How do people deal with the torrent of information pouring    down on us all? What sources can't they live without? We    regularly reach out to prominent figures in media,    entertainment, politics, the arts and the literary world, to    hear their answers. This is drawn from a conversation with    Brian    Stelter, New York Times reporter and    author of an upcoming book about morning    TV.  
      In the morning I wake up to Twitter like everyone    else, scrolling though an hour or so of tweets via the Twitter    app on my iPhone. I think of Twitter as my news wire. It brings    me up to speed on everything that happened overnight,    especially if I scroll back a couple of hours. I follow about    2,400 people, some in Europe and Asia, and looking at those    tweets in the morning gives me a good snapshot of what's    happening.     
      I try to get up by 7 a.m. to watch the morning shows, since      I'm writing a book about morning TV. I have four TVs in my      bedroom right now -- one big TV that's cable, and that's      tuned to NY1, because my girlfriend       Jamie is a traffic reporter there. The other three TVs      are smaller -- 20-inch flatscreens, basically computer      monitors hooked up to rabbit ears. They're tuned to ABC, NBC, and CBS, so I can watch them the way      the morning TV producers watch the shows. I soak it up and      learn how they do it. It's shown me how aware they are of      each other. If one has a big exclusive interview, the other      will either counter-program or tacitly acknowledge it. It's      also shown me that there are significant differences between      them -- CBS is really trying to be more substantive; NBC      tries to get the mix of news and features right; ABC is      clearly turning to criminal mysteries and softer features      earlier in the show than its competitors. I love watching. I      don't know what I'm going to do with the TVs after I finish      the book, but for now, having all four TVs on is bright      enough to force me to wake up.    
      Between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m., I start opening what ends up being      dozens of browser tabs -- links from Twitter, links from      Facebook, stories in The Times,      stories that Jamie sends -- on my computer. My goal is to      close all those by the end of the day. Right now I have      Politico, Salon, Adweek, the New York Times,      GigaOM, and The Atlantic open.      I'll at least skim all those open tabs by the end of the      day. I feel like within Google Chrome I'm piling up a      bunch of newspapers to read. Pretty much all the links come      from Twitter and Facebook, but primarily      Twitter. I think of the tabs as a stack of reading material;      some are story material, some are just stories I want to      read.    
       
      I wish there was a single destination to go for media. Right    now I'm assembling it myself with Twitter, the newsletters,    etc. -- there's no perfect site for me to go to. I end up not    going to most sites directly, though the ones I check directly    are Drudge, CNN, MSNBC, Fox, and Politico, and    The New York Times constantly. I think    it's the gold standard. I'm amazed that one site doesn't exist,    a Drudge Report for media types with quick snappy headlines,    bare bones. Without that, we sort of make it ourselves, with    Twitter and these things.    
      During the day I rely heavily on sites like Mediaite for video clips. I      think of it as a clipping service, showing me what I missed      last night on the Daily Show, or      from MSNBC or Fox. Gawker      also does some of that. And then there are blogs I go      to: TV      Newser, since I used to work there; I try to check      Gawker. I purposely go to their homepages.    
      I probably hit Twitter every five minutes or so. I don't      obsess over reading every tweet, but I like to when I can. I      worry less about tweeting out and more about listening. I've      been consciously trying to consume more and comment less,      unless i have something to add. And I check Facebook a couple      times an hour. I don't want to downplay it; I think it has so      much potential. I can sense it's becoming significant, but      collectively we haven't figured out how to use it. I      like what Facebook does on the newsfeed, collecting reported      posts together -- if 10 people post about NBC, those are      collected into one story, and that's helpful. I've just      started toying around with subscribing.     
    And there's something that's a subscription business tool. It's    called TV Eyes -- it's my    most important tool. It's a virtual DVR for every channel,    every city, at every hour of the day. I can go back and find    any clip I want, queue up the time, and watch it. I think it's    a B-to-B play; it's not meant for the public, but it's very    helpful. Mediaite's also great for that, and I rely on it a    lot, but this lets me go straight to it.    
      To end the day, I try to look at the New Yorker, New York, Time, People,      Entertainment      Weekly, Wired, Reason, The Nation, The Weekly      Standard, just to get my eyes away from a screen. I      try to read a different one each day; that's subway reading.      There's absolutely a risk of filtering out information by      relying so heavily on Facebook, Twitter, and email. So I      consciously try to ferret out other sources of information.      To me, the magazines are a piece of that.    
       
      I probably spend about 10 hours a day consuming information. I    watch TV on Hulu in the    evenings, and I play a lot of Halo on Xbox live. I think    videogaming is under-appreciated as a form of media. Oh,    and whenever I'm outside of New York I try to listen to the    radio, because that's the one piece we forget about. Poor    radio. I try to sample some of the talk radio shows -- they're    influential and not heard as often. Thankfully I can find radio    in TV Eyes.    
    Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments or send an email to    the author at jdoll at    theatlantic dot com. You can share ideas for stories on the    Open Wire.  
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Brian Stelter: What I Read