The Rose Report: Top Tweets Of The Week (1/14)

This week’s top tweets feature the Miami heat’s LeBron James, rapper 50 Cent, DJ D-Nice, musician Wyclef Jean, and sportswriter Jay G. Tate.
SportsGrid

Ryan Babel Tweets Photo Of Howard Webb Wearing Man United Shirt

Ryan Babel could face disciplinary action from The Football Association (FA) after the Liverpool striker posted a Photoshopped image on Twitter of referee Howard Webb wearing a Manchester United shirt. The image was posted in jest after Webb awarded Manchester United a penalty versus Liverpool. The decision was a poor one by Webb after TV [...]
EPL Talk

Chad Ochocinco Tweets Reaction to Being Mopey

Clipped from: twitter.com (share this clip)

Clipped from: twitter.com (share this clip)

I don’t think that Chad Ochocinco likes being called “Mopey.”
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The Rose Report: Top Tweets Of The Week (11/26)

Former NBA star and current ESPN Analyst Jalen Rose offers his take on the five most influential Twitter users of the week. They could be players, media personalities, or something else entirely – as long as they’re impactful and controversial, they’re in his starting five. Follow Jalen on Twitter here.

What Up Doe?! This week’s top tweets feature R&B star Rihanna, comedienne/talk show host Ellen DeGeneres, actress Lindsay Lohan, the Celtics’ Shaquille O’Neal, and Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis.

1. Rihanna tweets her hangover to the world

Why: Because there’s something to be said for a holiday hangover.

2. Ellen’s having a tough time going offline

Why: Because social media is as addictive as turkey, even during Thanksgiving.

3. Lindsay Lohan tries to turn things around

Why: Because hopefully this will inspire Lohan on her road to recovery.

4. Blake Griffin even has legends talking

Why: Because this rookie is turning heads around the NBA.

5. Darrelle Revis comes out on top vs. T.O.

Why: Because the Jets get the last laugh, while Cincy falls to 2-9.

Jalen Rose is a former Michigan Wolverine, NBA star, and current commentator for ESPN. You can catch him on ESPN’s “Kia NBA Countdown.”

SportsGrid

Tiger Tweets Post-Thanksgiving Night: No Escalades or Fire Hydrants!

Good news — Tiger Woods managed to stay away from hopping behind the wheel of his Escalade and plowing into a fire hydrant and neighbor’s tree before his wife performed the miraculous smash and grab just outside the driveway of his Isleworth home this year. Oh, no Florida Highway Patrol troopers or Windermere police officers showed up as surprise guests, either.

In his fifth career-tweet, Tiger checked in with his 264,723 (and counting) followers on the year-anniversary of receiving The Most Expensive Traffic Ticket In The World: “Hope everyone had a great thanksgiving. I just finished a pretty tough cardio session this morning because of all the apple and pumpkin pie.”

It’s unclear where he had his Turkey feast, but apparently he spent it with his “family,” including his mother. Of course, there was no chance in hell that he could have had a worse holiday than the last one, but I can’t imagine Thanksgiving will ever be the same again.

Hope everyone had a wonderful time stuffing themselves with delicious food, getting drunk, falling asleep on the couch watching football and waking up to watch more football!

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Wei Under Par

Mike Wise, Faking Tweets and Why It’s Not Okay

Want to make a bunch of sports fans, journalist watch dogs and social media people flip out at the same time? I present to you your new role model: Mike Wise.

Before I launch into a discussion of his antics yesterday, I should say that I actually do appreciate Wise’s writing in my local Washington Post. I read his stuff frequently, and have definitely complimented it here within SportsGrid and Mediaite. But I think Wise made a crucial judgment error yesterday when he tried to make Twitter a playground for a inferiority complex display over the way that channel is used surrounding news and rumors.

To catch everyone up, yesterday morning during his radio show on Washington’s FM sports net, The Fan, Wise thought it would be fun to toy with his Twitter followers by posting a few fake rumors. The fake stories were none too salacious (rumors about whether Donovan McNabb would start the Washington Redskins first game, for example), but the one that did take hold and passed around plenty was a claim that Ben Roethlisberger’s suspension would be five games after his meeting with the commissioner later this week.

His motive was to test a theory about what is considered credible and believable on the social status network, that those who have a certain air of authority often are believed fully without further vetting. As he told Dan Levy of Press Coverage yesterday afternoon:

“Bottom line: I picked a lousy way to show we have no credibility in this medium, in the social networking medium, and that nobody checks these things out. It was just not a good way to do it. If i had to do it all over again I would have picked another way.”

That’s the story. And it’s been discussed just about everywhere in the last 24 hours (fellow Post sports writer Dan Steinberg collected most of the responses yesterday evening). Fundamentally, most were upset with Wise for irresponsibly pulling the wool over the eyes of Twitter users, and potentially even using the fake news to drive a growth in new followers. Deadspin got a hold of the “I’m not upset, but I’m disappointed” memo that was passed around the sports staff shortly after the stunt, while others called for Wise’s suspension from the Washington Post.

All of this is well and good, and it looks good for the media organization to try and uphold its pre-set social media guidelines, which are valid. The fundamental benchmark for these guidelines, though, has nothing to do with the channel through which a journalist passes his message. There aren’t different rules for Twitter and Facebook and Foursquare. Regardless of the actual network being used, the Post’s guidelines are about journalism first:

We never abandon the guidelines that govern the separation of news from opinion, the importance of fact and objectivity, the appropriate use of language and tone, and other hallmarks of our brand of journalism.

There is more than one difference between guys like Mike Wise and writers like those I get to join here at a blog like SportsGrid. For example, Dan, Glenn and I have all Twitter accounts, but we established these ourselves and no one will really run to the bank on our predictions, no matter what interviews or stories we get here. But for Wise, he gets immediate credibility by way of that Washington Post label – he’s a good journalist, he earned it. And he uses Twitter as a broadcast – look back at his history and you’ll notice little engagement with followers but lots of story streams, often very informed as well.

Wise’s theory was that people on Twitter will trust anything from a credible source, run it without verifying, and he wanted to be able to say how dangerous that could be. What he failed to factor into his experiment was how credibility was earned, which is exactly what he could have jeopardized with his little stunt. Deep down, I’ve convinced myself that Wise wanted to make the famed “blogger in pajamas” point. Instead, he made the “journalists don’t get social media point,” and the evidence of this to me is his “I’m sorry you feel that way,” apology:

He’s only half right on his first point: Mike, nobody checks *your* facts, because you are a sports writer for one of the three most important newspapers in the country. You better believe they will now.

I want to look back at the idea that Wise should be suspended, because I don’t think he should. I feel like he’s a kid who was told not to go climb in a tree, went and did it anyway, and now has a broken arm to show for it. The broken arm is a lesson enough, don’t ground the guy.

Actually, I have a better idea: Instead of squelching Twitter involvement, the Post should force him to take a lesson from guys like Steinberg and engage his followers and those tweeting at him. Maybe if he learned a little more about what conversation is valued, he wouldn’t have had this ridiculous idea in the first place.

SportsGrid

The practice tweets are rolling in, so here’s your rundown so far: From Estes up there, some more…

Estes_tweet_bowman_grant

The practice tweets are rolling in, so here’s your rundown so far:

From Estes up there, some more fall experimentation is on with Michael Bowman working at TE and Corey Grant moving from RB to corner. Bowman growing out of a WR and into a TE has been a hot rumor since spring , so that’s a pretty interesting development. Grant to corner, on the other hand, is a little unnerving (recruited as an RB but promised a shot at WR, kid just needs the ball in his hands) but likely has more to do with the continuing depth and injury issues right now. On that note:

Blake Sims (foot) and DeMarcus Milliner (ankle) were in black jerseys, while Robert Lester (concussion) and DeQuan Menzie (hamstring) worked as normal.

CecilHurt reports that Saban was coaching the DBs “vocally.” I would imagine so.

Finally, Estes also reports that Kerry Murphy appeared to be working with the 1st group at NT.

Roll ‘Bama Roll