News of the terrorist attacks in Paris broke late Friday afternoon, and after a weekend of covering the attacks and their fallout, a group of Mashable editors gathered in executive editor Jim Roberts‘ office Monday morning to brainstorm the next steps for their coverage.
“Once we started to get the initial identifications of the victims, we knew it was going to be very important to compile an ongoing list and present it to our audience,” Roberts told me.
During the conversation, Brian Ries, Mashable’s real-time news editor, suggested using Twitter to share information on each of the victims. While all news organizations covering the Paris story are reporting on the victims and trying to provide their context and details about their lives, Mashable quickly realized that Twitter would be a unique way to share their stories.
“The part that I really like about this is its simplicity,” Roberts said. “The simplicity of the idea; the simplicity of the execution; being able to capture, in 140 characters, a life. While that doesn’t truly explore all of the contours of these people’s lives, it’s amazing how powerful 140 characters can be. There was just something about that simple format that was really appealing.”
Ries and Amanda Wills, Mashable’s deputy executive editor, worked out the details. They thought initially that they might share photos and details about the victims from the main Mashable Twitter account with a link back to Mashable’s other coverage, but they decided that that “cheapens the idea and would make it a little too promotional,” Ries said. Instead, they decided to create a standalone Twitter account — @ParisVictims — that exists solely to post photos and details on the lives of the victims.
They created the account, and the first tweet was posted within hours, shortly before noon Eastern time on Monday. The account now has more than 20,000 followers, and Mashable also created a Twitter Moment that it’s updating with each victim.
Guillaume Decherf, 43, France.
A music journalist and father of two.
#enmémoire pic.twitter.com/YKeazE8FAm
— En mémoire (@ParisVictims) November 16, 2015
Each tweet includes each victim’s name, age, and country of origin along with some details of their lives and a photo. Every tweet also uses the hashtag #enmémoire, which means “in memory” in French.
Lola Salines, 28, France.
Loved roller derby and children's books. "Sensitive, hip, enthusiastic.”
#enmémoire pic.twitter.com/cB3iJwDdDa
— En mémoire (@ParisVictims) November 17, 2015
“It was just about the person and taking ourselves out of it because we’re not the story,” Wills said. “We always talk about the best way to tell a story, [and how it’s] maybe not text on a page. For us, this was taking text off the page and going somewhere else with the story.”
Nohemi Gonzalez, 23, United States.
A student studying abroad in Paris, called a "shining star."
#enmémoire pic.twitter.com/hpu8UWoGn2
— En mémoire (@ParisVictims) November 16, 2015
The account’s Twitter bio links back to a Mashable story on the victims.
Though the idea is a simple one, the execution is more complicated due to the nature of the subject and also the nature of Twitter. Mashable has a Google spreadsheet to compile the names of and information about each of the victims. In addition to original reporting, Mashable staffers have scoured social media and statements put out by victims’ friends and families, along with French and English-language media reports, to make the tweets about more than just when and where they died.
Matthieu Giroud, 39, France.
Loved music & football. Leaves behind a 3-year-old boy & a pregnant wife.
#enmémoire pic.twitter.com/ItxAgzPUPP
— En mémoire (@ParisVictims) November 17, 2015
Mashable is taking even more care to ensure that it gets the details right because tweets can’t be edited, and Twitter’s character limit also presents challenges in how the information and photos can be sourced.
“Because of the character restrictions on Twitter, we obviously can’t say where we’re getting every photo, every quote, or every bit of information from,” Ries said. “We’re trying to track that as much as we can on the back end for our own records, but it’s definitely more of a curated little 140-character nugget than it is a full documentation of sourcing and everything like that.”
Mashable is spacing out the tweets every hour or so, and it plans to continue the account until all the victims have been identified. 129 people were killed in the attack, but there are still a number of victims who haven’t been identified, and it’s possible that the death toll will rise.
So far, it seems that Twitter users have been receptive to the account, and a peek at @ParisVictims’ mentions shows its global reach, though some other users said that they found the account overwhelming.
.@ParisVictims is a simple, beautiful and almost unbearably poignant tribute.
— Simon Richardson (@simonr916) November 17, 2015
Alle emoties door je lijf als je het account @ParisVictims door leest #heftig
— Saskia (@SazzelvanZon) November 17, 2015
Had to stop reading @ParisVictims because it's just too harrowing. But don't let that stop you; it's incredibly moving and important.
— PrincessPurling (@StarlingOne) November 17, 2015
Puedes leer sobre las víctimas de los atentados de París en @ParisVictims
— アリスチン覇比 (@_aristin_) November 17, 2015
Maybe it's just b/c I live so many days on Twitter, but @parisvictims is the most affecting/effective remembrance I've seen
— Anne Helen Petersen (@annehelen) November 17, 2015
Feel terrible, but I've had to mute @ParisVictims through the sheer number of people RTing 10+ of its tweets.
— James Ball (@jamesrbuk) November 17, 2015
Roberts said Mashable ultimately decided to profile the victims of the Paris attacks in this way because “clearly this is a moment that has truly locked in people’s attention on terrorism and what its impact is to the civilian population.”
“This seemed like the right thing to do at the right time. It may again be the right thing to do at another time, and when we decided to do this, it wasn’t to exclude anything else. We’re still covering the event itself as well as Beirut and the Russian plane crash in a variety of other ways.”
Mashable plans to continue updating the account until all the victims are identified, and then it will leave the account up as a memorial.
“This account exists for only one purpose,” Wills said. “When it has served that purpose, it’ll just live on.”