False Paterno Report Proves Big Media Doesn’t Get Social Media

As a Pennsylvania native and Penn State fan, today was not one of my favorite days.

The news of Joe Paterno’s health condition started at 4:59PM EST when the following Tweet was shared by Onward State, a popular student-run media organization.

That didn’t stop big media outlets like CBS Sports, The Huffington Post, and even trusted online sources like BreakingNews.com from taking the story and running with it; reporting to millions of readers that the legendary coach had passed away.

After brief shockwave of emotion to thousands of Penn State fans across the United States, big media once again proved that they do not understand social media journalism. The lesson here is simple: fact check twice, post once. Not everything you see on the Internet is a fact. Any great journalist understands the importance of fact checking before publishing any story, let alone one of this magnitude. Social media is one source, but it is not the ultimate source. The mistake exemplifies one of the downfalls of social media journalism. As Ben Parr points out, speed does not always correlate with accuracy.

Update: The Paterno family released a statement saying that Joe Paterno has passed away.  

Andrew Torba: Andrew is the CEO of Kuhcoon.com, a Social Media as a Service (SMaS) platform. Andrew is also a senior at the University of Scranton where he double majors in Philosophy and Political Science with a minor in Entrepreneurship. Over the past year he has researched and documented over 500 tech startup companies from across the globe. Andrew has a passion for entrepreneurship, technology, social media, and weight lifting.

View Comments (2)

  • This is crazy, in collecting comments I keep coming across these stories. Even having read your post I'm still having to double check if he is actually dead, cause there haven't been any corrections made yet.