“Sheer volume of coverage has become its own qualification for continued coverage,” Romano notes, blaming the media of following its peers more than discovering stories on their own. If one major outlet takes to the Gulf oil spill or the Times Square bombing, the others will follow. It’s part of the competitive nature of the business, and usually the topic that proves most popular prevails. The tragedy of the people of Nashville, however, a place at the heart of American
According to Romano, the “narrative” of the Nashville flood was too straightforward and not as manipulable as the developments in the Times Square bombing or the Gulf oil spill:
The problem for Nashville was that both the gulf oil spill and the Times Square terror attempt are like the Russian novels of this 24/7 media culture, with all the plot twists and larger themes (energy, environment, terrorism, etc.) required to fuel the blogs and cable shows for weeks on end. What’s more, both stories have political hooks, which provide our increasingly politicized press (MSNBC, FOX News, blogs) with grist for the kind of arguments that further extend a story’s lifespan (Did Obama respond too slowly? Should we Mirandize terrorists?). The Nashville narrative wasn’t compelling enough to break the cycle, so the MSM just continued to blather on about BP and Shahzad.
Here Romano gets at something deeper, though he ignores one major factor: the media wasn’t really covering the oil spill all that much until earlier this week, several days removed from when the story broke.
Perhaps Romano jumped the gun on this piece and the media is simply waiting out the halflife of the oil spill and terror stories before the dive into the damage in Nashville. They are already backed up on covering the oil spill story, and the emergence of a new terror plot only hindered that future. Compile that with whatever it was the stock market did yesterday and the riots in Greece, and that’s at least four days’ worth of backed up news.
There are some indications that the media is finally getting around to Nashville: Anderson Cooper covered the story live from Nashville last night, and both Fox and MSNBC devoting significant time to the flood as of yesterday. If Romano is right on his first point and media outlets do feed off of each other excessively, it’s quite possible other