Wednesday, October 06, 2010

The power of the tweet

Malcolm Gladwell is off the pace. Perhaps context is everything when it comes to the power of social media, and its amphetamine-fuelled upstart, Twitter.  In the US and the West in general, hot news stories are quick to break, with most angles to a story covered relentlessly until the next news break hits the shore. Helicopters take to the air, talk show hosts take calls, the 24 hour news cycle throws resource at the scene, pundits are summoned to the studios.. 


Things play out quite differently in other parts of the world.  Take the recent tragedy of 1-10, here in Abuja. The news warning of a bomb threat from MEND came through Twitter (just minutes after Jomo Gbomo's email was sent).  The news of the explosions (first in Eagle Square, then down the road) came through Twitter, from eyewitnesses using their mobile phones.  The fastest global news Twitter feed of them all - Breaking News - was onto the story within a few minutes. The news that people had been killed came through Twitter.  Bodies were 'seen' first on Twitter. As the terrestrial TV stations went into news blackout mode (showing only the fly past and calisthenics displays), the story developed - on Twitter, backed up by Facebook (although this was much slower and more sluggish), sms, BBIM and voice.  Those looking in from conventional media sources overseas, including CNN and the BBC, had to remind twitterers to continue using the correct hash tags so they could follow events.  They were powerless to lead on the news - plane tickets had yet to even be bought.


Even now, as the aftermath lurches from one side to the other, from Abuja to Jo'burg to Minna and back to Abuja again, Twitter is eons faster at pinpointing where on the radar the next aspect of the story is emerging from and way faster on follow-up than conventional news media.  In Nigeria at least, the revolution most likely won't be televised, but it may well be on Twitter.

2 comments:

Anonymous,  2:44 pm  

Please don't sloganise by calling it 1-10.

Debo,  8:21 pm  

The TV stations are careful of breaching "national security"

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