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Michael Specter Wins the Slate Hackathlon
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The readers have voted, the
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ballots have been counted, and the judges have crowned Michael Specter, a
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Moscow correspondent of the New York Times , the winner of the first
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Slate
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Hackathlon. More than 1,400 votes were cast in the four
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events. Here's the final breakdown, by percentages:
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We contacted Specter to
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offer our congratulations and ask how he feels about winning the first
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Hackathlon. "I'm far too overwhelmed with emotion to rely on mere words," he
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e-mailed back. "Also, I can't really write anything anymore unless you give me
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two hours and a cheat sheet."
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Specter has a reputation for
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being a sore winner that he bolstered during the Hackathlon. Although he led
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the contest from the beginning, he obviously took no joy in his success.
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Instead, he repeatedly accused his hack protégé, Malcolm Gladwell, of cheating
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by writing parody, which was prohibited under the rules, and filled the
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Hackathlon referee's e-mail box with his whining.
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Specter
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will return next fall to defend his title against three new challengers.
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Who's the fairest hack in
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all of journalism? With your help, we hope to settle that question with the
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first
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Slate
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Hackathlon.
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We've invited four of our
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favorite hacks to compete in four weekly journalistic events designed to
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showcase journalistic glibness, intellectual sleight of hand, greed under
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pressure, and a total disregard for what the rest of the world thinks.
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Actually, our four contestants have already demonstrated their disdain for what
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others might think by accepting the Hackathlon challenge.
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Our Hackathletes are
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Malcolm Gladwell of The New Yorker ; Hanna Rosin of the
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New Republic ; Michael Specter , a Moscow correspondent for the
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New York Times ; and Geoffrey Wheatcroft , author of The
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Randlords and a contributor to British publications too numerous to
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mention. (For more on the hack ethic, click to read Gladwell's exegesis.)
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The four weekly events are:
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an op-ed in the style of the New York Times (750 words or thereabouts);
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a New Yorker "Talk of the Town" piece (750 words or thereabouts); the
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first 1,000 words of a Vanity Fair profile; and a breaking news story
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(750 words or thereabouts).
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The subject of their
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hackwork will remain a mystery to all until the weekend of the competition,
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when
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Slate
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will e-mail the Hackathletes the assignment and a
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cheat sheet of facts, figures, and quotes from which they can crib. The cheat
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sheet will be posted for readers' inspection. The Hackathletes may not make up
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quotations (sorry, guys). They may take no more than two hours to complete the
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assignment. They may, if they so desire, do additional research. But they
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shouldn't. As a great hack once said, the essence of hackery is "adjusting a
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minimum of information to produce the maximum journalistic effect." (The only
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editing
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Slate
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has done to the pieces is a quick spell check.)
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The winner of the Hackathlon
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will be determined by an online vote of
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Slate
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's readers. Readers
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may vote once in each of the four events. The Hackathlete who polls the
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greatest total will be declared the winner and will return next year to face
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three new challengers.
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To vote you must be a
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registered
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Slate
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reader. If you've never registered, we suggest
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you do so now by clicking here. But you can always register later.
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Hackathletes, to your
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marks!
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