Well,
I wish this one hadn’t fallen into my lap.
Today
at approximately 12:56 P.M., a shooting, an apparent murder-suicide, occurred at
the Arnold School of Public Health at the University of South Carolina, my alma
mater and less than five miles from my house.
Detail. McKissick Museum. University of South Carolina. Columbia, South Carolina. 1939. Works Progress Administration Romanesque style. Photographed by Stephen Milligan (August 15, 2009). |
Coincidentally,
at about the same time, a car accident occurred just outside the building at
the corner of Assembly and College streets (USC is an open, downtown campus),
so among all of the confusion, the misinformation began to fly on social
media. According to WIS, Columbia’s NBC
affiliate, rumors of the shooting’s nature and location were spread on social
media: It was an active shooter situation.
It took place on the Horseshoe, the original part of campus. At Russell House, the university union. Even at the South Carolina State House, just
blocks away.
WIS
devoted all of its 5:00 and 5:30 news broadcasts to the event (with only a
two-minute look at the weather) and much of its 6:00 broadcast. The reporter on the scene, after discussing
the inaccurate social media reports with the evening anchor, who had joined her
there, then exhorted the audience to verify any information before sharing it
on social media.
Details
are still emerging as I listen to WIS’s 7:00 news report, most of which is
devoted to the shooting, but I’ve already noticed a little time is being
devoted to sports, weather, and traffic, but no other news has been reported.
Not
only is this story close to home geographically, but it’s also close to home as
far as the Social Role of Mass Media class goes. Verification.
Erroneous Twitter reports. Accuracy. Completeness.
Sensitive issues. All of these
were topics of this week’s class readings.
And all of these issues are embodied in this story:
Verification? The reporter chose the responsible route by
asking the public to verify information before sharing on social media to minimize
the spread of mistaken reports.
Erroneous
Twitter reports? The rumors in those
initial reports have been dispelled…but will probably be replaced by
others.
Completeness? Obviously the story is incomplete at the
moment, so much of the 7:00 news involved reiterating and discussing—no information
about the two who died can be released until the Richland County coroner gives
approval.
Accuracy? WIS is, for many, the best source of
television news in the Midlands, so I’m sure accuracy is something each
reporting team is striving for.
Sensitive
issue? Definitely.
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