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Yahoo! News is getting its political news primarily from The Associated Press, and will use the AP's call of individual states to update its electoral map, he said. Television networks are also relying on the AP for its vote returns, but the networks usually make their own projections on which candidates win. CNN's Web site will allow users to customize results to follow individual races. MSNBC.com is offering interactive elements, too. Several Web sites are streaming coverage: The Washington Post and Newsweek reporters will appear on washingtonpost.com, while Katie Couric will do a webcast after she gets off the air on CBS. There's been an explosion of interest on politically oriented Web sites this fall. The Huffington Post, for example, jumped from 792,000 unique visitors in September 2007 to 4.5 million this September. Newsbusters.org went from 113,000 to 732,000, and Talkingpointsmemo.com from 32,000 to 458,000. Interest in the campaign has been extraordinary, with three political speeches at the Republican and Democratic national convention each getting more than 40 million viewers. The vice presidential debate between Sarah Palin and Joe Biden had 70 million viewers, second only to the Carter-Reagan presidential debate as the most-watched political debate on American television, Nielsen said. "As a television event, it's been off the charts," Patterson said.
[Associated
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