RagingBullx wrote:My kids loved those snap chat pics, they sure as hell don't love the Telegraph etc. I feel some admiration for Hamilton because despite realising he is ultimately a spoilt child, I know Ted Kravitz is a tool and Formula One needs a new social media strategy to get a younger audience.
There is plenty of room for both social & digital media and tv & print media to cover a Grand Prix, it does not have to be one or the other. It is like meals, as much as we all love steak and chips, we wouldn't have it for breakfast, nor would you have a bowl of muesli on an evening out. The problem was that Hamilton was having his cornflakes in his PJs while the rest of the room were having business lunch, admittedly the same boring Ploughman's accompanied by the same boring tea, white with one sugar.
However, on the other side of the coin there are some writers in the print media who seem utterly desperate to fight digital media on digital media's terms- DM is bullet points and concise articles with soundbites because people scan web pages and flick through sites with little time or inclination to digest something with more meat on the bones. PM is for the deeper material for the reader to get their teeth into. Watch commuters on a train, those with tablets are constantly swiping the screen, those with paid for papers are reading the same page for ten minutes or more (this was an in house study for us).
To that end, print media journalists trying to get Hamilton to give them a soundbite along the lines that he has a saboteur on his side of the garage were eventually going to get a short shrift in some manner. Vettel in that position would likely mock the person asking the repetitive questions, Alonso would have laughed it off, at best Kimi would have said 'no' and Hamilton played silly buggers on his phone.
My son (nine) also liked the snapchat pictures, but he wouldn't have watched the driver's press conference in the first place as it turns him to stone. So going back to breakfast, lunch and dinner, I would have been happy to hear/read a decent and detailed Q&A with the Fleet Street hacks and my son would have liked Hamilton to put a cartoon smile onto Kimi Raikkonnen afterwards.