Key takeaway:  "By 11 p.m., he still had not spoken, but the news was spreading 
without him" -- welcome to the world of the modern news cycle and message 
management.  --- rick


May 1, 2011, 11:28 pm
How The Osama Announcement Leaked Out

By BRIAN STELTER

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/01/how-the-osama-announcement-leaked-out/?src=twrhp

The terse announcement came just after 9:45 p.m. Sunday from Dan Pfeiffer, the 
White House communications director. “POTUS to address the nation tonight at 
10:30 PM Eastern Time,” he wrote on Twitter, sharing the same message that had 
just been transmitted to the White House press corps.

The nation’s television networks and newspapers did not know, at first, that 
President Obama would be announcing the death of Osama bin Laden, an 
extraordinary development in the nearly ten-year-long war against terrorism 
waged by the United States and its allies. But reporters in Washington 
suspected almost immediately that the announcement could be about bin Laden.

That speculation was not aired out on television immediately, but it did erupt 
on Twitter and other social networking Web sites. Wishful thinking about bin 
Laden’s death ricocheted across the Web — and then, at 10:25 p.m., while Mr. 
Obama was writing his speech, one particular tweet seemed to confirm it. Keith 
Urbahn, the chief of staff for the former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, 
wrote at that time, “So I’m told by a reputable person they have killed Osama 
Bin Laden. Hot damn.”

Mr. Urbahn quickly added, “Don’t know if it’s true, but let’s pray it is.” He 
was credited by many on the Web with breaking the news, though he didn’t have 
first-hand confirmation.

Within minutes of that tweet, anonymous sources at the Pentagon and the White 
House started to tell reporters the same information. ABC, CBS and NBC 
interrupted programming across the country at almost the same minute, 10:45 
p.m., with the news. “We’re hearing absolute jubilation throughout government,” 
the ABC News correspondent Martha Raddatz reported.

Brian Williams, an NBC News anchor, told viewers, “This story started to leak 
out in the public domain largely when some Congressional staffers started to 
make phone calls.”

The sources remained anonymous, as the Associated Press said, “in order to 
speak ahead of the president.” Mr. Williams said some journalists received a 
three-word e-mail that read, “Get to work.”

Mr. Obama’s address, initially planned for 10:30 p.m., was delayed repeatedly. 
CNN reported that he was writing the address himself.

By 11 p.m., he still had not spoken, but the news was spreading without him. 
Shortly after the top of the hour, there were more than a dozen Facebook posts 
with the word “bin Laden” every second on Facebook. The New York Post’s Web 
site blared, “We Got Him!” The Huffington Post front page simply read, “Dead.”

And around the country, Americans gathered around televisions to digest the 
news. “This ends a chapter in the global war on terrorism which has defined a 
generation,” the NBC correspondent Richard Engel said.

One Twitter user in California said her whole family was watching, including 
her nine-year-old child. “We’re explaining who Osama Bin Laden is,” she wrote.

Her child was born several months after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
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