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The fracas occurred near midnight on Aug. 6, and authorities said it involved as many as 70 people. It started at the Gallery Place Station and continued to the L'Enfant Plaza Station. There were arrests, and several people landed in the hospital. On deadline, The Post gathered enough information for a news brief in Saturday's paper, and a short story was quickly posted online.
Throughout Saturday, it was among the most-viewed stories on the Web site, signaling intense reader interest. But as the day wore on, some readers grew frustrated that there was nothing more.
...
When a story for Sunday's paper finally did appear, it offered little new. Promoted on the front page and tucked at the bottom of Sunday's Metro section, it didn't answer key questions: What caused the fighting? Were the people who were injured participants or bystanders? Was Metro beefing up security?
Why such thin coverage? Much of the explanation is that The Post responded with too little, too late.
...
Pierre also worried about hyping a story that involved race. Although The Post's coverage on and after Sunday did not specify the racial makeup of those involved, many readers assumed they were black and offered racially insensitive online comments. "So ghetto," read one. Another urged ending "all welfare benefits for parents whose little animals cause this type of mayhem."
When The Post finally produced a more substantive story for Monday's paper, Pierre believes it was given too much prominence, even though it included eyewitness descriptions of multiple fights and bedlam as people tried to escape the pandemonium. The Post "overplayed it," said Pierre. "It was a fight on the Metro. Kids get into fights."
The Post should always be sensitive to overplaying stories, especially if race is involved. But the problem here was that readers last weekend couldn't get news they desperately wanted about what police said was a massive brawl on the public transit system used daily by hundreds of thousands of people. The hedge against overplaying the story was to get to the bottom of it, and fast.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/13/AR2010081304465.html
I thought this was a rare and interesting inside look at how city newspapers choose stories. I think it's pathetic that TMZ and facebook have more money then god while the Washington Post can only afford one city writer and two interns. I also feel that city residents need to know about the dangers of riding the metro, no matter who started the fight.
The other day I saw some German lady sit down next to a mentally disturbed woman, and then proceed to get in an arguement when the mentally disturbed woman absolutely freaked out. People just don't know how close they are to getting hurt on the metro, in part because of media bias like that reported above.