Saturday, April 27, 2013

Boston Bombings: News in Real Time

Last Thurs., Apr. 18 I was still watching CNN, horrified by the bombings on Boylston and now obsessed with the faces just shared by the FBI. I played those videos over and over again, as we all did.

Then, I heard there was a shooting and possibly an officer killed at MIT. Someone had the presence of mind to say that the Boston PD, Fire and EMS were on a live audio feed. I posted the following over the next hour:
  1. Now a at : MIT says gunshots were reported near the Stata Center outside Kendall Square 24 minutes ago, reports Boston Globe

    I knew immediately that it had to have been connected to the bombers, and was instinctively very worried about what would happen next. As I listened to the astonishingly clear audio feed, it felt like a movie: 
      19 Apr
    1. Heading towards Harvard Sq., told they do have video in that Shell station.
    2. Other 137NZ1 Black Mercedes SUV from Memorial drive gas sta - second man has darker skin. Both with firearms. , 1 went into Shell
    3. says 2 Middle Eastern males, with guns, carjacked a Black Mercedes in Cambridge: license no. 137NZ1 I think...1 is 5'7"
    The next morning when I found out about the shootout and the death of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, and the confirmed and very sad killing of MIT's Officer Sean Collier, my instincts had proven  correct and the news as I'd heard it in real time even more incredible.

    As a journalist, I'll take any source, anywhere, anytime that can prove credible. I will take that source not for attribution, on background, off or on the record. I will interview that source while bungee jumping, polka dancing or eating squid. I will interview her through a German translator or while running a 102-degree fever if this is her only free window.

    I get the story.

    Only a hermit ludite would deny the power of Twitter and real-time news sources like the Police, Fire and EMT feed.

    Yet, only a professional can verify details, make sense of the drama, and dig more deeply to add color.

    It will be interesting in the coming years to see how oldsters such as I (those of us who got through college writing essays on Selectrics) can adapt.

    Fortune will favor the versatile.

    Tweet on.

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