Early Wed. reporting on trapped W.Va. miners was ‘one of the most...
Early Wed. reporting on trapped W.Va. miners was “one of the most disturbing and disgraceful media performances of this type in recent years,” Editor & Publisher said. All media online, broadcast, cable, print -- uniformly blew the quickly-changing story…
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of an explosion that trapped 13 coal miners, E&P said. Editors and anchors blamed local officials and the governor for announcing falsely that 12 of 13 miners were found alive when 11 had been found with no confirmed vital signs; one made it out alive and is now in critical condition. Several news websites posted the erroneously upbeat reports late Tues. (for West Coast papers) and early Wed. The coverage displayed no ambiguity; for example a NYTimes.com headline said “12 Miners Found Alive 41 Hours After Explosion.” A later print edition of the paper bore a headline tracing the claim to miners’ relatives. ChicagoTribune.com ducked responsibility for its wrong report in a followup, saying 12 miners had been “believed alive.” In a timeline of headlines from the AP wire, E&P showed the last false report at 2:49 a.m. EST, with the first correct news at 3:06 a.m. Some papers had hit on the street before presses paused for remake; originals are at Newseum.org. Online/TV convergence site LostRemote.com shellacked ABC News, whose webcast preview of World News Tonight debuted Tues. afternoon, before the mine story broke. ABC had touted the webcast’s capacity for real-time updates as a tool for drawing viewers to the evening broadcast. But as the W.Va. story evolved, the webcast stayed static, with no coverage at all of the tragedy. “ABC News found it’s hard to update your webcast when you're scrambling on your newscast,” LostRemote.com blogger Steve Safran said. By Wed. morning, the webcast’s Tues. posting had been halved, and still didn’t mention the miners, “which is worse than having a dated story,” the New England Cable News online producer said: “Newspapers can be excused for getting it wrong this morning -- but webcasts that promise updates?”