Media watching for results of papal conclave

Martin Rothweiler, Christina Blumrath
Members of a German broadcast team for the Alabama-based Eternal Word Television Network, Martin Rothweiler and Christina Blumrath, hold a discussion outside the Vatican on Friday, March 3, 2013, in preparation for the papal election. Eternal Word Television Network isn't just talking about Vatican politics or the church sex scandal in its run-up to the papal vote. Rather, "Pope TV" is airing shows about how the new man may affect church liturgy, teachings and Vatican diplomacy. The network, with 336 total employees, has about 50 staffers in Rome working on conclave coverage being aired in English, Spanish and German, said chief executive Michael Warsaw.
Jeffery Bruno/ASSOCIATED PRESS

By DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP) -- White smoke or black smoke? Maybe it's easier just to wait for a text message that a new pope has been elected.

A Catholic organization has set up a website, popealarm.com, that lets people register to receive a text or email notification when a pope has been selected by cardinals meeting in Vatican City. None were needed Tuesday: after a day of pageantry and some arresting television pictures, black smoke from the Sistine Chapel chimney indicated no pope had been selected.

The text service set up by the Fellowship of Catholic University Students, or FOCUS, was an indication of how much the media world had changed since the last papal conclave, in 2005. The site had proven so popular with more than 40,000 respondents that it said Tuesday it could no longer guarantee new registrants would get a text message. People could still sign up for emails.

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"When the smoke goes up, you'll know what's going down" is the website's motto.

Another new website, adoptacardinal.org, assigns interested people one of the voting cardinals at random to pray for him as he deliberates on a new pope. Nearly 500,000 people had signed up by Tuesday morning.

Television cameras on Tuesday caught for the first time the first steps in the papal conclave, with the participating cardinals, one-by-one, taking an oath of silence about their deliberations. As each man approached, it was hard to lose the idea that one of them would soon be the leader of the Roman Catholic church.

Black smoke
Black smoke emerges from the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel, in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Tuesday, March 12, 2013. The black smoke indicates that the new pope has not been elected yet.
AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia

"For the few cardinals I have spoken with, all have said that it's the most important act they do as cardinal," said Father Joseph Martin, a Jesuit priest and television commentator. "It reminds you that they are also human beings charged with a divine task. Overall, I found it very moving."

When the oaths were taken, an official pronounced: "extra omnes," Latin for everybody out.

All but the cardinals streamed out of the Sistine Chapel and the large wooden doors were closed and latched behind them.

"That's quite a shot," NBC anchor Lester Holt said. CBS' Scott Pelley urged as much quiet as possible among his colleagues as the pictures played out on the network's special report. "No one has ever seen this before, so it's going to be fascinating," he said.

While the television networks resumed regular programming, websites for both CBS and NBC had "smoke cams," with cameras trained on the chimney that would provide the results of the first ballot. Within two hours, the results poured out in the form of black smoke.

Pelley and ABC's Diane Sawyer were both in Rome on Monday night to anchor their networks' evening newscast at the Vatican. NBC's Brian Williams stayed home, with Holt on the scene.

In 2005, none of the top network anchors went to Rome for the conclave. Some network planners are reluctant to move broadcasts to Rome for the conclave because it's an open-ended event; no one knows how long it will last. It's different for the installation of a new pope, a defined event that can be scheduled around.

Shepard Smith, who is Fox News Channel's top news anchor, is that network's top person on the scene. CNN has sent Anderson Cooper and Chris Cuomo, who will trade off coverage during the day and evening. Chris Jansing is the anchor leading MSNBC's coverage.

The BBC sent in 50 people, including three London-based anchors.

"It's huge, big resources are being devoted to this," said veteran Rome correspondent David Willey. He said the operation is bigger than for the 2005 conclave that elected Benedict.

The BBC has kept up its coverage despite torrential rains and hail that collapsed its tent atop the Janiculum Hill overlooking Rome. Jon Sopel, one of the anchors, tweeted: "Add to thunder and lightning, hail. Deafening noise under our canopy. Trying to avoid glib metaphors."