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Amy Gahran
A group weblog about the intersection of news & technology


Happy Anniversary, Rathergate!
Posted by Amy Gahran at 7:08 PM on Sep. 9, 2005
It was the post that launched 10,000 stories -- and a media firestorm that toppled longtime network anchor Dan Rather and several of his CBS News colleagues. It also showed the power of citizen journalism. And, I was surprised to learn today, it wasn't on a weblog.

The flap that came to be known as "Rathergate" began on September 8, 2004, with a comment to a thread in a Web-based conservative discussion forum, Free Republic. Using the pseudonym "Buckhead," Atlanta attorney Harry MacDougald posted his observations debunking the authenticity of documents that CBS News offered as proof that George W. Bush did not fulfill his military service obligations in 1972. (See comment 46 in the thread, "THE 'New' CBS BUSH DOCUMENTS: Let's do some investigating." More information also is available in my weblog today.) Word of the Free Republic discussion spread quickly through weblogs. The mainstream news media caught on, and the rest is history.

I think it's interesting that Rathergate has become known as the big story that first put weblogs on the news-media map. Indeed, weblogs played a key role in publicizing that story, and in keeping it visible. But Rathergate didn't start in a blog.

Discussion forums are, I now realize, exceptionally fertile ground for citizen journalism. In online discussion forums (e-mail lists), works of citizen journalism often aren't neatly packaged into article or coherent stories. Nevertheless, these efforts are offered in the same spirit and can accomplish the same goals as more easily recognizable works of citizen or professional journalism.

On this anniversary, I offer congratulations to citizen journalists -- and condolences to Mr. Rather.

CORRECTION: This item originally said that the Rathergate flap began on September 8, 2005; the correct year is 2004.
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