13,000 Sarah Palin e-mails released Friday provided little new insight about her time as Alaskas governor. But the frantic effort to obtain the messages, dissect them and post them online served as a watershed moment for the news media, whose zealous approach will no doubt be replicated on future stories.
The spectacle on Friday was unusual even for Palin, who is known for her ability to inspire a media frenzy.
Eager to be the first to post the messages online, news outlets including The Post dispatched reporters armed with scanners to Juneau for the 9 a.m. release of the e-mails, which were not distributed electronically but in stacks of printed paper.
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Back in their newsrooms, the outlets competed to get the documents online for the public first and to capture the coveted top spot on Google.
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Fox News host Greta van Susteren suggested that Palin was getting a media colonoscopy that did not match efforts to scrutinize other public figures or stories of greater importance. Press hunts Mama Grizzly was the headline on the Drudge Report on Saturday.
Even some liberal journalists pondered the public-interest value of the exercise as early as Friday morning.
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But its really not hard to think that the joke might somehow be on us.
Still, the massive deployments hint at the way journalists will tackle large stories in the future. And some of those stories will no doubt be more consequential than the mundane internal conversations of a former politician who may or may not run for public office again one day, let alone the presidency.
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There was a bit of overkill in that at least four large news organizations were crowdsourcing the Palin e-mails Friday, Rosen said.
But I think its a positive that big national news organizations were engaging their users in reporting experiments. They may learn from trying to do it and find it easier to do the next time.
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