Once over lightly

I have been noticing a trend in the media lately. There has been an increase in the number of stories they have been doing on exchanges on social media. However these stories seems to have a very process type nature to them. They follow the format of Person A did this on social media, Person B responded in way X. In a lot of cases there is no indication of the media seeking comment from those involved. There is also generally a vox pop quote from a social media user who was engaged in the exchange. This is what happened last night with a Stuff article. The article is about a tweet by former MP Tau Henare: West_Side_Tory_on_Twitter___Just_wondering_if__Lorde_has_epilepsy__ The Stuff story can be found here. The final quote from the story reads:

Joining in the discussion was Labour’s new deputy leader Annete King who tweeted, “Come on Tau that’s nasty. Both to Lorde and to those who suffer epilepsy.”

Now this whole blog is focused on the use of social media in politics, and I do posts such as Twitter Conversation of the Day, but I try to take a critical and analytical look at most of what I post about. Where as the story by Stuff, which doesn’t even carry a by line, provides no analysis, nor does it appear that there has been any attempt to obtain comment from the MP/former MP involved. What happens on social media can be indicative of deeper aspects of peoples views, which may be worth writing stories about. But it seems that for many in the media, social media is seen as a way to get quick and easy stories to fill column inches.   This story contributes nothing. This isn’t to say the tweet wasn’t worth writing a story about, but this story isn’t it.

Twitter Stats 21 November

I was away last Friday, so didn’t get a chance to do the Twitter stats. So these stats cover the last two weeks.

 

Most Tweets by an MP:

National: Chris Bishop 73, Jonathan Coleman 53, Simon O’Connor 44.

Labour: Trevor Mallard 119, Clare Curran 93, Phil Twyford 76.

Greens: Catherine Delahunty 131, Metiria Turei 112, Kevin Hague 86.

NZF: Tracey Martin 47, Clayton Mitchell 7, Fletcher Tabuteau 6.

Others: Marama Fox 410, Peter Dunne 94, Te Ururoa Flavell 17.

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Justice, BIM and “withheld information”

There has been a burst of Briefings to Incoming Ministers released in the last few days. There has been talk about the information that is being withheld in them. It would be good though, if departments wanted to withhold information, if they managed to actually acheive that. I have just been tipped off that the Justice BIM has issues around this. The BIM can be found here. If you highlight the areas withheld:

BIM_2014__Justice_Sector_-_bim-2014-justice-sector2

 

Then copy and paste it into a text editor, it is possible to see what has been withheld:

“giving Police flexibility to achieve optimal use of its people and deliver more responsively’
Now I am not going to get into the debate about what should and shouldn’t be withheld in BIMs. But If you are going to withhold stuff, before you post it online, it might pay to make sure that it has actually been withheld, and is not obtainable using a method such as this. DIA and Treasury seem to have it right, but it looks like Justice can’t figure it out.

Young Nats, Pandas and “borrowed” images?

The Prime Minister and his wife have been in China for the APEC meeting. As part of this trip, Bronagh went on a visit to a giant panda breeding park in Chengdu. Needless to say this has resulted in a number of warm fuzzy media stories about the visit. There are a number of photos doing the rounds of the event.

 

The Young Nats have posted about it:

panada

 

As have Radio NZ:

PM_s_wife_left_holding_baby__panda____Radio_New_Zealand_News Continue Reading