Abstract
The extraordinary breaking news story of Hurricane Katrina offered an opportunity to document how multimedia and interactive features interfere with the carefully crafted news story of a newspaper. Scholarship on news narratives and medium theory informed this case study, a textual analysis of the 2005 Hurricane Katrina coverage in The Times-Picayune and its web partner Nola.com. The main finding was that the New Orleans' newspaper tale of a mythic Flood in an American city transformed into a chronicle about people's personal experiences in cyberspace. In the process, audiences joined with journalists and reshaped the news narrative, which took on unique cyber-temporal and cyber-spatial qualities.
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