Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Breaking Tweets

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Founder(s)
  
Craig Kanalley

Website
  
www.breakingtweets.com

Founded
  
January 2009

Industry
  
News

Motto
  
World News, Twitter-Style

Type of site
  
News aggregation & blogging

Slogan(s)
  
World News, Twitter-Style

Alexa rank
  
10,673,292 (April 2014)

Headquarters
  
Chicago, Illinois, United States

Breaking Tweets was an international journalism news Web site that tracks world news through the use of Twitter and distributes its content via the Internet. It considered its content to be “hyperlocal gone global,” personalizing major news events through relevant tweets from around the world.

Contents

After launching on January 31, 2009, the site launched three spin-off sites, Breaking Tweets Sports, Breaking Tweets Entertainment, and Breaking Tweets Chicago. The main site, the world version, received visits from 194 countries and more than 100 news organizations in its first six months.

Notable stories

The site has been known to provide tweets sent from the scene of breaking news events. It posted tweets from the scene of an apparent attack on the Dutch Royal Family in the Netherlands on April 30, 2009.

The site was recognized by The Poynter Institute for Media Studies for its coverage of the Iranian Presidential Election, 2009, particularly its ability to provide information from Iran through a network of trusted sources. One day after the Poynter article was published, the site's founder claimed that Breaking Tweets was blocked in Iran.

It also posted tweets from the scene of the 2009 Jakarta bombings on July 17.

Reviews

The site has been noted for its innovation in the journalism community. In addition to recognition for its coverage of the Iran Election, The Poynter Institute for Media Studies also reviewed the site in April 2009, stating its usefulness "organizing the scattershot universe of all Tweets into comprehensible topics about specific places, times, and reaction to news events." Journalism.co.uk highlighted the site's ability to personalize the news in its review.

Other reviews on the site have been posted by blogs around the world. The biggest criticism of the site is that it is operated in English only.

A blog in Russia mentioned the language barrier but also said the site was "very creative."

A French blog called Breaking Tweets "a mashup of a hot news with tweets directly linked to this news," stating that tweets are manually selected by journalists and "arranged so that they fit in a natural way in an article to tell the story authentically."

The site has also been reviewed by blogs in Australia, Germany, Switzerland, and Greece.

The class

Students at DePaul University contributed to Breaking Tweets in the fall of 2009 as part of the class "Digital Editing: From Breaking News to Tweets," which DePaul says is "believed to be the first college-level journalism course focused solely on Twitter and its applications".

Breaking Tweets was specifically mentioned in articles about the class by the Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Gawker, and The Chronicle of Higher Education.

References

Breaking Tweets Wikipedia