First Web reporter to cover White House, Washington Post takes lead

by Sanjay Jha | November 11, 2008 at 08:54 pm
107 views | 4 Recommendations | 2 comments

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The entrance to the Washington Post on 15th street Northwest DC

The entrance to the Washington Post on 15th street Northwest DC

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Media outlets in the US have started preparing to cover the new Presidency. President elect Obama had harnessed the power of the internet and it has proved one of the key to his success. The Obama campaign has clearly indicated that the internet has been moving to the mainstream of political life in the US.

Realizing the growing importance of web based news and new administration's proclivity towards new medium media organizations are changing their strategy to cover White house.

The Washington Post will expand its crew of full-time White House correspondents from two to four to cover the incoming Obama Administration. That will also include the paper's first Web-based White House reporter.

Chris Cillizza, who writes at the popular page, "The Fix," will likely rename it "The White House Fix" and be based out of the White House beat.

Blogger Chris Cillizza will be The Washington Post  first Web-based White House reporter.  The paper is doubling its staff of full-time White House correspondents from two to four to "cover the incoming Obama Administration."

Following the presidential election, Managing Editor Phil Bennett said that the Internet has "become an integral part of our overall White House coverage and the leading edge of our breaking news coverage."

This appointment marks the first time that the Post has had a Web person as a "core" part of White House coverage.

Bennett added that Cillizza and reporters Anne Kornblut, Mike Shear and Michael Fletcher would replace the two current correspondents
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1
say71

I waited in line on November 6th to purchase a few copies of the commemorative edition of the November 5th Washington Post. I stood for 30 minutes, which is a long time for an American to wait in line, and bought five papers (there was a limit). I was feeling lucky, like I could sell them for a profit. To my dismay, later that day I was in a drugstore and a Post employee was setting up a cardboard stand and loading it up with the same paper I had waited in line for earlier! I said to him "are you kidding are these the same papers I waited in line and was made late for work for?"
"Yes Ma'am" he replied.

say71 has contributed a photo to this story.

0
eluxzen

internet is finaly getting mainstream in politics!

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First Flagged at 6:37 AM, Nov 12, 2008 by eluxzen
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