Social Media as Beat: Tweets as a news source during the 2010 British and Dutch elections

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    Abstract

    While the newspaper industry is in crisis and less time and resources are available for newsgathering, social media turn out to be a convenient and cheap beat for (political) journalism. This article investigates the use of Twitter as a source for newspaper coverage of the 2010 British and Dutch elections. Almost a quarter of the British and nearly half of the Dutch candidates shared their thoughts, visions, and experiences on Twitter. Subsequently, these tweets were increasingly quoted in newspaper coverage. We present a typology of the functions tweets have in news reports: they were either considered newsworthy as such, were a reason for further reporting, or were used to illustrate a broader news story. Consequently, we will show why politicians were successful in producing quotable tweets. While this paper, which is part of a broader project on how journalists (and politicians) use Twitter, focuses upon the coverage of election campaigns, our results indicate a broader trend in journalism. In the future, the reporter who attends events, gathers information face-to-face, and asks critical questions might instead aggregate information online and reproduce it in journalism discourse thereby altering the balance of power between journalists and sources.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)403-419
    Number of pages17
    JournalJournalism Practice
    Volume6
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

    Keywords

    • Journalism
    • News Reporting
    • Newspapers
    • Social Media
    • Sources
    • Twitter
    • United Kingdom
    • Netherlands
    • Content Analysis
    • Political Communication
    • Election Campaign
    • News Coverage
    • NEWS SOURCES OF JOURNALISTS
    • news production
    • Political Reporting
    • ELECTIONS
    • Digital Media
    • New Media
    • COMMUNICATION
    • Mass communications
    • Journalism Practice
    • journalism studies
    • Journalists
    • Politicians
    • NEWS
    • ONLINE COMMUNICATION
    • Online News

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