Online News a Winter Wonderland
A powerful East Coast winter storm -- and complaints about the cleanup effort that followed it -- topped the online news agenda last week, according to a special News Coverage Index from the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism.
No single subject really dominated news websites during the week of Dec. 27-31. But the story that led -- the first Eastern "snowpocalypse" of the season -- managed to surpass coverage of the U.S. economy, a story that had recently led the news overall, as well as in the online sector. The storm filled 12% of home-page coverage on the 12 websites studied in PEJ's weekly index. Although PEJ's weekly NCI normally includes more than 50 media outlets in five different sectors, this report focused solely on the news agenda in the nation's most-viewed news websites. PEJ's index studies news websites that attract the largest audiences of their kind.
The snowstorm, which struck along the coast from Philadelphia to Boston on Dec. 26 -- dropping as much as 20 inches of snow -- snarled the Eastern Seaboard as holiday travelers tried to make their way along busy and treacherous highways. But unlike the Midwestern storms of mid-December, which among other things, caved in the roof of the Minneapolis Metrodome, online sites devoted a significant portion of their coverage to the Eastern event. (During the week of Dec. 13-19, that storm did not even make the top 10 stories on the web).

News about the economy accounted for just 7% of the week's online news coverage, a drop from recent weeks. Between Nov. 1 and Dec. 19, for example, news about the economy accounted for 15% on the web. Last week, the news was good as many of the reports jumped on the drop in jobless claims.
The No. 3 subject last week, at 6% of online coverage, was an amalgam of stories about U.S. efforts to prevent terrorism. News websites posted stories about the Transportation Security Administration's efforts to increase security on airplanes, the U.S. terror watch list and the absence of major terrorist threats on New Year's Eve.
At No. 4 was the aftermath of the Nov. 2 midterm elections, with some winners sworn in and one loser -- Delaware Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell -- the subject of federal scrutiny over her use of campaign funds. That story made up another 5% of the week's news on the web.
At No. 5 was another subject that was an assortment of storylines around the common theme of cyberspace. Those stories -- which included coverage of hackers and online security and trend pieces on the use of social media -- accounted for 4% of the web newshole.

