How Sarah Palin's Facebook Chorus Achieves Harmony
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, August 3 2010
Slate's John Dickerson reveals that Sarah Palin's Facebook page doesn't get all uniformly upbeat all on its lonesome.
It's all rather curious. Dickerson and a colleague built a program that tracked comments on 10 Palin posts over the course of 12 days. Now, you might assume that team Palin took a hatchet to especially negative, anti-Palin commentary. And some of that, it seems, happened.
But that's not all that went down. The Palin enterprise also scrubbed from her feed comments where, found Dickerson, folks went after people who wrote mean things about her. Racial slurs were enough to get the boot, yes. So were suggestions that she shouldn't let her kids (Bristol, presumably) do reality TV or vaguely-worded notes about Barack Obama birth certificates. Also no good: excessive religious imagery and mild objections to Palin's picks of candidates to endorse.
The result implied by Dickerson's reporting is less a cleaned-up open Facebook conversation than a some sort of curated narration to the life and times of Sarah Palin.
For you process geeks -- and really, where would the world be without you? -- here's the scoop on the Python program the Slate folks built to track changes to Palin's Facebook comments sections.
