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What the Tweet?

What the Tweet? Every day, thousands of stories are passed around the internet on blogs and via Twitter. A new study by Journalism.org has examined the source of those stories. It turns out, most of them come from old-school media. We may like to share information via Twitter, but the information we share comes from the morning's newspaper. This is a look at where blogs and Twitter are getting their stories, and what kind of stories their users are most likely to link to. Crime Environment Economy Celebrity Terrorism Health & Medicine Politics/Government Media BLOGS TWITTER USERS Economy Weather Environment Foreign Events Foreign Events Terrorism Technology U.S. Newspaper / Magazine Health & Medicine International Newspaper / Magazine U.S. Broadcast Education Media Oddball International Broadcast U.S. Wire Service Other International Website eO Politics/Government Pop Culture U.S. Website Consumer Science Unknown Oddball Other U.S. Source Crime Disasters/Accidents Immigration Gay Science Race/Gender Race/Gender Disasters/Accidents Technology Pop Culture Celebrity Sports Media Religion SOURCE Journalism.org A collaboration between GOOD and Part & Parcel. SOU RCES

What the Tweet?

shared by judithgold on Dec 25
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This infographic provides information for where bloggers and Twitters get the stories that they write and tweet about from. It shows that although blogging and Tweeting are new forms of media the stor...

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GOOD

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Social Media
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