Brave New Media World
How Ashton Kutcher beat CNN on Twitter
"Dropping my first tweet," exclaimed Ashton Kutcher at 11:50 PM on January 15, 2009. At the time, it may have sounded as if the Hollywood gadfly had simply invented a new euphemism for human elimination. In fact, he was launching a revolution. For many years, only The New York Times had the power to drive the national discourse. Then, for a few years after that, only The New York Times and a handful of bloggers did. Using Twitter to broadcast a series of scoops about his noisy neighbor, however, Kutcher vividly illustrated how the media landscape was shifting once again. Now, even ordinary celebrities can reach the masses just as effectively as CNN or the only son of a recently deceased Nigerian millionaire: All they need is a cell phone and some fingers.
Just three months after Kutcher discovered Twitter, he found himself in a race with CNN to see who would reach a million followers first. The easily excitable movie star declared this "crazy" and "astonishing," and for once his hyperbole was warranted: How the hell had CNN managed to attract so many subscribers? Sure, it had a two-year lead on Kutcher, having created a Twitter account in January 2007. But while Kutcher was roping in new fans with random philosophical musings, CNN was all business, grunting out overly wordy bulletins like "Britain's chief terrorism officer has resigned, the London mayor's office says, after he revealed a sensitive document."
Scroll through CNN's archive of more than 700 tweets, and you will not find a single instance of exhibitionistic pandering or fake intimacy. There are few if any misspellings to lend the urgent, real-time, hyper-authentic quality so apparent in the work of Kutcher and his fellow celebrity tweet-droppers. Instead, the news organization presents itself as serious, focused, impersonal, and remote—i.e., everything Twitter doesn't reward you for. Are they making some valiant, pig-headed stand in the name of old-fashioned journalistic piety? Or are they just that clueless?
Of course, if there's one place in the digital world where you can act as if blogging, YouTube, and all the rest of that Web 2.0 crap never happened, it's Twitter, a rare triumph for broadcasting in the Internet era. Everywhere else, empowered individuals time-shift, trade files without permission, and generally behave as if they're in charge of determining their own media consumption experiences.
At Twitter, they're still somewhat herdable. If you long to push a button and reach a million people at once, on a regular basis, Twitter can help you do that.
Or, rather, it can help P. Diddy do that. Peruse the Twitter elite, and what's striking is how familiar most of the names are. This nascent, radical, paradigm-shifting medium is being dominated by…Britney Spears? Ryan Seacrest? Fred Durst? On YouTube, we're willing to take chances on unproven novelties, because YouTube is primarily a one-night-stand medium. Wham-bam-thank-you, Susan Boyle—we'll always have "I Dreamed I Dream." Twitter, on the other hand, asks for a commitment. And not a commitment from your Sony Vaio. It asks you for a commitment from your cell phone, which you carry around in your pocket all day, mere inches from your junk. As a consequence, Twitter is an intimate platform, a platform designed for communicating with people with close familial bonds, people whom you know and trust—which is to say, celebrities.
If you're on the transmitting end of the equation, and you're not using Twitter to simulate intimacy, then you're not doing it right. Ashton Kutcher gets this. John Mayer gets this. Kim Kardashian gets this. Even Larry King, operating in off the reservation mode, gets it. They understand that Twitter is essentially reality TV rendered in text, 140 characters or fewer at a time. CNN, on the other hand, insists on treating it as nothing more than a newsticker without the screen space to accommodate King's tremendous noggin. The New York Times and NPR employ the same uninspired approach.
Based on the evidence he presents in his Twitter stream, Ashton Kutcher spends a lot of time surfing the Internet and Twittering. He goes on vacations, has lunch with his dad, and sometimes just sits around being happy to be alive. Truth be told, he's pretty boring. But because he provides such a seemingly candid, seemingly minute-by-minute look at his life, he's generated tremendous interest in it. Every second of the day now, someone somewhere is checking to see if there's a new update from him—is he over the flu yet? How's his dog Bama doing?
At CNN, far more entertaining things are happening behind the scenes, but the only time we get to see them is when someone accidentally forgets to turn off a switch and suddenly we hear Wolf Blitzer bashing Cingular or engaging in awkward banter with White House correspondent Suzanne Malveaux. If CNN used Twitter as the channel for regularly transmitting the informal, random, and dramatic moments that happen during the process of producing the news, ultimately more people would get interested in the news itself. To industry veterans committed to the notion that news-gathering is a serious endeavour that should not be mixed with attempts to entertain, the idea of turning their working lives into a variant of reality TV is no doubt undignified and unprofessional. But is it any less undignified and unprofessional to make the news so boring even Ashton Kutcher's dog seems more compelling in comparison?
Contributing Editor Greg Beato is a writer living in San Francisco. Read his Reason archive here.
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Twitter sucks.
Ashton Kutcher sucks.
I follow reason on Twitter, and do you guys really do it any different than the media heavyweights??
Mango Punch,
They do, but intentional misspellings have always been part of the "Reason brand"
How much longer do we have to put up with this Twitter fad, and why on earth does the media think a silly internet service that allows giddy teenage girls to be spammed by their favorite celebrity matters even a tiny bit?
Chad, because no one wants to miss the next big tech thing. This means that everyone jumps on the most meaningless tech shit.
"But is it any less undignified and unprofessional to make the news so boring even Ashton Kutcher's dog seems more compelling in comparison?"
The news is "boring" to boring people. But Kutcher's dog? Why, that's just fascinating!
Chad beat me to the punch. I don't even 'twit' with beloved boyfriend. We tend to call each other and speak.
Suki, you just broke my heart
roy,
For failure to twitter?
not exactly
Shut the fuck up, Ashton Kutcher, you trucker-hat-wearing goon.
No comment on Twitter is necessary when its most effective / visible user is Kutcher.
We're through being cool.
"I haven't changed since high school and suddenly I'm uncool!"
For all of you corporate types out there: SEC compliance on Twitter
"I haven't changed since high school and suddenly I'm uncool!"
7/8 uncool. There's still hope for the other 1/8. But you must deposit some tweets, and fast.
Now, even ordinary celebrities can reach the masses just as effectively as CNN
Does CNN hire people who communicate like they were dropped repeatedly on their heads as infants?
"ordinary celebrities"?
shamelessly self promoting pinheads pretending to what?
Twitter, an act of masturbatory fantasy, feeble communication attempts, 'in-crowd' allegory
execrable excessive connectiveness perpetrated by blathering twits...
fokkin idiots
I ordinarily refrain from posting if I can't say something nice about whatever was posted (really!) but:
1) Twitter is stupid.
2) Ashton Kutcher is a vain, self-absorbed, vacuous retard.
3) Devoting ink to Ashton Kutcher, Twitter, and CNN in one article is like huffing gas and eating paint chips at the same time.
If you're on the transmitting end of the equation, and you're not using Twitter to simulate intimacy, then you're not doing it right.
Right. The self-centered, illiterate musings and goings-on of spoiled idiot celebrities transmitted to a gajillion empty-headed tween girls = intimacy.
But as Greg Beato writes, then came Ashton Kutcher.
Shut up, Beato. Shut the fuck up.
Please, I beg you, in the name of all that is good and holy, do not, under any circumstance, for any reason, do fucking not post any more twitter related stories this century.
Thank you.
/curmudgeon
kutcher took time off from making movies noone wants to see and coasting on his celebrity to "beat" cnn on twitter. that man has life by the balls.
I don't tweet. I have no use for twitter. I am waiting for 'grunter' where mico-blogging will be limited to a single syllable. Ugh.
A few things to note about the article:
1) CNN did not create the account in question. It was done by someone else and CNN didn't take control of the account until a few months ago. Most of the tweets under the CNN name were done by a fan.
2) The reason all the celebs have so many followers is because Twitter created "suggested" people to follow for new accounts back in February. Almost all of the suggested people were celebs, who would promote Twitter and help it spread. There are hundreds of thousands of phantom accounts on Twitter now that never follow anyone but the suggested list, never have anyone follow them, and never send a message. But for the "suggested" list, neither Ashton Kutcher nor anyone else would have 1m followers. He'd have a lot, but not that many.
@EverywhereTrip
that man has life by the balls.
Also there is the thing with being married to a woman twice his age. In his situation, there are balls that are had, but they are not life's.
It was kind of funny though when he made Justin Timberlake cry on Punk'd.
Also there is the thing with being married to a woman twice his age.
Eventually the black magic and super-science holding her together will fail and she'll just melt into wrinkles and flatulence. And then he'll just be stuck with Rumor prancing around the house in nothing but a towel and jaw-burqa.
How Ashton Kutcher Beat CNN on Twitter
Could be the shots he posted about his decrepit wife's ass.
Jesus. Most of these comments sound like they were written by Walter Matthau.
Or Larry King.
(And whenever I mention Larry, I have to add this:
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/33734)
Jesus. Most of these comments sound like they were written by Walter Matthau
Get off my lawn!
At least you can ignore twitter. It doesn't waste shelf space like celebrity-written books.
My father's theory was, if you have time to brag about what you're doing, you aren't doing enough.
Twitter breaks news stories on a regular basis, now. Just yesterday, in fact, it broke the story about that nutcase in the census building. I'm linked to stories, images, and, sure, random musings of the sort I find interesting from around the world... or not. Maybe my focus is a bit more local. Or maybe my focus is libertarian-specific, or futurist-specific, or spiritual-specific.
Then, the really interesting thing about Twitter is the more people get involved, the more powerful it becomes. I can search a town, or a person, and narrow in on what is happening, if anything, exactly.
The Boston Police Department tweets. My friends have thrice avoided major traffic jams because of it. Also, who knew there were so many bank robberies?!
All of this "Twitter SUCKS" bullshit is not original. We heard it for Facebook/Myspace; we heard it for AIM; we heard it for the nature of information on the internet; before there were iPods, we heard it for the Walkman (well, not really me, I was a baby --- or, was I? 1985? When did the Walkman come out???); we heard it for music in the 1960s, and for film, and for the Beatniks before that; we heard it for the Industrial goddamn Revolution! We'll always hear it.
The world changes and that upsets people. I get that. Doesn't make it any less lame.
Can't fight the tide, people, might as well play in it.
Eventually the black magic and super-science holding her together will fail and she'll just melt into wrinkles and flatulence. And then he'll just be stuck with Rumor prancing around the house in nothing but a towel and jaw-burqa.
SF... that was beautiful.
All of this "Twitter SUCKS" bullshit is not original. We heard it for Facebook/Myspace; we heard it for AIM; we heard it for the nature of information on the internet;
It was right for those earlier iterations, and its right for twitter. The signal to noise ratio is atrocious and getting worse; this is not progress.
Could be the shots he posted about his decrepit wife's ass.
Interestingly enough (or not), the cover of I Spit on Your Grave is actually a young Demi Moore's ass, and not Camille Keaton's. Now you know.
It was right for those earlier iterations, and its right for twitter. The signal to noise ratio is atrocious and getting worse; this is not progress.
I noticed that you ignored the rest of my list. Speaking of signals and noise, though, how do you feel about the television? Maybe not well. But what about the television? The Newspaper? Thoreau hated newspapers. Thoreau hated the whole concept of national and, even more, international news, in fact.
These crazy kids, with their crazy inventions! Ruining everything!
*But what about the radio?
Ugh.
I no longer even care, NutraSweet. Everything good will be systematically destroyed by the assholes in Hollywood. I have accepted this.
At CNN, far more entertaining things are happening behind the scenes, but the only time we get to see them is when someone accidentally forgets to turn off a switch and suddenly we hear Wolf Blitzer bashing Cingular or engaging in awkward banter with White House correspondent Suzanne Malveaux. If CNN used Twitter as the channel for regularly transmitting the informal, random, and dramatic moments that happen during the process of producing the news, ultimately more people would get interested in the news itself. To industry veterans committed to the notion that news-gathering is a serious endeavour that should not be mixed with attempts to entertain, the idea of turning their working lives into a variant of reality TV is no doubt undignified and unprofessional. But is it any less undignified and unprofessional to make the news so boring even Ashton Kutcher's dog seems more compelling in comparison?
The final graf seems to conclude that because more people are following Kutcher on Twitter than are following CNN, CNN should try to be as asinine as Kutcher. What a retarded idea. That's like saying, The New York Review of Books is less read and less popular than EW. It should be more like EW and include sections on what happened when Camilia Paglia drank too much wine.
I noticed that you ignored the rest of my list.
Perhaps because things like Ipods, Walkmen, and the Industrial Revolution aren't really communication technologies in any strong sense, and so don't really have a signal to noise ratio.
But what about the television? The Newspaper?
What about 'em? I use them primarily for entertainment. I go to the intertubes for my information gathering, because it provides filtering capabilities that keep the signal to noise ratio at an acceptable level.
that article sucks
Who the fuck is Ashton Kutcher? Sounds like a guy with a sweater tied around his neck.
"Ashton, you simply must knuckle down, my boy, or you'll never get into Harvard. And then Daddy will have to pull strings. You know how Daddy doesn't like to pull strings."
I don't really get the whole Twitter thing, and I certainly can't understand why anyone would want to to get a glimpse of Kutcher unfiltered. But I also don't get the Facebook thing, can't really get into texting, and I think it's incredibly rude when someone I'm talking pulls out there cell phone and bashes in a text. I guess I'm just a premature old fuddy-duddy.
I used to think it was weird that as a tech-loving nerd I really didn't get into those things. Then I realized that these aren't technological things, they are societal ones. Most of humanity prefers to be in groups and likes to identify with them. I'm a loner and really don't find satisfaction in groups. Therefore all these technological items that are focused on groups like Facebook and Twitter are things that don't interest me.
Aw poor roy. Thought you had seen some of my other comments.
Who the fuck is Ashton Kutcher? Sounds like a guy with a sweater tied around his neck.
He is the "That '70s Show" guy without a sweater of a white Afro.
OR White Afro, stupid keys.
is good
Thanks