24 Apr 2009 17:01 Africa/Lagos
Nieman Journalism Lab: How the Web Dominated the Breaking News Pulitzer Prize
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 24 /PRNewswire/ -- The three newspapers honored by the Pulitzer Prize Board for Breaking News all shared a common thread: They used the web as their primary outlet, not ink-on-paper.
The New York Times -- which won the prize -- and finalists the Houston Chronicle and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch each shifted to a web-first mentality when faced with big breaking news. That was true whether the news was a prostitution scandal (Times), a hurricane (Chronicle), or a shooting (Post-Dispatch).
"We cover news any way people need news," Chronicle editor Jeff Cohen told the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard. We cover it online, analog, digital, straight media -- any way you can serve it up, our staff is serving it up."
In-depth analysis of each of the Pulitzer finalists can be found at:
New York Times Wins Pulitzer Prize
Breaking News Winners
The Nieman Journalism Lab is a project at Harvard University to figure out the future of quality journalism online. Its site is http://www.niemanlab.org/.
Source: Nieman Journalism Lab
CONTACT: Joshua Benton, director of Nieman Journalism Lab,
joshua_benton@harvard.edu
Web Site: http://www.niemanlab.org/
American Times Online keeps the record of the regular reports on the current affairs, news and politics in America and relating to America.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Nieman Journalism Lab: How the Web Dominated the Breaking News Pulitzer Prize
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Breaking News
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Nieman Journalism Lab
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Pulitzer Prize
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