Heres What Happens When The Internet Decides A Newspaper’s Front - TopicsExpress



          

Heres What Happens When The Internet Decides A Newspaper’s Front Page Surprisingly, it’s not too bad. blog.newswhip NewsWhip, a company that ranks and monitors news stories through social shares, conducted an interesting experiment yesterday. Using Spike, a tool that monitors social activity to find the most shared stories across a particular site, NewsWhip swapped the front page stories of major newspapers with each papers most shared stories. The results touch on an interesting truth: that the front page isnt so much a comprehensive collection of the most important and popular stories on a given day as it is a reflection of editorial whims and, in the case of a tabloid paper like the Daily Mail, a clear demonstration of the institutions agenda. Perhaps more important though, is how, in many cases, the re-imagined front pages appear reasonably well rounded and contain plenty of hard news. While culture and lifestyle stories do seem to outrank the choices most front-page editors — the Top 10 Ramen Destinations in New York is unlikely to grace the front page of the New York Times — hard news stories (conflict in Ukraine, Obamas 2015 budget) still appear on the redesigned front pages, though less prominently. Its also easy to see the internets influence in the new pages. Stories about social media are more prominent and local news with its limited audience is hard to come by on the internets version of page one. Wall Street Journal blog.newswhip Daily Mail blog.newswhip View Entire List › bit.ly/1fc6HTQ
Posted on: Fri, 07 Mar 2014 01:35:56 +0000

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