Top News:
Jim Rutenberg / New York Times:
Journalists failed to question the polls predicting a Clinton victory because the data confirmed their gut feeling about who would win — All the dazzling technology, the big data and the sophisticated modeling that American newsrooms bring to the fundamentally human endeavor of presidential politics …
Discussion:
New York Times, Fortune, Washington Post, The Wrap, Los Angeles Times, The Atlantic, Los Angeles Times, Mediaite, Variety, TVNewser, Broadcasting & Cable, The New York Observer, USA Today, @pamelacolloff, ABC News, CNNMoney, MediaFile, USC News, Politico, ZDNet, AOL, @mathewi, CNN, @ejbergdahl, @fritinancy, Forbes, Washington Post, @frankluntz, GeekWire, @masonatoms, @jessemckinley, @milehighrobert, @propublica, @olympiajoe, @tommy_robb, @dushkaamateur, The Week, @aliwatkins, @dhume, @tripgabriel, @repstevensmith, @kvanvalkenburg, @edenlane, @williamsjon, @palafo, @gilbertcremulla, @nytimes, @brianstelter and Reuters, Thanks:@ravichandrans25
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Margaret Sullivan / Washington Post:
“Epic fail” in covering the political landscape by media as idealistic and naive journalists failed to take Trump voters seriously — To put it bluntly, the media missed the story. In the end, a huge number of American voters wanted something different.
Discussion:
Politico, New York Times, MediaFile, INMA, Fortune, Medium, CNBC, Recode, Vox, Gothamist, @judith_graham, @nathanielpopper, @hbottemiller, @jzheel, The Huffington Post, The Ringer, @benjaminnorton, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, FishbowlDC, @zeynep, @ludkmr, Data & Society, The Daily Caller, Business Insider, @mtracey, The Wrap, @mjg59, @gregpmiller, @gartenberg, @karaswisher, @rschooley, @globekpd, @g_e_anderson, @mlcalderone, @lizzieohreally, @charlesornstein, @venkatananth, @ahauslohner, @deanemurphy, @louistheroux, @mkolken, @marieslavicek, @rulajebreal, @nickkristof, @rubinreport, New Statesman, CNNMoney, @ishaantharoor, @tanit, @jeffrich, @arifleischer, @conalhanna, @mattwridley, @ninabernstein1, @hebajournalist, Washington Post, Daniel Kreiss, CNNMoney, LostRemote and @reddy
James Poniewozik / New York Times:
TV news networks were completely unprepared for Donald Trump's win and it was reflected in their coverage, with little analysis of the implications — None of this was in the script. — The presidential election had obsessed the news media for a year and a half.
Discussion:
@hollywoodspin, Quartz, @poniewozik, @nytimesarts and Mediaite
Max Read / New York Magazine:
Facebook's massive reach, abundance of emotionally charged fake viral stories, and lack of traditional gatekeepers helped Donald Trump win — A close and — to pundits, journalists, and Democrats — unexpected victory like Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's is always overdetermined …
Discussion:
Nieman Lab, Bloomberg, @mattdpearce, Techdirt, TechCrunch, @benedictevans, @zeynep, @nathanjurgenson, @max_read, The Verge, The Next Web, Fortune, Slate, Gizmodo, @_lilchen, @chrismessina, @kalexander03, Mashable, @digiphile, @noltenc, @simonowens, @gabrielsnyder, Recode, @mulvihill79, @s_m_i, @anjali28, @logandecker, @zeynep, @fakerobotgamer, @mattdpearce, @joshchin, @mattdpearce, @clarajeffery, Gothamist, @daveyalba, @jwherrman, @digiphile, @zeynep, @danagoldstein, @howardweaver, @pkafka, @jeffbercovici and @max_read
Michael Wolff / Hollywood Reporter:
Trump's win exposed smug media assumptions that endorsements count, polling works, and advertising matters — Ads don't work, polls don't work, celebrities don't work, media endorsements don't work and ground games don't work. — The media turned itself into the opposition and, accordingly …
Todd Spangler / Variety:
Startup VoteCastr, which worked with Slate and Vice News to publish real-time polling results, got predictions wrong in five of seven battleground states — Nearly every pre-election poll showed Hillary Clinton leading Donald Trump heading into Tuesday — and even the Republic National …
Discussion:
FiveThirtyEight, Recode, Politico, Slate, New York Times, New York Magazine, @5ean5ullivan, @trevorcornwell, The Next Web and Wall Street Journal
Reuters:
Time Warner's and AT&T's shares fell 2% and 1.4% respectively on Wednesday over concerns Trump will keep his vow to block AT&T acquisition — Shares of media group Time Warner Inc (TWX.N) fell more than 2 percent on Wednesday on concerns that U.S. President-elect Donald Trump …
Discussion:
Bloomberg, Engadget, Ars Technica, Future of Music Coalition, The Wrap, Recode, Mediaite, Business Insider and Reuters
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Emily Flitter / Reuters:
Breitbart News is expanding its US operation by hiring more journalists and is launching sites in France and Germany, says its US EIC Alex Marlow — The right-wing Breitbart News Network is expanding its U.S. operations and launching sites in Germany and France, its U.S. editor-in-chief told Reuters …
Discussion:
Guardian, AOL, @farano, FishbowlNY, CNNMoney, @laureltouby, @karanbhasin13, @jejohnson322 and FishbowlDC
Margaret Sullivan / Washington Post:
Covering President Trump will require fearless, deep journalism, news organizations willing to fund court battles, and help from some heroes — One thing is certain in the presumptive era of President Trump. Journalists are going to have to be better — stronger, more courageous, stiffer-spined — than they've ever been.
Discussion:
Columbia Journalism Review, Poynter, @postbaron, bookforum.com, @jswatz, Jon Slattery, @wteckert, @johnjcook, @poynter, @rachaelgleason, @stevemullis, @risawechsler and @rtburg
Hadas Gold / Politico:
After the US election, some journalists worry about future access to candidates, press freedom, and personal safety — As she left 1211 Avenue of the Americas building on Tuesday night, Wall Street Journal graphics editor Stephanie Stamm walked by the group of spectators gathered outside of Fox News' studios.
Discussion:
ABC News, @emmaroller, @speitsch, @politico, Analysis : NPR, @bolerokrump, @petemarco, @hadas_gold and @hadas_gold
Candace Smith / ABC News:
First-person account of what it was like as the only black reporter to cover Trump in the field throughout the election season — They say you never forget your first. It was February. I had just gotten assigned to cover GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump.
Alex Weprin / Politico:
About 71.5M people watched election returns come in during primetime hours, compared with 66.8M in 2012; Fox led cable coverage at 12.7M between 8pm and 3am — Approximately 71.5 million people, on average, watched the 2016 presidential election returns come in during prime-time hours last night …
Discussion:
CNNMoney, @hadas_gold and @politico_media