When News Comes Up from UndergroundSunday, October 18, 2009 at 09:10 AM EDT
Three days ago Jonathan
MacDonald witnessed an altercation in the London Underground at the
Holborn
Station, between — as Jonathan reports it — a uniformed Underground
staffer an elderly man whose arm had just been released from doors that had
closed on it while he was leaving. The staffer was loud and rude, while the
passenger was calm and gentlemanly. Jonathan also recorded the last of the
event on video — and blogged the event, video and
all.
Next blog post:
Fast forward 24 hours and the story has run as the leader on
Sky, BBC, LBC, ITN (see sample news coverage here) and on the front page of the Evening Standard. This
followed thousands of Tweets and Re-Tweets (including the Mayor of London,
Boris Johnson, getting involved), 65,000 video views yesterday alone on
YouTube
and hundreds of comments on this and many other blogs. Plus, the guard has
been
suspended and is under investigation.
All I did was see something that shouldn’t be tolerated and used the
ammunition we have in our hands – video/blogs/network.
I blog almost every day so this wasn’t any different. The
content of this one seemed to grab attention though, and it was this
attention that made things spiral. Hence, the main reason this story has flown
is due to what happened on camera. We must remember that. It’s not me. I
didn’t ‘invent the story’. I just blogged, like I do, and the
Twitterverse powered the rest. Although charming to be the focus of the viral
activity – I actually had the smallest part.
In that post Jonathan shows, with photos, how the story was played by the
mainstream media. His summary:
The Twitterers, Bloggers and commentators were the only people
who played this right. The stories were shared and eventually the press picked
it up.
What we need is for Industry to learn the key techniques of Involvism
that the Twitterers, Bloggers and commentators already
implement.
So far there are seventy comments, including pros and cons about what
Jonathan (jMac there) did, and his replies.
Most interesting to me about this are the stories being told, because those
have always been the stock-in-trade of journalism, especially in newspapers.
As
I put
it here,
The basic job of newspaper reporters is to write
stories. In simplest terms, stories are interesting arrangements of
facts. What makes stories interesting are: 1) protagonists (persons, groups,
teams, “issues” or causes); 2) a struggle, problem or conflict of
some sort; and 3) movement forward (hopefully, by not necessarily, toward a
conclusion). Whether or not you agree with that formulation, what cannot be
denied is the imperative.
Jonathan did his best as a witness. He also had a story to show and tell:
the abuse of a passenger. That’s what he reported. As it happened,
Jonathan caught the name (Ian) and the face of the Underground staffer, but
only the back of the passenger (a man with gray hair in a business jacket
carrying a leather bag). There are other stories to be told, of course. Read
them in Jonathan’s comment thread
In the old media world, freedom of speech belonged to companies that bought
ink by the barrel. In the new media world, it belongs to everybody with a cell
phone or a keyboard. Get used to it. Or, as Jonathan did, put it to use.
This article originally appeared on Doc Searls Weblog. |