlets like the BBC were attempting to gather facts, but they were sourced from eyewitnesses who claimed to see “bodies under white sheets.”  We may learn our news from the Twitterverse first, but the facts we accept are still confirmed by journalists. I doubt the twitterverse will mature to the point that it is independently confirming information with officials like a traditional news outlet, but the community has surprised us before.

By now it’s hard to tell who was the first to actually post news of the crash, how they heard about it, and how the news spread through the twitterverse. At the time of reporting, @nipp was a relatively low-key user, with only 30 updates and a few dozen followers. (At the time of posting he now has over 700) So even if he was the first on scene, we could assume the people who would’ve seen his first report within the first few minutes of the incident must have been few. Location-based features may have contributed to his tweet’s spread, as his message at 10:36 AM was soon RT’d by users like @jaapstronks, who currently has 1,485 followers. If he had nearly that many at the time of the RT, @nipp’s exposure may have exploded. @BreakingNewsOn caught onto the story and sent their first tweet to their 28,384 followers at 10:46 AM, a full seven minutes later. It appared to be another 10 minutes after that before we started seeing Breaking News scrollers on the BBC News site. So it’s unclear whether the twitterverse actually broke the story, but at least the news reached thousands more people in Twitter, in the same time it took for major media to post the news on their sites.

The twitterverse did gain some more mainstream recognition for its reporting. WCVB Boston posted a brief story soon after details emerged, crediting Twitter users as being first on the scene:

“A photo shown by the NOS showed the plane in three pieces in a muddy field. It doesn’t appear that the plane caught fire after the crash. Allowing anyone who could to simply walk out the holes in the plane. Passengers and passers by used Twitter to report the crash and upload pictures moments after it crash, long before local media.”

@nipp, at least, was impressed.

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Soon after his reporting, @nipp claims to have received numerous calls from TV and radio stations, proving Twitter first-responders can be valuable assets to the media who track Twitter trends.

The functions of the twitterverse in the news cycle are manifesting constantly. It’s a great tool for eyewitness reports and gathering quick community opinions – see the anchor I love to hate @ricksanchezcnn for more on that – but can the twitterverse ever really be the first on scene? In other words, if a tweet is posted on the interwebs and there are only a few dozen people to hear it, how long does it take to… make a sound? Perhaps not long at all. It’s the accuracy that hinders Twitter from growing independent from traditional news sources. If anything, Twitter is still a complement to major media, not a competitor.

No reliable facts could be compiled from rampant re-tweets, or even @nipp’s eyewitness reports after hundreds of emergency crew members descended on the crash site. So that value of speed is circumstantial – hearing unconfirmed reports about a plane crash 4 minutes earlier than normal probably won’t change anything, perhaps least of all cable news ratings. For now, we’ll still have to rely on traditional media entities for our facts, and holistic interpretations of news stories.