Delivering the Scoop!


In the early 1820s, when the only international news came in with the ships, several New York newspapers banded together to keep a small newsboat ready to meet incoming schooners. But in 1827, one of the papers on board, the 
Journal of Commerce, withdrew from the agreement: the editors didn’t want the boaters to work on the Sabbath. The Journal bought its own schooner. “One of its rivals then bought an even faster boat, and things escalated from there,” Andie Tucher, a historian and journalist who directs the Communications Ph.D. program at Columbia Journalism School, says. The first scoop war was born.

https://www.cjr.org/special_report/journalist-file-deadline-article.php

In this day of microwave sensibilities...actually even that isn't fast enough anymore...in this age of social media the new "scoop" delivery to your audience has even outgrown google docs as a means of linking your audience to your story. Now we have to tell a story in 140 characters or less for twitter, or with a picture and a blurb on Instagram. The story above tells the journey of "the scoop" and how delivering that has evolved over decades past until now.

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