@article{O’Hallarn_Shapiro_2014, title={#NBCFail: A qualitative review of the shared experience as a social movement}, volume={19}, url={https://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/4760}, DOI={10.5210/fm.v19i1.4760}, abstractNote={<p>The XXX Olympic Games in London, England was the most-watched event in U.S. television history, with more than 219 million viewers tuning in during the Games. However, the National Broadcasting Corporation (NBC) elected to show a number of events to U.S. audiences in prime time via tape delay, rather than broadcasting them live. As a result NBC encountered a great deal of criticism about its coverage, particularly on the online microblogging site Twitter. This research surveyed a sample of Twitter users who participated in the Twitter protest via the #NBCFail hashtag, to understand how being part of a shared protest affected their feelings about the Olympics, and NBC, both during, and several months after, the Olympic Games. The results suggest the feelings of #NBCFail participants were amplified significantly by being part of a movement, and that the protest network, while dormant outside of the Games, could be reactivated very quickly, with more participants, in future Olympics.</p>}, number={1}, journal={First Monday}, author={O’Hallarn, Brendan and Shapiro, Stephen}, year={2014}, month={Jan.} }